[00:00.000 --> 00:06.800] The following news flash is brought to you by the Lone Star Lowdown. [00:06.800 --> 00:13.200] Markets for Monday the 22nd of July 2019 open with precious metals, gold at $1,429 an ounce, [00:13.200 --> 00:21.440] silver $16.45 an ounce, copper $2.75 an ounce, oil Texas crude $55.63 a barrel, Brent crude [00:21.440 --> 00:29.760] $62.47 a barrel, and cryptos in order of market cap, Bitcoin Core $10,566.52, Ethereum [00:29.760 --> 00:41.440] $227.26, XRP Ripple $0.33, Litecoin $100.31, and Bitcoin Cash is at $324.10 a crypto coin. [00:45.920 --> 00:52.640] Today in history the year 1916 the preparedness day bombing a Thai suitcase bomb was detonated on [00:52.640 --> 00:58.720] market street in San Francisco during the World War I preparedness day parade killing 10 and entering [00:58.720 --> 01:08.480] 40. Today in history and recent news since Governor Greg Abbott signed House Bill 1325 [01:08.480 --> 01:13.200] legalizing HEPA into taxes law back in June county prosecutors around the state including [01:13.200 --> 01:17.760] Houston, Austin, San Antonio have been dropping marijuana possession charges and even refusing [01:17.760 --> 01:22.720] to file new ones since they are stipulating that they do not have the time or the laboratory equipment [01:22.720 --> 01:27.840] to test the earth for THC. Margaret Moore the Travis County District Attorney announced earlier [01:27.840 --> 01:32.480] this month that she was dismissing 32 felony possession and delivery of marijuana cases [01:32.480 --> 01:37.040] because of the law. Mr. Abbott and other state officials including the Attorney General stipulated [01:37.040 --> 01:42.080] in a letter to county district attorneys back on Thursday that marijuana has not been decriminalized [01:42.080 --> 01:48.560] in Texas and that these actions demonstrate a misunderstanding of how HB1325 works as well as [01:48.560 --> 01:55.280] other cities too like the District Attorney in El Paso, Kaima Esparza a Democrat who also stated [01:55.280 --> 02:00.320] earlier this month that the law quote will not have an effect on the prosecution of marijuana [02:00.320 --> 02:06.000] cases in El Paso. However the issue was succinctly summarized by Mr. Brandon Ball an assistant public [02:06.000 --> 02:10.800] defender in Harris County who stated that quote the law is constantly changing on what makes [02:10.800 --> 02:15.280] something illegal based on its chemical makeup. It's important that if someone is charged with [02:15.280 --> 02:24.800] something the test matches what they're charged with. A paper by Tulane University identified a [02:24.800 --> 02:29.920] five and a half inch American pocket shark as the first of its kind in the Gulf of Mexico, [02:29.920 --> 02:35.440] the specimen being only the second pocket shark ever captured or recorded with the other one [02:35.440 --> 02:40.800] being found way back in 1979 in the East Pacific Ocean. According to the university paper the [02:40.800 --> 02:47.440] shark secretes a luminous fluid from a gland near its front fins for the purpose it is hypothesized [02:47.440 --> 02:58.000] to lure and prey who may be drawn into the glow. This is Brooke Rody with your loadout for July 22nd, 2019. [03:18.240 --> 03:22.960] Tell me what you're gonna do and what are you gonna do? [03:28.400 --> 03:33.760] Bad boys, bad boys, what you gonna do, what you're gonna do when they come for you? [03:38.560 --> 03:40.560] What you gonna do when they come for you when you were eight and you had that dream? [03:41.520 --> 03:46.560] Go to school and you'll learn to go and rule. So why are you acting like a fluffy fool? [03:46.560 --> 04:04.560] Okay, Howdy Howdy, Randy Kelton, Brett Fountain, [04:04.560 --> 04:14.880] we have our radio on this Thursday, the fourth day of March, 2021, and before the show started, [04:14.880 --> 04:23.280] Brett and I were talking about how difficult it is sometimes to get people who are in a very [04:23.280 --> 04:31.280] difficult and overwhelming situation to step forward and take action to help themselves. [04:33.200 --> 04:40.960] You know, logically and reasonably, you would think that if someone is, say in this instance, [04:40.960 --> 04:44.720] trying to take your house away from you and throw you out in the streets, [04:46.320 --> 04:53.440] it would seem like you would do anything that was possible to keep that from happening. [04:54.720 --> 05:02.880] But that's not how people work. When people run into a circumstance or an issue that's terrifying [05:02.880 --> 05:13.600] and overwhelming, it is extremely difficult for them to even function. You know, I pretty well [05:13.600 --> 05:20.640] know what I'm doing here. I know how to take these guys on. When they came after me and prosecuted me [05:20.640 --> 05:29.040] for operating and investigating service without a license, it was a ludicrous charge. But they're [05:29.040 --> 05:39.600] looking at putting me in jail for a year. It was extremely difficult for me to force myself to do [05:39.600 --> 05:48.720] something. I struggled with it. Because I was so concerned about it, I was just almost unable to [05:48.720 --> 05:55.280] function. Yeah, in some ways, it's like the oppression is so heavy, it just paralyzes us. [05:55.280 --> 06:04.320] And it's so difficult to muster that oomph that we need to stand up and have a backbone [06:05.200 --> 06:14.000] and take it on eye to eye. And how do we help someone? How do we take someone who's [06:14.800 --> 06:23.120] standing on the precipice? And they're the only one that has standing to act in their own defense. [06:23.120 --> 06:33.040] But because it's so overwhelming, they just want to duck down and hide and hope it all goes away. [06:34.560 --> 06:41.360] After the foreclosure, after the thrown out in the street, yes, it was bad and it was horrible, [06:41.360 --> 06:50.320] awful things happened. But that oppression is gone. Now they can stand up and they're in a position [06:50.320 --> 06:55.120] where they have to do something to be able to have a place to live and eat. But they don't have [06:55.120 --> 07:01.680] these people coming after them anymore. And then they can begin to function. How do we get people [07:01.680 --> 07:07.200] to be able to function under this extreme and extraordinary stress? [07:09.840 --> 07:16.080] For me, it's been a conundrum. And I've struggled to find a way past this. And [07:16.080 --> 07:28.960] most of my approach to dealing with public officials and the legal system goes to getting people past [07:28.960 --> 07:39.360] that issue. I'm setting up the traffic ticket side and I'm designing it for precisely that purpose. [07:39.360 --> 07:47.440] Traffic of all of the things that you could be forced into court for is the least obnoxious. [07:48.960 --> 07:53.920] I mean, it's just about money. They're not going to put you in jail. They're not going to take your [07:53.920 --> 07:59.600] house. They're not going to take kids away from you. They're just going to charge you a few books, [07:59.600 --> 08:05.840] books that you'd rather not pay. So in the overall scheme of things, that's relatively minor [08:05.840 --> 08:13.360] consideration and people are not going to be totally debilitated by that unless they object [08:13.360 --> 08:22.720] initially and then wind up having to be to step before a judge. And then all the terror of being [08:22.720 --> 08:32.000] sent, of a third grader being sent to the principal erupts in their face. So we're trying to take the [08:32.000 --> 08:40.240] traffic ticket and use it as a demonstration of how you can walk all over the system. [08:42.240 --> 08:50.320] A demonstration of how the system is not in control. You can take control and you can bring [08:50.320 --> 09:00.240] the system to task. We have less of this debilitating terror because the consequences are not so [09:00.240 --> 09:07.520] serious. If you get a ticket, you're going to have to pay it. Okay, if you decide to fight it, [09:07.520 --> 09:14.160] the worst that can happen is what would happen anyway. You have to pay the ticket. Okay, you [09:14.160 --> 09:17.920] might have to go down to court a couple of times. But at the end of the day, you have to pay the [09:17.920 --> 09:23.920] ticket. If you go to court, they'll make you a deal and you won't have to pay as much. So [09:23.920 --> 09:30.640] it's not so horrible that it debilitates people and then we're hoping to be able to demonstrate to [09:30.640 --> 09:41.040] them that you can take the system to task. You can fight city hall. And it's really not that hard. [09:41.040 --> 09:50.080] It's just that we go to school to a government mandated school system. We don't go because we [09:50.080 --> 09:56.400] want to. We go because the government tells us we have to. And that's generally the only interaction [09:56.400 --> 10:02.480] people have with government officials. It's in the schools. And in the schools, they tell you about [10:02.480 --> 10:09.600] what all of these wonderful rights and privileges that you have as a citizen of this free nation. [10:09.600 --> 10:18.720] Isn't that wonderful? However, while you're in this school, don't even think of trying to exercise [10:18.720 --> 10:24.880] one of those rights or the whole weight of the system will land right square on your head. [10:26.160 --> 10:33.760] We put children through 12 years of that hypocrisy. And then once they get out of high school, we [10:33.760 --> 10:42.080] expect them to become empowered citizens. Good luck with that. I presented a presentation to my [10:42.080 --> 10:50.080] state representative and asked him to propose legislation that would separate the school [10:50.080 --> 10:59.040] counselor from the school system and designate him an ombudsman for students. So when a child is [10:59.040 --> 11:06.080] sent to the principal, say a third grader or fourth grader, they don't go by themselves to the principal. [11:06.080 --> 11:17.840] It's a bad idea because the child is absolutely totally outgunned. And they feel completely [11:17.840 --> 11:24.720] overwhelmed. So we take the school counselor and designate the school counselor as an ombudsman. [11:24.720 --> 11:32.320] And the school counselor goes with the child to the principal and acts as the principal as the [11:32.320 --> 11:41.520] child's counselor representative. The same way we as adults can hire lawyers to represent us before [11:41.520 --> 11:49.280] the court. We demonstrate to the child how the system is supposed to work by providing them [11:50.640 --> 11:59.600] with someone to represent them before the principal. Then the child does not feel so [11:59.600 --> 12:05.520] overwhelmed. And even if the child loses, which in most cases they will because most cases [12:06.720 --> 12:11.840] the kids screwed up and did something wrong for which they need correction, not punishment, [12:12.400 --> 12:19.120] not abuse, but correction. And the main thing they need to know is the system will respond to [12:19.120 --> 12:25.680] them and pay attention to them and only deliver retribution when retribution is absolutely [12:25.680 --> 12:35.440] required. If they've been wrongfully accused, they need someone to step up in their defense. [12:36.240 --> 12:42.240] This would greatly improve our interaction with the criminal justice system. Well, [12:42.240 --> 12:50.240] I didn't get that done yet. But the point of it is when we get before court, we get out of school, [12:50.240 --> 12:56.640] 12 years of mandated school system where we're under the thumb of public officials. And then we go [12:56.640 --> 13:02.240] out in the real world and we do our business and have very little interaction with the criminal [13:02.240 --> 13:09.440] justice system. A very small percentage of the public have any dealings with the criminal justice [13:09.440 --> 13:17.920] system. In Texas in 2017, last year, I have good numbers, there were nine million criminal cases [13:17.920 --> 13:27.120] filed. Seven million were traffic out of 29 million people. So out of 29 million people, [13:27.120 --> 13:35.680] there were 2,000, I'm sorry, 2 million serious criminal cases filed. [13:38.080 --> 13:43.920] That's not a great number. People can go the whole lives and the majority of people go their [13:43.920 --> 13:49.600] entire lives and never get called into court for anything above a traffic ticket. [13:52.080 --> 13:57.920] But even when they get called in on something as innocuous as a traffic ticket, [13:58.640 --> 14:03.520] right? The worst, you don't have to pay a few dollars for the ticket. If you don't feel like [14:03.520 --> 