[00:00.000 --> 00:06.760] The following news flash is brought to you by The Lone Star Lowdown. [00:06.760 --> 00:13.480] Markets for Monday, 22 July 2019 Open with Precious Metals, Gold $1,429 Announce, Silver [00:13.480 --> 00:22.680] $16.45 Announce, Copper $2.75 Announce, Oil, Texas Crude $55.63 Barrel, Brent Crude $62.47 [00:22.680 --> 00:33.200] And Crypto is an order of market cap, Bitcoin Core $10,566.52, Ethereum $227.26, XRP Ripple [00:33.200 --> 00:46.160] $0.33, Litecoin $100.31, and Bitcoin Cash is at $324.10 a Crypto Coin. [00:46.160 --> 00:52.400] Today in history, the year 1916, the Preparedness Day Bombing, a tying suitcase bomb, was detonated [00:52.400 --> 00:57.720] on Market Street in San Francisco during the World War I Preparedness Day Parade, killing [00:57.720 --> 01:04.720] 10 and injuring 40. [01:04.720 --> 01:09.400] And recent news, since Governor Greg Abbott signed House Bill 1325 legalizing Hemp into [01:09.400 --> 01:14.120] taxes law back in June, county prosecutors around the state, including Houston, Austin, [01:14.120 --> 01:18.080] and San Antonio, have been dropping marijuana possession charges and even refusing to file [01:18.080 --> 01:22.720] new ones since they are stipulating that they do not have the time or the laboratory equipment [01:22.720 --> 01:24.800] to test the herb for THC. [01:24.800 --> 01:28.440] Margaret Moore, the Travis County District Attorney, announced earlier this month that [01:28.440 --> 01:33.040] she was dismissing 32 felony possession and delivery of marijuana cases because of the [01:33.040 --> 01:34.040] law. [01:34.040 --> 01:37.600] Mr. Abbott and other state officials, including the Attorney General stipulated in a letter [01:37.600 --> 01:42.080] to county district attorneys back on Thursday that marijuana has not been decriminalized [01:42.080 --> 01:48.240] in Texas and that these actions demonstrate a misunderstanding of how HB 1325 works, as [01:48.240 --> 01:54.480] well as other cities, too, like the District Attorney in El Paso, Kyma Esparza, a Democrat [01:54.480 --> 01:58.960] who also stated earlier this month that the law, quote, will not have an effect on the [01:58.960 --> 02:01.720] prosecution of marijuana cases in El Paso. [02:01.720 --> 02:06.720] However, the issue was succinctly summarized by Mr. Brandon Ball, an assistant public defender [02:06.720 --> 02:10.760] in Harris County, who stated that, quote, the law is constantly changing on what makes [02:10.760 --> 02:13.480] something illegal based on its chemical makeup. [02:13.480 --> 02:17.360] It's important that if someone is charged with something, the test matches what they're [02:17.360 --> 02:22.600] charged with. [02:22.600 --> 02:27.240] A paper by Tulane University identified a five-and-a-half-inch American pocket shark [02:27.240 --> 02:32.360] as the first of its kind in the Gulf of Mexico, the specimen being only the second pocket [02:32.360 --> 02:38.000] shark ever captured or recorded with the other one being found way back in 1979 in the East [02:38.000 --> 02:39.480] Pacific Ocean. [02:39.480 --> 02:43.760] According to the university paper, the shark secretes a luminous fluid from a gland near [02:43.760 --> 02:50.040] its front fins for the purposes hypothesized to lure and prey who may be drawn into the [02:50.040 --> 03:16.120] flow. [03:16.120 --> 03:32.120] Bad boys, bad boys, what you gonna do, what you gonna do when they come for you? [03:32.120 --> 03:38.120] Bad boys, bad boys, what you gonna do, what you gonna do when they come for you? [03:38.120 --> 03:44.120] When you were eight and you had bad dreams, you go to school and learn to go then lose. [03:44.120 --> 03:49.120] Okay, howdy, howdy, Randy Kelton, Brett Fountain, Root of Law Radio. [03:49.120 --> 03:54.120] On this Friday the 11th day of what month was it? [03:54.120 --> 04:00.120] We made it to September already. This is December 2020. [04:00.120 --> 04:09.120] Okay, I am turning the phones on this time so if you have a comment or a question give us a call. [04:09.120 --> 04:16.120] Our call in number 512-646-1984. Big news to start with, very depressing. [04:16.120 --> 04:23.120] I told the pastor the last, so before last I did I was real depressed because of the way things are going. [04:23.120 --> 04:27.120] And in the last show I wasn't so depressed because of this Texas lawsuit. [04:27.120 --> 04:31.120] Now I'm depressed again because the suit just got thrown out. [04:31.120 --> 04:38.120] The Supreme refused to hear it and they refused to hear it 7-2. [04:38.120 --> 04:41.120] Yeah, I was really disappointed to hear that too. [04:41.120 --> 04:43.120] When I read the... [04:43.120 --> 04:44.120] No standing? [04:44.120 --> 04:54.120] Yeah, when I read their standing, at first blush I read that and I said, I don't know. [04:54.120 --> 04:57.120] Not me, that makes a whole lot of sense. [04:57.120 --> 04:58.120] It made sense. [04:58.120 --> 05:08.120] Depending on the other state following the constitutions, then Texas cannot properly be represented. [05:08.120 --> 05:10.120] There's no way for us to get a fair shake. [05:10.120 --> 05:14.120] Well, there has to be something to say that. [05:14.120 --> 05:19.120] And they claim standing but I didn't see the case law to support standing. [05:19.120 --> 05:21.120] But it never really occurred to me. [05:21.120 --> 05:26.120] Somebody has ever litigated the fact that 2 plus 2 is 4. [05:26.120 --> 05:32.120] Okay, yeah, I understand that. [05:32.120 --> 05:37.120] And what sounds reasonable and sounds rational sounds like it ought to be. [05:37.120 --> 05:39.120] It's not always the way it is. [05:39.120 --> 05:50.120] I'm not familiar enough with the underlying law because challenges of this nature may be not quite this extreme. [05:50.120 --> 05:52.120] They've been going on forever. [05:52.120 --> 06:00.120] I mentioned the Lincoln's second term had a major challenge of this nature. [06:00.120 --> 06:01.120] So it's not new. [06:01.120 --> 06:06.120] There should be remedy. [06:06.120 --> 06:09.120] Maybe this is not the remedy. [06:09.120 --> 06:19.120] If the state doesn't have standing, it would seem that Trump would have standing. [06:19.120 --> 06:23.120] But the same argument wouldn't both have standing. [06:23.120 --> 06:25.120] Yeah, so why didn't Trump file? [06:25.120 --> 06:32.120] It would be harder to deny him standing because with him it wouldn't matter what state it was. [06:32.120 --> 06:39.120] What I'm concerned it'll have to wind up having to be is adjudicated in the states themselves. [06:39.120 --> 06:54.120] And if the states ruled that these rulings by these judges that said that you can ignore the specific stipulation of the statute, [06:54.120 --> 07:05.120] that's going to be really problematic and it'll be problematic in the future as much for their Democrats as the Republicans. [07:05.120 --> 07:11.120] Because if one can do this and get by with it, another can do this and get by with it. [07:11.120 --> 07:14.120] It just depends on where the money is at. [07:14.120 --> 07:18.120] But I guess we'll have to see. [07:18.120 --> 07:21.120] It's still too new for me. [07:21.120 --> 07:26.120] So I haven't had time to research it and get a good idea of what's going on. [07:26.120 --> 07:31.120] There has to be a remedy for election fraud. [07:31.120 --> 07:36.120] There's way too many instances of election fraud for there not to be a remedy. [07:36.120 --> 07:44.120] My concern is if the vote is fraudulent and proved later to be fraudulent, [07:44.120 --> 07:55.120] but the president is confirmed, does the president become unconfirmed? [07:55.120 --> 07:57.120] I don't know. [07:57.120 --> 08:00.120] That's a question I have to lift up. [08:00.120 --> 08:08.120] After he's already been put in place, because for a country that is extremely disruptive. [08:08.120 --> 08:14.120] But if you got there by fraud, then it would only be right. [08:14.120 --> 08:19.120] But what we think is right is not always the case. [08:19.120 --> 08:24.120] Well, if somebody got there by fraud, then it would be more disruptive to leave him there. [08:24.120 --> 08:28.120] Somebody who has shown himself to act fraudulently. [08:28.120 --> 08:32.120] I think so, and that would certainly be grounds for impeachment. [08:32.120 --> 08:42.120] And somehow, impeachment may be then imprisonment. [08:42.120 --> 08:45.120] But impeachment first, that would bring him out. [08:45.120 --> 08:53.120] And I'm wondering if it turns out that this fraud is as extensive as it appears to be. [08:53.120 --> 09:06.120] Will every Democrat in government accept this outcome? [09:06.120 --> 09:16.120] Do we have no one in government who has a sense of right and wrong? [09:16.120 --> 09:31.120] If it's proven, and this is pretty definitive proof of wrongdoing, I can't imagine all of the Democrats being good with this. [09:31.120 --> 09:34.120] Well, I would hope you're right. [09:34.120 --> 09:39.120] I'm hoping my faith in the American public will sort this out. [09:39.120 --> 09:43.120] So I'm really concerned about what's going to happen there. [09:43.120 --> 09:50.120] And I don't like to go this much into politics, but this is so immediate. [09:50.120 --> 09:56.120] They're talking about doing extensive bailouts. [09:56.120 --> 10:02.120] So my question is, where does all of this money come from? [10:02.120 --> 10:13.120] How does the country run indefinitely on money created out of the thin air? [10:13.120 --> 10:15.120] This is not happening in China. [10:15.120 --> 10:22.120] It's not happening in most other countries, just here right now. [10:22.120 --> 10:33.120] The problem is, if you try to bail out everybody, you wind up bailing out nobody. [10:33.120 --> 10:44.120] If you take the tax money paid in by those states that are doing well and use it to fund those states that are not doing well, [10:44.120 --> 10:53.120] you won't be able to sufficiently fund those states, and you'll underfund the states that are doing well and bring everybody down. [10:53.120 --> 11:07.120] If we keep this foreclosure moratorium on, if they reinstate that, then you've got all these lenders that have put their money out there, [11:07.120 --> 11:12.120] and now they can't get any of it back, they're going to start collapsing. [11:12.120 --> 11:22.120] You've got, God retires, turns in his 401k, buys a six-flat for income, and now he can't pay for it. [11:22.120 --> 11:32.120] So what happens when the guy can't pay for his property, he can't keep the lights on, he can't maintain the property, [11:32.120 --> 11:41.120] and the people in the property will jump up and down and rail in righteous indignation, and he'll tell them, tough, deal with it. [11:41.120 --> 11:49.120] What am I supposed to do? You want me to fix your problem for you? You need to pay me. [11:49.120 --> 11:53.120] I don't have any money to fix it, just like you don't have money to pay me. [11:53.120 --> 12:01.120] So deal with it, just like in California right now, they can't get product in because truck drivers won't drive in there, [12:01.120 --> 12:06.120] because they're afraid of the riots. [12:06.120 --> 12:16.120] So they created this problem that has long-range ramifications. I am concerned continuing bailouts. [12:16.120 --> 12:30.120] This is a disaster, a horrible disaster. It's going to fall on, they're making sure it falls on everybody. [12:30.120 --> 12:35.120] No matter how well the state does, no matter how well they take care of their business, [12:35.120 --> 12:41.120] if they don't back out of the union, the union will bankrupt them. [12:41.120 --> 12:51.120] And there's been a call in Texas to secede for a long time. This might actually get it done. [12:51.120 --> 12:58.120] I can see how Paxton's suit getting slapped down might actually fuel that fire. [12:58.120 --> 13:06.120] I think if they start taking all the tax money to bail out California, because it's by far the biggest, [13:06.120 --> 13:13.120] the biggest market's fifth largest economy on the planet, and when I was building this sweeper, [13:13.120 --> 13:18.120] I got it together and got it running. I'm having the last piece built right now. [13:18.120 --> 13:25.120] I was talking to companies that I wanted them to be able to build them on the east coast, west coast, central, [13:25.120 --> 13:30.120] so we didn't have to ship them so far. And I had several companies tell me, [13:30.120 --> 13:34.120] I will not do business in California. Now, I'll deliver stuff to California, [13:34.120 --> 13:43.120] but I will not do business in California. And Elon Musk told them that when they shut him down, [13:43.120 --> 13:49.120] I'm moving my plan out of California. That's exactly what he's doing. [13:49.120 --> 13:57.120] That's where he's moving to. A place where you'll have the least grief from government. [13:57.120 --> 14:03.120] That's Texas. That's where Colorado hates us, California hates us, [14:03.120 --> 14:09.120] because everybody's flooding out of those places, east coast. They're all flooding into Texas. [14:09.120 --> 14:18.120] And my big concern is, is they will bring the politics that created their problem. [14:18.120 --> 14:24.120] And they'll Californiaize Texas, and we'll wind up in the same situation. [14:24.120 --> 14:30.120] I'm just hoping that they learn from these mistakes. [14:30.120 --> 14:31.120] And how? [14:31.120 --> 14:36.120] About the billboards I saw traveling around in Florida, I saw some billboards. [14:36.120 --> 14:42.120] They were all over the place. Don't vote for what you just fled. [14:42.120 --> 14:49.120] Good. And I think that that push may get a lot stronger. [14:49.120 --> 14:56.120] But the problem is, if they're able to just literally steal the vote, it doesn't make any difference. [14:56.120 --> 14:59.120] That's true. [14:59.120 --> 15:03.120] Unless some of the Democrats stand up and say, we can't do this, [15:03.120 --> 15:09.120] there's got to be some Democrats that understand fiscal responsibility. [15:09.120 --> 15:14.120] They all can't be like Bernie Sanders. [15:14.120 --> 15:24.120] He was suggesting giving some $5,000 a month to everybody. [15:24.120 --> 15:29.120] And they did the math where it's just come from. It's absolutely impossible. [15:29.120 --> 15:33.120] But he was suggesting it, seriously suggesting it. [15:33.120 --> 15:35.120] Well, that was nice of him. [15:35.120 --> 15:42.120] That's nice of him. But then if everybody gets $5,000 a month, nobody has an advantage. [15:42.120 --> 15:46.120] We will go into hyperinflation. [15:46.120 --> 15:52.120] It's a competition that makes the economy work. [15:52.120 --> 15:58.120] And that's the