[00:00.000 --> 00:06.720] The falling of these flashes brought to you by the Lowest Star Lowdown. [00:06.720 --> 00:13.040] Markets for Monday the 22nd of July 2019 open with precious metals, gold at $1,429 an ounce, [00:13.040 --> 00:21.320] silver $16.45 an ounce, copper $2.75 an ounce, oil Texas crude $55.63 a barrel, Brent crude [00:21.320 --> 00:29.720] $62.47 a barrel, and cryptos in order of market cap, Bitcoin Core $10,566.52, Ethereum [00:29.720 --> 00:41.320] $227.26, XRP Ripple $0.33, Whitecoin $100.31, and Bitcoin Cash is at $324.10 a crypto coin. [00:41.320 --> 00:52.400] In history the year 1916 the preparedness day bombing a time suitcase bomb was detonated on [00:52.400 --> 00:58.200] market street in San Francisco during the World War I preparedness day parade killing 10 and [00:58.200 --> 01:07.360] entering 40 today in history. In recent news since the Governor Greg Abbott signed House Bill [01:07.360 --> 01:13.040] 1325 legalizing hemp into taxes law back in June county prosecutors around the state including [01:13.040 --> 01:17.760] Houston, Austin and San Antonio have been dropping marijuana possession charges and even refusing [01:17.760 --> 01:22.200] to file new ones since they are stipulating that they do not have the time or the laboratory [01:22.200 --> 01:27.440] equipment to test the earth for THC. Margaret Moore the Travis County District Attorney announced [01:27.440 --> 01:31.720] earlier this month that she was dismissing 32 felony possession and delivery of marijuana [01:31.720 --> 01:36.560] cases because of the law. Mr. Abbott and other state officials including the Attorney General [01:36.560 --> 01:40.680] stipulated in a letter to county district attorneys back on Thursday that marijuana [01:40.680 --> 01:45.680] has not been decriminalized in Texas and that these actions demonstrate a misunderstanding [01:45.680 --> 01:52.480] of how HB 1325 works as well as other cities too like the District Attorney in El Paso, [01:52.480 --> 01:57.840] Jaime Esparza a Democrat who also stated earlier this month that the law quote will not have [01:57.840 --> 02:03.360] an effect on the prosecution of marijuana cases in El Paso. However the issue was succinctly [02:03.360 --> 02:07.920] summarized by Mr. Brandon Ball an assistant public defender in Harris County who stated [02:07.920 --> 02:12.160] that quote the law is constantly changing on what makes something illegal based on its [02:12.160 --> 02:16.960] chemical makeup. It's important that if someone is charged with something the test matches [02:16.960 --> 02:25.720] what they're charged with. A paper by Tulane University identified a five and a half inch [02:25.720 --> 02:31.040] American pocket shark as the first of its kind in the Gulf of Mexico the specimen being [02:31.040 --> 02:36.000] only the second pocket shark ever captured or recorded with the other one being found [02:36.000 --> 02:41.040] way back in 1979 in the East Pacific Ocean. According to the university paper the shark [02:41.040 --> 02:47.440] secretes a lumus fluid from a gland near its front fins for the purpose it is hypothesized [02:47.440 --> 02:55.600] to lure and prey may be drawn into the glow. This is Rick Rodeo with the lowdown for July [02:55.600 --> 03:13.360] 22nd 2019. [03:13.360 --> 03:36.720] This is Rick Rodeo with the lowdown for July 22nd 2019. [03:36.720 --> 04:05.360] Okay howdy howdy Randy Kelsen, Brett Fountain, [04:05.360 --> 04:15.040] Rue de la Radio on this Thursday the 25th day of June 2020. It's hard to believe years [04:15.040 --> 04:23.520] half over already. It's amazing. And I still don't have my sweeper ready. It's just delay [04:23.520 --> 04:33.040] after delay after delay but I'm hoping to be able to order parts either tomorrow or Monday. [04:33.040 --> 04:42.560] My son and I've got this company I'm putting together and I've hired an engineer and I [04:42.560 --> 04:57.240] have a consultant engineer and me and we all have the same name. There's something really [04:57.240 --> 05:05.680] cool about that. My grandson is the engineer. My son is the consultant and I'm the dummy [05:05.680 --> 05:13.360] who needs both of them to show me what to do. And so far it's working pretty good. I'm [05:13.360 --> 05:23.880] real excited about that. I get to work with my grandson and my son. That's what a few [05:23.880 --> 05:32.560] parents get those kinds of presents. So I consider that a great gift. But anyway getting [05:32.560 --> 05:40.920] that thing together, I've been an engineer all this time and I have people talk to me [05:40.920 --> 05:48.640] about I've got this great idea but don't tell anybody. Somebody must steal it. Forget [05:48.640 --> 05:58.760] that noise. It is so difficult to take an engineer and turn it into something real. [05:58.760 --> 06:07.360] I gave a set of descriptions to an engineer to build me a shroud or just fold some sheet [06:07.360 --> 06:14.120] metal for my equipment and he couldn't do it without technical drugs. He's only been [06:14.120 --> 06:19.320] out of college a couple of years so he hadn't really learned how to think yet. And that was [06:19.320 --> 06:27.280] exceptionally frustrating so I backed up and had to learn a whole new 3D modeling program. [06:27.280 --> 06:38.040] I could not get AutoCAD to do annotations. I've been working with AutoCAD for probably [06:38.040 --> 06:48.720] 20 years and I cannot get it to do annotations. That's building a schematic. That's what [06:48.720 --> 06:56.560] the program is for. All the rest of it is worth nothing if you can't print out drawings. [06:56.560 --> 07:02.520] And I cannot get it to print out drawings. I can't get it to annotate. Even create the [07:02.520 --> 07:12.960] page to print out. So my son brought up a new program called Fusion 360 and it was interesting. [07:12.960 --> 07:20.360] I got AutoCAD when it first came out. You open the program and you get a dash. That's [07:20.360 --> 07:27.320] your cursor. You get one little dash up in the corner of the screen blinking. And you [07:27.320 --> 07:35.640] got to do everything from the keyboard. Well, that was how it started. It got more sophisticated. [07:35.640 --> 07:42.120] But it's an interesting study in how we do things. These guys who designed this program [07:42.120 --> 07:52.000] were draftsmen. And they call it 3D modeling but it's really an extension of electronic [07:52.000 --> 08:04.760] drafting. Then this new program that one that AutoCAD or the Autodesk purchased, it's parametric [08:04.760 --> 08:16.080] modeling. These guys were not draftsmen. It was interesting how this one works. I build [08:16.080 --> 08:24.520] a model in 3D and then I annotate the model or I put dimensions on the model. I draw the [08:24.520 --> 08:30.040] model to dimensions and then I add dimensions to it later so you can see what the dimensions [08:30.040 --> 08:37.160] really are. These new or parametric modeling tools, they don't do it that way. You want [08:37.160 --> 08:46.880] a particular shape. You just draw lines and generally make the shape. Then you add constraints [08:46.880 --> 08:52.080] to it like I got these two lines and they're parallel to one another. So I click those [08:52.080 --> 08:57.440] two lines and tell the machine to make them parallel. Then I click on this line and I [08:57.440 --> 09:03.320] dimension it. I say make this line this long. I may have five or six lines connected to [09:03.320 --> 09:08.400] this line. And it will make that line the length I tell it to and all the other lines [09:08.400 --> 09:14.200] will adjust. Then I can tell it to make this next line perpendicular to this first line [09:14.200 --> 09:24.760] and boom. All the lines adjust as I add constraints. The geometric constraints parallel, concentric, [09:24.760 --> 09:35.600] linear and then there are dimension constraints. In AutoCAD, dimensions are not constraints [09:35.600 --> 09:44.120] but in this program it is. So I build this piece and when I tell the system how long [09:44.120 --> 09:50.680] this line is going to be, that becomes the constraint inside the system and everything [09:50.680 --> 09:56.560] else adjusts to that within their own constraints. So if I've got a piece I've designed here [09:56.560 --> 10:04.840] and I say well you know it really needs to be, this line needs to be a little bit longer. [10:04.840 --> 10:11.560] So I stretch that line out. The rest of the drawing adapts to match that dimension change. [10:11.560 --> 10:19.320] The old drafting programs, AutoCAD, I can extend this line but all the other lines stay [10:19.320 --> 10:24.200] where they were so I have to, all the other lines that are affected by it I have to delete [10:24.200 --> 10:35.240] them and redraw it. This one actually understands the image that you're created and much more [10:35.240 --> 10:42.560] than that. I was doing some tutorials and I built this piece and it had me go in and [10:42.560 --> 10:49.800] select a material for it. When you select a material for a part that you've built, the [10:49.800 --> 11:00.120] machine can tell you how much it weighs, how much stress it can take, what kinds of coatings [11:00.120 --> 11:07.840] can go on this material. Just everything about like I did one that was cast iron and it changed [11:07.840 --> 11:15.040] the texture to look like cast iron and it changed the weight of the object. It was amazing [11:15.040 --> 11:26.360] how smart these things are. The problem was I had to be smarter to use it. It was not fun [11:26.360 --> 11:34.360] and when I was studying it it was not pretty. If you were anywhere around you needed plugs [11:34.360 --> 11:43.760] in your ears and earmuffs and loud music playing. But anyway, it was interesting. Back to what [11:43.760 --> 11:52.480] the show is all about, I am trying to get this project started so I can put other people [11:52.480 --> 12:02.160] on it because what I want to do is I have due process pretty well completed in my project [12:02.160 --> 12:08.320] and legal earth project. What I don't have completed are all of the statutes. I've got [12:08.320 --> 12:13.840] about half of those. But I have due process and we're looking at remedy. We've got all [12:13.840 --> 12:25.360] these guys doing these protests over the George Floyd killing and the police conduct and they're [12:25.360 --> 12:33.200] out here. They're interested enough that they're coming out in the streets and risking getting [12:33.200 --> 12:42.160] shot with rubber bullets and tased and gassed by the police. They're looking for remedy. [12:42.160 --> 12:50.480] So I want to get my due process portion of legal earth polished up a little bit and then [12:50.480 --> 12:58.040] take it to these organizations that are organizing these demonstrations and ask them to have [12:58.040 --> 13:05.280] their followers when they have interactions with the police that they're not happy with [13:05.280 --> 13:11.920] to go to these questionnaires and answer the questions and the questionnaire will spit [13:11.920 --> 13:22.440] you out documents that will allow you to take action against police personally. You know, [13:22.440 --> 13:32.120] the way I start with it, if you have watched the video of the murder of George Floyd, most [13:32.120 --> 13:38.320] people have seen that video. If you saw that and you believe that that video was true and [13:38.320 --> 13:48.240] accurate and it actually showed a police officer killing this guy and you did not file a criminal [13:48.240 --> 13:59.880] complaint or file a notice of that crime that you have violated 18 U.S. Code 4. That's a [13:59.880 --> 14:09.160] federal violation and it's a class A misdemeanor. It gets you up to year in jail. In order to [14:09.160 --> 14:16.360] file a complaint, you don't have to have personal knowledge. You simply must have reason to [14:16.360 --> 14:23.000] believe and actually do believe that a crime is committed and that person committed it. [14:23.000 --> 14:30.200] And under federal law, you have a duty to give notice of that crime and murder by a police [14:30.200 --> 14:36.720] officer is a federal crime. It can be prosecuted in the state, but it's a federal due process [14:36.720 --> 14:42.840] violation. So all of these people who've watched the video and didn't report it, they committed [14:42.840 --> 14:52.440] a class A misdemeanor. I got a question, Randy. When somebody believes that it happened and [14:52.440 --> 14:58.720] they believe that they know who did it, but they don't, they are unable to say when they [14:58.720 --> 15:03.760] believe that it happened to nail it down to a time which could then be barred or not barred [15:03.760 --> 15:09.640] by statute of limitations and or they can't nail it down to where it happened. [15:09.640 --> 15:10.640] Only relevant. [15:10.640 --> 15:16.720] So they couldn't put it inside of a territorial jurisdiction, but they didn't believe that [15:16.720 --> 15:18.720] this person did it. [15:18.720 --> 15:27.280] In this case, in the Floyd case, this was a policeman murdering a person he had in custody. [15:27.280 --> 15:32.600] That's a federal due process violation. So the place to file is the Fed. And that's what [15:32.600 --> 15:38.280] makes the Fed apply. And whether he knows where it happened or when it happens, not [15:38.280 --> 15:39.280] relevant. [15:39.280 --> 15:42.520] That'll be for a prosecutor to figure out. [15:42.520 --> 15:47.920] Exactly. What the statute says, if you have reason to believe and do believe that a crime [15:47.920 --> 15:51.080] has been committed, you have a duty to report it. [15:51.080 --> 15:55.040] So you might not even necessarily know who did it, but you have a reasonable need that [15:55.040 --> 15:56.040] somebody did. [15:56.040 --> 16:01.720] Yeah, that's all you need to know. Just give the police alert. Alert the police that something's [16:01.720 --> 16:02.720] going on. [16:02.720 --> 16:09.640] My next door neighbor comes to me and she's a woman that lives alone, is aged and some [16:09.640 --> 16:14.720] guys harassing her and she's got a neighbor next to him that she's terrified of and she [16:14.720 --> 16:18.760] saw him murder someone behind her house. [16:18.760 --> 16:26.760] Now I may think she's a little flaky, but if