14:10.640] you deserved it and you want to fight the ticket, you go down to the, you refuse to make a deal, [14:10.640 --> 14:16.560] you ask for a court setting, you go down to the court setting and the judge calls you up before [14:16.560 --> 14:26.560] the court. What behavioral model do you have to help you deal with criminal justice with public [14:26.560 --> 14:36.800] officials when public officials are making accusations against you? It's being called [14:36.800 --> 14:45.520] before the principal. I sit in court and I watch people step up before the judges on a traffic [14:45.520 --> 14:51.040] ticket requiring a lot of big deal. The worst that can happen is what would happen anyway. [14:52.000 --> 14:57.440] So if you fight a ticket, it can only get better. But they step up in front of the judge [14:57.440 --> 15:08.080] and they are so terrified they can hardly speak. I watched an older man, really expensive suit, [15:08.800 --> 15:15.120] looked like a very sophisticated high-level executive, stepped up in front of the judge, [15:15.120 --> 15:21.680] had a set of notes that were shaking so badly he could not read them. He tried to talk and he [15:21.680 --> 15:33.600] could barely say anything. I'm thinking, what is going on? This is no chump. This guy is sophisticated [15:33.600 --> 15:38.960] and he's appeared to be well-versed. He had done his homework but when he got in front of the judge, [15:38.960 --> 15:44.000] he couldn't even talk. He was a third grader being sent to the principal. That was the only [15:44.000 --> 15:54.720] behavioral set that he had. Everything that I do in this radio show is about primarily one thing. [15:56.400 --> 16:04.000] I want to juxtapose the behavioral set that you draw on when you step in front of a judge. [16:05.200 --> 16:11.520] The behavioral set you learned in grade school when being sent before the principal. I want to [16:11.520 --> 16:20.720] juxtapose that behavioral set with the behavioral set you use when you go to the principal about [16:20.720 --> 16:26.080] one of your children and you want to know what in the heck are you guys doing to my kids. [16:28.320 --> 16:34.160] It's a whole different mental perspective but the child never having had that experience, [16:35.120 --> 16:41.120] they go before the judge and they only have what they have available. The whole purpose [16:41.120 --> 16:46.400] of our show is to give you a different behavioral set you can draw on. Once you can draw on that [16:46.400 --> 16:51.520] behavioral set, we don't have to tell you what to do. You can't figure that out yourself. Hang on. [16:51.520 --> 16:55.440] We're going to help Brett Fountain remove our radio. We'll be right back. [17:03.760 --> 17:08.480] It's the 2019 Logos Radio Network Annual Fundraiser and Gun Giveaway, [17:08.480 --> 17:14.320] sponsored by Central Texas Gun Works. Go to LogosRadioNetwork.com and enter to win. [17:14.320 --> 17:19.680] Any amount is appreciated. Everything helps to keep us on the air. From Central Texas Gun Works, [17:19.680 --> 17:26.880] the grand prize up for grabs is a Spike Tactical AR-15. More prizes and sponsors to be announced. [17:26.880 --> 17:32.400] Every $25 donation is a chance to win. When you purchase Randy Kelton's e-book, [17:32.400 --> 17:38.800] Legal101, you get four chances to win. Purchase Eddie Craig's traffic seminar and get 10 chances [17:38.800 --> 17:44.560] to win. If you've enjoyed the shows on Logos Radio Network, support our fundraiser so we can keep [17:44.560 --> 17:50.160] bringing you the best quality programming on talk radio today. We also accept Bitcoin and other [17:50.160 --> 17:57.440] cryptocurrencies. And remember, every $25 donation is a chance to win. Go to LogosRadioNetwork.com [17:57.440 --> 18:04.720] for details and donate today. Logos Radio Network welcomes a new show to our lineup for the new [18:04.720 --> 18:12.320] year. Scripture Talk with Nana will begin Wednesday, January 8 from 8 to 10 p.m. Central Time. Our goal [18:12.320 --> 18:18.640] is in accord with Matthew 5.16. Let your light so shine before men that they may see your good works [18:18.640 --> 18:24.160] and glorify your Father which is in heaven. We wish to reflect God's light and be a blessing [18:24.160 --> 18:29.920] to all those with a hearing ear. Join Nana and guests for both verse by verse Bible studies [18:29.920 --> 18:36.240] and topical Bible studies designed to provoke unto love and good works. Our verse by verse Bible [18:36.240 --> 18:41.760] studies will begin in the book of Matthew where we will discuss one chapter per week. Our topical [18:41.760 --> 18:47.200] Bible studies will vary each week and will explore sound doctrine as well as Christian character [18:47.200 --> 18:54.240] development. So mark your calendar and join us live on LogosRadioNetwork.com Wednesdays from 8 [18:54.240 --> 18:59.920] to 10 p.m. starting January 8 for an inspiring and motivating discussion of the Scriptures. [18:59.920 --> 19:15.920] We are listening to the Logos Radio Network. LogosRadioNetwork.com [19:29.920 --> 19:47.600] Okay, we are back. I turn the phone lines on so if you have a question or a comment give us a call. [19:48.400 --> 19:58.320] Our call in number is 512-646-1984. We will be taking your calls all night and if you have a ticket [19:58.320 --> 20:06.640] or if you would like to get a better feel about how to go after the system go to [20:06.640 --> 20:13.760] trafficticket.website. It might be a little screwed up at the moment. Scott Richardson came by today [20:13.760 --> 20:20.400] and critiqued my site and I make some changes and it screwed it all up but I hadn't got it fixed yet [20:20.400 --> 20:29.200] but I'll have it fixed in the morning. I'm sure it was Scott's doing right. Yes, it was Scott's fault. [20:30.640 --> 20:37.760] Never mind that I made the changes, it was still Scott's fault. So whatever happens I always need [20:37.760 --> 20:44.720] somebody else to blame it on but I'm still building this site and I'm trying to figure out the best [20:44.720 --> 20:50.560] way to reach someone and he was concerned that I had too much information on the page [20:51.760 --> 20:59.920] and his criticism was well taken. I'm trying to find that balance between too much information and [20:59.920 --> 21:10.160] not