problem socialism has, is it doesn't have a good competitive environment. [15:58.120 --> 16:01.120] And besides, I want to borrow Bernie's car. [16:01.120 --> 16:05.120] I need a car. You want to give me your keys? [16:05.120 --> 16:08.120] Somehow I can't see him going for that. [16:08.120 --> 16:13.120] And the pastor asked me to make a really interesting comment about Venezuela. [16:13.120 --> 16:17.120] Venezuela was a very prosperous functioning democracy. [16:17.120 --> 16:19.120] And they voted in socialism. [16:19.120 --> 16:23.120] And six years later, people are starving to death and nobody's got any work. [16:23.120 --> 16:26.120] And he said, you can vote in socialism. [16:26.120 --> 16:32.120] You can bring in socialism by vote, but you'll have to take it out with guns. [16:32.120 --> 16:34.120] And I'm concerned about that. [16:34.120 --> 16:37.120] Hang on. About to go to our sponsors. [16:37.120 --> 16:41.120] I called in number 512-646-1984. [16:41.120 --> 16:43.120] I hope you haven't depressed everybody. [16:43.120 --> 16:45.120] The call boards are empty. [16:45.120 --> 16:49.120] So if you have a question or a comment, give us a call. [16:49.120 --> 17:00.120] We'll be right back. [17:20.120 --> 17:24.120] What to do when contacted by phones, mail, or court summons? [17:24.120 --> 17:26.120] How to answer letters and phone calls? [17:26.120 --> 17:29.120] How to get debt collectors out of your credit reports? [17:29.120 --> 17:33.120] How to turn the financial tables on them and make them pay you to go away? [17:33.120 --> 17:38.120] The Michael Mirris Proven Method is the solution for how to stop debt collectors. [17:38.120 --> 17:41.120] Personal consultation is available as well. [17:41.120 --> 17:44.120] For more information, please visit ruleoflawradio.com [17:44.120 --> 17:49.120] and click on the blue Michael Mirris banner, or email michaelmirris at yahoo.com. [17:49.120 --> 17:57.120] That's ruleoflawradio.com, or email m-i-c-h-a-e-l-m-i-r-r-a-m at yahoo.com [17:57.120 --> 18:00.120] to learn how to stop debt collectors next. [18:00.120 --> 18:04.120] Rule of Law Radio is proud to offer the Rule of Law Traffic Seminar. [18:04.120 --> 18:07.120] In today's America, we live in an us against them society, [18:07.120 --> 18:09.120] and if we, the people, are ever going to have a free society, [18:09.120 --> 18:12.120] then we're going to have to stand and defend our own rights. [18:12.120 --> 18:15.120] Among those rights are the right to travel freely from place to place, [18:15.120 --> 18:17.120] the right to act in our own private capacity, [18:17.120 --> 18:19.120] and most importantly, the right to due process of law. [18:19.120 --> 18:22.120] Traffic courts afford us the least expensive opportunity [18:22.120 --> 18:25.120] to learn how to enforce and preserve our rights through due process. [18:25.120 --> 18:28.120] Former Sheriff's Deputy Eddie Craig, in conjunction with Rule of Law Radio, [18:28.120 --> 18:31.120] has put together the most comprehensive teaching tool available [18:31.120 --> 18:33.120] that will help you understand what due process is [18:33.120 --> 18:35.120] and how to hold courts to the rule of law. [18:35.120 --> 18:37.120] You can get your own copy of this invaluable material [18:37.120 --> 18:40.120] by going to ruleoflawradio.com and ordering your copy today. [18:40.120 --> 18:42.120] By ordering now, you'll receive a copy of Eddie's book, [18:42.120 --> 18:44.120] The Texas Transportation Code, The Law vs. the Lie, [18:44.120 --> 18:47.120] video and audio of the original 2009 seminar. [18:47.120 --> 18:50.120] Hundreds of research documents and other useful resource material. [18:50.120 --> 18:52.120] Learn how to fight for your rights with the help of this material [18:52.120 --> 18:54.120] from ruleoflawradio.com. [18:54.120 --> 18:56.120] Order your copy today and together we can have [18:56.120 --> 19:11.120] free society we all want and deserve. [19:26.120 --> 19:35.120] Okay, we are back. [19:35.120 --> 19:38.120] Randy Kelton, Brent Fountain, Rule of Law Radio, [19:38.120 --> 19:41.120] and all of a sudden the board filled up. [19:41.120 --> 19:45.120] We are going to go to Ted in Texas, Ted in Utah. [19:45.120 --> 19:48.120] Hello Ted. [19:48.120 --> 19:52.120] What do you have for us today? [19:52.120 --> 19:56.120] Well, maybe if you could explain something to me. [19:56.120 --> 20:04.120] I talked to Eddie and he said I have to petition [20:04.120 --> 20:08.120] for a quick trial. [20:08.120 --> 20:10.120] I don't understand that. [20:10.120 --> 20:14.120] Why should I have to be positioned for my right? [20:14.120 --> 20:19.120] Well, we have case law that says that rights [20:19.120 --> 20:22.120] belong to the belligerent litigant, [20:22.120 --> 20:25.120] and that if you don't demand your rights, [20:25.120 --> 20:29.120] the courts presume that you waive them. [20:29.120 --> 20:31.120] Now, that may not be... [20:31.120 --> 20:32.120] Emotion. [20:32.120 --> 20:35.120] Well, I always, on my ticket site, [20:35.120 --> 20:37.120] I have a demand for a speedy trial. [20:37.120 --> 20:42.120] Anything I want, I demand it. [20:42.120 --> 20:44.120] Because they assume if you don't demand it, [20:44.120 --> 20:46.120] that you waive it. [20:46.120 --> 20:51.120] Now, I don't think that's right, but that's how it is. [20:51.120 --> 20:55.120] So, that's why you would have to do that. [20:55.120 --> 21:00.120] Well, I don't think it's right either. [21:00.120 --> 21:04.120] There's a lot in law that I don't think is right. [21:04.120 --> 21:08.120] But, and that's what we try to do on this show. [21:08.120 --> 21:12.120] We try to find those little things that prosecutors [21:12.120 --> 21:15.120] and judges like to use to trip you up with. [21:15.120 --> 21:21.120] For instance, findings of fact and conclusions at law. [21:21.120 --> 21:26.120] In Texas, in a district court, [21:26.120 --> 21:32.120] the rules say that if you don't request [21:32.120 --> 21:35.120] findings of fact and conclusions at law, [21:35.120 --> 21:39.120] then you waive any error by the court. [21:39.120 --> 21:43.120] So, the only way you can have standing to appeal [21:43.120 --> 21:45.120] is to request findings of fact. [21:45.120 --> 21:50.120] Now, the courts don't always go by that rule. [21:50.120 --> 21:54.120] But if you're a pro se, you can bet they'll pull that rule out [21:54.120 --> 21:56.120] and use it on you. [21:56.120 --> 21:58.120] So, we have just talked to someone today [21:58.120 --> 22:02.120] who's filing for findings of fact and conclusions [22:02.120 --> 22:07.120] in a traffic case. [22:07.120 --> 22:10.120] And then when the judge doesn't give it to you, [22:10.120 --> 22:12.120] then you file a judicial conduct complaint, [22:12.120 --> 22:15.120] you file a criminal complaint against the judge, [22:15.120 --> 22:20.120] accusing the judge of failing to properly apply the law [22:20.120 --> 22:26.120] to the facts, that's an act of malfeasance in office. [22:26.120 --> 22:32.120] I'm sorry, that's an act of misfeasance in office. [22:32.120 --> 22:36.120] Where a public official fails to perform a duty [22:36.120 --> 22:38.120] he's required to perform. [22:38.120 --> 22:42.120] And if that act has the effect of denying the citizen [22:42.120 --> 22:46.120] full free access to or enjoyment of a right, [22:46.120 --> 22:50.120] in this case, specifically the right to the due course [22:50.120 --> 22:56.120] of the laws, that's class A misdemeanor in every state. [22:56.120 --> 22:57.120] Okay. [22:57.120 --> 23:01.120] So, now, I looked up the law on this, [23:01.120 --> 23:04.120] and I got it up one time. [23:04.120 --> 23:08.120] And it said 70 days for Utah. [23:08.120 --> 23:11.120] And what I'd called about was wanting to know [23:11.120 --> 23:18.120] how to write a motion to ask for dismissal. [23:18.120 --> 23:21.120] That's what Eddie told me that, you know, [23:21.120 --> 23:26.120] I had to request file a motion for a speedy trial. [23:26.120 --> 23:31.120] Well, if you have, if the time is already told, [23:31.120 --> 23:34.120] then just go ahead and move for dismissal [23:34.120 --> 23:37.120] for denial of due process. [23:37.120 --> 23:40.120] If there's case law saying they don't have to bother [23:40.120 --> 23:43.120] with due process, let them bring it up. [23:43.120 --> 23:47.120] And then you look at their case law and you bounce off of that. [23:47.120 --> 23:52.120] You can even argue that the case law is not well founded [23:52.120 --> 23:56.120] and should be revisited by the court. [23:56.120 --> 24:00.120] You can drag them in back into the courts. [24:00.120 --> 24:02.120] Would that be also something, Randy, [24:02.120 --> 24:07.120] where Ted might be able to say that there needs to be [24:07.120 --> 24:10.120] dismissed for want of prosecution? [24:10.120 --> 24:17.120] That's generally how you frame that statement. [24:17.120 --> 24:20.120] You know, they'll do that to you if you file a civil suit [24:20.120 --> 24:23.120] and you don't do anything for six months, [24:23.120 --> 24:26.120] then the court will dismiss, can dismiss, [24:26.120 --> 24:30.120] and then you will have a warrant for lack of prosecution. [24:30.120 --> 24:34.120] And lack of prosecution doesn't necessarily go to criminal. [24:34.120 --> 24:39.120] It means you failed to prosecute your case. [24:39.120 --> 24:46.120] So like if you file a civil, they would say lack of prosecution as well. [24:46.120 --> 24:50.120] Yeah, you told me in the past where to find your tricy ticker website [24:50.120 --> 24:54.120] and I didn't write it down and I'll write it down tonight. [24:54.120 --> 24:57.120] You need to take some zinc. [24:57.120 --> 25:03.120] I started taking zinc and I don't remember the last time I forgot something. [25:03.120 --> 25:07.120] Oh, yeah. Well, I did forget to order the zinc. [25:07.120 --> 25:10.120] There is that. Okay. [25:10.120 --> 25:16.120] It's trafficticket.website. [25:16.120 --> 25:20.120] And I don't have it set up for all the states. [25:20.120 --> 25:22.120] I just hadn't had time to do all that, [25:22.120 --> 25:24.120] but I do have it up and working. [25:24.120 --> 25:26.120] It has all the general stuff in there. [25:26.120 --> 25:28.120] It does have a motion for speedy trial, [25:28.120 --> 25:32.120] a request for an examining trial, [25:32.120 --> 25:34.120] and a bunch of other odds and ends. [25:34.120 --> 25:37.120] It doesn't matter which file they're going to ignore it. [25:37.120 --> 25:40.120] That's what you want them to do. [25:40.120 --> 25:41.120] Yeah. [25:41.120 --> 25:44.120] Because now you get to go after them. [25:44.120 --> 25:47.120] And if the prosecutor makes an argument before the court [25:47.120 --> 25:49.120] that you don't like, then you bar grieve him [25:49.120 --> 25:53.120] and ask for sanctions against him. [25:53.120 --> 25:57.120] Accusing of failing to speak with candor to the court, [25:57.120 --> 26:01.120] let him show that what he said is justified under law, [26:01.120 --> 26:07.120] and not just some policy that they've been following. [26:07.120 --> 26:08.120] Right, yeah. [26:08.120 --> 26:12.120] And then you can actually, you can also put an affidavit of facts [26:12.120 --> 26:15.120] in support of that motion for sanctions. [26:15.120 --> 26:20.120] If that officially makes the court aware of the fact [26:20.120 --> 26:24.120] that he didn't tell the truth, then you can go after the judge [26:24.120 --> 26:28.120] for not bar grieving the lawyer. [26:28.120 --> 26:29.120] Right. [26:29.120 --> 26:35.120] Well, the original judge just died here a couple weeks ago. [26:35.120 --> 26:38.120] I had that problem with a district judge [26:38.120 --> 26:42.120] that had a bailiff touch me in court. [26:42.120 --> 26:45.120] And I filed first degree felony aggravated assault charges [26:45.120 --> 26:48.120] against him for that. [26:48.120 --> 26:52.120] But he got out of it, and that's how I did it. [26:52.120 --> 26:56.120] He's driving to work one morning and pulled over on the side [26:56.120 --> 26:58.120] of the road and died. [26:58.120 --> 27:02.120] I thought that was a little much. [27:02.120 --> 27:06.120] Yeah, that was a tricky way to get out. [27:06.120 --> 27:11.120] So you can refile your motions as for a re-hearing on them. [27:11.120 --> 27:14.120] Well, no, probably not. [27:14.120 --> 27:16.120] Go to the traffic site and pull down of those. [27:16.120 --> 27:19.120] I got a bunch of interesting stuff. [27:19.120 --> 27:26.120] I think I've got the motion for finances of the judge. [27:26.120 --> 27:30.120] If I don't let me know, I have a motion that asks, [27:30.120 --> 27:34.120] where I went through all of the ways I could find [27:34.120 --> 27:40.120] that judges had been accused of laundering payoff money. [27:40.120 --> 27:44.120] And asked for financial disclosures from the judge [27:44.120 --> 27:48.120] and asked if he had any properties where he had multiple [27:48.120 --> 27:54.120] mortgages that were paid off in short periods of time. [27:54.120 --> 28:00.120] And a bunch of others that were crafted so they would know [28:00.120 --> 28:03.120] I was looking for money laundering. [28:03.120 --> 28:09.120] And surprising as it is, I have not had a single judge [28:09.120 --> 28:12.120] that responded to that. [28:12.120 --> 28:14.120] Okay. [28:14.120 --> 28:16.120] Imagine that. [28:16.120 --> 28:18.120] Then you get to appeal it. [28:18.120 --> 28:21.120] If the judge or conduct complaint the judge, [28:21.120 --> 28:27.120] because if the judge was not a graph-taking criminal, [28:27.120 --> 28:31.120] he wouldn't have any problem responding to this. [28:31.120 --> 28:37.120] And since he didn't, that creates the adverse inference [28:37.120 --> 28:41.120] that he's a graph-taking criminal. [28:41.120 --> 28:46.120] They're not used to someone coming straight at him. [28:46.120 --> 28:50.120] They used to everyone bowing and scraping before him. [28:50.120 --> 28:53.120] And it'll make up, well, depends on what you want to do [28:53.120 --> 28:56.120] with your ticket. [28:56.120 --> 28:59.120] Well, do you just want to win it? [28:59.120 --> 29:01.120] Or do you want these guys to start filing off? [29:01.120 --> 29:04.120] Is this a fight you want to have? [29:04.120 --> 29:10.120] Well, I can't take it on until like next April. [29:10.120 --> 29:17.120] If I just leave it late, I'll head to Arizona for the winter. [29:17.120 --> 29:22.120] Well, yeah, it won't take, get to April, it'll be easy. [29:22.120 --> 29:27.120] You file anything with them and they'll just stop. [29:27.120 --> 29:30.120] So, but depends, before