I think she's not that flaky, but she won't [16:26.760 --> 16:32.680] tell the police because she's terrified. She's afraid he retaliate. If I believe her, then [16:32.680 --> 16:36.360] I have a duty to report it. [16:36.360 --> 16:41.000] Reason to believe and do believe. That's all it needs. It does not need, it can be here, [16:41.000 --> 16:44.120] say it does not need to be personal knowledge. [16:44.120 --> 16:52.760] So point out reason I brought that up. If you can be prosecuted for not doing something, [16:52.760 --> 17:03.960] any action of any kind against you because you did do something, let's fill a new retain. [17:03.960 --> 17:09.880] It's the 2019 Logos Radio Network annual fundraiser and gun giveaway sponsored by Central Texas [17:09.880 --> 17:16.320] Gun Works. Go to LogosRadioNetwork.com and enter to win. Any amount is appreciated, everything [17:16.320 --> 17:21.720] helps to keep us on the air. From Central Texas Gun Works, the grand prize up for grabs [17:21.720 --> 17:28.680] is the Spikes Tactical AR-15. More prizes and sponsors to be announced. Every $25 donation [17:28.680 --> 17:34.320] is a chance to win. When you purchase Randy Kelton's e-book, Legal 101, you get four [17:34.320 --> 17:39.920] chances to win. Purchase Eddie Craig's traffic seminar and get ten chances to win. If you've [17:39.920 --> 17:44.840] enjoyed the shows on Logos Radio Network, support our fundraiser so we can keep bringing [17:44.840 --> 17:51.480] you the best quality programming on talk radio today. We also accept Bitcoin and other cryptocurrencies. [17:51.480 --> 17:58.240] And remember, every $25 donation is a chance to win. Go to LogosRadioNetwork.com for details [17:58.240 --> 18:05.600] and donate today. Logos Radio Network welcomes a new show to our lineup for the new year. [18:05.600 --> 18:11.920] Scripture Talk with Nana will begin Wednesday, January 8th from 8 to 10 p.m. Central Time. [18:11.920 --> 18:17.280] Our goal is in accord with Matthew 516. Let your light so shine before men that they may [18:17.280 --> 18:22.880] see your good works and glorify your Father which is in heaven. We wish to reflect God's [18:22.880 --> 18:28.160] light and be a blessing to all those with a hearing ear. Join Nana and guests for both [18:28.160 --> 18:33.360] verse by verse Bible studies and topical Bible studies designed to provoke unto love [18:33.360 --> 18:38.760] and good works. Our verse by verse Bible studies will begin in the book of Matthew where we [18:38.760 --> 18:44.040] will discuss one chapter per week. Our topical Bible studies will vary each week and will [18:44.040 --> 18:49.560] explore sound doctrine as well as Christian character development. So mark your calendar [18:49.560 --> 18:56.840] and join us live on LogosRadioNetwork.com Wednesdays from 8 to 10 p.m. starting January 8th for [18:56.840 --> 19:23.120] an inspiring and motivating discussion of the Scriptures. [19:23.120 --> 19:40.400] Okay, we are back. Randy Kelton, Brett Fountain, Rue de la Radio. I have a rhetorical question [19:40.400 --> 19:49.360] for everyone. Most reasonable people look at what's going on and we're not happy campers. [19:49.360 --> 19:57.200] Now, I am not a black man, but the fact that I am not a black man does not mean that I [19:57.200 --> 20:05.280] am not concerned about the fact that black people are being killed by police. I want [20:05.280 --> 20:10.560] to say disproportionately to white people, but I'm not sure if that's the case. Pastor [20:10.560 --> 20:19.360] Massad says it's not the case. What he said was is that a white person is far more likely [20:19.360 --> 20:25.240] to be killed by a policeman than he is by a criminal. So I don't know if that interprets [20:25.240 --> 20:32.800] into black and white. I don't think this issue is essentially black and white. It would be [20:32.800 --> 20:51.280] less problematic if that were the case. That's what it looks like, but it does appear to [20:51.280 --> 20:56.760] be worse in the black neighborhoods, but the black neighborhoods tend to be the poor neighborhoods [20:56.760 --> 21:02.080] and the poor neighborhoods tend to have less education and more crime. That doesn't necessarily [21:02.080 --> 21:07.360] have anything to do with them being the fact that they're poor in this country may have [21:07.360 --> 21:18.400] to do with the fact that they're black. But I really don't believe that the real problem [21:18.400 --> 21:28.160] is because they're black. It's really because the police are so accustomed to arresting [21:28.160 --> 21:34.480] black people that every time they know what's going on in the head of any one particular [21:34.480 --> 21:41.320] cop because maybe a lot of them don't have that issue, but then maybe one of them is [21:41.320 --> 21:50.040] inclined to take it out on somebody of a different color for whatever reason. What I've seen [21:50.040 --> 21:56.000] is the police tend to interact with poor people in poor neighborhoods more than white people [21:56.000 --> 22:04.440] in white, than non-poor people in non-poor neighborhoods. I think that's true. Poor neighborhoods [22:04.440 --> 22:13.840] tend to be predominantly black and that's serious things. Yes, there is racism. I hate [22:13.840 --> 22:23.280] to think it, but it is in our genes. Getting rid of that is difficult because we are genetically [22:23.280 --> 22:34.120] predisposed to think of ourselves and the groups with which we are associated as better [22:34.120 --> 22:40.880] or more deserving than groups with which we are not associated. That's not just black [22:40.880 --> 22:50.280] and white. It's Christian and Muslim. It's Catholic and Protestant. It is the nature [22:50.280 --> 22:58.960] of the beast to feel that anyone who's not a part of your group is somehow lesser, less [22:58.960 --> 23:05.360] deserving in the Christian belief system to have this belief in special creation. I think [23:05.360 --> 23:10.200] that's one of the worst things in the Christian belief system. [23:10.200 --> 23:24.160] Yeah, we're special to the exclusion of someone else. If you're not a Christian, then you [23:24.160 --> 23:32.920] are a heathen. If you're not a Muslim, then you're an infidel, since you're the same thing. [23:32.920 --> 23:40.160] We need to label those who are not a part of our group. If you're not a Baptist, then [23:40.160 --> 23:51.320] you're a Methodist, or God forbid, Church of Christ, or even worth Catholic. It's how [23:51.320 --> 24:00.600] human beings are made. I'm certainly not condoning this. I'm just understanding this is how human [24:00.600 --> 24:06.320] beings are made and we need to work out a way to get around that. The Bible intended [24:06.320 --> 24:19.800] to get around that. When the Bible says, judge not that ye, be not judge, Jesus did not [24:19.800 --> 24:28.120] miss words. He meant exactly what he said. If we're not able to pass judgment on one [24:28.120 --> 24:38.800] other, this part of social segregation tends to go away. My position under the Bible, maybe [24:38.800 --> 24:45.840] God and Jesus can pass judgment, but we can't do that. We've been warned about that. We get [24:45.840 --> 24:51.600] being troubled over that by what measure which ye meet, so shall that it be measured to you [24:51.600 --> 25:01.840] again. But human beings being human beings is what we do. Anyway, I'm off topic. It does [25:01.840 --> 25:09.440] appear to be that the black culture takes the brunt of this. We have them essentially [25:09.440 --> 25:17.880] fed up and they're looking for remedy. I'm hoping that if I can get a portion of the [25:17.880 --> 25:27.920] Leader Earth Project launched and get it in their hands at times when they've just been [25:27.920 --> 25:35.760] annoyed by the police or threatened or treated in a way in which they feel abused, if we [25:35.760 --> 25:44.320] can give them a tool where they can stomp all over that policeman. Now, I'm not anti-police [25:44.320 --> 25:53.080] and I know we have good policemen out there. We are anti-police brutality, anti-lawless [25:53.080 --> 26:04.320] police. I have experienced my share of that. I did instigate most of it, but I understand [26:04.320 --> 26:12.520] they're a good policeman out there. The biggest problem I see is not the ones perpetrating [26:12.520 --> 26:22.000] these atrocities. In the Minnesota incident, it wasn't the policeman who was insensitive [26:22.000 --> 26:28.920] to the person he was choking. It was the black policeman holding people back who were trying [26:28.920 --> 26:38.680] to get to him to save his life. That's the real criminal. What would it took for a reasonable [26:38.680 --> 26:42.560] human being to walk over and say, hey, you need to get off this guy's neck? He could [26:42.560 --> 26:50.840] be suffocated. What would it took? Was it three policemen stood there and kept everybody [26:50.840 --> 26:57.520] back? The public could see that he was killing the guy. They kept everybody else from stopping [26:57.520 --> 27:02.520] and they're telling him, he's killing him, he's killing him. The policeman just could [27:02.520 --> 27:09.080] not bring himself to interfere with another policeman when he's doing something improper. [27:09.080 --> 27:16.680] So that those other policemen are getting prosecuted, that's how it should be. We need [27:16.680 --> 27:24.800] to start prosecuting the police that do not police the police. This tool will allow us [27:24.800 --> 27:30.760] to do that. We get all the policemen names and you fill in all their names in the tool [27:30.760 --> 27:36.680] and it'll burp out complaints against all of them. And then when this policeman here [27:36.680 --> 27:43.560] gets hammered big time because another policeman couldn't, was emotionally out of control, [27:43.560 --> 27:50.240] he is not going to be a happy camper. Blue thin line or no thin blue line or no thin [27:50.240 --> 27:57.200] blue line, he's not going to be happy. This is how we can fix this thing. That's my story [27:57.200 --> 28:07.320] and I'm sticking to it. And you had a really good point you wanted to address. The difference [28:07.320 --> 28:10.080] between criminal and civil. [28:10.080 --> 28:17.120] Yeah, I think it's worth bringing up maybe from time to time because I know I didn't [28:17.120 --> 28:24.440] get this at the beginning and I think maybe a lot of people, I get the questions when [28:24.440 --> 28:30.800] people are needing some help. I get the questions that I can see what's behind the question [28:30.800 --> 28:35.800] is they don't understand that there's two different worlds. There's a civil world and [28:35.800 --> 28:43.480] a criminal world, legally speaking. Somebody might do something, a bad actor might step [28:43.480 --> 28:49.920] up into the middle of your perfectly fine day and do something completely wrong and cause [28:49.920 --> 28:59.200] trouble for you and those two worlds tend to blur in our minds. When we start thinking [28:59.200 --> 29:04.920] about man, that wasn't right. That shouldn't have happened that way. Well, that person, [29:04.920 --> 29:15.280] they need to pay. What do I need to do? And the two worlds blur together. There are civil [29:15.280 --> 29:20.560] things that you do when somebody has done some kind of wrong doing, called a tort usually [29:20.560 --> 29:26.360] and they did something wrong. We'll probably have to look at this some more after our sponsors [29:26.360 --> 29:36.760] but the criminal world is some very specifically codified crimes. So if it's a state issue [29:36.760 --> 29:42.640] or a federal issue, you follow along with what that crime says the person did. It's [29:42.640 --> 29:48.720] not emotional. It's just here are the facts. Here's what happened and you don't have any [29:48.720 --> 29:54.160] standing for that. You don't get money back if somebody did something wrong. We can talk [29:54.160 --> 30:01.880] some more about that on the other side after the sponsors. [30:01.880 --> 30:06.400] Businesses ask you for a lot of personal information and you may trust them to keep it safe but [30:06.400 --> 30:11.360] it turns out that even the most trusted companies may be unwittingly revealing your secrets. [30:11.360 --> 30:16.000] I'm Dr. Katherine Albrecht and I'll be right back with details. [30:16.000 --> 30:20.360] Privacy is under attack. When you give up data about yourself, you'll never get it back [30:20.360 --> 30:25.960] again. And once your privacy is gone, you'll find your freedoms will start to vanish too. [30:25.960 --> 30:32.120] So protect your rights. Say no to surveillance and keep your information to yourself. Privacy, [30:32.120 --> 30:37.280] it's worth hanging on to. This public service announcement is brought to you by startpage.com. [30:37.280 --> 30:45.240] Your private search engine alternative to Google, Yahoo and Bing. Start over with startpage. [30:45.240 --> 30:50.000] Data privacy is a big deal so nearly every company has a policy explaining how they handle [30:50.000 --> 30:54.760] your personal information. But what happens if it escapes their control? It's not an [30:54.760 --> 31:00.480] idle question. According to a recent survey, a shocking 90% of U.S. companies admit their [31:00.480 --> 31:05.480] security was breached by hackers in the last year. That's one more reason you should trust [31:05.480 --> 31:11.040] your searches to startpage.com. Unlike other search engines, startpage doesn't store any [31:11.040 --> 31:14.960] data on you. They've never been hacked, but even if they were, there would be nothing [31:14.960 --> 31:19.720] for criminals to see. The covered would be bare. Too bad other companies don't treat [31:19.720 --> 31:30.880] your data the same way. I'm Dr. Katherine Albrecht. More news and information at KatherineAlbrecht.com. [31:30.880 --> 31:37.120] I lost my son. My uncle. My uncle. On September 11, 2001. Most people don't know that a third [31:37.120 --> 31:42.880] tower fell on September 11. World Trade Center 7, a 47-story skyscraper, was not hit by a [31:42.880 --> 31:49.120] plane. I will be official explanation is that fire brought down Building 7. Over 1,200 architects [31:49.120 --> 31:52.880] and engineers have looked into the evidence and believed there is