enough so I'm struggling with it but the intent of the traffic ticket site is to give [21:10.160 --> 21:16.160] people a place to actually apply the stuff we've been talking about on the radio. [21:17.600 --> 21:24.160] You can listen to our show not having had an experience with the criminal justice system [21:25.280 --> 21:32.880] and you can intuitively and intellectually understand what we're talking about. [21:32.880 --> 21:43.040] However, when you get the system comes straight at you, even if it's something as minor as a ticket, [21:43.920 --> 21:51.200] you sign that ticket and you agree to appear at court then you are bound, you don't have an option. [21:52.320 --> 21:59.200] You have to do what they tell you and that's a different experience. Now when you know you have [21:59.200 --> 22:06.160] to go to that court and you have to stand before these public officials who can rule on your [22:08.000 --> 22:15.360] financial future to a minor degree, it changes your perspective dramatically. [22:16.800 --> 22:23.920] If you're just listening to the show and I explain these processes and procedures, [22:23.920 --> 22:32.080] that's rather academic. You can identify with it and kind of understand it but if you've got a [22:32.080 --> 22:40.080] public official pointing their finger right in your face, now I got your attention. It is immediate, [22:40.080 --> 22:46.640] it is right now and when I talk about those things that are actually happening to you today, [22:46.640 --> 22:54.000] then to you they're more compelling and you will internalize it much better. [22:55.120 --> 23:03.680] So what we're trying to do is get people over that first step. The first step is the hardest. [23:04.400 --> 23:10.000] We go to the court and we're terrified of them. So what I want them to do is turn them into a parent [23:10.000 --> 23:17.360] and bring the public official to task. First thing we ask for is a speed trial. [23:19.040 --> 23:23.120] Turn them into a parent? Can you expound on what you mean by turn them into a parent? [23:23.680 --> 23:27.040] Well, if your child is called before the principal, [23:28.800 --> 23:34.320] he will have a set of behaviors that he can use to deal with the principal. [23:34.320 --> 23:42.080] When your child tells you he's having problems or the principal wants to talk to you about your child, [23:42.960 --> 23:48.160] you go down there with a whole different set of practices and procedures and behaviors. [23:50.240 --> 23:56.160] You're not, the principal is not coming after you. You want the principal to justify what he's [23:56.160 --> 24:02.720] doing to one of your children and he better get it right. Are you going to land on him like a ton [24:02.720 --> 24:09.200] of bricks? You're not taking a half an ounce of crapola from him. A whole different behavioral set. [24:10.880 --> 24:20.080] If we can juxtapose those behavioral sets, the influence that would trigger one behavioral [24:20.080 --> 24:30.480] set, we want to do a reframe. So instead of triggering one frame of reference, we trigger [24:30.480 --> 24:38.400] a separate frame of reference. We trigger a frame of reference of the master addressing [24:38.400 --> 24:45.120] their servants. So what this whole show is about. Once you make that shift, [24:46.400 --> 24:52.320] then dealing with these public officials becomes a whole lot easier and the easiest place to do [24:52.320 --> 24:57.760] that. If I asked somebody, I've got a guy now that is in a divorce and his wife accused him [24:57.760 --> 25:05.440] of abuse at her when it didn't happen. And I'm asking him, I prepared him a [25:07.360 --> 25:14.080] motion to dismiss for lack of a 16.17 order. Well, he's kind of terrified to do that. [25:15.360 --> 25:20.080] He's not from this country. He's from the Middle East. He doesn't understand this country. [25:20.080 --> 25:28.960] So, and I'm asking him to step right in the middle of the judge. And he's terrified to do that. [25:29.760 --> 25:34.080] I'm asking him to order his lawyer to do something that his lawyer doesn't want to do. [25:35.760 --> 25:39.600] And he's terrified and with good cause. His liberty is at risk. [25:41.520 --> 25:48.880] He screws this up, he can go to jail. That's a big deal. And I don't like doing this [25:48.880 --> 25:55.760] in a situation where someone's liberty is at risk. Much better to do it over a traffic ticket. [25:57.760 --> 26:02.560] Because what's the worst that can happen? You have to pay the ticket. Big deal. [26:03.600 --> 26:10.960] Okay, maybe I have to pay another 40, 50 bucks for court fee costs, but big deal. [26:11.920 --> 26:16.880] Jump change in the overall scheme of things. You don't have to worry about going to jail, [26:16.880 --> 26:21.520] losing your job, losing your standing in the community, all the horrible things that [26:21.520 --> 26:28.720] happen when you're prosecuted. Minor stuff. Easier to slip them over the threshold. [26:30.160 --> 26:37.440] So, the first thing we do is file a speedy trial motion. And we explain to them, [26:37.440 --> 26:44.480] this is why you file a speedy trial motion. Because the courts, if you don't plead guilty, [26:44.480 --> 26:50.560] then their primary tactic is to order you to come to court. And then when you get the court [26:50.560 --> 26:55.280] counsel to hearing and order you to come back and order you to come back and order you to come back [26:55.280 --> 27:03.280] until you give up and just pay the ticket. So, we demand speedy trial. When they order you to [27:03.280 --> 27:08.800] come to court and they're not ready for trial, you come back, go through our questionnaire, [27:08.800 --> 27:15.760] and we'll prepare for you criminal charges against the judge and the prosecutor and professional [27:15.760 --> 27:23.840] conduct complaints against the judge and prosecutor and a demand for them to pay you for your time. [27:26.640 --> 27:32.960] They want to dance? Let's dance, guys. You want to call me and have me come back again and again [27:32.960 --> 27:40.960] and again we'll see how that works out for you. Now, that's not so difficult. You've been ordered [27:40.960 --> 27:45.200] to come to court and you do exactly what you were supposed to do and they don't. [27:47.520 --> 27:52.960] When we have someone download all of our