you start this kind of fight, [29:30.120 --> 29:33.120] figure out what you want to do with it. [29:33.120 --> 29:35.120] Yes, it's generally a pretty big fight [29:35.120 --> 29:37.120] because they do everything wrong. [29:37.120 --> 29:40.120] But if you want to beat them up, it's great fun [29:40.120 --> 29:42.120] and you don't have much to lose. [29:42.120 --> 29:45.120] Hang on, we'll pick this back up on the other side. [29:45.120 --> 29:50.120] Randy Kelton, Brett Fountain, good time to check out our sponsors. [29:50.120 --> 29:52.120] And Brett Fountain shows me a picture [29:52.120 --> 29:54.120] when we're getting close to the end. [29:54.120 --> 29:56.120] It's generally a pretty girl, but this time it was him. [29:56.120 --> 29:59.120] Yuck. We'll be right back. [29:59.120 --> 30:05.120] It's clear cell phones have changed the way we live and work, [30:05.120 --> 30:07.120] but have they negatively affected our health? [30:07.120 --> 30:10.120] I'm Dr. Cameron Albrecht and I'll be back in just a moment [30:10.120 --> 30:12.120] with new findings about how cell phones [30:12.120 --> 30:15.120] may actually alter our brain chemistry. [30:15.120 --> 30:17.120] Privacy is under attack. [30:17.120 --> 30:20.120] When you give up data about yourself, you'll never get it back again. [30:20.120 --> 30:22.120] And once your privacy is gone, [30:22.120 --> 30:25.120] you'll find your freedoms will start to vanish too. [30:25.120 --> 30:27.120] So protect your rights. [30:27.120 --> 30:31.120] Say no to surveillance and keep your information to yourself. [30:31.120 --> 30:33.120] Privacy, it's worth hanging on to. [30:33.120 --> 30:37.120] This public service announcement is brought to you by StartPage.com, [30:37.120 --> 30:41.120] the private search engine alternative to Google, Yahoo and Bing. [30:41.120 --> 30:44.120] Start over with StartPage. [30:44.120 --> 30:47.120] Cell phones emit radio frequency energy. [30:47.120 --> 30:48.120] It's a fact. [30:48.120 --> 30:51.120] But whether it's dangerous to have a phone beaming this kind of radiation [30:51.120 --> 30:53.120] near your head has been disputed. [30:53.120 --> 30:55.120] Some have blamed it for brain tumors [30:55.120 --> 30:58.120] and cell phone companies have downplayed concerns. [30:58.120 --> 31:01.120] Well, now the Journal of the American Medical Association [31:01.120 --> 31:04.120] is confirming that cell phones affect brain chemistry. [31:04.120 --> 31:07.120] A study of 47 volunteers showed that glucose metabolism [31:07.120 --> 31:10.120] in the area of the brain closest to the cell phone antenna [31:10.120 --> 31:12.120] increases when the cell phone is on. [31:12.120 --> 31:15.120] While researchers aren't sure whether this exposure causes damage, [31:15.120 --> 31:17.120] I'm not taking any chances. [31:17.120 --> 31:19.120] I always keep the phone far from my body [31:19.120 --> 31:21.120] and I use a corded headset. [31:21.120 --> 31:23.120] I'm Dr. Cameron Albrecht. [31:23.120 --> 31:26.120] This is your information at CapronAlbrecht.com. [31:53.120 --> 32:05.120] Logos Radio Network welcomes a new show to our lineup for the new year. [32:05.120 --> 32:09.120] Scripture Talk with Nana will begin Wednesday, January 8th [32:09.120 --> 32:12.120] from 8 to 10 p.m. Central Time. [32:12.120 --> 32:15.120] Our goal is in accord with Matthew 516. [32:15.120 --> 32:17.120] Let your light so shine before men [32:17.120 --> 32:19.120] that they may see your good works [32:19.120 --> 32:21.120] and glorify your Father which is in heaven. [32:21.120 --> 32:23.120] We wish to reflect God's light [32:23.120 --> 32:26.120] and be a blessing to all those with a hearing ear. [32:26.120 --> 32:30.120] Join Nana and guests for both verse by verse Bible studies [32:30.120 --> 32:35.120] and topical Bible studies designed to provoke unto love and good works. [32:35.120 --> 32:38.120] Our verse by verse Bible studies will begin in the book of Matthew [32:38.120 --> 32:41.120] where we will discuss one chapter per week. [32:41.120 --> 32:44.120] Our topical Bible studies will vary each week [32:44.120 --> 32:46.120] and will explore sound doctrine [32:46.120 --> 32:48.120] as well as Christian character development. [32:48.120 --> 32:53.120] So mark your calendar and join us live on LogosRadioNetwork.com [32:53.120 --> 32:57.120] Wednesdays from 8 to 10 p.m. starting January 8th [32:57.120 --> 33:00.120] for an inspiring and motivating discussion of the Scriptures. [33:00.120 --> 33:06.120] You're listening to the Logos Radio Network [33:06.120 --> 33:10.120] at LogosRadioNetwork.com. [33:10.120 --> 33:20.120] Yeah, I got that one rent and I'm going to solve them [33:20.120 --> 33:25.120] to the head of the government to prosecute them. [33:25.120 --> 33:29.120] Okay. [33:29.120 --> 33:32.120] Hold on a second. [33:32.120 --> 33:41.120] Okay, we are back. [33:41.120 --> 33:44.120] Randy Kelton, Brett Fountain, Galutava Radio. [33:44.120 --> 33:50.120] And we're talking to Ted in Utah about taking on a traffic ticket. [33:50.120 --> 33:58.120] So traffic tickets are a great place to learn how the law works. [33:58.120 --> 34:04.120] And you know, it's only going to be a couple hundred bucks [34:04.120 --> 34:06.120] no matter what you do. [34:06.120 --> 34:08.120] They're always going to rule against you. [34:08.120 --> 34:10.120] You might get lucky and get it dropped, [34:10.120 --> 34:14.120] but it's a lot of work, a lot of time. [34:14.120 --> 34:18.120] Before you take one on and get embroiled in that fight, [34:18.120 --> 34:20.120] then you don't understand it's going to be a fight. [34:20.120 --> 34:23.120] So you really need to figure out why you want to do it [34:23.120 --> 34:28.120] before you get started because there are other fights [34:28.120 --> 34:30.120] that you can take on. [34:30.120 --> 34:33.120] There are more fights you can take on than you can get to. [34:33.120 --> 34:36.120] So I always suggest big fights real careful. [34:36.120 --> 34:42.120] So Ted, what do you want at the end of the day? [34:42.120 --> 34:44.120] Educate them for one thing. [34:44.120 --> 34:46.120] It's not a traffic ticket. [34:46.120 --> 34:47.120] I've talked to you before. [34:47.120 --> 34:50.120] It's this vicious dog ticket on the side of a dog. [34:50.120 --> 34:54.120] It's an organization for retaliation. [34:54.120 --> 35:02.120] Oh, that changes things. [35:02.120 --> 35:06.120] So what do they want to do to your dog? [35:06.120 --> 35:14.120] Well, I think the ultimate gain is to put her down. [35:14.120 --> 35:22.120] It's a 20 pound food. [35:22.120 --> 35:29.120] So who's after her and why? [35:29.120 --> 35:31.120] Dog catcher. [35:31.120 --> 35:36.120] I choose the dog catcher out for not doing her job. [35:36.120 --> 35:43.120] Oh, so go after her for retaliation. [35:43.120 --> 35:47.120] Is that a retaliation crime? [35:47.120 --> 35:49.120] Every state has one. [35:49.120 --> 35:51.120] A good old boy's town. [35:51.120 --> 35:55.120] Every state has a retaliation. [35:55.120 --> 35:59.120] And they have to have it to protect witnesses. [35:59.120 --> 36:08.120] Did the dog catcher encounter the dog outside a combined find area? [36:08.120 --> 36:12.120] Like running around the street or something? [36:12.120 --> 36:15.120] Somebody left the gate open out back. [36:15.120 --> 36:17.120] And she got out. [36:17.120 --> 36:22.120] The neighbor kept her overnight because she ran right home before the dog catcher gets there. [36:22.120 --> 36:29.120] But another gal claimed that my food will run out and bit her dog on the nose. [36:29.120 --> 36:34.120] Now her dog's three times the size. [36:34.120 --> 36:43.120] Now I'm sure Lucy probably got out, went under the gate or whatever she did. [36:43.120 --> 36:47.120] She didn't bite her dog on the nose. [36:47.120 --> 36:49.120] And this woman took a video. [36:49.120 --> 36:51.120] I've seen the video. [36:51.120 --> 36:58.120] And all I've seen in the video is this woman attacking my dog. [36:58.120 --> 37:00.120] Screaming at her and my dog. [37:00.120 --> 37:03.120] Lucy reacted like normally would. [37:03.120 --> 37:05.120] Anybody would. [37:05.120 --> 37:10.120] But I've never seen her bite her dog or anything else. [37:10.120 --> 37:16.120] Plus this woman had problems with other dogs in the neighborhood. [37:16.120 --> 37:22.120] I think it's one of these old gals that paranoid. [37:22.120 --> 37:26.120] Have you considered suing her? [37:26.120 --> 37:31.120] Well, I probably will at the end of this. [37:31.120 --> 37:40.120] Well, if you want the claim against your dog in all the way, you might want to do it now. [37:40.120 --> 37:47.120] But if you want to have this fight, then you can do that at the end. [37:47.120 --> 37:49.120] Okay. [37:49.120 --> 37:52.120] Yeah. [37:52.120 --> 37:57.120] Ted, how about if I read something to you out of Utah code here? [37:57.120 --> 38:00.120] Might just resonate with you. [38:00.120 --> 38:05.120] This says it's in Title 76, Chapter 8. [38:05.120 --> 38:10.120] It's 76-8-508.pr. [38:10.120 --> 38:16.120] Retaliation against a witness, victim, or informant. [38:16.120 --> 38:20.120] And it says here in Subsection 2, [38:20.120 --> 38:31.120] a person is guilty of the third degree felony of retaliation against a witness, victim, or informant if believing that an official proceeding [38:31.120 --> 38:38.120] or investigation is pending, is about to be instituted, or has been concluded. [38:38.120 --> 38:48.120] So in your situation, it would be an informant and it would be the official investigation about to be instituted. [38:48.120 --> 38:52.120] And in Subsection A there, it says, [38:52.120 --> 39:02.120] this person makes a threat of harm or causes harm and directs the threat of action against the witness or informant regarding any official proceeding, [39:02.120 --> 39:09.120] a victim of any crime, or any person closely associated with the victim or informant, [39:09.120 --> 39:16.120] and as retaliation or retribution against the witness, victim, or informant. [39:16.120 --> 39:18.120] So there's a third degree felony. [39:18.120 --> 39:25.120] And from what I'm hearing, it sounds like it lines right up with this third degree felony. [39:25.120 --> 39:26.120] Yeah. [39:26.120 --> 39:27.120] What was that? [39:27.120 --> 39:29.120] That was 76-8? [39:29.120 --> 39:31.120] Yes. [39:31.120 --> 39:36.120] 508.3. [39:36.120 --> 39:40.120] Take a look at that. [39:40.120 --> 39:45.120] It sounds like it fits the situation. [39:45.120 --> 39:51.120] Yeah, I'll try to see if I can get up. [39:51.120 --> 39:56.120] I've never tried to look up laws before in my life. [39:56.120 --> 39:59.120] Are you familiar with how to write a criminal complaint? [39:59.120 --> 40:02.120] Absolutely not. [40:02.120 --> 40:04.120] Well, it's real easy. [40:04.120 --> 40:08.120] You take the language that's in there, you can even copy and paste it, [40:08.120 --> 40:16.120] and it says, if a person does this, well, you just edit it to say that the person did that. [40:16.120 --> 40:24.120] So where it says a person is guilty, if believing that an official proceeding or investigation is pending, [40:24.120 --> 40:39.120] so you just say that the offender, knowing that an official proceeding or investigation was likely to be instituted, [40:39.120 --> 40:43.120] just word it so that it happened instead of that, it could happen. [40:43.120 --> 40:44.120] It's very simple. [40:44.120 --> 40:51.120] You just tweak the language slightly to make it a statement of something that the offender did. [40:51.120 --> 40:52.120] Does that make sense? [40:52.120 --> 41:03.120] Okay, let's go back to what the offender did that gives you the claim. [41:03.120 --> 41:13.120] We have a woman accusing the dog of biting her dog and has a video, but not of your dog biting her dog. [41:13.120 --> 41:14.120] Right. [41:14.120 --> 41:20.120] Is the dog being aggressive toward her? [41:20.120 --> 41:22.120] Yes. [41:22.120 --> 41:34.120] He's a holler, and I don't know if she kicked the dog, hit the dog, or what, but I've never seen my dog react that way. [41:34.120 --> 41:41.120] That is a problem because she was outside of a confined area. [41:41.120 --> 41:45.120] Yes, she went under the gauges. [41:45.120 --> 41:52.120] The other person has a video of the dog being aggressive, and that's going to support her claim, rather true or not, [41:52.120 --> 41:56.120] that it bit her dog on the nose. [41:56.120 --> 42:00.120] Yes. [42:00.120 --> 42:04.120] So she's filing a, what kind of complaint? [42:04.120 --> 42:07.120] Is this criminal or civil against you? [42:07.120 --> 42:17.120] Well, I think it's criminal, it's a class three misdemeanor, or class three misdemeanor. [42:17.120 --> 42:20.120] Okay, has this ever occurred before? [42:20.120 --> 42:21.120] No. [42:21.120 --> 42:27.120] Has this woman made other similar complaints? [42:27.120 --> 42:29.120] Yes. [42:29.120 --> 42:34.120] Oh, right after mine. [42:34.120 --> 42:39.120] Have you done a search of the court record to see how many she's filed? [42:39.120 --> 42:40.120] No. [42:40.120 --> 42:42.120] Well, I don't want to do that. [42:42.120 --> 42:45.120] Her name yet. [42:45.120 --> 42:46.120] Wait, say that again? [42:46.120 --> 42:47.120] I don't. [42:47.120 --> 42:55.120] I don't have her name, and I haven't wanted to rock the boat till after I get back from Arizona. [42:55.120 --> 43:04.120] Well, just go down and pull the record, you know, ask the clerk to see the file, that won't rock the boat in, and you can read her statement, [43:04.120 --> 43:08.120] and her name would be in the statement. [43:08.120 --> 43:09.120] Okay. [43:09.120 --> 43:14.120] You've got to write to that anyway. [43:14.120 --> 43:17.120] You've got to write to know who your accuser is. [43:17.120 --> 43:27.120] Yeah, I figured if I didn't do anything, I could also ask for dismissal, but I wasn't given discovery. [43:27.120 --> 43:31.120] Yeah, they won't doubt that you'll get it. [43:31.120 --> 43:34.120] That's not grounds for dismissal. [43:34.120 --> 43:40.120] That's grounds for appeal if they denied discovery, but not dismissal. [43:40.120 --> 43:45.120] Well, they're required to give discovery seven days before you go to trial. [43:45.120 --> 43:48.120] But that's not grounds for dismissal. [43:48.120 --> 43:53.120] Okay, it's going to be interesting. [43:53.120 --> 43:57.120] Okay, well, we'll do some research and we're going to move ahead. [43:57.120 --> 43:59.120] We've got a whole boat full of cars. [43:59.120 --> 44:00.120] We'll be right back. [44:00.120 --> 44:06.120] Through advances in technology, our lives have greatly