more to the story. Bring [31:52.880 --> 31:59.040] justice to my son. My uncle. My nephew. My son. Go to building what.org. Why it fell, [31:59.040 --> 32:04.280] why it matters, is what you can do. Rule of Law Radio is proud to offer the Rule of [32:04.280 --> 32:08.120] Law Traffic Seminar. In today's America, we live in a us against them society. If we [32:08.120 --> 32:11.800] believe we're ever going to have a free society, then we're going to have to stand and defend [32:11.800 --> 32:15.760] our own rights. Among those rights are the right to travel freely from place to place, [32:15.760 --> 32:19.360] the right to act in our own private capacity, and most importantly, the right to due process [32:19.360 --> 32:23.600] of law. Traffic courts afford us the least expensive opportunity to learn how to enforce [32:23.600 --> 32:27.920] and preserve our rights through due process. Former Sheriff's Deputy Eddie Craig, in conjunction [32:27.920 --> 32:31.320] with Rule of Law Radio, has put together the most comprehensive teaching tool available [32:31.320 --> 32:35.400] that will help you understand what due process is and how to hold courts to the rule of law. [32:35.400 --> 32:39.640] You can get your own copy of this invaluable material by going to ruleoflawradio.com and [32:39.640 --> 32:43.000] ordering your copy today. By ordering now, you'll receive a copy of Eddie's book, The [32:43.000 --> 32:47.520] Texas Transportation Code, The Law vs. the Lie, video and audio of the original 2009 [32:47.520 --> 32:51.160] seminar, hundreds of research documents and other useful resource material. Learn how [32:51.160 --> 32:55.040] to fight for your rights with the help of this material from ruleoflawradio.com. Order [32:55.040 --> 33:00.040] your copy today and together we can have the free society we all want and deserve. [33:25.040 --> 33:40.640] The job is difficult to serve. Be on a base. At the start. When you're gonna stop abuse your [33:40.640 --> 33:52.520] power, your power, your power, when you're gonna stop abuse your power, when you're gonna [33:52.520 --> 34:11.320] Okay, we are back. This is the rule of law radio. Randy Kelton. I'm Brett Fountain. [34:11.320 --> 34:20.000] And this is the 25th of June, 2020. And we are talking about civil versus criminal. Criminal [34:20.000 --> 34:30.520] versus civil. A guy came to me this week and was asking about a traffic ticket. And he's [34:30.520 --> 34:37.080] just upset because this guy did so many things wrong. You know, from the aggravated assault [34:37.080 --> 34:46.560] to the stealing the truck, there's a lot of things that happen in there. And we tend to, [34:46.560 --> 34:54.120] because the victim of somebody's wrongdoing, we tend to blur it all together. And I didn't know [34:54.120 --> 35:00.880] at the beginning, when I first started looking into how do you seek remedy, I didn't realize [35:00.880 --> 35:06.880] that these are two completely separate worlds and you just need to distinguish them. Put all [35:06.880 --> 35:13.600] your emotions aside, even though you feel, you know, really hurt and wronged and betrayed and [35:13.600 --> 35:19.920] everything. And take a look at these two different kinds of responses. It doesn't have to be one [35:19.920 --> 35:24.760] or the other. It can be both. You can address them in parallel, but they each have their own [35:24.760 --> 35:29.200] separate kind of paperwork and their own separate kind of rules. So you deal with them [35:29.200 --> 35:40.120] distinctly, even if you're doing both. So I just wanted to mention that, but that in people's [35:40.120 --> 35:45.040] minds and thinking if that's, maybe everybody else already realizes that, but I didn't get [35:45.040 --> 35:50.720] first and the people that come to me often seem to not get that at the beginning. So it's good [35:50.720 --> 36:00.800] to distinguish that. And it's a nice calculus to have when you feel as though you've been [36:00.800 --> 36:09.240] mistreated by, especially a public official, you look at the criminal side, you know, how can [36:09.240 --> 36:17.480] you go after the criminal side and give the individual reason not to do this again, but [36:17.480 --> 36:24.400] then on the other side, the other hand, you were harmed by this. And the civil side is totally [36:24.400 --> 36:32.160] different than the criminal side. The one has very little to do with the other. When the criminal [36:32.160 --> 36:41.040] action results in a harm, that harm is civil and it's prosecuted separate. And then there's money [36:41.040 --> 36:49.280] involved. That's the money you ask for damages, meaning money. Pay me for what you and the amount [36:49.280 --> 36:55.080] that you harmed me. That's the civil side. A policeman arrests me and takes me straight to jail. [36:55.080 --> 37:01.520] Well, I have a right to a reasonable expectation that the law will be followed. The law requires [37:01.520 --> 37:09.760] him to take me directly to a nearest magistrate. Well, by taking me directly to jail, he cost me [37:09.760 --> 37:18.000] to suffer harm. The harm is false imprisonment. Now, I can file criminal charges against him [37:18.000 --> 37:29.560] for official misconduct or official oppression. But all I have standing to do in most states [37:29.560 --> 37:40.840] is give notice. In Pennsylvania, you have standing to appeal a decision not to prosecute all the [37:40.840 --> 37:47.240] way up to the Pennsylvania Supreme. But in most states, all you have is a duty to give notice [37:47.240 --> 37:56.640] of crime. Which means you need to adjust your... So that means you need to adjust your expectations [37:56.640 --> 38:02.160] of what's going to happen when you do that. It's not going to turn into money for you. [38:02.160 --> 38:08.160] It's going to turn... The purpose is different. The purpose is you're trying to apply some [38:08.160 --> 38:14.600] pressure that will potentially, hopefully bring some correction to the behavior that [38:14.600 --> 38:20.000] caused this or the system that allowed their officers to do this or so forth. [38:20.000 --> 38:25.720] You're doing that because you're a good citizen and it's your duty to report crime. If you [38:25.720 --> 38:31.280] report that crime and the individual gets prosecuted and found guilty, well, that makes [38:31.280 --> 38:41.640] your civil suit dead bang or raise judicata. If the court finds that the officer who committed [38:41.640 --> 38:52.720] this act acted illegally and they issue a finding of that, a policeman acting improperly [38:52.720 --> 39:00.920] in a way that denies you in the due course of the laws. And that's something you have [39:00.920 --> 39:09.600] a right to a reasonable expectation of. And you are harmed by that either by emotional [39:09.600 --> 39:19.200] stress or you wind up having to pay bonds and towing fees and all these other unfortunate [39:19.200 --> 39:26.320] things. That's harm that you can then file a civil action to collect for the damages [39:26.320 --> 39:35.640] that the criminal costs you. It's real important that we separate those two. And it's been [39:35.640 --> 39:44.400] my strategy on... I'm going to try to promote on this show that you don't wait until you [39:44.400 --> 39:52.400] have... say you're being prosecuted. You don't wait until the prosecution is complete to [39:52.400 --> 39:59.400] use the criminal side. I just had... Sonny from Georgia called me this week and I'm afraid [39:59.400 --> 40:07.400] Tuesday he's going to jail. He tried to hold these guys to law and they came after him. [40:07.400 --> 40:15.360] But he didn't file against them criminally. He wanted to wait because he had this nagging [40:15.360 --> 40:22.680] suspicion in the back of his mind that if I file against them criminally they may act [40:22.680 --> 40:29.400] more harshly against me. And now... That's a very common thought unfortunately. [40:29.400 --> 40:36.400] Now that he's at the end he's realizing they did every possible no good sneak and rotten [40:36.400 --> 40:43.960] lowdown thing they could do to him. They cut him not one half inches slack. There's nothing [40:43.960 --> 40:51.520] they could have done worse to him than they did. So you might as well go after them. When [40:51.520 --> 41:01.400] you start going after them now they got a reason they got cause to take a step back and maybe [41:01.400 --> 41:07.960] find another way to behave themselves. So it's my position. File criminal charges. File them [41:07.960 --> 41:15.640] quick. File them often. Don't hesitate. The first time you file a criminal charge you have [41:15.640 --> 41:23.360] created a circumstance to where you have poisoned their well. Now poisoning the well is generally [41:23.360 --> 41:29.960] considered a bad thing. But when you get charged with a crime by a police officer your well [41:29.960 --> 41:37.400] is poisoned big time. Because the judges and prosecutors all have a vested interest in [41:37.400 --> 41:44.320] accepting what the policeman says whether they believe him or not. You need to give them [41:44.320 --> 41:51.720] a different vested interest. You need to go straight for their throats. You can when the [41:51.720 --> 41:56.240] prosecutor refuses to act on your criminal complaint against the officer you file one [41:56.240 --> 42:02.480] against the prosecutor. Now you ask that the prosecutor be disqualified because he's being [42:02.480 --> 42:09.440] prosecuted for his criminal behavior in the case. Now their well is poisoned. And you [42:09.440 --> 42:13.680] file professional conduct complaints. You're just a conduct complaint against the judge. [42:13.680 --> 42:19.600] The judge is not going to be happy. But he can't come after you because that becomes [42:19.600 --> 42:25.840] retaliation. He's getting stuck in the mud and the mud gets deeper the more he messes [42:25.840 --> 42:34.760] with you. So give them a reason for the judge to say get this person out of my court. I [42:34.760 --> 42:39.440] don't want to have any more problems with them. So if they dismiss the case to keep [42:39.440 --> 42:45.600] you from beating up the judge do you have a problem with that? Don't care why they dismiss [42:45.600 --> 42:54.760] my case. But if they have nothing coming at them. No bad consequences for their bad behavior [42:54.760 --> 43:02.320] they're going to keep up their bad behavior. Policemen pull me over. Give me just a little [43:02.320 --> 43:12.240] bit of crapola. He is a 911 call real fast. Now Bubba let's see how much attitude you're [43:12.240 --> 43:19.800] going to have when I got an officer out here that I'm trying to get to arrest you. Changes [43:19.800 --> 43:26.920] the perspective of everybody involved. And it puts you in a much better position. So [43:26.920 --> 43:34.360] I'm suggesting people file complaints. Criminal, civil, professional, professional are the [43:34.360 --> 43:38.960] best of the most powerful. File them quick and file them off and there's no reason to [43:38.960 --> 43:45.760] be a nice guy here. Hang on. About to go to our sponsors Randy Kelton, Brett Fountain, [43:45.760 --> 43:50.480] moving to our radio. We do have the call lines open. We'll come back. We're going to go to [43:50.480 --> 44:01.880] Tina in California. Hang on. We'll be right back. I love Logos. Without the shows on [44:01.880 --> 44:06.240] this network I'd be almost as ignorant as my friends. I'm so addicted to the truth now [44:06.240 --> 44:11.240] that there's no going back. I need my truth pick. I'd be lost without Logos. And I really [44:11.240 --> 44:14.880] want to help keep this network on the air. I'd love to volunteer as a show producer [44:14.880 --> 44:19.000] but I'm a bit of a Luddite and I really don't have any money to give because I spend it [44:19.000 --> 44:24.440] all on supplements. How can I help Logos? Well, I'm glad you asked. Whenever you order [44:24.440 --> 44:29.440] anything from Amazon you can help Logos with ordering your supplies or holiday gifts. First [44:29.440 --> 44:35.720] thing you do is clear your cookies. Now go to LogosRegualNetwork.com. Click on the Amazon [44:35.720 --> 44:42.040] logo and bookmark it. Now when you order anything from Amazon you use that link and Logos gets [44:42.040 --> 44:47.840] a few pesos. Do I pay extra? No. Do you have to do anything different when I order? No. [44:47.840 --> 44:53.520] Can I use my Amazon Prime? No. I mean yes. Wow. Giving without doing anything or spending [44:53.520 --> 45:01.520] any money. This is perfect. Thank you so much. We are Logos. Happy holidays Logos. Are you [45:01.520 --> 45:07.640] the plaintiff or defendant in a lawsuit? Win your case without an attorney with Jurisdictionary. [45:07.640 --> 45:14.200] The affordable, easy to understand 4 CD course that will show you how in 24 hours you step [45:14.200 --> 45:20.000] by step. If you have a lawyer know what your lawyer should be doing. If you don't have [45:20.000 --> 45:26.040] a lawyer know what you should do for yourself. Thousands have won with our step by step course [45:26.040 --> 45:32.840] and now you can too. Jurisdictionary was created by a licensed attorney with 22 years of case [45:32.840 --> 45:38.200] winning experience. Even if you're not in a lawsuit you can learn what everyone should [45:38.200 --> 45:43.680] understand about the principles and practices that control our American courts. You'll [45:43.680 --> 45:51.120] receive our audio classroom, video seminar, tutorials, forms for civil cases, pro se tactics [45:51.120 --> 45:57.560] and much more. Please visit ruleoflawradio.com and click on the banner or call toll free [45:57.560 --> 46:04.560] 866-LAW-E-V. [46:27.560 --> 46:37.680] Okay we are back. Randy Kelton, Brett Fountain, rule of law radio and we're going to go to [46:37.680 --> 46:44.320] Tina in California. Our caller line is open. We have a lot of room on the boards. I think [46:44.320 --> 46:51.080] Brett and I had this dissertation for a whole hour. I think we bored everybody stiff. So [46:51.080 --> 46:55.200] they were trying to call in and we bored them so stiff they couldn't push the buttons and [46:55.200 --> 47:02.440] get the number. So if you have a question or comment, give us a call. Hello Tina, what [47:02.440 --> 47:04.440] do you have for us today? [47:04.440 --> 47:14.040] I have a couple of quick questions. I'm getting ready to work on my appeal brief for the [47:14.040 --> 47:25.480] Attorney's judgment. Apart from that, you said the other week that if a judge ruled [47:25.480 --> 47:34.880] their case frivolous, they could do that if they had not paid the fee. This is in the [47:34.880 --> 47:43.240] federal court. In the federal court, if you file in form of papyrus, the courts have said [47:43.240 --> 47:52.800] in the interest of judicial economy, someone filing pro se in form of papyrus, they're [47:52.800 --> 47:59.360] not, they're generally not the most educated and not the most schooled in law. And the [47:59.360 --> 48:09.560] judge is, can look at the case and determine whether or not the petitioner has stated a [48:09.560 --> 48:19.360] claim for which recovery can be had. He doesn't have to declare it frivolous. He can just declare [48:19.360 --> 48:27.040] it as insufficient and say that it's inappropriate for the federal government to have to pay [48:27.040 --> 48:36.200] for this court case that someone filed in form of papyrus when the case is insufficient [48:36.200 --> 48:48.920] to have a positive outcome. So in that one case, he can dismiss on his own recognizance [48:48.920 --> 49:00.080] or suesponte. Okay. So in my case, I had filed in form of papyrus. This was a couple of cases [49:00.080 --> 49:14.120] ago. And the trial judge just dismissed with prejudice based on res judicata. Everything, [49:14.120 --> 49:20.360] no matter what it was, was res judicata, which it actually wasn't. I filed an appeal in form [49:20.360 --> 49:25.360] of papyrus and was got a letter saying if you don't pay the fee, we're not going to [49:25.360 --> 49:31.120] look at the case. And even if you do, we probably will dismiss it anyway, to a wudge to that [49:31.120 --> 49:35.880] effect. But that's what it was meaning. If I didn't pay the fee, they wouldn't even look [49:35.880 --> 49:41.160] at it. If I did pay the fee, well, probably not going to work. But that's holding me to [49:41.160 --> 49:46.320] ransom because they weren't going to look at my appeal if I didn't pay. So I borrowed [49:46.320 --> 49:51.920] the money and paid, and then they dismissed it as frivolous without really basically looking [49:51.920 --> 49:58.920] at it. Is that something they can do, take, you know, hold me, extort money out of me, [49:58.920 --> 50:08.600] and then just dismissed it as frivolous? That's part of the process. That's there. [50:08.600 --> 50:17.640] We don't always have effective remedy, but you do have the appellate process. Just, was [50:17.640 --> 50:21.960] it the appellate court that dismissed it? This had to be the trial court that dismissed [50:21.960 --> 50:36.280] it as frivolous. No. That was the appellate court. Okay. You do not have a right to appeal. [50:36.280 --> 50:44.520] That may be right. It may be wrong. You have a right to petition for an appeal, but the [50:44.520 --> 50:51.920] court has the right to dismiss that appeal. Now, with that said, the court has to have [50:51.920 --> 51:01.560] a valid reason to dismiss the appeal. So there is room to raise an issue. You can certainly [51:01.560 --> 51:09.840] appeal the ruling of the court of appeals to the Supreme, and you may or may not get [51:09.840 --> 51:16.840] remedy. The problem is, is you're in California. And if there's any, it's the most blue state [51:16.840 --> 51:24.360] in the nation, and absolutely by far the most corrupt, at least in my personal opinion, [51:24.360 --> 51:29.160] from what I've seen dealing with the courts, the courts, the judges are essentially bought [51:29.160 --> 51:38.280] and paid for. There's just no remedy there unless we can take them to the federal court [51:38.280 --> 51:44.960] and sue the state of California and the federal court. And we just happen to have a federal [51:44.960 --> 51:57.400] court that's being stuffed with judges appointed by Trump. We've been grossly short of federal [51:57.400 --> 52:02.960] judges. And for one reason or another, previous presidents have not appointed judges to fill [52:02.960 --> 52:11.080] those positions. Well, Trump is fixing that problem. That was an oversight by these guys [52:11.080 --> 52:21.600] and Trump is using that to put right wing conservative judges in place. So the political [52:21.600 --> 52:30.280] climate may be moving in our favor, especially when you have California that's an exceptionally [52:30.280 --> 52:38.800] blue state, which the president would like to turn a little more red. If you're in California, [52:38.800 --> 52:47.080] you have to look at the prospect of the president hammering you because you're in California. [52:47.080 --> 52:55.160] And with what I see coming, I think it would be, I don't think anybody can imagine that [52:55.160 --> 53:05.880] Trump's not going to win this next election. The Democratic Party has fallen into incredible [53:05.880 --> 53:16.280] disarray. And this may be a good time to get a little movement toward justice back. [53:16.280 --> 53:27.880] All I can tell you is keep hammering at them. Yeah. How can the appeal court, if the trial [53:27.880 --> 53:32.240] court accepted my informal porpoise, and my case was moving through, even though the judge [53:32.240 --> 53:37.040] just dismissed everything and wouldn't even ever let me get to speak before him, if they [53:37.040 --> 53:43.040] accepted my informal porpoise, how could the appeal court decide that they just said they [53:43.040 --> 53:47.920] didn't believe I was indigent and my, you know, they were dismissing it and they actually [53:47.920 --> 53:57.120] said your indigency was res judicata. Whether or not you were indigent was not before this [53:57.120 --> 54:03.280] court. So this court exerted, afforded to exert authority did not express the have a court [54:03.280 --> 54:10.400] had determined that you were indigent. The Court of Appeals has no power to revisit that [54:10.400 --> 54:16.800] determination because that determination was not appealed to the federal, to the appeal [54:16.800 --> 54:25.320] court. So the court exerted, afforded to exert authority did not express the have. That should [54:25.320 --> 54:31.880] get criminal complaints and that should get a federal complaint against them. [54:31.880 --> 54:37.720] Okay. So when you say federal criminal, so is that going before the grand jury? Is that [54:37.720 --> 54:47.000] what I'm saying? Absolutely. The Court of Appeals is deliberately done denying you process, [54:47.000 --> 54:53.280] due process when they had no power to issue the ruling, they ruled. You should go right [54:53.280 --> 55:00.880] for the strokes. Give the feds a chance to beat up the local, give the red feds a chance [55:00.880 --> 55:09.040] to beat up the local blue democrats. Okay. It's all politics in the end. I first file [55:09.040 --> 55:17.720] it with the district attorney though, who is blue. File it with the U.S. Attorney. With [55:17.720 --> 55:30.000] U.S. Attorney. Okay. I like that idea. This is a denial of due process. Okay. It can ring [55:30.000 --> 55:35.720] in the state, but it can also ring in the fed. And this is more appropriate for the [55:35.720 --> 55:43.760] fed because you have the high courts performing, exercising and authority they absolutely do [55:43.760 --> 55:50.840] not have. Denying you due process. Due process moves you right to the federal court. [55:50.840 --> 55:56.120] Okay. I'll file that then. I've got one other question because I'll save the other questions [55:56.120 --> 56:01.400] for tomorrow to let other people come in. But one question, you know, because I'm looking [56:01.400 --> 56:09.080] for my notes trying to get that declared for judgment. And I really want to hammer the [56:09.080 --> 56:17.240] notaries for disposing of their notary journals and refusing to comply with the law to give [56:17.240 --> 56:25.440] me copies of them. Can I write to the bank and their attorneys and make a request that [56:25.440 --> 56:31.120] they do not destroy evidence because it seems they've already destroyed the evidence of [56:31.120 --> 56:42.800] the notary. Okay. There's a term for that. Brett, do you remember the term? Oh, a spoilation. [56:42.800 --> 56:52.600] Tina, look up spoilation as it applies to California. [56:52.600 --> 56:57.960] Does the spoilation apply even when there's not an active investigation going on? Is that [56:57.960 --> 57:07.640] only for in an investigation? If you can show that someone destroyed what a reasonable person [57:07.640 --> 57:14.240] of ordinary proofs would construe could wind up as evidence against you and you destroyed [57:14.240 --> 57:20.440] it for the purpose of eliminating the possibility of someone finding evidence against you, you [57:20.440 --> 57:31.480] can claim that as spoilation. Okay. This is evidence against them for falsifying documents. [57:31.480 --> 57:36.360] So you might file a motion with the court. If you file a notice of intent to appeal, [57:36.360 --> 57:47.080] you might file for a read a mandamus ordering the other party not to destroy evidence to [57:47.080 --> 57:55.880] avoid litigation concerning the spoilation litigation in the interest of judicial economy [57:55.880 --> 58:08.760] and the interest of fair play. But I'm already now at the appeal stage. You're at the appeal [58:08.760 --> 58:18.160] stage, so the case is not over. So it would be inappropriate to destroy anything that [58:18.160 --> 58:28.840] could conceivably be evidence. Okay. Well, let's let you go to someone else. Thank you [58:28.840 --> 58:36.360] very much for this. Okay. Okay. Thank you, Tina. Okay. Now we're going, we're going to [58:36.360 --> 58:45.560] go to Scott, but we're coming up on our intermission. So we'll just leave Scott to the other side. [58:45.560 --> 58:54.560] We'll be right back. 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This comprehensive yet compact study [59:35.360 --> 59:45.600] Bible is yours just by calling us toll free at 1-888-551-0102 or by ordering online at [59:45.600 --> 59:53.000] freestudybible.com. That's freestudybible.com. [59:53.000 --> 01:00:00.840] You're listening to the Logos Radio Network at LogosRadioNetwork.com. [01:00:00.840 --> 01:00:06.880] The following news flash is brought to you by The Lowest Star Lowdown. [01:00:06.880 --> 01:00:13.280] Markets for Monday the 22nd of July 2019 open with precious metals, gold at $1,429 an ounce, [01:00:13.280 --> 01:00:21.520] silver $16.45 an ounce, copper $2.75 an ounce, oil, Texas crude $55.63 a barrel, Brent crude [01:00:21.520 --> 01:00:31.000] $62.47 a barrel, and cryptos in order of market cap, Bitcoin Core $10,566.52, Ethereum $227.26, [01:00:31.000 --> 01:00:42.560] XRP, Ripple $0.33, Litecoin $100.31, and Bitcoin Cash is at $324.10 a crypto coin. [01:00:42.560 --> 01:00:52.560] Today in History, the year 1916, the Preparedness Day Bombing, a timed suitcase bomb, was detonated [01:00:52.560 --> 01:00:57.880] on Market Street in San Francisco during the World War I Preparedness Day Parade, killing [01:00:57.880 --> 01:01:04.880] 10 and entering 40. [01:01:04.880 --> 01:01:09.520] And recent news, since Governor Greg Abbott signed House Bill 1325 legalizing Hemp and [01:01:09.520 --> 01:01:14.400] the Texas law back in June, county prosecutors around the state including Houston, Austin, [01:01:14.400 --> 01:01:18.960] San Antonio have been dropping marijuana possession charges and even refusing to file new ones [01:01:18.960 --> 01:01:22.960] since they are stipulating that they do not have the time or the laboratory equipment to [01:01:22.960 --> 01:01:24.920] test the herb for THC. [01:01:24.920 --> 01:01:28.560] Margaret Moore, the Travis County District Attorney, announced earlier this month that [01:01:28.560 --> 01:01:33.240] she was dismissing 32 felony possession and delivery of marijuana cases because of the [01:01:33.240 --> 01:01:34.240] law. [01:01:34.240 --> 01:01:37.720] Mr. Abbott and other state officials, including the Attorney General, stipulated in a letter [01:01:37.720 --> 01:01:42.240] to county district attorneys back on Thursday that marijuana has not been decriminalized [01:01:42.240 --> 01:01:48.360] in Texas and that these actions demonstrate a misunderstanding of how HB 1325 works. [01:01:48.360 --> 01:01:54.600] As well as other cities too, like the district attorney in El Paso, Cayma Esparza, a Democrat [01:01:54.600 --> 01:01:59.080] who also stated earlier this month that the law, quote, will not have an effect on the [01:01:59.080 --> 01:02:01.960] prosecution of marijuana cases in El Paso. [01:02:01.960 --> 01:02:06.880] However, the issue was succinctly summarized by Mr. Brandon Ball, an assistant public defender [01:02:06.880 --> 01:02:10.880] in Harris County, who stated that, quote, the law is constantly changing on what makes [01:02:10.880 --> 01:02:13.600] something illegal based on its chemical makeup. [01:02:13.600 --> 01:02:17.520] It's important that if someone is charged with something, the test matches with their [01:02:17.520 --> 01:02:22.720] charged with. [01:02:22.720 --> 01:02:27.760] A paper by Tulane University identified a five and a half inch American pocket shark as the [01:02:27.760 --> 01:02:32.840] first of its kind in the Gulf of Mexico, the specimen being only the second pocket shark [01:02:32.840 --> 01:02:38.480] ever captured or recorded with the other one being found way back in 1979 in the East Pacific [01:02:38.480 --> 01:02:39.480] Ocean. [01:02:39.480 --> 01:02:44.320] According to the university paper, the shark secretes a lumus fluid from a gland near its [01:02:44.320 --> 01:02:50.200] front fins for the purposes hypothesized to lure and prey who may be drawn into the [01:02:50.200 --> 01:03:10.900] flow. [01:03:40.900 --> 01:03:50.420] Okay, we are back. [01:03:50.420 --> 01:04:00.340] Randy Kelton, Brett Fountain, root of L'Oreal on this Thursday, the 25th day of June, 2020. [01:04:00.340 --> 01:04:03.540] And we are going to Scott in Texas. [01:04:03.540 --> 01:04:10.660] And Scott, I know you have something intelligent, intuitive, and insightful for us. [01:04:10.660 --> 01:04:14.340] Oh, I never