documents, sign them and send them to the court. [27:54.400 --> 28:01.440] Then they go to court with these high expectations that this is a land of law [28:01.440 --> 28:08.800] and you can expect that the court system is fair and just. You go down there and that judge just [28:08.800 --> 28:16.880] blows off all your motions. It's not so much about the ticket anymore. Now it's about the betrayal. [28:18.160 --> 28:24.960] They've just demonstrated to you that your faith that the law was there to protect and [28:24.960 --> 28:34.240] protect you all your life was all nonsense. You feel betrayed and the first thing that happens [28:34.240 --> 28:40.160] after the betrayal and you become terrorized, you realize that you're vulnerable before the system [28:41.280 --> 28:52.960] and that morphs into not just anger but fury. Now you are furious. They have lied to me my whole life. [28:52.960 --> 28:59.920] Now you're ready to go after them. Now we can prepare you the documents that will pick their [28:59.920 --> 29:07.760] behinds and you're more motivated to use them. That is the purpose of our traffic ticket side [29:08.880 --> 29:17.680] and we will show people how to take on this system and give them grief they will not believe. [29:17.680 --> 29:25.120] Very likely if I can get a bunch of people to use the system we will shut down traffic enforcement [29:25.120 --> 29:32.480] in the state of Texas and that will demonstrate to the people that you have the power to handle [29:32.480 --> 29:38.160] these guys. Hang on we've got a bunch of callers on the call board we'll go to our callers when [29:38.160 --> 29:45.600] we come back our call in number I think I've got one more and we check yeah I've got one more empty [29:45.600 --> 29:52.320] space on the call board a call in numbers five one two six four six nineteen eighty four we'll be right [29:52.320 --> 30:06.320] back. Businesses ask you for a lot of personal information and you may trust them to keep it safe [30:06.320 --> 30:10.800] but it turns out that even the most trusted companies may be unwittingly revealing your [30:10.800 --> 30:17.520] secrets. I'm Dr. Catherine Albrecht and I'll be right back with details. 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I'm Dr. Catherine Albrecht more news and information at Catherine Albrecht.com [31:26.080 --> 31:37.760] I lost my son my uncle my son on September 11, 2004 most people don't know that a third tower [31:37.760 --> 31:43.360] fell on September 11. World Trade Center 7 a 47 story skyscraper was not hit by a plane. [31:43.360 --> 31:49.280] I will be official explanation is that fire brought down building 7 over 1200 architects [31:49.280 --> 31:53.600] and engineers have looked into the evidence and believe there is more to the story bring justice [31:53.600 --> 32:00.320] to my son my uncle my nephew my son go to building what dot org why it fell why it matters as what you [32:00.320 --> 32:06.720] can do rule law radio is proud to offer the rule of law traffic seminar in today's america we live [32:06.720 --> 32:10.640] in an us against them society if we the people are ever going to have a free society then we're [32:10.640 --> 32:15.040] going to have to stand and defend our own rights among those rights are the right to travel freely [32:15.040 --> 32:18.720] from place to place the right to act in our own private capacity and most importantly the right [32:18.720 --> 32:23.440] to do process of law traffic courts afford us the least expensive opportunity to learn how to [32:23.440 --> 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deserve live free speech radio logos radio network dot com [33:29.280 --> 33:58.160] okay we are back brandy calcum's wet fountain rule of all radio on this thursday the fourth day [33:58.160 --> 34:07.440] of march 2021 and we're talking we're going to patty in texas hello patty what do you have for us [34:07.440 --> 34:22.560] today oh hello uh yes um i got a letter in the mail from the attorneys and they want to um [34:22.560 --> 34:34.880] have me a court hearing on the 10th of this month for what wait a minute hold on you got a court [34:34.880 --> 34:46.720] you got a letter when um this week you're gonna have to give you more time okay we can file [34:46.720 --> 34:54.480] the bar grievance against the lawyer for not giving you ample notice and you don't have time [34:55.760 --> 35:01.440] brent how many days in civil are you required to have i know it's at least seven [35:02.320 --> 35:12.160] but in this particular situation the rule has a specific um stipulation it's not the standard [35:12.160 --> 35:20.880] 10 or the standard seven this is a 20 day minimum so and it can't be more than 30 and it can't be [35:20.880 --> 35:27.760] fewer than 20 days they have to put it in this 10 day window that's out there so they could set [35:27.760 --> 35:35.440] it three weeks in advance but not five days oh wonderful okay what one thing to understand [35:35.440 --> 35:47.040] pay is uh when they do something that seems awful or horrible or wrongful oh goody goody goody [35:48.080 --> 35:54.240] now you get to beat them up for it lawyers are accustomed to doing this to people especially [35:54.240 --> 35:58.560] when they're dealing with a prosa because for the most part prosays don't know any better [35:58.560 --> 36:07.840] but fortunately you're dealing with brett and he knows better and he revels at beating up lawyers [36:09.680 --> 36:16.880] so they give you a free shot at them brett you want to tell her what we should do at this point [36:19.280 --> 36:25.920] well what i kind of had in mind was yeah bar grieve the new attorney attorney number two the [36:25.920 --> 36:31.760] first attorney just poop disappeared so the third but the second attorney who's just stepping into this [36:32.400 --> 36:39.680] gets a bar grievance number one because of what they filed was frivolous and there's the rules say [36:39.680 --> 36:44.720] they're not allowed to be filing frivolous pleadings so and then he's got another bar [36:44.720 --> 36:50.880] grievance coming up because he didn't correct the judge now the judge just has a responsibility to [36:50.880 --> 37:01.280] know that he needs to set the hearing date between 20 and 30 days after the request for a hearing is [37:01.280 --> 37:09.520] filed