improved, except in the area of nutrition. [44:06.120 --> 44:11.120] People feed their pets better than they feed themselves, and it's time we changed all that. [44:11.120 --> 44:17.120] Our primary defense against aging and disease in this toxic environment is good nutrition. [44:17.120 --> 44:22.120] In a world where natural foods have been irradiated, adulterated, and mutilated, [44:22.120 --> 44:25.120] young Jeviti can provide the nutrients you need. [44:25.120 --> 44:31.120] Logo Swiglio Network gets many requests to endorse all sorts of products, most of which we reject. [44:31.120 --> 44:34.120] We have come to trust Jeviti so much. [44:34.120 --> 44:40.120] We became a marketing distributor along with Alex Jones, Ben Fuchs, and many others. [44:40.120 --> 44:47.120] When you order from LogoSwiglioNetwork.com, your health will improve as you help support quality radio. [44:47.120 --> 44:52.120] As you realize the benefits of Jeviti, you may want to join us. [44:52.120 --> 44:59.120] As a distributor, you can experience improved health, help your friends and family, and increase your income. [44:59.120 --> 45:01.120] Order now. [45:01.120 --> 45:04.120] Are you the plaintiff or defendant in a lawsuit? [45:04.120 --> 45:11.120] Win your case without an attorney with Jurisdictionary, the affordable, easy-to-understand 4-CD course [45:11.120 --> 45:15.120] that will show you how in 24 hours, step-by-step. [45:15.120 --> 45:19.120] If you have a lawyer, know what your lawyer should be doing. [45:19.120 --> 45:23.120] If you don't have a lawyer, know what you should do for yourself. [45:23.120 --> 45:28.120] Thousands have won with our step-by-step course, and now you can too. [45:28.120 --> 45:34.120] Jurisdictionary was created by a licensed attorney with 22 years of case-winning experience. [45:34.120 --> 45:43.120] Even if you're not in a lawsuit, you can learn what everyone should understand about the principles and practices that control our American courts. [45:43.120 --> 45:52.120] You'll receive our audio classroom, video seminar, tutorials, forms for civil cases, pro se tactics, and much more. [45:52.120 --> 46:01.120] Please visit ruleoflawradio.com and click on the banner or call toll-free 866-LAW-EZ. [46:22.120 --> 46:34.120] Okay, we are back. [46:34.120 --> 46:43.120] Randy Kelton, Brett Fountain Rule of Law Radio on this Friday, the 11th day of December, 2020. [46:43.120 --> 46:45.120] And we're going to Chris in Colorado. [46:45.120 --> 46:46.120] Hello, Chris. [46:46.120 --> 46:48.120] What do you have for us today? [46:48.120 --> 46:58.120] Hey, guys, I have a question that sounds like Ted was bringing me some of what I needed. [46:58.120 --> 47:09.120] I had my first court experience over the summer, about somebody in two small claims, and it was a thing over eviction and a deposit. [47:09.120 --> 47:13.120] I was never evicted, but that's the reason they used to keep the deposit. [47:13.120 --> 47:21.120] And the judge's favorite, she gave me a judgment in my favor, and so it was a good first experience. [47:21.120 --> 47:26.120] Now I'm on my second one. [47:26.120 --> 47:29.120] I'm almost tempted to try to get evicted. [47:29.120 --> 47:34.120] I had an argument for a manager at a storage company because they rented me a storage unit. [47:34.120 --> 47:44.120] Well, not half the size, but quite a bit smaller than what I paid for, and basically told me if I didn't like it, I could just leave. [47:44.120 --> 47:46.120] So I got an argument. [47:46.120 --> 47:52.120] She used a pretty bad customer experience, and she canceled my contract. [47:52.120 --> 48:00.120] So I was wondering what I could do, and it looks not like Ted in retaliation is one little angle, but my main question was, [48:00.120 --> 48:12.120] since I signed a contract and they have all the basic stuff in there with, you're going to have to go through, what do you call it, when you don't go to court, they keep it with... [48:12.120 --> 48:13.120] Mediation. [48:13.120 --> 48:15.120] Mediation, right? [48:15.120 --> 48:18.120] And they have no liability, et cetera, et cetera. [48:18.120 --> 48:23.120] Basically, they're just not liable for anything in some silly paper, but to me it's just a silly paper, right? [48:23.120 --> 48:25.120] Contracts are meant to be broken, right? [48:25.120 --> 48:36.120] Yeah, what they would normally be liable for, they're liable for anyway, if there is a contractual provision that claims to make them not liable, [48:36.120 --> 48:51.120] if that contractual condition does not grant you some equal advantage, then the covenant is unconscionable and not enforceable. [48:51.120 --> 48:53.120] At least that's the argument you can make. [48:53.120 --> 49:04.120] Okay, and I read through it, and what it said is I signed something that says the measurement was estimated, and I said, so basically you could give me something that's half the size of the unit, [49:04.120 --> 49:08.120] which we're getting close to, and they said, well, it doesn't matter, you signed it. [49:08.120 --> 49:11.120] So that's where I'm at with the... [49:11.120 --> 49:14.120] That's a pretty good case. [49:14.120 --> 49:28.120] You got a JP who's going to look at that, and if it's obviously fraudulent in what they're doing, you might charge them with fraud. [49:28.120 --> 49:34.120] They have storage spaces, and they're saying they're estimated sizes. [49:34.120 --> 49:40.120] When you signed, they say what we told you was basically only an estimate, and... [49:40.120 --> 49:46.120] How do you have estimated sizes when you have a fixed unit? [49:46.120 --> 49:50.120] Does a unit change sizes sometimes? [49:50.120 --> 49:53.120] Just those moving walls. [49:53.120 --> 49:56.120] So tell me, how big are they? [49:56.120 --> 49:59.120] Exactly, exactly. [49:59.120 --> 50:11.120] That's really stupid to say that your storage space is an estimated size, that's an unconscionable covenant in the contract. [50:11.120 --> 50:13.120] It won't be enforceable. [50:13.120 --> 50:17.120] We can't use that as a reason to sell you one size and give you another. [50:17.120 --> 50:22.120] That's called bait and switch. [50:22.120 --> 50:23.120] Yeah. [50:23.120 --> 50:25.120] You might look up to the case law. [50:25.120 --> 50:29.120] It was just estimated. [50:29.120 --> 50:31.120] Sorry? [50:31.120 --> 50:33.120] That was what I asked. [50:33.120 --> 50:35.120] I said, you know, no big deal. [50:35.120 --> 50:39.120] Can I just get some consideration that I got a space that's 30% less than what I'm paying for? [50:39.120 --> 50:41.120] And they said, well, you signed it. [50:41.120 --> 50:43.120] First, the original manager said, there's nothing I can do. [50:43.120 --> 50:44.120] Talk to corporate. [50:44.120 --> 50:46.120] Corporate would never answer or call me back. [50:46.120 --> 50:52.120] And I finally get a call from this nasty district manager who just basically said, screw off and do your thing. [50:52.120 --> 50:58.120] And when I called her out, she says, you're being aggressive and threatening on canceling your contract. [50:58.120 --> 51:07.120] So I'm down in Texas right now, actually, and I don't want to drive three states up to go do this and, you know, cost me $600, $700 to go take care of it. [51:07.120 --> 51:08.120] Wait a minute. [51:08.120 --> 51:09.120] Wait a minute. [51:09.120 --> 51:11.120] Are you living in Texas? [51:11.120 --> 51:13.120] Well, I did last winter. [51:13.120 --> 51:16.120] I'm considering it again this winter. [51:16.120 --> 51:20.120] Well, were you living in Texas when this occurred? [51:20.120 --> 51:21.120] Yes. [51:21.120 --> 51:24.120] So I'm in Texas. [51:24.120 --> 51:28.120] Perfect. [51:28.120 --> 51:32.120] And let them move it to a federal court if they want to. [51:32.120 --> 51:34.120] Well, it's not enough money. [51:34.120 --> 51:37.120] They can't. [51:37.120 --> 51:42.120] Randy, that's a loadout. [51:42.120 --> 51:43.120] Is it a corporation? [51:43.120 --> 51:45.120] Is it a large company? [51:45.120 --> 51:46.120] It is. [51:46.120 --> 51:48.120] It's pretty good size. [51:48.120 --> 51:52.120] Do they have locations in Texas? [51:52.120 --> 51:55.120] They do, yeah. [51:55.120 --> 51:59.120] Look up international shoe. [51:59.120 --> 52:03.120] It's a seminal case on minimal contacts. [52:03.120 --> 52:05.120] They have offices in Texas. [52:05.120 --> 52:07.120] They do business in Texas. [52:07.120 --> 52:11.120] They can be sued in Texas. [52:11.120 --> 52:13.120] Okay. [52:13.120 --> 52:17.120] That'd be great fun. [52:17.120 --> 52:22.120] That would be, JP Court I think costs $65. [52:22.120 --> 52:28.120] That would be $65 worth of fun. [52:28.120 --> 52:37.120] Well, I got three weeks to just secure my stuff and not get it tossed or ejected. [52:37.120 --> 52:43.120] Oh, once you sue them, your stuff gets secured. [52:43.120 --> 52:45.120] Okay. [52:45.120 --> 52:52.120] I asked the court for a restraining order against them. [52:52.120 --> 52:55.120] The court's probably going to think, well, they're in Colorado. [52:55.120 --> 52:57.120] I can't give a straight restraining order. [52:57.120 --> 53:00.120] You say, oh, the company's in, it's also in Texas. [53:00.120 --> 53:02.120] So you can issue to the company. [53:02.120 --> 53:06.120] And then the restraining order takes effect no matter where it's at. [53:06.120 --> 53:08.120] Okay. [53:08.120 --> 53:14.120] But once you, once you sue them, corporates going to say, don't do anything with this guy's property. [53:14.120 --> 53:17.120] And then he'll sue you for the full amount of the property. [53:17.120 --> 53:30.120] This is a question as to whether or not this manager or whatever he was had just because she felt that you were being aggressive. [53:30.120 --> 53:38.120] Is there a covenant in the contract that says that you can't be rude? [53:38.120 --> 53:41.120] I haven't read the whole thing, but I haven't seen that yet. [53:41.120 --> 53:43.120] No. [53:43.120 --> 53:45.120] I don't think it's... [53:45.120 --> 53:53.120] So she, her action was ultra-virage, was outside the scope of the contract. [53:53.120 --> 53:58.120] So how much do you sue her for? [53:58.120 --> 54:00.120] All you can do in JP's 10 grand. [54:00.120 --> 54:05.120] So sue them for 10 grand. [54:05.120 --> 54:07.120] Well, if they could just dance with... [54:07.120 --> 54:14.120] I'm going to get ahold of the owner. Ironically, the owner of the company, and this is a pretty multi-million dollar company. [54:14.120 --> 54:18.120] It's not huge here. It's big enough. It's StoreQuest. [54:18.120 --> 54:24.120] I found his address in California. His phone numbers are readily available. It's crazy. He's pretty approachable. [54:24.120 --> 54:28.120] So I don't know if he knows his employees are doing this, but I'm going to get ahold of him first. [54:28.120 --> 54:32.120] Well, sue him. [54:32.120 --> 54:36.120] You'll find out real quick. [54:36.120 --> 54:44.120] And then what they probably do is call you and then you explain what's going on. [54:44.120 --> 54:48.120] Mostly corporate doesn't know this stuff is going on. [54:48.120 --> 54:50.120] Right. I agree. [54:50.120 --> 54:52.120] Yeah, these local people don't tell everybody. [54:52.120 --> 54:58.120] You're spending all these hundreds of thousand dollars, thousands of dollars on advertising, [54:58.120 --> 55:03.120] and you've got people that are working for you that don't have an investment in your business [55:03.120 --> 55:08.120] that are really giving your business a black eye. You need to know about it. [55:08.120 --> 55:11.120] Right. I'm not talking about it. [55:11.120 --> 55:15.120] So just calling him probably would fix it. [55:15.120 --> 55:19.120] I did that to a friend of mine who came to Texas. [55:19.120 --> 55:24.120] At the time, we all had party lines, and he paid them extra to get a private line. [55:24.120 --> 55:28.120] They made him lay a 200-foot cable before they would come out and hook it up. [55:28.120 --> 55:31.120] They hooked it up and put him on a six-party line. [55:31.120 --> 55:37.120] So I happened to know that Cintel, they would tell you their head office is in Colleen, [55:37.120 --> 55:40.120] but that wasn't the case. It was actually in Chicago. [55:40.120 --> 55:46.120] So Mark is real upset because he's running a business and he can't do that on a six-party line. [55:46.120 --> 55:56.120] So I called up to Chicago and told him that my daughter was doing a paper in school [55:56.120 --> 56:03.120] on high-level executives, and she wanted to do one on the president of Cintel [56:03.120 --> 56:07.120] since that was her phone company, and asked who the president was. [56:07.120 --> 56:13.120] Oh, yeah, they told me. I hung up. I called back and asked for the president by name. [56:13.120 --> 56:18.120] And I get his secretary, and I act like I'm upset. [56:18.120 --> 56:21.120] And I asked him, where is that? Well, he's not here. [56:21.120 --> 56:23.120] Well, who the heck is there? [56:23.120 --> 56:29.120] Mr. Rice is here. Well, who's he? Well, he's the chairman of the board. [56:29.120 --> 56:32.120] Oh, he'll do. [56:32.120 --> 56:38.120] And I said, hey, Mark, this is a guy named Rice in Chicago. He can help you. [56:38.120 --> 56:41.120] I give it to Mark. He grabbed the phone out of my head. [56:41.120 --> 56:47.120] Look, if you, Mr. Rice, look, you, S.O.B., I paid you for a six-party line. [56:47.120 --> 56:51.120] You got me on a private line. You got me on a six-party line. [56:51.120 --> 56:56.120] I'll get my private line five to come up to Chicago and kick your behind to do it. [56:56.120 --> 56:58.120] Click, you hung up. [56:58.120 --> 57:02.120] Whoa, Mark. You know what that was? [57:02.120 --> 57:06.120] Awesome, Rice. That was the chairman of the board. [57:06.120 --> 57:10.120] Oh, he was terrified. [57:10.120 --> 57:18.120] 30 minutes later, we get a call from a Mr. Whitney, executive vice president of this five-state area. [57:18.120 --> 57:24.120] Without your private line, will tomorrow noon be soon enough? [57:24.120 --> 57:29.120] I come out there the next day. I bet they had 200 guys out there. [57:29.120 --> 57:36.120] Guys up, polls ditch, which, oh, man, it was a mess. [57:36.120 --> 57:41.120] The boss didn't know. What it turned out was they had bought this company. [57:41.120 --> 57:47.120] It was a co-op and Sintel bought it out and they were trying to get everybody on private lines. [57:47.120 --> 57:50.120] The company itself was resisting. [57:50.120 --> 57:58.120] And when Mark threatened to beat up the chairman of the board, they got that fixed. [57:58.120 --> 58:03.120] So that really works. Get a hold