disappoint. [01:04:14.340 --> 01:04:24.100] Well, to, you know, talk with Tina, her best bet right now is to go straight at the U.S. [01:04:24.100 --> 01:04:31.540] Attorney because last week, Trump fired the U.S. Attorney up there in the Southern District [01:04:31.540 --> 01:04:38.020] of New York, which happens to be the most powerful district of New York because that's [01:04:38.020 --> 01:04:41.620] where the Wall Street is. [01:04:41.620 --> 01:04:53.140] Oh, wait, that's the U.S. Attorney who, before this impeachment action against Trump, had [01:04:53.140 --> 01:05:04.020] the head prosecutor in, I remember it earlier today, not Kiev. [01:05:04.020 --> 01:05:06.020] Ukraine. [01:05:06.020 --> 01:05:07.020] Ukraine. [01:05:07.020 --> 01:05:10.100] I actually remembered it earlier today. [01:05:10.100 --> 01:05:19.540] In Ukraine, was trying to contact this U.S. Attorney in private to bring information he [01:05:19.540 --> 01:05:29.500] had about Hunter Biden, Joe Biden, and this company that Hunter and this other guy was [01:05:29.500 --> 01:05:38.780] working for, to get an investigation going in the United States because it was too corrupt [01:05:38.780 --> 01:05:43.380] in what you said. [01:05:43.380 --> 01:05:44.380] Ukraine. [01:05:44.380 --> 01:05:47.740] Yes, I was going to say that. [01:05:47.740 --> 01:05:57.140] And this was a lawyer, just a lawyer who knew about it was also trying to give him, he was [01:05:57.140 --> 01:06:05.060] trying to run interference for this prosecutor in Ukraine to get this U.S. Attorney to take [01:06:05.060 --> 01:06:10.740] this information and start an investigation, he refused. [01:06:10.740 --> 01:06:21.620] This whole thing about impeaching Trump, about trying to get an investigation on Hunter and [01:06:21.620 --> 01:06:28.540] Joe Biden, it wasn't Hunter, it wasn't Trump who did that. [01:06:28.540 --> 01:06:35.020] This was while Obama was still in office, that these guys are trying to get this done. [01:06:35.020 --> 01:06:41.820] This U.S. Attorney he just fired was the one who refused to accept this information when [01:06:41.820 --> 01:06:44.820] Obama was in. [01:06:44.820 --> 01:06:52.220] You know, I'm thinking Trump knew about this when they were trying to indict him. [01:06:52.220 --> 01:06:57.620] So ask yourself, why didn't Trump bring this up at the time? [01:06:57.620 --> 01:07:00.820] Because he's smart. [01:07:00.820 --> 01:07:01.820] Exactly. [01:07:01.820 --> 01:07:04.020] The Democrats are out of their league. [01:07:04.020 --> 01:07:09.380] He knew for certain it made no difference what the Democrats did. [01:07:09.380 --> 01:07:16.180] The Senate was not going to indict him, not going to impeach him. [01:07:16.180 --> 01:07:19.180] So he let them do all the stuff they were doing. [01:07:19.180 --> 01:07:26.220] And last year I told Pastor Masson, the pastor is talking about all this stuff that's going [01:07:26.220 --> 01:07:27.220] on. [01:07:27.220 --> 01:07:29.780] I said, you got to know Trump knows about that. [01:07:29.780 --> 01:07:32.540] So why didn't he bring it up? [01:07:32.540 --> 01:07:38.300] He just sat back there and let them huff and puff and blow all their steam. [01:07:38.300 --> 01:07:42.660] And then he knew they weren't going to get their indictment. [01:07:42.660 --> 01:07:47.700] And I told him, in the year before the election he's going to get a deal with China, he's [01:07:47.700 --> 01:07:55.300] going to get a deal with Mexico and Canada, and he's going to get a deal with North Korea. [01:07:55.300 --> 01:08:01.300] And I guarantee you before the election he's going to have a deal with North Korea. [01:08:01.300 --> 01:08:06.140] And then he's going to go after them for all of this stuff they were doing. [01:08:06.140 --> 01:08:08.500] He's setting them up. [01:08:08.500 --> 01:08:11.860] And right now all of that's coming out. [01:08:11.860 --> 01:08:16.980] He set them up and they walked right into it. [01:08:16.980 --> 01:08:25.500] It's a complete set up and the deal is that attorney, he was a temporary U.S. attorney [01:08:25.500 --> 01:08:33.340] and how he got the state in power is all those crooked judges that were in there on. [01:08:33.340 --> 01:08:43.700] And I think that these guys were in on some of those secret things, oh man, I can't believe [01:08:43.700 --> 01:08:44.700] I had a brain fart. [01:08:44.700 --> 01:08:47.100] But anyhow, so these crooked judges... [01:08:47.100 --> 01:08:49.100] It's not Ukraine. [01:08:49.100 --> 01:08:50.100] Yeah, right. [01:08:50.100 --> 01:08:51.100] Yeah. [01:08:51.100 --> 01:08:54.420] I'm having my Ukrainian moment. [01:08:54.420 --> 01:09:09.260] So these crooked judges basically just appointed him to be the indefinite U.S. attorney overseeding [01:09:09.260 --> 01:09:14.060] the whole process of how it's supposed to normally be done. [01:09:14.060 --> 01:09:19.780] And then when this guy got a little lippy, well, you know, Bart just said, you're fired. [01:09:19.780 --> 01:09:21.280] And that was it. [01:09:21.280 --> 01:09:29.220] This guy's also overseeing not just that investigation, there's like several key investigations [01:09:29.220 --> 01:09:31.340] that he was over. [01:09:31.340 --> 01:09:37.420] And now all those fictionists are still in out now and start going sideways. [01:09:37.420 --> 01:09:42.180] Trump's going to start doling them out one at a time. [01:09:42.180 --> 01:09:44.340] He set these guys up. [01:09:44.340 --> 01:09:45.580] Oh yeah. [01:09:45.580 --> 01:09:46.700] I'm surprised. [01:09:46.700 --> 01:09:53.620] I have to admit that I did not see Trump as this savvy. [01:09:53.620 --> 01:09:58.700] I voted for him because he was a gadfly. [01:09:58.700 --> 01:10:05.180] And I said this on the air, you know, the Republicans and the Democrats, they're making [01:10:05.180 --> 01:10:06.180] a difference. [01:10:06.180 --> 01:10:10.300] They all got their snouts in the same trough. [01:10:10.300 --> 01:10:15.660] Trump may have his snout in somebody's trough, but it's not the one the Democrats and Republicans [01:10:15.660 --> 01:10:18.860] got theirs in and that's why I voted for him. [01:10:18.860 --> 01:10:20.180] All right. [01:10:20.180 --> 01:10:24.820] And he has been exactly what I hoped he would be. [01:10:24.820 --> 01:10:28.300] All of this stuff about one world order. [01:10:28.300 --> 01:10:34.140] You don't hear anybody talking about one world order anymore. [01:10:34.140 --> 01:10:38.140] Trump flushed that down the toilet. [01:10:38.140 --> 01:10:42.740] And now we have Fauci, who is part of all of that. [01:10:42.740 --> 01:10:49.780] The last I heard, he's saying, oh yeah, it looks like the only ones who were getting [01:10:49.780 --> 01:10:55.900] the coronavirus are young people and they're able to fight it off. [01:10:55.900 --> 01:10:56.900] Okay. [01:10:56.900 --> 01:10:59.580] Well, that's really not a good indication. [01:10:59.580 --> 01:11:02.820] We're really going to have the sky fall in on us. [01:11:02.820 --> 01:11:03.820] You just wait. [01:11:03.820 --> 01:11:05.300] The sky is going to fall in. [01:11:05.300 --> 01:11:11.660] Now, I said it was going to fall in earlier, but it didn't, but he's going to fall in. [01:11:11.660 --> 01:11:18.340] Trust me, it sounded absolutely desperate. [01:11:18.340 --> 01:11:24.740] Things are not working, Fauci is still going on their early predictions and everybody else [01:11:24.740 --> 01:11:29.460] is going by the facts and the facts are proving up. [01:11:29.460 --> 01:11:37.020] So Trump is in a really, really good position. [01:11:37.020 --> 01:11:43.060] I can't see how the Democrats can win this election, except otherwise, other than stealing [01:11:43.060 --> 01:11:44.060] it. [01:11:44.060 --> 01:11:50.580] And I don't think they can do that because at the end of the day, no matter how big the [01:11:50.580 --> 01:11:58.740] cities are with the electoral college, the heartland has more electoral votes and I don't [01:11:58.740 --> 01:12:03.380] think they can overcome it, especially with Biden. [01:12:03.380 --> 01:12:09.140] Oh, yeah, it's going to be real ugly. [01:12:09.140 --> 01:12:12.660] There's just no way they can put Biden up against Trump. [01:12:12.660 --> 01:12:18.980] That's why Biden has his first virtual town hall and they ordered all the delegates to [01:12:18.980 --> 01:12:24.740] stay home so he can accept his nomination and that's going to be a complete disaster. [01:12:24.740 --> 01:12:27.460] You can just see that already, every one of them. [01:12:27.460 --> 01:12:28.460] Okay. [01:12:28.460 --> 01:12:29.460] Okay. [01:12:29.460 --> 01:12:32.780] Speak to the gun show where they tried to have a virtual gun show. [01:12:32.780 --> 01:12:35.020] Can you speak to how that worked out? [01:12:35.020 --> 01:12:38.020] Oh, man, that was horrible. [01:12:38.020 --> 01:12:44.780] The whole website, it crashed several times before while they were trying to get everything [01:12:44.780 --> 01:12:47.780] implemented. [01:12:47.780 --> 01:12:54.300] All of these, a lot of these early phases of these virtual platforms are all just failing [01:12:54.300 --> 01:12:59.700] and because they never had to deal with this stuff before. [01:12:59.700 --> 01:13:10.380] And so, from bandwidth to payment processors to all this stuff in between and everything [01:13:10.380 --> 01:13:12.700] is just horribly... [01:13:12.700 --> 01:13:13.700] Okay. [01:13:13.700 --> 01:13:18.060] We're not, and we're not being outrageous here. [01:13:18.060 --> 01:13:23.940] Look at the last election, what happened to the Democrats. [01:13:23.940 --> 01:13:32.380] My computers got hacked, the Republicans didn't get hacked. [01:13:32.380 --> 01:13:41.180] I'm watching the Democrats and I'm not particularly political, I've always been an independent, [01:13:41.180 --> 01:13:47.060] but I'm looking at the Democrats, I'm saying, what is going on with you guys? [01:13:47.060 --> 01:13:58.060] How on earth would you put Trump, I mean Biden as your candidate, with all this negative [01:13:58.060 --> 01:14:01.740] energy on Biden? [01:14:01.740 --> 01:14:08.260] Not just that he bragged about doing exactly what the Democrats were trying to impeach [01:14:08.260 --> 01:14:16.420] Trump for, but that he's clearly not in good health. [01:14:16.420 --> 01:14:25.780] Because the question becomes, of all of the human beings, all of the lawyers and the politicians [01:14:25.780 --> 01:14:33.460] who were out there, we got a lot of good people out there, even Democrats, is this the best [01:14:33.460 --> 01:14:41.660] you had or is there some other reason that you had to put Biden forward instead of someone [01:14:41.660 --> 01:14:45.620] else who doesn't have all this negative baggage? [01:14:45.620 --> 01:14:56.460] I'm sure they could have found someone on the order of Jack Kennedy, intelligent, good-looking, [01:14:56.460 --> 01:15:01.260] charismatic, who could appeal to everybody. [01:15:01.260 --> 01:15:04.540] The Democrats got lots of people to draw from. [01:15:04.540 --> 01:15:10.420] What pushed them into having to bring Biden forward? [01:15:10.420 --> 01:15:13.220] What leverage does he have? [01:15:13.220 --> 01:15:17.260] The Democrats just got too much baggage to get elected. [01:15:17.260 --> 01:15:21.140] Am I missing something, Scott? [01:15:21.140 --> 01:15:29.340] The only thing I can say is that whenever public officials running for office, they [01:15:29.340 --> 01:15:34.740] can't try to indict him or throw him in jail, and that's why they keep saying Hillary wants [01:15:34.740 --> 01:15:40.540] to try to run and so many people want to try to run because they can't get indicted for [01:15:40.540 --> 01:15:47.940] being a criminal during that time, but after the election, once they lose, they can legitimately [01:15:47.940 --> 01:15:50.660] charge him with public crimes and stuff. [01:15:50.660 --> 01:15:55.740] But Trump didn't go after Hillary, why? [01:15:55.740 --> 01:15:56.740] Not yet. [01:15:56.740 --> 01:16:03.900] Well, I'm saying he didn't go after Hillary yet because if he went after Hillary, he would [01:16:03.900 --> 01:16:07.460] take Joe Biden with him. [01:16:07.460 --> 01:16:14.420] And he wanted to run against Joe Biden because he's got all the dirt on Joe Biden. [01:16:14.420 --> 01:16:22.180] If he'd have got some young guy, energetic, charismatic, who didn't have any dirty baggage, [01:16:22.180 --> 01:16:27.500] he would have a lot harder to fight. [01:16:27.500 --> 01:16:33.300] My biggest concern is, isn't there anyone in the Republican Party that could look at [01:16:33.300 --> 01:16:38.940] this and say, come on, guys, something's wrong. [01:16:38.940 --> 01:16:42.860] We need to get busy here and do something positive. [01:16:42.860 --> 01:16:45.820] They're just following this road. [01:16:45.820 --> 01:16:47.900] They can't seem to get out of this road. [01:16:47.900 --> 01:16:48.900] Hang on. [01:16:48.900 --> 01:16:51.540] We're about to go to our sponsors. [01:16:51.540 --> 01:17:00.580] Randy Kelton, Brett Fountain, Rue de la Radio, we'll be right back. [01:17:00.580 --> 01:17:05.180] Logos Radio Network welcomes a new show to our lineup for the new year. [01:17:05.180 --> 01:17:11.500] Scripture Talk with Nana will begin Wednesday, January 8th, from 8 to 10 p.m. central time. [01:17:11.500 --> 01:17:14.580] Our goal is in accord with Matthew 5.16. [01:17:14.580 --> 01:17:19.620] Let your light so shine before men that they may see your good works and glorify your Father [01:17:19.620 --> 01:17:21.140] which is in heaven. [01:17:21.140 --> 01:17:26.020] We wish to reflect God's light and be a blessing to all those with a hearing ear. [01:17:26.020 --> 01:17:31.460] Join Nana and guests for both verse by verse Bible studies and topical Bible studies designed [01:17:31.460 --> 01:17:34.620] to provoke unto love and good works. [01:17:34.620 --> 01:17:39.020] Our verse by verse Bible studies will begin in the book of Matthew where we will discuss [01:17:39.020 --> 01:17:40.780] one chapter per week. [01:17:40.780 --> 01:17:45.860] Our topical Bible studies will vary each week and will explore sound doctrine as well as [01:17:45.860 --> 01:17:48.060] Christian character development. [01:17:48.060 --> 01:17:55.140] So