not after there's a response but after there's a request for a hearing now to my knowledge [37:09.520 --> 37:15.920] nobody's requested a hearing yet so he can't set a hearing date yet but we're not gonna tell him [37:15.920 --> 37:20.720] about that part that'll be another bar grievance for later so right now we'll just tell him he's [37:20.720 --> 37:29.280] not allowed to have set this at the time the date that's being set and the attorney should have called [37:29.280 --> 37:36.400] him on that i'm sorry your honor we can't do that you're breaking the rules the attorney is never [37:36.400 --> 37:43.520] gonna tell the judge that he doesn't have the guts to tell a judge that but he is his attorney rules [37:43.520 --> 37:50.320] a professional conduct require him to call out the judge on that so since he didn't he gets a [37:50.320 --> 38:02.080] bar grievance he violated that rule okay and then you're going to do a motion to strike the hearing [38:02.080 --> 38:12.160] date for lack of proper note of sufficient notice well we can i i just put something in there as a [38:12.160 --> 38:21.280] it's a challenge to the jurisdiction and it is a against the court two options says you even approve [38:21.280 --> 38:29.440] up jurisdiction or just going to have to throw this case out and the only way that they can prove [38:29.440 --> 38:36.320] jurisdiction is to turn around to the auditioning attorney who started this mess and say hey you better [38:36.320 --> 38:43.440] give me some better paperwork is what you came up with was crap oh okay they have set a hearing date [38:44.240 --> 38:50.080] yes for the petition but they're not allowed to yeah i need to deal with that hearing date as well [38:51.920 --> 38:55.680] so that they can't go ahead and hold it there needs to be an opposition to it [38:56.240 --> 39:03.680] an objection to the setting of the hearing date yes because it failed to give sufficient notice [39:03.680 --> 39:15.680] and their problem is uh once you get that stricken then the clock starts all over again [39:17.360 --> 39:27.760] so they can't use that filing as a time and say well you know we filed this motion we gave you [39:27.760 --> 39:36.480] notice but it wasn't enough notice so we can move the trial date out from you needed 20 days [39:36.480 --> 39:42.160] we'll move it out 10 days no no you don't get to do that you got to start all over again [39:43.840 --> 39:49.760] you got to set another date and it has to be at least give you at least enough time from the time [39:49.760 --> 39:55.760] you get those that the new date is set yeah and then when they do that then we'll object again and [39:55.760 --> 40:05.040] say that nobody has requested a hearing so then the attorney's going to have to turn around and [40:05.040 --> 40:10.400] request a hearing because we don't need to let the attorney push that button if he wants to [40:10.400 --> 40:17.120] need to get bar groups for it well what was the purpose of the hearing that was to do the quick [40:17.120 --> 40:24.080] hurry up railroad trying to foreclosure the rule 736 in texas is an expedited foreclosure [40:24.080 --> 40:30.240] that allows the attorney to just request from a judge hey can you just slide this one under the [40:30.240 --> 40:35.280] radar please and we don't want to have to go through all the rigmarole and prove up our position [40:35.280 --> 40:39.120] and everything you know everything's on the up and up we would never defraud anybody can you just [40:39.120 --> 40:45.760] go ahead and push this one on through there's nobody responds go ahead yeah there has to be [40:45.760 --> 40:54.960] something in the record or in the law that says the only time they can do that is when there are [40:54.960 --> 41:02.960] no issues in contention right so if nobody responds they give all this notice and send out to everybody [41:02.960 --> 41:07.120] which they screwed up on that part and they've got bar grievance and criminal complaints for that [41:07.120 --> 41:13.200] but they send out all this notice and they expect that if somebody is going to contest it then they [41:13.200 --> 41:21.680] will do so within whatever 38 days and plus round to the nearest monday and so we did that we got [41:22.640 --> 41:29.440] adi had an opposition to that and then they tried to say that it wasn't timely all because of their [41:29.440 --> 41:37.040] lies and we got some bar grievances in for that by now i'm sure the partners and supervisors are [41:37.040 --> 41:52.160] all upset it's no wonder that first lady lost her job so but yeah the the hearing on the petition [41:52.960 --> 41:58.240] the judge is not allowed to have a hearing on the petition if there's no opposition but if there is [41:58.240 --> 42:06.000] an opposition then he must not issue a ruling without a hearing but he's not allowed to set [42:06.000 --> 42:09.200] a date for the hearing until 20 days after someone requests it [42:13.360 --> 42:22.080] okay that's okay so what you're saying is that the attorney can't set the hearing [42:22.080 --> 42:30.160] the judge has to set the hearing so the attorney should have asked the judge can you set me a date [42:30.160 --> 42:42.800] blah blah blah blah so we can do whatever but let me touch that a second he has to this is a civil [42:42.800 --> 42:51.440] matter there's no surprise here and they expect everyone to be civil and work together for a [42:51.440 --> 42:58.720] fair adjudication so the lawyer says okay i would like a hearing date set on either this [42:58.720 --> 43:07.600] date or this other date before he does that he has to come to you and ask you would these dates be [43:07.600 --> 43:16.000] acceptable to you and then you can go to the judge and say i have these dates open and [43:16.720 --> 43:23.840] the i've notified the opposing side and they either agreed to this date or this other date [43:23.840 --> 43:30.400] or they didn't agree to either one of them so i asked the judge to set a hearing date on one of [43:30.400 --> 43:40.080] these two that's kind of the way it's supposed to work because we're about to fall off the cliff but [43:40.080 --> 43:45.280] but i'll explain that a little more when we come back and this puts the lawyer in a much more [43:45.280 --> 43:52.480] difficult position randy calton grette fountain louis