of this guy and ask him, [58:03.120 --> 58:06.120] do you know what your people are doing out here? [58:06.120 --> 58:12.120] They're lying to people. They're selling them one size and then giving them another. [58:12.120 --> 58:15.120] And then when they complain about it, they just throw them out. [58:15.120 --> 58:22.120] And you watch what happens. That'll probably fix your problem without you having to file a suit. [58:22.120 --> 58:27.120] Very true. Very true. Okay, I'll give it a run. [58:27.120 --> 58:35.120] Okay, thank you, Chris. Okay, we're about to go to our sponsors. Did you have anything else for us, Chris? [58:35.120 --> 58:39.120] Well, just saying, hey, it's been a while, so thank you very much. I think that's good for this week. [58:39.120 --> 58:48.120] Okay, thank you, Chris. Randy Kelton. Randy Kelton, Brett Fountain, root of Law Radio. We'll be right back. [59:09.120 --> 59:14.120] We'll be right back. [59:40.120 --> 59:44.120] That's 888-551-0102. [59:44.120 --> 59:49.120] Or visit us online at bfa.org. [01:00:00.120 --> 01:00:05.120] The following news flash is brought to you by the Lone Star Lowdown. [01:00:05.120 --> 01:00:09.120] Markets for Monday the 22nd of July, 2019. [01:00:09.120 --> 01:00:12.120] Open with precious metals. Gold, $1,429.00. [01:00:12.120 --> 01:00:15.120] Silver, $16.45. [01:00:15.120 --> 01:00:17.120] Copper, $2.75. [01:00:17.120 --> 01:00:20.120] Oil, Texas crude, $55.63. [01:00:20.120 --> 01:00:23.120] Brent crude, $62.47. [01:00:23.120 --> 01:00:29.120] And cryptos in order of market cap. Bitcoin Core, $10,566.52. [01:00:29.120 --> 01:00:32.120] Ethereum, $227.26. [01:00:32.120 --> 01:00:35.120] XRP, Ripple, $0.33. [01:00:35.120 --> 01:00:37.120] Litecoin, $100.31. [01:00:37.120 --> 01:00:40.120] And Bitcoin Cash is at $324.10. [01:00:40.120 --> 01:00:43.120] A crypto coin. [01:00:46.120 --> 01:01:00.120] In history, the year 1916, the Preparedness Day bombing, a tying suitcase bomb, was detonated on Market Street in San Francisco during the World War I Preparedness Day Parade, killing 10 and entering 40. [01:01:00.120 --> 01:01:05.120] And recent news. [01:01:05.120 --> 01:01:24.120] Since Governor Greg Abbott signed House Bill 1325 legalizing heaven to tax his law back in June, county prosecutors around the state, including Houston, Austin, San Antonio, have been dropping marijuana possession charges and even refusing to file new ones, since they are stipulating that they do not have the time or the laboratory equipment to test the herb for THC. [01:01:24.120 --> 01:01:33.120] Margaret Moore, the Travis County District Attorney, announced earlier this month that she was dismissing 32 felony possession and delivery of marijuana cases because of the law. [01:01:33.120 --> 01:01:48.120] Mr. Abbott and other state officials, including the Attorney General, stipulated in a letter to county district attorneys back on Thursday that marijuana has not been decriminalized in Texas and that these actions demonstrate a misunderstanding of how HB 1325 works. [01:01:48.120 --> 01:02:01.120] As well as other cities, too, like the District Attorney in El Paso, Kyma Esparza, a Democrat who also stated earlier this month that the law, quote, will not have an effect on the prosecution of marijuana cases in El Paso. [01:02:01.120 --> 01:02:13.120] However, the issue was succinctly summarized by Mr. Brandon Ball, an assistant public defender in Harris County, who stated that, quote, the law is constantly changing on what makes something illegal based on its chemical makeup. [01:02:13.120 --> 01:02:22.120] It's important that if someone is charged with something, the test matches what they're charged with. [01:02:22.120 --> 01:02:27.120] A paper by Tulane University identified a five and a half inch American pocket shark. [01:02:27.120 --> 01:02:39.120] As the first of its kind in the Gulf of Mexico, the specimen being only the second pocket shark ever captured or recorded with the other one being found way back in 1979 in the East Pacific Ocean. [01:02:39.120 --> 01:02:53.120] According to the university paper, the shark secretes a luminous fluid from a gland near its front fins for the purposes hypothesized to lure and prey who may be drawn into the glow. [01:02:53.120 --> 01:03:11.120] This was Book Roadie with the Lowdown for July 22, 2019. [01:03:23.120 --> 01:03:43.120] Okay, we are back. Randy Kelthup, Brett Felton. We lost a caller. [01:03:43.120 --> 01:03:52.120] Who was I going to? Brett, he's not there anymore. Oh, Chris, Chris, that's right. That's right. Chris, Chris dropped off. I'm brain dead. [01:03:52.120 --> 01:04:08.120] I need to take some more zinc. I forgot to. Okay. Hello, Miss Mary. What do you have for us today? Good evening. I was wanting to invite you to church. [01:04:08.120 --> 01:04:16.120] Oh, where at? My church is the Lady of Alibara. [01:04:16.120 --> 01:04:29.120] Oh, okay. I thought maybe it was the Gospel according to Randy. You wish. So what do you have for us today? [01:04:29.120 --> 01:04:39.120] Well, where do we start? They're saying Sidney Powell might prosecute the election and military court. Does that hold any water? [01:04:39.120 --> 01:04:49.120] No, there's nothing military. Military doesn't have any jurisdiction. I hear all this kind of stuff all the time. [01:04:49.120 --> 01:05:05.120] But the only way Sidney Powell could get any jurisdiction is if the president declared martial law, but he doesn't have time because before he could get it implemented, he would be out of office. [01:05:05.120 --> 01:05:16.120] We're not still in martial law since 9-11? No. I don't know that martial law, general martial law was ever declared. [01:05:16.120 --> 01:05:18.120] Okay. [01:05:18.120 --> 01:05:24.120] I didn't hear about it being declared at 9-11. [01:05:24.120 --> 01:05:26.120] Okay. [01:05:26.120 --> 01:05:41.120] Yes, so the military has nothing to say about this. I've heard that a lot that you can always take stuff to a military court, but as far as I can tell, that's nonsense. I've never found anything to support it. [01:05:41.120 --> 01:05:47.120] Could an executive order have pushed it in there if we could speak for an interference? [01:05:47.120 --> 01:05:58.120] No. Executive order is the executive branch. This is a judicial branch function and the president don't have anything to say about that. [01:05:58.120 --> 01:06:06.120] No, I can't say anyway the military. That's the last thing we want is the military interfering with civilian matters. [01:06:06.120 --> 01:06:13.120] Their job is to protect us from an external threat, not internal. [01:06:13.120 --> 01:06:22.120] That would be scary business if the military could start court-martialing citizens. [01:06:22.120 --> 01:06:42.120] Okay. Well, with the Venezuela thing, we've been talking that here in Texas we need to run for Republicans and run in the ranks like of a local delegate and start doing work in a Republican party to build some new infrastructure. [01:06:42.120 --> 01:06:47.120] I'm not sure what that means, the reference to Venezuela. [01:06:47.120 --> 01:06:59.120] Well, the Republicans here in Texas seem to have been pretty weak and it looks like Texas is the next frontier for the Democrats. [01:06:59.120 --> 01:07:09.120] So by building a Republican party and the constitutional knowledge, we can take steps forward to establish a non-socialist state or country. [01:07:09.120 --> 01:07:15.120] Have you heard anything about secession? [01:07:15.120 --> 01:07:22.120] We hear about that every eight years, Randy. That comes up here in like every eight years. [01:07:22.120 --> 01:07:23.120] Why eight years? [01:07:23.120 --> 01:07:44.120] They seem to be very interested on the radio. They're laughing at it and I'm not saying that has anything to do with constitutionalists, but in order to grab the minds of normal citizens, I think through leadership and using the system and doing work in Republican parties are best bet. [01:07:44.120 --> 01:07:59.120] Well, I agree. Texas is pretty Republican anyway, so it's, we got a lot of Democrats moving in, but it'll be interesting to see how this election shakes out. [01:07:59.120 --> 01:08:10.120] If the Democrats do take the White House and do what they're claiming, we're likely to have a lot more people moving away from the Democratic Party. [01:08:10.120 --> 01:08:20.120] Because when the sky starts falling in on everybody, it will be clear what the problem is. [01:08:20.120 --> 01:08:25.120] Okay. Well, also, go ahead. [01:08:25.120 --> 01:08:27.120] No, go ahead. I was waiting for you. [01:08:27.120 --> 01:08:49.120] Well, on another subject, I believe the Texas State Law Library has a phone service. I know that when I used to go up there and they allowed access to the library, those librarians were on call all day running around doing research for God knows what state agency for free. [01:08:49.120 --> 01:09:06.120] So that state law library is open to all citizens for free. Once you have your local library card, you can get your state law library card, and once you have one of those or both, you can get a card that goes to all institution. [01:09:06.120 --> 01:09:20.120] I know one day I was writing a suit on an ex-boyfriend on property damage, and you want to see a testimony hold water, show the local sheriff your copy of property damage or whatnot. [01:09:20.120 --> 01:09:28.120] And that takes your case that those losses look real good when the cops are trying to talk to you, including for the dog victim guy. [01:09:28.120 --> 01:09:37.120] But that day I must have driven home with $3,000 worth of books from the library. [01:09:37.120 --> 01:09:49.120] Well, long library librarians are great. If you have legal issues, you can call them and they will research it for you. [01:09:49.120 --> 01:09:58.120] Yeah, I recommend that to everybody. Texas State Law Library is underneath the Texas Supreme Court. What are those two courts? [01:09:58.120 --> 01:10:01.120] The Court of Criminal Appeals. [01:10:01.120 --> 01:10:15.120] Yeah, Criminal Appeals and Supreme Court. So criminal appeals is where they decide who to kill. People get the death sentence there, and that's next to the Capitol. It's in a separate building, but they're all linked with basement. [01:10:15.120 --> 01:10:34.120] Yeah, if you're on Congress Street, Congress runs right into the Capitol. If you go north on Congress, you look at the Capitol, and when you get to the Capitol, you turn left, and then the next street turn right, and it'll run you right straight into the building that has the Supreme Court, [01:10:34.120 --> 01:10:44.120] the Supreme Court and the Court of Criminal Appeals right across from each other, and then to your left down in the basement is the Law Library. [01:10:44.120 --> 01:10:55.120] Right. It's a separate detached building, and right next to that is a separate detached building, about seven stories. I think the county attorney or district attorneys there, I don't know. [01:10:55.120 --> 01:11:08.120] No, no, no, no. They moved their next door to the courthouse, though. The Ron, the, what's his name, building? Ron Earl Building. And that was all by the courthouse. [01:11:08.120 --> 01:11:17.120] The state attorney's office are right next to that law library, and I think they have a law library and running around 40 hours a week. [01:11:17.120 --> 01:11:37.120] I was looking at two different issues, Randy. One is Facebook. One is writing an anti-vax bill, and I talked with Citizens' Commission on Human Rights this week, and I'm going to do some research with Texans for vaccine choice [01:11:37.120 --> 01:11:51.120] and national vaccine info center. And he was under the idea that these two organizations had full breast and understanding of where we are with anti-vaccine bills. [01:11:51.120 --> 01:12:00.120] But I don't think it would hurt to put another one out there or at least market what they have. So that's coming up for me to be working on. [01:12:00.120 --> 01:12:12.120] But I don't know, what do you think about that? I mean, I've got my cheating little ways I wear my mask and don't wear my mask and when and where I do it and how much I go out. [01:12:12.120 --> 01:12:19.120] But Richard had me worried about the vaccine, got me started to worry about the vaccine. So where's the vaccine? [01:12:19.120 --> 01:12:24.120] You should be worried about the vaccine and what I've seen about it. [01:12:24.120 --> 01:12:32.120] It's so, this vaccine will alter, permanently alter your DNA. [01:12:32.120 --> 01:12:45.120] I think it's plausible we write a bill. So that's something I'm looking at. Hopefully have something in a week or two and I'll be talking to a former ledge here up in Dallas soon. [01:12:45.120 --> 01:12:54.120] From what I've heard of the vaccine, whether it's dangerous or not, what it is, its effects are permanent. [01:12:54.120 --> 01:13:04.120] Unlike vaccines that have mercury and other heavy metals in them, you can do chelation therapy or other treatments to remove those contaminants. [01:13:04.120 --> 01:13:21.120] But this particular vaccine will alter your DNA and it will alter it permanently. So if it does have the kinds of harmful side effects that have been suggested, it's permanent. You can't fix it. [01:13:21.120 --> 01:13:35.120] And then we've got the CDC, according to record requests, we've got the CDC preparing to list all of these known horrible side effects as complications to COVID-19. [01:13:35.120 --> 01:13:42.120] Well, that's part of the COVID-19. They're already setting it up. [01:13:42.120 --> 01:13:51.120] I'm really concerned about the vaccine. I'm not going to let them touch me with that until they've had a lot more experience with it. [01:13:51.120 --> 01:14:01.120] Well, I want you to look and edit the last rendition of my bill. Richard and I are going to look at it. [01:14:01.120 --> 01:14:13.120] He's in D.C. right now for the rally, the Trump rally tomorrow. But for both of you guys, if y'all have any, you know, any information you can gather, just keep that at the forefront. [01:14:13.120 --> 01:14:23.120] And lastly, any ideas on moving forward with doing Facebook? I think discovery on Facebook could be a lot of fun. [01:14:23.120 --> 01:14:36.120] I bet it could. No, I haven't sat down and tried to find a cause of action on Facebook. [01:14:36.120 --> 01:14:41.120] Brett, what do you know about right to work? [01:14:41.120 --> 01:14:43.120] Right to work. [01:14:43.120 --> 01:14:53.120] And property ownership in your job. In Texas, it's the right to work state. We don't have unions. [01:14:53.120 --> 01:14:56.120] Your employer can fire you if you want to. [01:14:56.120 --> 01:15:14.120] And