mark your calendar and join us live on LogosRadioNetwork.com Wednesdays from 8 to 10 p.m. starting [01:17:55.140 --> 01:18:00.420] January 8th for an inspiring and motivating discussion of the Scriptures. [01:18:00.420 --> 01:18:10.260] It's the 2019 Logos Radio Network annual fundraiser and gun giveaway sponsored by Central Texas [01:18:10.260 --> 01:18:11.260] Gun Works. [01:18:11.260 --> 01:18:14.900] Go to LogosRadioNetwork.com and enter to win. [01:18:14.900 --> 01:18:16.700] Any amount is appreciated. [01:18:16.700 --> 01:18:18.540] Everything helps to keep us on the air. [01:18:18.540 --> 01:18:24.940] From Central Texas Gun Works, the grand prize up for grabs is a Spikes Tactical AR-15. [01:18:24.940 --> 01:18:27.500] All prizes and sponsors to be announced. [01:18:27.500 --> 01:18:30.700] Every $25 donation is a chance to win. [01:18:30.700 --> 01:18:36.300] When you purchase Randy Kelton's e-book, Legal 101, you get four chances to win. [01:18:36.300 --> 01:18:39.980] Purchase Eddie Craig's Traffic Seminar and get 10 chances to win. [01:18:39.980 --> 01:18:44.580] If you've enjoyed the shows on Logos Radio Network, support our fundraiser so we can [01:18:44.580 --> 01:18:48.940] keep bringing you the best quality programming on Talk Radio today. [01:18:48.940 --> 01:18:51.820] We also accept Bitcoin and other cryptocurrencies. [01:18:51.820 --> 01:18:55.940] And remember, every $25 donation is a chance to win. [01:18:55.940 --> 01:19:22.420] Go to LogosRadioNetwork.com for details and donate today. [01:19:25.940 --> 01:19:36.540] Well, you ain't gonna fool me with that same old trick again. [01:19:36.540 --> 01:19:41.540] I was blindsided but now I can see your face. [01:19:41.540 --> 01:19:46.540] You put the fear in my pockets, took the money from my ass, [01:19:46.540 --> 01:19:55.540] Ain't gonna fool me with that same old trick again. [01:19:55.540 --> 01:20:04.140] You ain't gonna fool me with that same old trick again. [01:20:04.140 --> 01:20:05.140] Okay, we are back. [01:20:05.140 --> 01:20:07.780] Randy Kelton, Brett Felton, Roova Radio. [01:20:07.780 --> 01:20:14.940] And I apologize if I spent too much time on this, Scott, but it's been something that [01:20:14.940 --> 01:20:21.940] has bothered me aside from all of the politics. [01:20:21.940 --> 01:20:28.900] I look at this and I say, they're putting forward the candidate that appears to have [01:20:28.900 --> 01:20:41.460] the most baggage and the most problems and I'm reluctant to assume that they're stupid. [01:20:41.460 --> 01:20:43.100] It's always a bad idea. [01:20:43.100 --> 01:20:47.420] Scott, you brought up a point that I hadn't really ever considered that factor that you're [01:20:47.420 --> 01:20:54.820] talking about that if somebody knows they're in big trouble, they're likely to get indicted [01:20:54.820 --> 01:21:00.620] and they're running then they have like a window of, can't get me yet. [01:21:00.620 --> 01:21:03.060] I never really thought about that factor. [01:21:03.060 --> 01:21:12.780] Yeah, that's been discussed and that was one of the reasons so many people, they thought [01:21:12.780 --> 01:21:19.820] Hitler was gonna try to run in and all this other stuff because you get basically immunity [01:21:19.820 --> 01:21:28.220] during that time frame, but after you lose that election, then you lost that immunity. [01:21:28.220 --> 01:21:31.700] So that was kind of one of the reasons, you know. [01:21:31.700 --> 01:21:40.740] Yeah, but what kind of leverage could Joe Biden have that would be sufficient to control [01:21:40.740 --> 01:21:44.500] the entire Democratic Party? [01:21:44.500 --> 01:21:51.300] You gotta know there are young guys down there just chomping at the bit wanting to jump in [01:21:51.300 --> 01:21:58.860] and get themselves recognized and known, but nobody's raising their hand, what is going [01:21:58.860 --> 01:21:59.860] on? [01:21:59.860 --> 01:22:06.340] Well, Joe, you know, he's gonna know a whole lot of dirt about a lot of stuff, but you [01:22:06.340 --> 01:22:16.820] know, he's also, he's getting to a point where he can almost claim that he has no memory [01:22:16.820 --> 01:22:20.020] and everybody will believe it. [01:22:20.020 --> 01:22:29.780] And so the fact that you can not remember bad behavior doesn't help much. [01:22:29.780 --> 01:22:32.460] So okay, this is a conundrum. [01:22:32.460 --> 01:22:34.460] It's not something we can finish here. [01:22:34.460 --> 01:22:36.500] We might want to talk about this more tomorrow night. [01:22:36.500 --> 01:22:44.100] We got a full board of callers and you're giving me a headache, Scott, because this has always [01:22:44.100 --> 01:22:46.780] been a conundrum for me. [01:22:46.780 --> 01:22:53.420] I expect there to be really smart people on both sides. [01:22:53.420 --> 01:23:00.020] So why do the Democrats appear to be creating this situation where there's no chance they [01:23:00.020 --> 01:23:01.020] can be elected? [01:23:01.020 --> 01:23:04.940] Let's call in tomorrow night, Scott, I'd like to talk about this again. [01:23:04.940 --> 01:23:07.900] We got three more callers and we're running out of time. [01:23:07.900 --> 01:23:08.900] Okay. [01:23:08.900 --> 01:23:09.900] Okay. [01:23:09.900 --> 01:23:10.900] Thank you, Scott. [01:23:10.900 --> 01:23:11.900] Okay. [01:23:11.900 --> 01:23:19.100] Now we're going to go to Robert in California and Robert's been emailing me and I'm not [01:23:19.100 --> 01:23:21.900] going to tell you what he's been calling me. [01:23:21.900 --> 01:23:25.140] Hello, Robert. [01:23:25.140 --> 01:23:28.100] You can't call me that on the air. [01:23:28.100 --> 01:23:30.980] Are you there, Robert? [01:23:30.980 --> 01:23:36.220] I guess he's not there. [01:23:36.220 --> 01:23:38.220] We must have put him to sleep. [01:23:38.220 --> 01:23:39.220] Okay. [01:23:39.220 --> 01:23:43.020] Now we're going to go to David in Texas. [01:23:43.020 --> 01:23:44.020] Hello, David. [01:23:44.020 --> 01:23:47.020] What do you have for us today? [01:23:47.020 --> 01:23:49.020] Yeah, Randy. [01:23:49.020 --> 01:24:00.220] I was working on this land patent and what it did was I got all the fees, state and all [01:24:00.220 --> 01:24:07.220] the way back to the 18 members and we said I got to go to a land office or something [01:24:07.220 --> 01:24:09.220] to have it certified or... [01:24:09.220 --> 01:24:18.620] Yes, it's in Austin and the people at the land office in Austin are bored out of their [01:24:18.620 --> 01:24:21.780] gourds. [01:24:21.780 --> 01:24:26.940] So when you go down there, they will bend over backwards to help you. [01:24:26.940 --> 01:24:28.940] That's what I've heard about them. [01:24:28.940 --> 01:24:35.180] Everybody who's with there, you see Texas, as far as I know, is the only state in the [01:24:35.180 --> 01:24:41.100] union that has its own land office. [01:24:41.100 --> 01:24:43.340] Everybody else uses the fence. [01:24:43.340 --> 01:24:46.940] What's the Bureau of Land Management? [01:24:46.940 --> 01:24:52.940] No, I don't think that's what it is. [01:24:52.940 --> 01:24:57.300] If Debra were on, she would know exactly who it is. [01:24:57.300 --> 01:25:04.340] But everybody that I've talked to who went to the patent office in Austin was just amazed [01:25:04.340 --> 01:25:08.940] at how helpful everybody was there. [01:25:08.940 --> 01:25:11.340] Nobody's got anything to do. [01:25:11.340 --> 01:25:18.220] So when somebody comes in, oh, goody, goody, we've got somebody we can work with, get the [01:25:18.220 --> 01:25:24.860] land office in Austin, you will find them extremely helpful, at least that's what I've [01:25:24.860 --> 01:25:25.860] heard. [01:25:25.860 --> 01:25:31.060] That's a patent office, so what I'm filing for is to patent them. [01:25:31.060 --> 01:25:34.500] Yeah, these are the guys who do that. [01:25:34.500 --> 01:25:41.100] And everybody who's went to them, they have been extremely helpful in helping them bring [01:25:41.100 --> 01:25:42.100] your patent forward. [01:25:42.100 --> 01:25:46.620] So if I have to go to Washington, or D.C., or... [01:25:46.620 --> 01:25:49.420] No, no, no, no, no, no, you do not. [01:25:49.420 --> 01:25:50.420] You're in Texas. [01:25:50.420 --> 01:25:52.420] You do not have to go to Washington. [01:25:52.420 --> 01:25:58.220] But say I have to, I guess you'd go to the patent office in D.C. then. [01:25:58.220 --> 01:26:00.900] No, no, no, this is land patent. [01:26:00.900 --> 01:26:03.260] It's not the same as patents. [01:26:03.260 --> 01:26:06.060] Is there a land patent in D.C.? [01:26:06.060 --> 01:26:14.500] Yeah, patent is just a name for a type of a claim against property. [01:26:14.500 --> 01:26:17.780] The patent office in D.C. has nothing to do with it. [01:26:17.780 --> 01:26:24.820] The Bureau of Land Management handles property for everybody else, all the other states, [01:26:24.820 --> 01:26:27.940] but they don't handle Texas. [01:26:27.940 --> 01:26:33.940] Texas when it came into the union was a sovereign nation, and it had its own patent office, or [01:26:33.940 --> 01:26:40.660] land patent office, and it still does, and it's in Austin. [01:26:40.660 --> 01:26:43.220] Federal government doesn't have anything to say about it. [01:26:43.220 --> 01:26:48.140] Well, they do give you a certified letter, or something, or... [01:26:48.140 --> 01:26:56.860] Yeah, you talk to them, and they will help you do a search all the way back to the original [01:26:56.860 --> 01:27:00.900] patent on the property. [01:27:00.900 --> 01:27:05.940] I don't want to get that, I got all the copy. [01:27:05.940 --> 01:27:14.580] They will, okay, if you want to bring forward your land patent, you do it through the, what's [01:27:14.580 --> 01:27:16.940] it, do you know what it's called in Texas? [01:27:16.940 --> 01:27:27.020] The General Land Office, G.O., could be, but they're the ones to help you do that. [01:27:27.020 --> 01:27:31.220] Okay, I'll go over there. [01:27:31.220 --> 01:27:34.260] Yeah, yeah, just call down to Austin. [01:27:34.260 --> 01:27:38.980] Everybody who's talked to them was, you know, everybody I've talked to about them were just [01:27:38.980 --> 01:27:43.340] absolutely amazed at how helpful these people were. [01:27:43.340 --> 01:27:46.020] Okay, I'll do that. [01:27:46.020 --> 01:27:47.020] All right. [01:27:47.020 --> 01:27:48.500] Okay, thank you. [01:27:48.500 --> 01:27:50.540] Okay, thank you, David. [01:27:50.540 --> 01:27:53.820] Now we're going to Brett in Colorado. [01:27:53.820 --> 01:27:54.820] Hello, Brett. [01:27:54.820 --> 01:27:55.820] Yeah, hi. [01:27:55.820 --> 01:27:56.820] It's just Barrett. [01:27:56.820 --> 01:28:02.420] Oh, I'm sorry, it said Barrett, and I read it, Brett. [01:28:02.420 --> 01:28:05.660] I'm thinking of this co-host I got. [01:28:05.660 --> 01:28:08.140] Okay, I'm sorry, Barrett. [01:28:08.140 --> 01:28:10.380] I got pulled over. [01:28:10.380 --> 01:28:13.060] I'm here in Cortez, Colorado. [01:28:13.060 --> 01:28:17.100] I got pulled over about 10 o'clock. [01:28:17.100 --> 01:28:18.100] Cortez, Colorado. [01:28:18.100 --> 01:28:23.420] Yeah, Cortez, Colorado, it's a town of about 2,500 people. [01:28:23.420 --> 01:28:24.420] That's familiar. [01:28:24.420 --> 01:28:29.860] Is that on the other side of Wolf Creek Pass? [01:28:29.860 --> 01:28:32.860] It's out right off of Highway 160. [01:28:32.860 --> 01:28:38.100] Okay, now it seems like I've had some dealings with that before. [01:28:38.100 --> 01:28:40.060] Okay, I'm sorry, go ahead. [01:28:40.060 --> 01:28:42.900] But yeah, I got pulled over. [01:28:42.900 --> 01:28:47.740] I've got one of those plates that say private, not for hire type thing. [01:28:47.740 --> 01:28:50.460] No tags, no nothing on it. [01:28:50.460 --> 01:28:59.540] And he pulled me over and I told him, you know, he asked me for my license and registration [01:28:59.540 --> 01:29:02.780] and insurance and all that, and I said, I'm not using a license. [01:29:02.780 --> 01:29:03.780] I'm traveling. [01:29:03.780 --> 01:29:07.900] And I pretty much did Eddie Craig's thing. [01:29:07.900 --> 01:29:11.820] I asked him the necessary questions that I told him, I said, you know, you'd have to [01:29:11.820 --> 01:29:18.820] acknowledge on tape that you heard me tell you that I'm traveling and then not driving [01:29:18.820 --> 01:29:23.140] and not operating a motor vehicle or any of those things. [01:29:23.140 --> 01:29:31.540] And I was really surprised that they did not tow my car and they did not take me to jail. [01:29:31.540 --> 01:29:33.660] They didn't even ask me to step out of my car. [01:29:33.660 --> 01:29:38.500] I mean, I don't know if there's anything to do with it, but I pulled into the busiest [01:29:38.500 --> 01:29:43.580] little shopping center in this whole town here, there's like people all over the place. [01:29:43.580 --> 01:29:46.820] I don't know, that's why they're being nice. [01:29:46.820 --> 01:29:56.420] Yeah, let me say, most police become policemen because they want to be the good guys. [01:29:56.420 --> 01:30:02.900] And most police I know hate writing traffic tickets. [01:30:02.900 --> 01:30:08.900] Reality TV, sugar, obesity, jet lag, the list of things that makes us dumber just keeps [01:30:08.900 --> 01:30:09.900] on growing. [01:30:09.900 --> 01:30:13.060] But now researchers say we can add stress to the list. [01:30:13.060 --> 01:30:16.700] I'm Dr. Catherine Albrecht, back with details in a moment. [01:30:16.700 --> 01:30:18.900] Privacy is under attack. [01:30:18.900 --> 01:30:22.500] When you give up data about yourself, you'll never get it back again. [01:30:22.500 --> 01:30:27.500] And once your privacy is gone, you'll find your freedoms will start to vanish too. [01:30:27.500 --> 01:30:32.700] So protect your rights, say no to surveillance and keep your information to yourself. [01:30:32.700 --> 01:30:35.260] Privacy, it's worth hanging on to. [01:30:35.260 --> 01:30:40.860] This message is brought to you by StartPage.com, the private search engine alternative to Google, [01:30:40.860 --> 01:30:42.580] Yahoo and Bing. [01:30:42.580 --> 01:30:44.580] Start over with StartPage. [01:30:44.580 --> 01:30:48.580] Are you always on the go and juggling multiple projects? [01:30:48.580 --> 