law radio i won't give the call in number [43:52.480 --> 43:57.680] out yet we've got four people on the board as soon as one drops off you can call in we'll be right [43:57.680 --> 44:04.640] back i love logos without the shows on this network i'd be almost as ignorant as my friends [44:04.640 --> 44:09.680] i'm so addicted to the truth now that there's no going back i need my truth pick i'd be lost without [44:09.680 --> 44:14.960] logos and i really want to help keep this network on the air i'd love to volunteer as a show producer [44:14.960 --> 44:20.320] but i'm a bit of a lie and i really don't have any money to give because i spent it all on supplement [44:20.320 --> 44:26.000] how can i help logos well i'm glad you asked whenever you order anything from amazon you [44:26.000 --> 44:30.800] can help logos with ordering your supplies or holiday gifts first thing you do is clear your [44:30.800 --> 44:38.560] cookies now go to logosregualnetwork.com tick on the amazon logo and bookmark it now when you order [44:38.560 --> 44:45.280] anything from amazon you use that link and logos gets a few pesos do i pay extra no do you have to [44:45.280 --> 44:52.320] do anything different when i order no can i use my amazon prime no i mean yes wow giving without [44:52.320 --> 44:59.440] doing anything or spending any money this is perfect thank you so much we are welcome happy holidays [44:59.440 --> 45:06.320] logos are you the plaintiff or defendant in a lawsuit win your case without an attorney with [45:06.320 --> 45:14.080] jurist dictionary the affordable easy to understand four cd course that will show you how in 24 hours [45:14.080 --> 45:20.960] step by step if you have a lawyer know what your lawyer should be doing if you don't have a lawyer [45:20.960 --> 45:26.800] know what you should do for yourself thousands have won with our step by step course and now [45:26.800 --> 45:33.360] you can too jurist dictionary was created by a licensed attorney with 22 years of case winning [45:33.360 --> 45:39.360] experience even if you're not in a lawsuit you can learn what everyone should understand about [45:39.360 --> 45:45.760] the principles and practices that control our american courts you'll receive our audio classroom [45:45.760 --> 45:53.520] video seminar tutorials forms for civil cases prosa tactics and much more please visit rule [45:53.520 --> 46:10.960] of law radio dot com and click on the banner are called toll free 866 law easy [46:23.520 --> 46:38.080] okay we are back when the kelton brett fountain rule of law radio and we're talking to patty in [46:38.080 --> 46:43.280] texas i'll let brett handle this because he's the one that is so good at beating up lawyers [46:43.840 --> 46:51.600] and catching lawyers pulling lawyers shenanigans we will you address the civil part of a civil case [46:51.600 --> 46:59.040] how everybody's supposed to act with stability yeah that's what the word civil means right [47:00.320 --> 47:07.520] so these rules are are set up so that attorneys won't just go run them up and and do their normal [47:07.520 --> 47:11.440] thing they're going to actually have some limitations where they need to do things a [47:11.440 --> 47:17.600] certain way such as setting a hearing when you're setting a hearing date that's supposed to be [47:17.600 --> 47:23.360] scheduled just like if you're calling for some appointment you want to make sure that something's [47:23.360 --> 47:27.600] going to work out you call the other person and you work it out with them right you say [47:27.600 --> 47:32.560] hey can you come over on friday night oh actually no i've got something playing for i need to can [47:32.560 --> 47:38.320] we do saturday sure no problem because the morning oh i've got i got a haircut in the morning so you [47:38.320 --> 47:45.840] work it out right and these lawyers are supposed to go and do that with each other and so they need [47:45.840 --> 47:53.360] to work it out with usually it's lawyers on both sides right because people don't look for the most [47:53.360 --> 48:00.560] part people don't venture into that territory it's it's like uncharted they don't understand it they [48:00.560 --> 48:06.800] feel you know overwhelmed by it and they don't usually try to handle it themselves usually it's [48:06.800 --> 48:12.080] these lawyers and the lawyers will work out a schedule say can you do thursday ah i've got court [48:12.080 --> 48:16.160] on that day so they'll come up with a day that works for them and they'll go tell the judge that [48:16.160 --> 48:20.480] they would like to set it for this but they worked both parties worked with each other on that date [48:22.400 --> 48:28.880] and yes and be the one that normally they tell the judge that you know we discuss this with [48:28.880 --> 48:35.520] i want you to set it for this date we discussed it with counsel and they're agreeable yeah and [48:35.520 --> 48:41.040] then the judge would be the one to tell them oh sorry boys you picked a day i'm glad it works for [48:41.040 --> 48:48.880] you but no we can't do that day because this lady needs to have her 20 days of notice and you [48:48.880 --> 48:54.880] that's only 18 days get it right go back to your scheduling so the judge is going to have to be the [48:54.880 --> 49:01.040] one to correct them on that if they try to schedule it improperly does that make sense [49:01.040 --> 49:17.280] can we lose you patty no yeah but my question is how how i mean if the attorney has already [49:17.280 --> 49:24.480] scheduled it for that court then the court already knows the judge should already know that and [49:24.480 --> 49:32.400] and he's allowing it so that's where i i'm getting confused if he if he knows that it's [49:32.400 --> 49:38.880] not been 20 days or 30 days or whatever then why is he allowing it [49:41.600 --> 49:50.400] hey can i address that but yeah the judge is assuming that when a lawyer requests a hearing [49:50.400 --> 49:58.000] date that the lawyer has set the date in accordance with the rules and that the lawyer has counseled [49:58.000 --> 50:03.280] with the other side now the lawyer should tell the judge that he counseled with the other side [50:03.280 --> 50:09.280] but they don't always do that so he gets this and the judge assumes he's done all these things he's [50:09.280 --> 