for a long time, they claim that you had no ownership interest in your job. But the courts have subsequently ruled that if you work for a company and you spend your time there and your life there and you organize your life around that company, [01:15:14.120 --> 01:15:29.120] that over time you develop a property ownership in your job in that company so they can't arbitrarily or capriciously fire you or you consume them for all of the time and investment you have in the company. [01:15:29.120 --> 01:15:45.120] So considering that case law, if I use Facebook, people use it as a way to generate income, and Facebook advertises that, that you can advertise on Facebook, [01:15:45.120 --> 01:15:59.120] you can go on Facebook and put in blogs and build networks on Facebook. Well, that's time consuming and costs money. You get an investment in that. [01:15:59.120 --> 01:16:08.120] So if Facebook arbitrarily and capriciously destroys your investment, I would think we would have a claim against it. [01:16:08.120 --> 01:16:20.120] Where they come in and ban your channel after you put all this time and work in developing it. And they advertised it as a platform you could use for that purpose. [01:16:20.120 --> 01:16:32.120] And then they changed their policy arbitrarily and capriciously and cost you all the time and money you put into this to building this. I would think we would have a claim. [01:16:32.120 --> 01:16:48.120] Okay. I like it. I would say, and we can talk some more about this after the sponsors if you want to, but I would say you need to target the terms of service because they're going to say you got kicked off because you violated terms. [01:16:48.120 --> 01:16:57.120] You need to make sure that you word it in a way that shows you didn't. That's a good point. But we'll be right back. [01:16:57.120 --> 01:17:04.120] Thank you for your sponsors. [01:17:28.120 --> 01:17:34.120] How to turn the financial tables on them and make them pay you to go away. [01:17:34.120 --> 01:17:41.120] The Michael Maris proven method is the solution for how to stop debt collectors. Personal consultation is available as well. [01:17:41.120 --> 01:18:00.120] For more information, please visit ruleoflawradio.com and click on the blue Michael Maris banner or email Michael Maris at yahoo.com. 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 now. [01:18:00.120 --> 01:18:13.120] I love logos. Without the shows on this network, I'd be almost as ignorant as my friends. I'm so addicted to the truth now that there's no going back. I need my truth fake. I'd be lost without logos. And I really want to help keep this network on the air. [01:18:13.120 --> 01:18:22.120] I'd love to volunteer as a show producer, but I'm a bit of a Luddite and I really don't have any money to give because I spent it all on supplements. How can I help logos? [01:18:22.120 --> 01:18:31.120] Well, I'm glad you asked. Whenever you order anything from Amazon, you can help logos with ordering your supplies or holiday gifts. First thing you do is clear your cookies. [01:18:31.120 --> 01:18:43.120] Now, go to logosradionetwork.com. Click on the Amazon logo and bookmark it. Now, when you order anything from Amazon, you use that link and logos gets a few pesos. [01:18:43.120 --> 01:18:44.120] Do I pay extra? [01:18:44.120 --> 01:18:45.120] No. [01:18:45.120 --> 01:18:47.120] Do you have to do anything different when I order? [01:18:47.120 --> 01:18:48.120] No. [01:18:48.120 --> 01:18:49.120] Can I use my Amazon pride? [01:18:49.120 --> 01:18:50.120] No. [01:18:50.120 --> 01:18:51.120] I mean yes. [01:18:51.120 --> 01:18:57.120] Wow. Giving without doing anything or spending any money. This is perfect. Thank you so much. [01:18:57.120 --> 01:18:58.120] We are welcome. [01:18:58.120 --> 01:19:27.120] Happy holidays, logos. [01:19:27.120 --> 01:19:28.120] Well. [01:19:57.120 --> 01:20:25.120] Okay, this is Randy Kelton, Brett Felton, legal law radio on this Friday, the 11th day of December, 2020, and we're talking to Mary in Texas. [01:20:25.120 --> 01:20:37.120] Okay, Mary, we were discussing how to get a shot at Facebook on the break, and we definitely need to read the contract. [01:20:37.120 --> 01:20:39.120] Okay. [01:20:39.120 --> 01:20:49.120] And once we've read the contract really good, I'm sure we can find something. The big deal is not to win in court. You know, they've got lots of money deep pockets. [01:20:49.120 --> 01:21:03.120] The big deal is to get them into court. And then when their lawyer responds to you, bar grieve them. Bar grieve them in the Stone Age, then they push their litigation costs up. [01:21:03.120 --> 01:21:17.120] If they get sued every time they ban somebody, even if it's in a local JP court, it only costs you 65 bucks. You drag them in for 10 grand and then beat up their lawyers. [01:21:17.120 --> 01:21:23.120] They push their litigation costs up. [01:21:23.120 --> 01:21:26.120] Okay. Anything else, Mary? [01:21:26.120 --> 01:21:37.120] Well, the hope is to find about seven causes of action. And I'm looking at fraud, collective common political censorship, religious censorship. [01:21:37.120 --> 01:21:56.120] I mean, I'm just saying I want to stack up any plausible charge. And then I want to make kind of like you something shareable. And so after I get a few of these documents, I want to start a Facebook page that says Facebook page, how to process through Facebook. [01:21:56.120 --> 01:22:07.120] I wonder if that would surely look at their terms of service. I bet that's not in there. [01:22:07.120 --> 01:22:27.120] Because I've spent years on developing, you know, getting up to 3000 people. I have about 1000 people blocked as well because that's so many trolls. And so many of my friends here in Austin got mad when I started supporting Trump. He's arrested Chapa, Einstein, Weinstein, et cetera, et cetera. [01:22:27.120 --> 01:22:49.120] So basically, this has been my only political platform when I was so busy working all the time. So I've spent hours and hours a day, you know, building up my group, editing my group, presenting controversial information on politics and health from controversial authors. [01:22:49.120 --> 01:23:05.120] So even though, and they did say, you know, it's violation community standards and a lot of people apparently after they asked to have the policy looked at, they get clemency and their count gets restored. [01:23:05.120 --> 01:23:21.120] But I haven't done that yet. And again, I just started a project on Facebook called anti-vax USA. And so they're asking me if I want to pay money to advertise that group, even though I have almost zero access to that page. [01:23:21.120 --> 01:23:29.120] For some reason, it's not working. But they have solicited me to pay money to advertise my group. [01:23:29.120 --> 01:23:40.120] Oh, if they charge you to advertise on Facebook, and then they block the page that you advertised. [01:23:40.120 --> 01:23:41.120] Okay. [01:23:41.120 --> 01:23:42.120] Okay. [01:23:42.120 --> 01:23:45.120] That would be a way to get at them. [01:23:45.120 --> 01:23:57.120] Okay, I'll do it. I'll put $10, $20 down on that and go from there. And I'll be calling back with you guys and talking more about the anti-vax project and the Facebook project. [01:23:57.120 --> 01:23:58.120] Okay, good. [01:23:58.120 --> 01:24:04.120] I'll look at that terms of service and get a good idea of exactly where they are drawing the lines. [01:24:04.120 --> 01:24:16.120] I know it's one of these things where it can't be technically enforced because you didn't sign something or knowingly agree to it. [01:24:16.120 --> 01:24:21.120] And plus, it's all digital. They change it all the time. You can't even know when they change it. [01:24:21.120 --> 01:24:24.120] And yes, they are going to argue that those apply to you. [01:24:24.120 --> 01:24:33.120] So there's something else. If they set these standards, then they don't enforce those standards. [01:24:33.120 --> 01:24:52.120] Then they create, I don't want to say an easement. There's another term for it, but if you build your Facebook page based on what they're actually doing and while they have these standards, [01:24:52.120 --> 01:24:58.120] they're not enforcing them, you are acting in good faith based on the level of enforcement. [01:24:58.120 --> 01:25:05.120] And then when they change that level of enforcement, now they've cost you your time capriciously and arbitrarily. [01:25:05.120 --> 01:25:08.120] And that should be enough to get you in court with them. [01:25:08.120 --> 01:25:16.120] Okay. I do want to say that I have to somehow look up a complaint or something on Facebook, [01:25:16.120 --> 01:25:25.120] because they're still editing my stuff this last week. And I try to take screenshots of it all, but sometimes I'm limited with data capacity. [01:25:25.120 --> 01:25:31.120] And so I went to look at why they had banned some posts I wanted to put up. [01:25:31.120 --> 01:25:35.120] And one of them was about financial armageddon. It's just an article. [01:25:35.120 --> 01:25:50.120] And then in order to do that, I have to go to Google and sign or agree or submit to five pages of terms of agreement before I could even reach Facebook. [01:25:50.120 --> 01:26:00.120] So that was strange. I would assume Facebook could bring that up, but while I was going to see why they had banned another one of my articles, [01:26:00.120 --> 01:26:08.120] and these are just articles I'm republishing or from another site putting on the page, just controversial articles that most of your audience would agree with. [01:26:08.120 --> 01:26:11.120] Nothing violent, nothing racist. [01:26:11.120 --> 01:26:19.120] Okay. One of our listeners was on a blog, another blog, a Facebook page. [01:26:19.120 --> 01:26:30.120] And he had a font that was made up of lots of different fonts, just randomly chose a different font. [01:26:30.120 --> 01:26:34.120] Well, it's easy enough to read for humans. [01:26:34.120 --> 01:26:40.120] But what he was saying is their algorithms can't read this. [01:26:40.120 --> 01:26:49.120] Now this is going to be reposting articles. So they have to flag these articles or memes before I... [01:26:49.120 --> 01:26:54.120] No, what I'm seeing is there's a font we can use that their algorithms, that their systems can't read. [01:26:54.120 --> 01:26:56.120] I like it. I like it. I'm not... [01:26:56.120 --> 01:27:03.120] I asked him to send it to me, but I hadn't heard from him. I hadn't checked the blog, the Facebook page. It might be on there. [01:27:03.120 --> 01:27:10.120] But I would like to find that. Then we start to post it in that. That'll make them dubs. It's kind of like a capture. [01:27:10.120 --> 01:27:14.120] You know, a capture is something the computer can't figure out. [01:27:14.120 --> 01:27:22.120] Well, Richard was saying that, you know, if I come off as a politician, which I have run for mayor, that that also is something else. [01:27:22.120 --> 01:27:28.120] So I made sure, which I already have on my feet are, you know, events and things I've done in the Capitol and whatnot. [01:27:28.120 --> 01:27:33.120] So I made sure and I announced that on my profile and everything. [01:27:33.120 --> 01:27:42.120] But basically, you know, I really, like you said, I would love just to go to a lawyer, drive to Houston, talk to some rich lawyer, [01:27:42.120 --> 01:27:49.120] and say, hey, you ready to show your brass cajones here and let's do a class action on Facebook? [01:27:49.120 --> 01:27:52.120] But you told me I'd be wasting my time. [01:27:52.120 --> 01:28:00.120] Well, a class action, you waste time. The lawyers, they will shake their fists at Facebook and then make a deal with them. [01:28:00.120 --> 01:28:02.120] And just blow off everybody. [01:28:02.120 --> 01:28:08.120] So you're saying we can throw these in the JP Court because I know JP Court is so easy to use. [01:28:08.120 --> 01:28:13.120] Yeah, only 65 bucks. [01:28:13.120 --> 01:28:17.120] Drag them down in the local JP Court and then start barking. [01:28:17.120 --> 01:28:19.120] Then we beat up their lawyers. [01:28:19.120 --> 01:28:27.120] Let me be clear with your audience, I do not prefer JP Court for anything because it limits your ability to appeal. [01:28:27.120 --> 01:28:36.120] But if I can write a little book or pamphlet and show the normal person with limited education and limited time and limited finances, [01:28:36.120 --> 01:28:40.120] how to use JP Court, I am more than happy to do that. [01:28:40.120 --> 01:28:43.120] Okay, let me help you with JP Court. [01:28:43.120 --> 01:28:48.120] Actually, your ability to appeal is not limited at all. [01:28:48.120 --> 01:28:59.120] If you get a ruling in a JP Court you don't like, you can appeal it to the county court and we have the whole trial over again in the county court. [01:28:59.120 --> 01:29:02.120] Oh, thank you. Okay, fair enough. [01:29:02.120 --> 01:29:07.120] Because the JP Court is considered an inferior court. [01:29:07.120 --> 01:29:14.120] It's not presided over by a judge who is a lawyer. [01:29:14.120 --> 01:29:20.120] If you get a ruling you don't like, you can automatically appeal it to the county court to a judge who is a lawyer. [01:29:20.120 --> 01:29:23.120] I have no idea. [01:29:23.120 --> 01:29:30.120] So that makes it easy. You can just jump right up to the county court, but it make them do it again. [01:29:30.120 --> 01:29:32.120] I like it. Okay. [01:29:32.120 --> 01:29:36.120] That's my line. It's something like that. [01:29:36.120 --> 01:29:45.120] And Grant was saying I could give the judicial misconduct for the judge not bar-greaving the attorney. I've never heard of that. [01:29:45.120 --> 01:30:01.120] Yes, it's a...in Texas we have the judicial TCJC Code of Judicial Conduct. We'll be right back. [01:30:01.120 --> 01:30:06.120] Sorry, soft drink lovers. Even diet drinks can make you fat. [01:30:06.120 --> 01:30:11.120] A new study shows the diet soda drinkers gain much more weight than people who avoid the stuff. [01:30:11.120 --> 01:30:16.120] I'm Dr. Katherine Albrecht and I'll be back in a moment with a scoop on supposedly skinny sodas. [01:30:16.120 --> 01:30:22.120] Privacy is under attack. When you give up data about yourself, you'll never get it back again. [01:30:22.120 --> 01:30:27.120] And once your privacy is gone, you'll find your freedoms will start to vanish too. [01:30:27.120 --> 01:30:32.120] So protect your rights. Say no to surveillance and keep your information to yourself. [01:30:32.120 --> 01:30:38.120] Privacy. It's worth hanging on to. This public service announcement is brought to you by StartPage.com. [01:30:38.120 --> 01:30:45.120] The private search engine