01:30:52.580] If so, you might think that multitasking proves you're smart. [01:30:52.580 --> 01:30:56.660] But think again, all that stress might be eating your brain. [01:30:56.660 --> 01:31:01.300] A new study finds stress reduces the number of connections between neurons, which actually [01:31:01.300 --> 01:31:04.860] makes it harder for people to manage problems. [01:31:04.860 --> 01:31:08.940] Researchers at Yale University found that stressed out people have less gray matter in [01:31:08.940 --> 01:31:11.100] their prefrontal cortex. [01:31:11.100 --> 01:31:16.260] That's the part of the brain that helps us weigh conflicting ideas and regulate our emotions. [01:31:16.260 --> 01:31:18.220] So take a deep breath and chill out. [01:31:18.220 --> 01:31:21.660] It'll help keep your mind as sharp as a tack. [01:31:21.660 --> 01:31:31.540] I'm Dr. Catherine Albrecht for StartPage.com, the world's most private search engine. [01:31:31.540 --> 01:31:36.940] This is Building 7, a 47-story skyscraper that fell on the afternoon of September 11th. [01:31:36.940 --> 01:31:39.100] The government says that fire brought it down. [01:31:39.100 --> 01:31:43.940] Over 1,500 architects and engineers have concluded it was a controlled demolition. [01:31:43.940 --> 01:31:47.940] Over 6,000 of my fellow service members have given their lives and thousands of my fellow [01:31:47.940 --> 01:31:49.380] force respondents have died. [01:31:49.380 --> 01:31:50.860] I'm not a conspiracy theorist. [01:31:50.860 --> 01:31:51.860] I'm a structural engineer. [01:31:51.860 --> 01:31:53.220] I'm a New York City correction officer. [01:31:53.220 --> 01:31:54.220] I'm an Air Force pilot. [01:31:54.220 --> 01:31:55.860] I'm a father who lost his son. [01:31:55.860 --> 01:31:58.500] We're Americans and we deserve the truth. [01:31:58.500 --> 01:32:01.740] Go to RememberBuilding7.org today. [01:32:01.740 --> 01:32:05.940] Rule of Law Radio is proud to offer the Rule of Law Traffic Seminar. [01:32:05.940 --> 01:32:09.700] In today's America, we live in an us-against-them society, and if we, the people, are ever going [01:32:09.700 --> 01:32:13.860] to have a free society, then we're going to have to stand and defend our own rights. [01:32:13.860 --> 01:32:16.900] Among those rights are the right to travel freely from place to place, the right to act [01:32:16.900 --> 01:32:20.900] in our own private capacity, and most importantly, the right to due process of law. [01:32:20.900 --> 01:32:24.780] Traffic courts afford us the least expensive opportunity to learn how to enforce and preserve [01:32:24.780 --> 01:32:26.660] our rights through due process. 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[01:32:55.660 --> 01:32:59.460] Order your copy today and together we can have the free society we all want and deserve. [01:32:59.460 --> 01:33:06.460] You are listening to the Logos Radio Network, LogosRadioNetwork.com. [01:33:29.460 --> 01:33:49.020] Okay, we are back, Randy Kelton, Brett Felton, Rule of Law Radio, I kind of dove off the [01:33:49.020 --> 01:33:56.180] cliff there a little bit, but it was nicely right in between sentences, it was perfect. [01:33:56.180 --> 01:34:00.980] Just like I planned it that way, you guys didn't hear the sentence I said after we got [01:34:00.980 --> 01:34:08.220] off the air, but all the police are not bad and they want to be good guys. [01:34:08.220 --> 01:34:16.820] I'm looking at this as an opportunity to give those policemen who are good policemen an [01:34:16.820 --> 01:34:22.940] opportunity to act the way they want to. [01:34:22.940 --> 01:34:34.820] Here we've had a number of cases where policemen have been indicted or charged or forced to [01:34:34.820 --> 01:34:41.300] resign because of the behavior of other policemen that they didn't intercede in. [01:34:41.300 --> 01:34:47.980] We had one city, I forgot what the name of it was, I think it was in Virginia, where [01:34:47.980 --> 01:34:55.420] they had protests and the police were so outrageous in the protests that the city council forced [01:34:55.420 --> 01:35:03.780] the chief of police to resign because this happened on his watch. [01:35:03.780 --> 01:35:12.820] And we're getting another one where a policeman killed someone and a number of policemen filed [01:35:12.820 --> 01:35:16.220] false reports, they all got charged. [01:35:16.220 --> 01:35:20.700] We're seeing policemen getting charged for their bad behavior. [01:35:20.700 --> 01:35:25.900] We haven't seen that, you know, that's what they fight against more than anything. [01:35:25.900 --> 01:35:29.620] They want to be immune from their behavior and that's changing. [01:35:29.620 --> 01:35:36.940] And I think the majority of the policemen out there will find this as a relief and now they [01:35:36.940 --> 01:35:39.700] get to go back to being good policemen. [01:35:39.700 --> 01:35:41.500] What do you think, Barrett? [01:35:41.500 --> 01:35:47.860] I don't know, I beg to differ a little bit, I think that the job is there. [01:35:47.860 --> 01:35:53.740] They know they're immune and I think some of them, they become a cop because they can [01:35:53.740 --> 01:36:00.740] abuse, they get to beat people up and I don't know, I think that the cop... [01:36:00.740 --> 01:36:04.420] Okay, I agree with you, you are right. [01:36:04.420 --> 01:36:10.580] A lot of people are drawn to this profession for reasons that should keep them out of this [01:36:10.580 --> 01:36:11.580] profession. [01:36:11.580 --> 01:36:17.380] It is the duty of those who were drawn to this profession because they want to be the [01:36:17.380 --> 01:36:22.340] good guys to protect us against those bad guys. [01:36:22.340 --> 01:36:28.980] But we've created a police culture where police are unable to do that. [01:36:28.980 --> 01:36:38.220] Now, I want to say that the cop who's standing there not doing anything wrong and we go after [01:36:38.220 --> 01:36:44.340] him, I'm saying he's the guy we should go after. [01:36:44.340 --> 01:36:49.860] You've got this cop here who's just found out that his wife is having an affair with [01:36:49.860 --> 01:36:52.500] his best friend. [01:36:52.500 --> 01:36:55.940] His kids got leukemia. [01:36:55.940 --> 01:37:03.540] He just got sued by somebody that he arrested ten years ago. [01:37:03.540 --> 01:37:09.300] Everything's going wrong for this guy and he just got out of a chase. [01:37:09.300 --> 01:37:16.780] He's been on a half a dozen calls today and each one more miserable than the one before [01:37:16.780 --> 01:37:22.700] and then he pulls you over, he's all wired up on adrenaline and his life is going in [01:37:22.700 --> 01:37:27.620] the toilet and he takes it out on you. [01:37:27.620 --> 01:37:34.340] The cop that doesn't have all these problems owes it to that guy to protect his career [01:37:34.340 --> 01:37:43.860] for him, to step up and say get your leg off his neck. [01:37:43.860 --> 01:37:50.980] What would it have taken for a policeman, one of those standing around to put his hand [01:37:50.980 --> 01:37:59.500] on this guy's shoulder and say, you need to give this guy some air? [01:37:59.500 --> 01:38:05.020] The cop that was choking the guy out with his knee on his head, there was this guy. [01:38:05.020 --> 01:38:08.220] These other people saying you're killing him, you're killing him, they're trying to get [01:38:08.220 --> 01:38:13.220] to him to save the guy, all of those cops are getting indicted and that's how it should [01:38:13.220 --> 01:38:14.220] be. [01:38:14.220 --> 01:38:20.340] The ones who are, in my opinion, the most guilty are the ones who were protecting the [01:38:20.340 --> 01:38:22.460] one who was acting out. [01:38:22.460 --> 01:38:28.620] It was their job to make sure he didn't do what he did. [01:38:28.620 --> 01:38:34.460] But they just stood back and let it happen, they're the ones that should be prosecuted. [01:38:34.460 --> 01:38:40.500] When we start going after the enablers, this stuff will stop. [01:38:40.500 --> 01:38:49.460] We in the careers of the policeman, not the one who pushes this guy so hard that the first [01:38:49.460 --> 01:38:56.820] part of his anatomy that hits the ground is the back of his head, that should be attempted [01:38:56.820 --> 01:39:00.140] murder right on his face. [01:39:00.140 --> 01:39:05.980] If I hit you over the head with a sledgehammer, intentionally they would call that attempted [01:39:05.980 --> 01:39:08.340] murder. [01:39:08.340 --> 01:39:14.340] If I push you in your chest so hard that your body over centers in the first part of your [01:39:14.340 --> 01:39:20.980] anatomy that hits the ground is the back of your head, that a reasonable person of ordinary [01:39:20.980 --> 01:39:27.020] prudence would expect that that would kill you because your brain will slosh around in [01:39:27.020 --> 01:39:36.660] your cranium and then you'll get cranial swelling, strokes, seizure, coma, death. [01:39:36.660 --> 01:39:39.460] That's if you don't break your neck right away. [01:39:39.460 --> 01:39:47.700] Yeah, so to push somebody that way, I know it looks kind of natural, it just gives him [01:39:47.700 --> 01:39:48.700] a shove. [01:39:48.700 --> 01:39:56.900] Well, I could give you a shove that way from the back or from the side, but not from the [01:39:56.900 --> 01:39:58.820] front. [01:39:58.820 --> 01:40:00.220] That'll kill somebody. [01:40:00.220 --> 01:40:03.540] And these other policemen stand by and watch it. [01:40:03.540 --> 01:40:09.060] When he did that, these other policemen should have arrested him immediately. [01:40:09.060 --> 01:40:14.860] The fact that they didn't make them equally guilty and they should be charged, when we [01:40:14.860 --> 01:40:21.820] start charging and prosecuting the enablers, a lot of these problems go away, and we'll [01:40:21.820 --> 01:40:25.420] get policemen who feel comfortable being policemen. [01:40:25.420 --> 01:40:30.260] But I kind of took things away from what you were talking about. [01:40:30.260 --> 01:40:36.020] You saying these officers didn't act inappropriately, what did they do? [01:40:36.020 --> 01:40:40.620] No, they were, I would almost say they were polite, I mean almost. [01:40:40.620 --> 01:40:44.820] But the one did threaten, because they asked me to sign the ticket and I'm like, hey, that's [01:40:44.820 --> 01:40:48.780] too close to like signing a contract or I just don't want to do that. [01:40:48.780 --> 01:40:52.340] He says, well, I can arrest you for that. [01:40:52.340 --> 01:40:54.860] And he said, but I'm not. [01:40:54.860 --> 01:40:58.740] And he said, I'm just going to, if you'll take it for no registration, no insurance, [01:40:58.740 --> 01:41:02.100] no license, blah, blah, blah. [01:41:02.100 --> 01:41:09.540] But Eddie Craig, there was a caller that called in on Eddie Craig Monday, by his Monday [01:41:09.540 --> 01:41:10.540] program. [01:41:10.540 --> 01:41:17.060] Eddie, Eddie, who is this guy, Eddie Craig? [01:41:17.060 --> 01:41:18.540] Eddie gets no slack. [01:41:18.540 --> 01:41:25.860] But anyway, this guy called in with the same problem, my guy, he just got busted with no [01:41:25.860 --> 01:41:30.820] license, insurance, registration, and Eddie Craig was going to start telling him how to [01:41:30.820 --> 01:41:32.180] take care of it. [01:41:32.180 --> 01:41:38.660] But it was the end of the show, and all that Eddie Craig got out was, don't use the right [01:41:38.660 --> 01:41:44.780] to travel because you'll lose, email me or something like that, he said, and then boom, [01:41:44.780 --> 01:41:46.780] the show went off. [01:41:46.780 --> 01:41:51.580] So I wanted to know what he was going to say to that man, because I want to know what [01:41:51.580 --> 01:41:52.580] to do. [01:41:52.580 --> 01:41:57.660] Wait a minute, are you telling me that Eddie Craig ran off to cliff? [01:41:57.660 --> 01:42:01.620] Hey, I thought I was the only guy to run off to cliff. [01:42:01.620 --> 01:42:05.020] Okay, say again what he was saying. [01:42:05.020 --> 01:42:10.980] Eddie Craig, right before the show cut off, he was telling this guy who was also busted [01:42:10.980 --> 01:42:16.660] through the same thing I was, which was no insurance, registration, blah, blah, blah, [01:42:16.660 --> 01:42:17.660] no tag. [01:42:17.660 --> 01:42:23.700] I just had the private, not-for-hire plate on my car. [01:42:23.700 --> 01:42:31.380] Anyways, the last thing Eddie Craig said to this guy was, don't use the right to travel [01:42:31.380 --> 01:42:39.380] because you'll lose, email me, and blah, blah, blah, and then the show cut off and went [01:42:39.380 --> 01:42:41.980] through the credits afterwards. [01:42:41.980 --> 01:42:46.500] I would need more facts. [01:42:46.500 --> 01:42:50.900] There's not enough facts, so I don't really know the context. [01:42:50.900 --> 01:42:59.180] Eddie had something in mind, something else that had been told to him. [01:42:59.180 --> 01:43:01.300] Just on Monday, and that's it? [01:43:01.300 --> 01:43:04.140] Yeah, only Mondays. [01:43:04.140 --> 01:43:05.140] Yeah. [01:43:05.140 --> 01:43:14.700] We let him out of his cage every Monday for two hours, and we put him back. [01:43:14.700 --> 01:43:19.300] Don't use the right to travel, I'm trying to think. [01:43:19.300 --> 01:43:22.780] What do you do when you get pulled over, do you just have a personal license? [01:43:22.780 --> 01:43:23.780] Oh, okay. [01:43:23.780 --> 01:43:35.540] You're talking about Colorado, the right to travel, if it was in Texas, then I would [01:43:35.540 --> 01:43:48.020] go for the authority of the officer to enforce the code, but in Colorado, is there a statute? [01:43:48.020 --> 01:43:57.100] Is there anything in Colorado that grants a peace officer the authority to enforce [01:43:57.100 --> 01:44:00.340] the commercial transportation code? [01:44:00.340 --> 01:44:05.660] Are you being harassed by debt collectors with phone calls, letters, or even losses? [01:44:05.660 --> 01:44:09.100] Stop debt collectors now with the Michael Maris proven method. [01:44:09.100 --> 01:44:13.460] Michael Maris has won six cases in federal court against debt collectors, and now you [01:44:13.460 --> 01:44:14.460] can win two. 