alternative to Google, Yahoo, and Bing. Start over with StartPage. [01:30:45.120 --> 01:30:51.120] Artificial sweeteners cut the calories and help you lose weight, right? Wrong. [01:30:51.120 --> 01:30:56.120] Researchers at UT San Antonio followed hundreds of diet soda drinkers for nearly a decade. [01:30:56.120 --> 01:31:03.120] They found that regularly drinking diet soda expanded people's waistlines five times more than no soda at all. [01:31:03.120 --> 01:31:10.120] The study's authors say artificial sweeteners triggered the appetite, but unlike regular sugars, don't deliver anything to squelch it. [01:31:10.120 --> 01:31:16.120] Waking up hunger without satisfying it leads to cravings, which can result in a larger overall calorie intake. [01:31:16.120 --> 01:31:24.120] So use natural sweeteners to maintain a healthy weight, and if you need to shed some pounds, avoid the sweet stuff altogether and drink water instead. [01:31:24.120 --> 01:31:30.120] I'm Dr. Catherine Albrecht. More news and information at CatherineAlbrecht.com. [01:31:30.120 --> 01:31:36.120] This is Building 7, a 47-story skyscraper that fell on the afternoon of September 11. [01:31:36.120 --> 01:31:43.120] The government says that fire brought it down. However, 1,500 architects and engineers have concluded it was a controlled demolition. [01:31:43.120 --> 01:31:46.120] Over 6,000 of my fellow service members have given their lives. [01:31:46.120 --> 01:31:49.120] Thousands of my fellow first responders are dying. [01:31:49.120 --> 01:31:50.120] I'm not a conspiracy theorist. [01:31:50.120 --> 01:31:51.120] I'm a structural engineer. [01:31:51.120 --> 01:31:52.120] I'm a New York City correctional. [01:31:52.120 --> 01:31:53.120] I'm an Air Force pilot. [01:31:53.120 --> 01:31:55.120] I'm a father who lost his son. [01:31:55.120 --> 01:31:57.120] We're Americans, and we deserve the truth. [01:31:57.120 --> 01:32:26.120] Go to RememberBuilding7.org today. [01:32:27.120 --> 01:32:35.120] In conjunction with Rule of Law Radio has put together the most comprehensive teaching tool available that will help you understand what due process is and how to hold courts to the rule of law. [01:32:35.120 --> 01:32:40.120] You can get your own copy of this invaluable material by going to RuleofLawRadio.com and ordering your copy today. [01:32:40.120 --> 01:32:47.120] By ordering now, you'll receive a copy of Eddie's book, The Texas Transportation Code, The Law vs. the Lie, video and audio of your original 2009 seminar. [01:32:47.120 --> 01:32:50.120] Hundreds of research documents and other useful resource material. [01:32:50.120 --> 01:32:54.120] Learn how to fight for your rights with the help of this material from RuleofLawRadio.com. [01:32:54.120 --> 01:32:59.120] Order your copy today, and together we can have the free society we all want and deserve. [01:33:24.120 --> 01:33:53.120] Okay, we are back. [01:33:53.120 --> 01:33:55.120] This is the Rule of Law Radio. [01:33:55.120 --> 01:34:02.120] I'm Brad Fountain, and we're talking here with Mary in Texas about the thing. [01:34:02.120 --> 01:34:12.120] One thing that you can do is when a lawyer has done something wrong, and by wrong, I mean they violated their own rules. [01:34:12.120 --> 01:34:15.120] They have their rules of professional conduct. [01:34:15.120 --> 01:34:29.120] And if they do something that deserves a bargaining, then you can file in your case an affidavit as supporting your motion for sanctions. [01:34:29.120 --> 01:34:34.120] And that officially puts it, that makes the judge aware. [01:34:34.120 --> 01:34:52.120] Once the judge is aware that an attorney has done something wrong, then according to the Code of Judicial Conduct, Canon 3D subsection 2, that judge now has a responsibility. [01:34:52.120 --> 01:34:58.120] He doesn't just get to blow it off and forget about it because you've made him aware. [01:34:58.120 --> 01:35:07.120] And Mary here says, would you like me to read that? You've already looked at it. [01:35:07.120 --> 01:35:09.120] I'm sorry? [01:35:09.120 --> 01:35:11.120] Please. [01:35:11.120 --> 01:35:25.120] Yeah, it says, a judge who receives information clearly establishing that a lawyer has committed a violation of the Texas disciplinary rules of professional conduct should take appropriate action. [01:35:25.120 --> 01:35:36.120] A judge having knowledge that a lawyer has committed a violation of the Texas disciplinary rules of professional conduct that raises a substantial question as to the lawyer's honesty, [01:35:36.120 --> 01:35:47.120] trustworthiness, or fitness as a lawyer in other respects shall inform the office of the general counsel of the State Bar of Texas, or take other appropriate action. [01:35:47.120 --> 01:35:53.120] We've been missing that for a long time. How the hell did you find that piece? [01:35:53.120 --> 01:35:58.120] We've been missing that for a long time with these elected judges. [01:35:58.120 --> 01:36:07.120] I beat up some municipal judges and attorneys pretty good with this because they each have this responsibility in the other direction. [01:36:07.120 --> 01:36:27.120] And they also have, some of these municipalities have multiple judges, so there'll be like a few associate judges and one head judge, and you can make them aware of each other's indiscretions, and then they're all in trouble for not having reported their buddies. [01:36:27.120 --> 01:36:43.120] Yummy. So back to the case motion, the lawyer does something wrong, and then I put it in my file as what? In my case, I put it in my file as what? [01:36:43.120 --> 01:36:48.120] In your case, you're going to do a motion for sanctions. [01:36:48.120 --> 01:37:03.120] It's a motion for sanctions against the opposing attorney. And so you'll put a few little bullet points in there that just says what they did and says the rule says he's not allowed to do this, this, that, and the other. [01:37:03.120 --> 01:37:12.120] He did this, that, or the other on such and such a date. And then as a supporting evidence that goes with that, you have an affidavit. [01:37:12.120 --> 01:37:24.120] And the affidavit is sworn, you've notarized it, you've put it in there. Actually, I'm not even sure if you have to notarize it. You could just make a statement of facts and sign it. It's going into the case as part of a motion. [01:37:24.120 --> 01:37:30.120] It's not a criminal complaint, so you might not even need notarizing. I've done it notarized, but probably don't need to. [01:37:30.120 --> 01:37:36.120] The state bar doesn't need a notary, a notarization on this. State bar complaint. [01:37:36.120 --> 01:37:47.120] Right. And this is not going to the state bar. That's separate. You do these in parallel. Send one off to the state bar, but this is going into the court. This is into the file. [01:37:47.120 --> 01:37:59.120] State bar doesn't get the motion. The court gets the motion and this statement of facts that they violated such and such a rule is just making the court aware, officially. [01:37:59.120 --> 01:38:01.120] That's beautiful. [01:38:01.120 --> 01:38:12.120] So I know y'all have got others. I just want to reiterate about the state law library. You can't do that to all the listeners. You can call in and they'll answer questions over the phone. [01:38:12.120 --> 01:38:21.120] When I was using their services in person two or three years ago to look at property damage and emotional suffering or whatever. [01:38:21.120 --> 01:38:34.120] I did about $100,000 lawsuit against my ex. And the sheriffs love looking at that document. They gave my complaints or interest a lot of credibility besides using their damn criminal system. [01:38:34.120 --> 01:38:42.120] So any type of, you know, it might have cost me two, three hundred bucks to write this a week of my time. I was copying and pasting. [01:38:42.120 --> 01:38:53.120] I went down to the state law library and I said, you know, hey, Ms. Librarian, how should I write this? What should I do? Well, I'm not a lawyer. I can't give you legal advice. [01:38:53.120 --> 01:39:03.120] And so then my question is, where do I look up, blah, blah, blah, blah, blah in layman's terms? You don't need to be expected to speak legalese to interact with these librarians. [01:39:03.120 --> 01:39:16.120] They're going to treat you a little poorly at first, but keep on. Well, where would this, where would this issue be located? And if you can work around their thing, they can't represent themselves as lawyers. [01:39:16.120 --> 01:39:24.120] Just, but they are very helpful if you treat them like librarians. [01:39:24.120 --> 01:39:37.120] Yeah, that sounds like good advice. I've had real good luck with librarians. You don't ask them for legal advice, but you ask them where would I look up case law on this particular issue? [01:39:37.120 --> 01:39:39.120] They will jump right on it. [01:39:39.120 --> 01:39:48.120] Right, guys. Yeah. They know it back to back of their hands. Last question. Where's Fred Graves? What happened to Drew's Dictionary? [01:39:48.120 --> 01:39:58.120] Well, Fred's kind of, he's kind of retired. He stopped, he stopped doing the show a couple years ago. [01:39:58.120 --> 01:40:06.120] I wish we could do a similar product like jurisdiction area to get, get people their, their walking shoes on this, their boots. [01:40:06.120 --> 01:40:23.120] I've got legal 101 out there, but it's not, it's a little, I didn't go the same direction Fred did, but it gives you kind of the basics on how the system really works. [01:40:23.120 --> 01:40:32.120] Maybe you need to put a little add on for that. But I guess I got to get back to my Friday night date, my hot date with Magnum PI. [01:40:32.120 --> 01:40:38.120] Okay. Thank you, Mary. You guys are the best. I love y'all. [01:40:38.120 --> 01:40:48.120] Okay. Thank you, Mary. Now we're going to go to John in New York. Hello, John. What do you have for us today? [01:40:48.120 --> 01:41:02.120] Well, it's not what I've got. It's what you've got for us. Well, I just wanted to say you had a guy on last Friday night, I believe it was Friday night, and he did his homework. [01:41:02.120 --> 01:41:05.120] I think his name was Scott from Texas. [01:41:05.120 --> 01:41:14.120] Yeah, don't be careful. Scott's probably listening and his head is probably swelling as we speak. [01:41:14.120 --> 01:41:25.120] He's a smart guy. He was really up on everything that was going on with the election fraud, and he really knew what he was saying. [01:41:25.120 --> 01:41:32.120] That guy is very well read. Let me tell you, he could work as a newsman next to me anytime. [01:41:32.120 --> 01:41:44.120] Anyway, just a comment about that, the real way to prove the election fraud, you probably already know this, I think you even said it, is based on those battle states. [01:41:44.120 --> 01:41:53.120] They violated the Constitution and their state laws when they changed the way the election was taken care of without the okay of the state legislature. [01:41:53.120 --> 01:42:02.120] And that's a very simple ironclad slam dunk to prove because it's a given. They did violate the law, and it's pretty obvious. [01:42:02.120 --> 01:42:09.120] So you go after them, I guess. I'm not a lawyer, but you would go after them for that alone. [01:42:09.120 --> 01:42:20.120] And the update on that is 21 states, the last I heard today, 21 states now support the Texas Supreme Court lawsuit. [01:42:20.120 --> 01:42:31.120] That's 40%. The problem is, is the Texas, the US Supreme 7 to 2 refused to hear it. [01:42:31.120 --> 01:42:44.120] I heard somebody just texted me now and said, I guess SCOTUS yanked the rug out from under Donald Trump. Did I get that right? [01:42:44.120 --> 01:42:57.120] Well, they refused to hear this petition because they said that the state did not have standing to invoke the jurisdiction of the Supreme. [01:42:57.120 --> 01:43:12.120] And you can't argue with the ruling because the ruling was 7 to 2, so it's hard to argue with it because we had Republican judges saying the same thing. [01:43:12.120 --> 01:43:23.120] But are they saying that the people of Texas have no standing? They're not harmed or affected by other states' election fraud? [01:43:23.120 --> 01:43:25.120] At the federal level, it affects Texas. [01:43:25.120 --> 01:43:40.120] No, they didn't say that. They said, they just said, they didn't explain why Texas didn't have standing to bring this issue. [01:43:40.120 --> 01:43:49.120] So I don't know, you know, we've got an issue that we think we should have standing, but they didn't explain why. [01:43:49.120 --> 01:44:00.120] So I can't answer that yet. Hang on, go into our sponsors, Randy Kelton, Bert Kelton, Ruvla Radio, we'll be right back. [01:44:00.120 --> 01:44:06.120] Through advances in technology, our lives have greatly improved, except in the area of nutrition. [01:44:06.120 --> 01:44:11.120] People feed their pets better than they feed themselves, and it's time we changed all that. [01:44:11.120 --> 01:44:17.120] Our primary defense against aging and disease in this toxic environment is good nutrition. [01:44:17.120 --> 01:44:25.120] In a world where natural foods have been irradiated, adulterated, and mutilated, young Jevity can provide the nutrients you need. [01:44:25.120 --> 01:44:31.120] Logo Shredion Network gets many requests to endorse all sorts of products, most of which we reject. [01:44:31.120 --> 01:44:39.120] We have come to trust Jevity so much, we became a marketing distributor along with Alex Jones, Ben Fuchs, and many others. [01:44:39.120 --> 01:44:47.120] When you order from Logo Shredion Network.com, your health will improve as you help support quality radio. [01:44:47.120 --> 01:44:51.120] As you realize the benefits of Jevity, you may want to join us. [01:44:51.120 --> 01:45:00.120] As a distributor, you can experience improved health, help your friends and family, and increase your income. Order now. [01:45:00.120 --> 01:45:04.120] Are you the plaintiff or defendant in a lawsuit? [01:45:04.120 --> 01:45:07.120] Win your case without an attorney with Jurisdictionary. [01:45:07.120 --> 01:45:15.120] The affordable, easy to understand four CD course that will show you how in 24 hours, step by step. [01:45:15.120 --> 01:45:19.120] If you have a lawyer, know what your lawyer should be doing. [01:45:19.120 --> 01:45:23.120] If you don't have a lawyer, know what you should do for yourself. [01:45:23.120 --> 01:45:28.120] Thousands have won with our step by step course, and now you can too. [01:45:28.120 --> 01:45:34.120] Jurisdictionary was created by a licensed attorney with 22 years of case winning experience. [01:45:34.120 --> 01:45:43.120] Even if you're not in a lawsuit, you can learn