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[01:44:49.700 --> 01:44:59.260] That's ruleoflawradio.com or email m-i-c-h-a-e-l-m-i-r-r-a-s at yahoo.com to learn how to stop debt collectors [01:44:59.260 --> 01:45:00.260] next. [01:45:00.260 --> 01:45:04.540] Are you the plaintiff or defendant in a lawsuit? [01:45:04.540 --> 01:45:07.780] Win your case without an attorney with jurisdiction. [01:45:07.780 --> 01:45:14.300] The affordable, easy-to-understand four-CD course that will show you how in 24 hours, [01:45:14.300 --> 01:45:15.300] step-by-step. [01:45:15.300 --> 01:45:19.500] If you have a lawyer, know what your lawyer should be doing. [01:45:19.500 --> 01:45:23.220] If you don't have a lawyer, know what you should do for yourself. [01:45:23.220 --> 01:45:29.020] Thousands have won with our step-by-step course, and now you can too. [01:45:29.020 --> 01:45:34.740] Jurisdictionary was created by a licensed attorney with 22 years of case-winning experience. [01:45:34.740 --> 01:45:39.340] Even if you're not in a lawsuit, you can learn what everyone should understand about [01:45:39.340 --> 01:45:43.740] the principles and practices that control our American courts. [01:45:43.740 --> 01:45:49.860] You'll receive our audio classroom, video seminar, tutorials, forms for civil cases, [01:45:49.860 --> 01:45:52.660] prosa tactics, and much more. [01:45:52.660 --> 01:46:16.660] Please visit ruleoflawradio.com and click on the banner or call toll-free 866-LAW-E-Z. [01:46:16.660 --> 01:46:18.420] My name is [01:46:46.660 --> 01:46:59.660] They know that if they don't do it, somebody will come to pay, and just the world will never [01:46:59.660 --> 01:47:00.660] understand. [01:47:00.660 --> 01:47:25.660] They know that if they don't do it, somebody will come to pay, and just the world will never [01:47:25.660 --> 01:47:32.660] understand. [01:47:32.660 --> 01:47:58.660] They know that if they don't do it, somebody will come to pay, and just the world will never [01:47:58.660 --> 01:48:05.660] understand. [01:48:05.660 --> 01:48:18.660] They know that if they don't do it, somebody will come to pay, and just the world will never [01:48:18.660 --> 01:48:19.660] understand. [01:48:19.660 --> 01:48:35.660] They know that if they don't do it, somebody will come to pay, and just the world will [01:48:35.660 --> 01:48:36.660] never understand. [01:48:36.660 --> 01:48:56.660] They know that if they don't do it, somebody will come to pay, and just the world will [01:48:56.660 --> 01:48:57.660] never understand. [01:48:57.660 --> 01:49:04.660] It's that way in Texas, but I don't know about Colorado. [01:49:04.660 --> 01:49:12.660] The Highway Patrol was essentially created for the purpose of enforcing commercial transportation [01:49:12.660 --> 01:49:21.660] codes, and that's because back in the late 40s Truman, before he became president, was [01:49:21.660 --> 01:49:23.660] a road builder. [01:49:23.660 --> 01:49:27.660] And he was aghast at the way they're building roads. [01:49:27.660 --> 01:49:33.660] He said, you're building roads for horse and carriage, and you got these 3,000 pound automobiles, [01:49:33.660 --> 01:49:35.660] people are slaughtering themselves. [01:49:35.660 --> 01:49:41.660] And now we're getting these huge trucks that the infrastructure is not designed to handle, [01:49:41.660 --> 01:49:48.660] they're damaging the roads and bridges, the trucks are horribly designed, the brakes are [01:49:48.660 --> 01:49:52.660] horrible, the drivers don't know what they're doing, we need to fix this. [01:49:52.660 --> 01:50:00.660] So he had the Corps of Engineers design the interstate highway system, and he had the, [01:50:00.660 --> 01:50:12.660] I don't know who did it, create a pattern, a model transportation code, and 47 or 50 [01:50:12.660 --> 01:50:13.660] states adopted it. [01:50:13.660 --> 01:50:19.660] And then they went to the sheriffs and asked, and told them, we got this whole new set of [01:50:19.660 --> 01:50:24.660] codes for you to enforce in the sheriffs, told them to go scratch. [01:50:24.660 --> 01:50:28.660] We don't have any funding to support a whole new set of code. [01:50:28.660 --> 01:50:33.660] So if you want us to support that, you got to give us some funding or find another way [01:50:33.660 --> 01:50:34.660] to do it. [01:50:34.660 --> 01:50:44.660] So what they did was they created state police for the singular purpose of enforcing commercial [01:50:44.660 --> 01:50:48.660] transportation laws. [01:50:48.660 --> 01:50:55.660] Justice law says the Department of Public Safety may not enforce the criminal laws, [01:50:55.660 --> 01:51:02.660] except under the request of and under the direction of local law enforcement. [01:51:02.660 --> 01:51:05.660] They were simply traffic cops. [01:51:05.660 --> 01:51:11.660] They didn't want to increase the county budget for the sheriff to enforce these codes, so [01:51:11.660 --> 01:51:15.660] the state put together a force to do that. [01:51:15.660 --> 01:51:26.660] So my question is, when Colorado did that, did they give local law enforcement authority [01:51:26.660 --> 01:51:30.660] to enforce this commercial transportation code? [01:51:30.660 --> 01:51:33.660] You need to find that. [01:51:33.660 --> 01:51:38.660] Okay, if they don't have the authority, you know, these guys, when I asked for their [01:51:38.660 --> 01:51:45.660] number on my camera, they said, all right, here's our badge number, and they wouldn't [01:51:45.660 --> 01:51:48.660] give it to me, and it just said, city of Cortez. [01:51:48.660 --> 01:51:52.660] And so it's like they don't have badge numbers for some reason or something. [01:51:52.660 --> 01:51:53.660] It's weird. [01:51:53.660 --> 01:51:56.660] Well, a public official is required to identify himself. [01:51:56.660 --> 01:52:01.660] If he does have a badge number, then that can give me something that will identify you [01:52:01.660 --> 01:52:03.660] as a singular individual. [01:52:03.660 --> 01:52:05.660] That's pretty straightforward. [01:52:05.660 --> 01:52:09.660] And you don't care if they identify themselves or not. [01:52:09.660 --> 01:52:12.660] You will say, unidentified officer. [01:52:12.660 --> 01:52:16.660] And the judge will say, what's this unidentified officer? [01:52:16.660 --> 01:52:20.660] Well, I asked him to identify himself, and he refused. [01:52:20.660 --> 01:52:23.660] Let him explain to the judge. [01:52:23.660 --> 01:52:26.660] You know, they want to have a, you know, be a smart alec. [01:52:26.660 --> 01:52:28.660] Yeah, that works for them. [01:52:28.660 --> 01:52:32.660] But you were saying these officers didn't tow your vehicle. [01:52:32.660 --> 01:52:34.660] What did they do? [01:52:34.660 --> 01:52:41.660] They just gave me a ticket and told me just to park it in another area of this. [01:52:41.660 --> 01:52:45.660] It was a city market, is what they call this place. [01:52:45.660 --> 01:52:54.660] And they just, just travel over and park in another and don't drive unless you have insurance on this car or something. [01:52:54.660 --> 01:52:55.660] And that's all they said. [01:52:55.660 --> 01:52:58.660] And instead, I just went ahead and went home. [01:52:58.660 --> 01:53:00.660] That is an interesting setup. [01:53:00.660 --> 01:53:06.660] Did they say travel to another place and don't drive? [01:53:06.660 --> 01:53:10.660] Yeah, he's being a smart ass is kind of what he's doing. [01:53:10.660 --> 01:53:14.660] I've never heard of this right to travel thing. [01:53:14.660 --> 01:53:15.660] Just go ahead and travel. [01:53:15.660 --> 01:53:17.660] I've got the whole thing on recording. [01:53:17.660 --> 01:53:19.660] I could put it on my YouTube channel. [01:53:19.660 --> 01:53:22.660] You might want to do that. [01:53:22.660 --> 01:53:25.660] The fact that they didn't arrest you, [01:53:25.660 --> 01:53:33.660] it sounds like they tempered their behavior with discretion. [01:53:33.660 --> 01:53:35.660] And that's the whole point. [01:53:35.660 --> 01:53:40.660] That's what all these, these protests are about. [01:53:40.660 --> 01:53:49.660] You know, if you've got a situation here in which you're not completely sure of your position, don't act ignorant. [01:53:49.660 --> 01:53:56.660] And it sounds like these officers did exactly what I would have wanted them to do. [01:53:56.660 --> 01:53:57.660] Yeah, I was, I was shocked. [01:53:57.660 --> 01:54:01.660] I've never had cops who didn't want to rip me out of the car. [01:54:01.660 --> 01:54:02.660] Okay. [01:54:02.660 --> 01:54:06.660] Do you want to really screw them around? [01:54:06.660 --> 01:54:08.660] Oh, I would love that. [01:54:08.660 --> 01:54:11.660] I mean, if I can get a few bucks out of this, I can get down. [01:54:11.660 --> 01:54:13.660] Let me make a suggestion. [01:54:13.660 --> 01:54:16.660] It's not intuitive. [01:54:16.660 --> 01:54:23.660] Write a commendation letter to, to the chief about these officers. [01:54:23.660 --> 01:54:28.660] They were in a circumstance where they weren't absolutely sure of the controlling law. [01:54:28.660 --> 01:54:39.660] And rather than act aggressively and inappropriately, they conducted themselves with dignity and respect. [01:54:39.660 --> 01:54:46.660] What do you do when the guy's too nice? [01:54:46.660 --> 01:54:49.660] You do the right thing. [01:54:49.660 --> 01:54:56.660] And, you know, we were very quick to condemn policemen when they act inappropriately. [01:54:56.660 --> 01:55:03.660] We should be just as quick to compliment them when they, when they act appropriately. [01:55:03.660 --> 01:55:09.660] All right, will you speak to what you did with two sheriff's deputies? [01:55:09.660 --> 01:55:14.660] Yeah, two sheriff deputies did mostly the right thing. [01:55:14.660 --> 01:55:18.660] They shouldn't have bothered us at all, but they did mostly the right thing in a situation. [01:55:18.660 --> 01:55:20.660] And I wanted to commend them for that. [01:55:20.660 --> 01:55:25.660] So I told them to their face that I was going to commend them. [01:55:25.660 --> 01:55:29.660] And then I turned around and reached out to their boss, the sheriff, because these guys are deputies. [01:55:29.660 --> 01:55:32.660] I reached out to the sheriff and I gave him records request. [01:55:32.660 --> 01:55:36.660] I said, I want to know about the process for commendation. [01:55:36.660 --> 01:55:38.660] Well, he promptly ignored me. [01:55:38.660 --> 01:55:46.660] So then I wrote letters to these two guys and I sent a copy to the media. [01:55:46.660 --> 01:55:51.660] And I said, well, you know, these guys deserve commendation, but the sheriff won't hear of it. [01:55:51.660 --> 01:55:55.660] He's obstacling the commendation. [01:55:55.660 --> 01:55:59.660] He won't let these two, two of his guys, these are fine guys. [01:55:59.660 --> 01:56:07.660] Probably the only two in there that respect the law and they deserve to be honored for that. [01:56:07.660 --> 01:56:11.660] And I guess that, you know, doesn't make the sheriff look very good. [01:56:11.660 --> 01:56:15.660] A very quick story on this issue. [01:56:15.660 --> 01:56:23.660] A good friend of mine, Bill Vieth, Dr. Bill Vieth, he had a house built and they did an incredible job. [01:56:23.660 --> 01:56:33.660] I took a bath in his upstairs bathroom 12 years after the building was built. [01:56:33.660 --> 01:56:41.660] And the caulking around the plastic bath where the fiberglass bathtub was not cracked. [01:56:41.660 --> 01:56:51.660] How do you build a building so sturdy that when you fill a bathtub and a human being gets in it and gets out and you empty it, [01:56:51.660 --> 01:56:55.660] it doesn't move and crack the caulking? [01:56:55.660 --> 01:56:58.660] I told him, I was astounded. [01:56:58.660 --> 01:57:04.660] He said, yeah, they did such a good job that I wrote in, wrote a letter complimenting him on the great job. [01:57:04.660 --> 01:57:10.660] And then 12 years later, he had a salesman come out, try to sell him a new home. [01:57:10.660 --> 01:57:14.660] The same company, the salesman didn't know that. [01:57:14.660 --> 01:57:21.660] And he showed him a letter from a satisfied customer 12 years later. [01:57:21.660 --> 01:57:26.660] Dr. Vieth said, that was the letter I wrote. [01:57:26.660 --> 01:57:29.660] They don't get good letters often. [01:57:29.660 --> 01:57:33.660] And if you really want to screw around management, [01:57:33.660 --> 01:57:46.660] send them letters of commendation for officers who act appropriately and not necessarily in accordance with the way these guys standing behind the thin blue line operate. [01:57:46.660 --> 01:57:49.660] It makes them crazy. [01:57:49.660 --> 01:57:57.660] I actually mentioned in there, I apologize for presuming that you two were in on all that sheriff office lawlessness. [01:57:57.660 --> 01:58:04.660] Each of you is your own man and I should have given you the benefit of the doubt. [01:58:04.660 --> 01:58:09.660] And I went on to thank them and appreciate them and just contrast their behavior with all the guys around them. [01:58:09.660 --> 01:58:13.660] You know how bad that screws everybody else up? [01:58:13.660 --> 01:58:20.660] These guys are getting compliments from the guy who's beaten up everybody. [01:58:20.660 --> 01:58:29.660] Anyway, we kind of hijacked you to address issues you talk about. [01:58:29.660 --> 01:58:36.660] If we have any questions you wanted to ask that we didn't let you get to tonight, we call back tomorrow night. [01:58:36.660 --> 01:58:38.660] Yeah, I'll get that. [01:58:38.660 --> 01:58:41.660] Okay, we're about to run out of time. [01:58:41.660 --> 01:58:43.660] Thank you all for listening. [01:58:43.660 --> 01:58:44.660] We'll be back tomorrow night. [01:58:44.660 --> 01:58:46.660] Same time, same station. [01:58:46.660 --> 01:58:48.660] Thank you all for listening. [01:58:48.660 --> 01:58:50.660] Good night. [01:59:19.660 --> 01:59:29.660] This translation is highly accurate and it comes with over 13,000 cross references, plus charts and maps and an outline for every book of the Bible. [01:59:29.660 --> 01:59:32.660] This is truly a Bible you can understand. [01:59:32.660 --> 01:59:40.660] To get your free copy of the New Testament recovery version, call us toll free at 888-551-0102. [01:59:40.660 --> 01:59:49.660] That's 888-551-0102 or visit us online at bfa.org.