what everyone should understand about the principles and practices that control our American courts. [01:45:43.120 --> 01:45:52.120] You'll receive our audio classroom, video seminar, tutorials, forms for civil cases, pro se tactics, and much more. [01:45:52.120 --> 01:46:01.120] Please visit ruleoflawradio.com and click on the banner or call toll-free 866-LAW-EZ. [01:46:22.120 --> 01:46:51.120] Okay, we are back from the rule of law radio. [01:46:51.120 --> 01:46:53.120] Randy Kelton, I'm Brett Fountain. [01:46:53.120 --> 01:46:56.120] This is Friday the 11th of December, 2020. [01:46:56.120 --> 01:47:03.120] We're continuing our four hour marathon, and we're talking with John in New York. [01:47:03.120 --> 01:47:11.120] We were talking about the Supreme Court and how they said the Texas doesn't have any standing. [01:47:11.120 --> 01:47:22.120] One of the people that I know from my job has just alerted me for the fact. [01:47:22.120 --> 01:47:26.120] Now, what would you say is the best remedy for that? [01:47:26.120 --> 01:47:32.120] I mean, if you were, it seems like, doesn't it seem like somebody got bought off or threatened? [01:47:32.120 --> 01:47:34.120] No, no it doesn't. [01:47:34.120 --> 01:47:36.120] Trump should have filed it. [01:47:36.120 --> 01:47:39.120] Say again? [01:47:39.120 --> 01:47:41.120] Trump should have filed it. [01:47:41.120 --> 01:47:43.120] Don't understand why he didn't. [01:47:43.120 --> 01:47:46.120] He definitely had standing. [01:47:46.120 --> 01:47:49.120] Now, can he still file it? [01:47:49.120 --> 01:47:50.120] Yes. [01:47:50.120 --> 01:47:51.120] I would think so. [01:47:51.120 --> 01:47:52.120] Oh. [01:47:52.120 --> 01:48:02.120] Okay, so if you had to, in one sentence, he would have to file what they just filed and told that they didn't have legal standing. [01:48:02.120 --> 01:48:04.120] Exactly. [01:48:04.120 --> 01:48:05.120] I see. [01:48:05.120 --> 01:48:06.120] He was a principal. [01:48:06.120 --> 01:48:08.120] He definitely had standing. [01:48:08.120 --> 01:48:15.120] I still wonder why we haven't seen the document yet from, you know, there would be their findings of fact and conclusions of law. [01:48:15.120 --> 01:48:28.120] When they rule to say no standing, I'm really curious to see why anybody would think that the people of a state have, are not harmed. [01:48:28.120 --> 01:48:30.120] Oh, by a fraudulent, fraudulent electorature. [01:48:30.120 --> 01:48:31.120] Sure. [01:48:31.120 --> 01:48:33.120] What court should he pursue that in? [01:48:33.120 --> 01:48:34.120] What court? [01:48:34.120 --> 01:48:39.120] Supreme is the only place to do that. [01:48:39.120 --> 01:48:41.120] So he would go to the Supreme Court. [01:48:41.120 --> 01:48:44.120] Is that the one in Washington or the one in Texas? [01:48:44.120 --> 01:48:45.120] Washington. [01:48:45.120 --> 01:48:48.120] Supreme, the SCOTUS, the U.S. Supreme. [01:48:48.120 --> 01:48:50.120] U.S. Supreme Court. [01:48:50.120 --> 01:48:56.120] So if he files it, basically the same thing that they filed, only he files it in his name. [01:48:56.120 --> 01:48:58.120] That's the magic key. [01:48:58.120 --> 01:48:59.120] Is that the idea? [01:48:59.120 --> 01:49:00.120] Yes. [01:49:00.120 --> 01:49:01.120] Yes. [01:49:01.120 --> 01:49:03.120] He would have standing. [01:49:03.120 --> 01:49:04.120] Oh, okay. [01:49:04.120 --> 01:49:05.120] All right. [01:49:05.120 --> 01:49:06.120] Yeah. [01:49:06.120 --> 01:49:14.120] So, and then you made a comment about the, just real quick, you made a comment about the virus and the vaccines. [01:49:14.120 --> 01:49:16.120] And you are so right. [01:49:16.120 --> 01:49:26.120] England and Australia are two of the countries that have warned everybody about the coming COVID vaccine. [01:49:26.120 --> 01:49:38.120] They have said that it causes everything, if I'm reading this correctly, the vaccine they were referring to was an RNA, DNA type, like you mentioned. [01:49:38.120 --> 01:49:41.120] And it does screw up your, hijacks your DNA. [01:49:41.120 --> 01:49:46.120] And of course that opens the door to cancer, birth defects, all kinds of things. [01:49:46.120 --> 01:49:51.120] And it also is a threat to women's carrying a baby. [01:49:51.120 --> 01:49:58.120] It will, in effect, it will sterilize women, many women because it goes after the placenta. [01:49:58.120 --> 01:50:10.120] I won't get into the technical angle of what it does in the placenta, but basically it goes after the woman's establishment of the placenta and therefore the baby is not going to be born. [01:50:10.120 --> 01:50:13.120] And that's what they're actually doing. [01:50:13.120 --> 01:50:21.120] That's the whole purpose from what I gather, it's a little early to tell, you got to have documentation and proof. [01:50:21.120 --> 01:50:35.120] And sometimes these people, like Gates and Fauci, who are as dirty as the day is long, they will actually make, and the WHO, they will actually make admissions. [01:50:35.120 --> 01:50:44.120] And if you listen, they admit it out of their own mouths, like the, I believe it was the WHO a couple months ago said, hey, wait a minute, three or four months ago now. [01:50:44.120 --> 01:50:47.120] Hey, wait a minute, we better look at these vaccines. [01:50:47.120 --> 01:50:49.120] They've been harming people. [01:50:49.120 --> 01:50:52.120] Oh, well, no kidding. [01:50:52.120 --> 01:50:58.120] I mean, take a look at the $4.4 billion that the vaccine, I forget what they call it. [01:50:58.120 --> 01:51:03.120] It's a fund that was set up with taxpayer money. [01:51:03.120 --> 01:51:14.120] It was a fund that was set up with taxpayer money to pay out billions of dollars to those who know about this agency and will claim that they've been damaged by vaccines. [01:51:14.120 --> 01:51:18.120] To date, I believe 4.4 billion has been paid out. [01:51:18.120 --> 01:51:22.120] So it sounds like vaccines are a little bit dangerous. [01:51:22.120 --> 01:51:28.120] And they most, if not all, vaccines will lower your immune system. [01:51:28.120 --> 01:51:30.120] And that's what they were warning about. [01:51:30.120 --> 01:51:39.120] The countries were saying, among other things, burst effects, but making people very sick. [01:51:39.120 --> 01:51:41.120] Wait a minute, wait a minute. [01:51:41.120 --> 01:51:43.120] Burst effects? [01:51:43.120 --> 01:51:49.120] Well, have they been testing them long enough to make that determination? [01:51:49.120 --> 01:51:51.120] That's the whole point. [01:51:51.120 --> 01:51:52.120] I was just going to get to that. [01:51:52.120 --> 01:51:53.120] Thank you. [01:51:53.120 --> 01:51:55.120] You're a smart guy. [01:51:55.120 --> 01:51:57.120] The burst effects take a while. [01:51:57.120 --> 01:52:05.120] I mean, they've never used RNA, DNA vaccines in anybody, including animals. [01:52:05.120 --> 01:52:07.120] This is the first time. [01:52:07.120 --> 01:52:10.120] And that was one of the points that they made. [01:52:10.120 --> 01:52:15.120] And the other point was there's a lot of bad things about these vaccines. [01:52:15.120 --> 01:52:19.120] Vaccines in general will lower your immune system. [01:52:19.120 --> 01:52:28.120] For example, in the military, they found that those who got the flu vaccine, [01:52:28.120 --> 01:52:36.120] those who got the flu vaccine in the military seemed to have a 38% increased risk of getting COVID-19. [01:52:36.120 --> 01:52:38.120] And that's the reason for that is very simple. [01:52:38.120 --> 01:52:44.120] And tell Mary that she should call the office of Robert F. Kennedy, Jr. [01:52:44.120 --> 01:52:50.120] That's Bobby Kennedy, the one that was campaigning for president and got shot by Sirhan Sirhan [01:52:50.120 --> 01:52:55.120] and a number of CIA operatives in the kitchen at that hotel. [01:52:55.120 --> 01:52:59.120] They found more bullet holes than what was in Sirhan's gun. [01:52:59.120 --> 01:53:01.120] But that's beside the point. [01:53:01.120 --> 01:53:07.120] Robert F. Kennedy, Jr. is a very knowledgeable guy when it comes to vaccines. [01:53:07.120 --> 01:53:17.120] And if Mary wants help, have Mary call Robert F. Kennedy, Jr.'s office, I'm sure that once he finds out what she's doing, [01:53:17.120 --> 01:53:20.120] he will be on board with her and maybe help her out. [01:53:20.120 --> 01:53:22.120] And his staff may be able to help her. [01:53:22.120 --> 01:53:32.120] So, yeah, he's a big proponent of telling the truth about vaccines. [01:53:32.120 --> 01:53:44.120] And vaccines make a lot of money and it is in the best interest of the pharmaceutical companies to lie about certain aspects of the vaccines. [01:53:44.120 --> 01:53:54.120] And people have claimed, well, I'm not going to get into the, but they did, but because that was a little illegal. [01:53:54.120 --> 01:53:58.120] Anyhow, to make a long story short, Mary is on the right track. [01:53:58.120 --> 01:54:03.120] And that's basically it. Robert F. Kennedy, Jr. might be able to help her. [01:54:03.120 --> 01:54:07.120] And so there's a lot of things wrong with the vaccine. [01:54:07.120 --> 01:54:12.120] I haven't hit all of it yet. [01:54:12.120 --> 01:54:15.120] Oh, there's an increased risk for HIV. [01:54:15.120 --> 01:54:23.120] With the vaccine, there have been some doctors and or agencies, and I can't quote the names of them. [01:54:23.120 --> 01:54:25.120] I've got it in my file somewhere. [01:54:25.120 --> 01:54:28.120] But today I was just going over it today. [01:54:28.120 --> 01:54:41.120] The COVID-19 vaccine, which ones probably the RNA DNA that you were talking about on the air, they have a very detrimental effect to those with allergies. [01:54:41.120 --> 01:54:46.120] Those who have immune systems compromised as in HIV. [01:54:46.120 --> 01:54:54.120] And anybody who has HIV positive, who is HIV positive, they were saying better refrain from the vaccine. [01:54:54.120 --> 01:55:01.120] So we have a situation. I'm going to stick my neck out here and then I'll shut up and I'll let you take it from there. [01:55:01.120 --> 01:55:06.120] And I have one legal question and I'll hang up. [01:55:06.120 --> 01:55:17.120] These vaccines are front from what I can gather to load the body up on metals. [01:55:17.120 --> 01:55:30.120] And they found in 44, they used to think that vaccines were loaded with aluminum and mercury and sometimes cadmium and antibiotics, [01:55:30.120 --> 01:55:43.120] squalene, which can cause infertility, I believe, loaded with viruses, fragments of DNA, and of course, fragments of DNA that you're asking for trouble. [01:55:43.120 --> 01:55:52.120] If that DNA mixes with your DNA, you're going to talk cancer down the road someplace or birth defects down the road someplace. [01:55:52.120 --> 01:55:57.120] And again, as you pointed out, it takes a while to test for that. [01:55:57.120 --> 01:56:06.120] And of course, the RNA DNA, they skipped the animal trial because they knew what would happen. [01:56:06.120 --> 01:56:10.120] And that's all I'm going to say. They knew the outcome of that. [01:56:10.120 --> 01:56:14.120] There's just one more thing. [01:56:14.120 --> 01:56:19.120] There's just so much. I'm going to hang up. I'm going to say darn, why didn't I tell them that? [01:56:19.120 --> 01:56:23.120] Because there's so much. It's just, it's skipping me right now. [01:56:23.120 --> 01:56:28.120] And there's just so much. But I've given you a pretty good idea. [01:56:28.120 --> 01:56:46.120] Risk for AIDS, risk for HIV, and the vaccines themselves, there have been recent, there has been a recent analysis by two doctors, at least two, and then there's others. [01:56:46.120 --> 01:56:54.120] And I can't quote your their names, but they maintain that they found 44 vaccines, not just aluminum, not just mercury. [01:56:54.120 --> 01:57:02.120] Mercury happens to be the third most toxic poison in the universe, as far as, you know, medical, in medical terms. [01:57:02.120 --> 01:57:08.120] But, and then they put it in a vaccine and somehow it becomes good for you when they load it directly in your bloodstream. [01:57:08.120 --> 01:57:10.120] You don't need to be a doctor to figure that out. [01:57:10.120 --> 01:57:22.120] But they found besides aluminum and mercury and cadmium and all the things that I mentioned before, DNA fragments, they found that the 44s, [01:57:22.120 --> 01:57:31.120] the 44 vaccines that they tested contained very strange metals like tungsten, iron. [01:57:31.120 --> 01:57:35.120] And I can't remember this like a half a dozen to a dozen of them. [01:57:35.120 --> 01:57:38.120] And I can't quote them right off the top of my head. [01:57:38.120 --> 01:57:44.120] But what in heaven's name is tungsten doing in a vaccine has nothing to do medically. [01:57:44.120 --> 01:57:46.120] It has nothing to do medically. [01:57:46.120 --> 01:57:53.120] Now, you're an engineer and I just happen to be talking to an engineer on the phone as we speak the phone rang. [01:57:53.120 --> 01:57:55.120] And you're both engineers. [01:57:55.120 --> 01:57:56.120] You know what happens. [01:57:56.120 --> 01:57:58.120] What are antennas made out of? [01:57:58.120 --> 01:58:00.120] And you're both going to say metal. [01:58:00.120 --> 01:58:02.120] Well, why are you asking? [01:58:02.120 --> 01:58:12.120] Well, when you load mercury, cadmium, aluminum into cells, especially the brain, those are metals. [01:58:12.120 --> 01:58:24.120] When you stand in front of a RF source, you know, like a cell phone, cell tower, and especially now 5G that I won't get into because that's a whole topic on its own. [01:58:24.120 --> 01:58:34.120] You're going to absorb the RF, the energy from the phone, from the cell tower, magnanimously more than you would if those metals were not in your body. [01:58:34.120 --> 01:58:39.120] So they're loading those vaccines as metals, I think for a reason. [01:58:39.120 --> 01:58:40.120] That's all. [01:58:40.120 --> 01:58:43.120] Wow, John, I hate to interrupt. [01:58:43.120 --> 01:58:48.120] This is so fascinating and unfortunately, we have to wait just a moment. [01:58:48.120 --> 01:59:17.120] We'll be right back. [01:59:18.120 --> 01:59:28.120] Difficult and profound passages are opened up in a marvelous way, providing an entrance into the riches of the word beyond which you've ever experienced before. [01:59:28.120 --> 01:59:33.120] Bibles for America would like to give you a free recovery version simply for the asking. [01:59:33.120 --> 01:59:48.120] This comprehensive yet compact study Bible is yours just by calling us toll free at 1-888-551-0102 or by ordering online at freestudybible.com. [01:59:48.120 --> 02:00:04.120] You are listening to the Logos Radio Network. LogosRidionetwork.com.