50:18.000] supposed to so it's up to the opposition to notice the judge that the lawyer is pulling a [50:18.000 --> 50:26.320] shyster shenanigan so you simply file an opposition to the date and this brings the question before [50:26.320 --> 50:36.960] the judge does that make sense okay yeah the judge doesn't automatically assume that shysters [50:36.960 --> 50:43.840] are pulling shenanigans they expect lawyers to act in accordance with the rules and when they get [50:43.840 --> 50:50.560] a motion for a hearing setting they presume that the lawyer has done what he's supposed to [50:51.520 --> 50:58.160] always you have to oppose anything you don't like so in this case you would have one document that [50:58.160 --> 51:04.240] would be an objection to the setting of that hearing date collect the court no you object [51:05.600 --> 51:11.840] they failed to give proper notice and then another document would be a motion that moves the court [51:11.840 --> 51:18.000] and we're going to say that the court needs to strike the improper scheduling of a hearing [51:22.480 --> 51:27.600] so you're asking the court to do something and reset the hearing in accordance with the rules [51:27.600 --> 51:38.800] mm-hmm and and it would be a good idea to propose a date generally two dates [51:40.720 --> 51:47.520] and then let opposing counsel decide which of those dates would be better for them [51:48.640 --> 51:56.560] or propose a date themselves i'm wondering if we ought not to request any reset yet i'm thinking [51:56.560 --> 52:03.520] let's just strike it because as it stands nobody has requested a hearing and the judge can't set [52:03.520 --> 52:10.320] a hearing until someone requests it 20 days after someone requests it yes like nobody's requested [52:10.320 --> 52:19.520] yet you're exactly right you should first object to the timing second object to the fact that a [52:19.520 --> 52:28.640] well if the other lawyer requested a hearing setting then he's requested it it's not in [52:28.640 --> 52:34.640] writing so as far as we're concerned it doesn't exist oh so you're saying that the judge set [52:34.640 --> 52:41.840] this date to respond to yes or based on the fact that there was a there was a response on file [52:41.840 --> 52:50.480] so he can't rule without setting a without having a hearing but he can't set the hearing date [52:51.120 --> 52:57.200] until someone requests it okay so you can't you can't complain against the lawyer because he didn't [52:57.200 --> 53:06.480] set it right he didn't ask for it so okay so you file an opposition to this to the setting of a [53:06.480 --> 53:12.400] hearing because one's not been requested exactly and one really annoyed the judge [53:14.400 --> 53:19.520] and we've got the challenge to subject matter jurisdiction standing in the way and that's a [53:19.520 --> 53:24.640] threshold issue he can't get past that and just skip over it and start talking about [53:24.640 --> 53:33.120] when are we going for a close he needs to first so there's some authority to do so to act [53:33.120 --> 53:40.960] at exactly before you even address the hearing setting or the propriety of the judge setting [53:40.960 --> 53:48.320] the hearing you challenge subject matter jurisdiction first and then if you rules against [53:48.320 --> 53:55.920] your own subject matter jurisdiction you file an opposition to it an objection and then you file [53:55.920 --> 54:05.040] a motion to strike the hearing date as no hearing date was requested that's going to annoy the judge [54:07.920 --> 54:12.000] and well there's another threshold issue that has already been challenged as well [54:12.000 --> 54:16.480] and he needs to deal with that first and that is the threshold issue of improper venue [54:17.840 --> 54:22.800] because if the jurisdiction wasn't established by the attorney coming and bringing the proper [54:22.800 --> 54:28.960] paperwork and proof to the judge well then he doesn't that's not the right place to have it [54:28.960 --> 54:34.720] discussed it maybe it belongs somewhere else okay wait are we speaking to subject matter [54:34.720 --> 54:40.880] jurisdiction or venue now that one was venue because venue is dependent on subject matter [54:40.880 --> 54:46.080] jurisdiction so you have a separate subject matter jurisdiction what was your subject [54:46.080 --> 54:54.800] matter jurisdiction challenge because the lawyer brought the the original petition did not bring [54:55.920 --> 55:02.880] sufficient evidence that the rules require him to bring in the first place so he didn't show standing [55:03.600 --> 55:10.880] right oh good and that's absolutely first just doesn't get to talk about or do anything [55:10.880 --> 55:16.640] this should get a judicial conduct complaint against the judge for setting a hearing when the [55:16.640 --> 55:23.760] yes standing is the lack of standing is being screened about now what a judge can do is if there's [55:23.760 --> 55:31.680] a hearing already set before jurisdiction's challenge he can abate the hearing or do a [55:31.680 --> 55:38.240] continuance until there is a hearing on subject matter jurisdiction that's administrative things [55:38.240 --> 55:47.040] he can do he can't do anything substantive that goes to the merits of the case so in this case [55:47.040 --> 55:55.280] setting a hearing uh on what was the hearing on on whether or not they can do this railroad [55:55.280 --> 56:01.920] in expedited foreclosure okay so and he can't get to that without jurisdiction so he can [56:01.920 --> 56:10.400] exactly for him to set a date to hear that and then he's attempting to exercise your decision [56:10.400 --> 56:21.360] you're a file uh official impression against him no he'll love that because he doesn't have the [56:21.360 --> 56:28.720] authority to do that he's exerted or purported to exert an authority he does not have it's not [56:28.720 --> 56:36.640] enough just to object to the judge performing a criminal act he commits a crime and you object [56:36.640 --> 56:45.120] to him committing the crime he's a file against him and that should get interesting because if [56:45.120 --> 56:54.720] you file against him he dare not say one word about it or that's witness tampering and obstructs it [56:54.720 --> 57:04.960] patty you do not need the judge to be your buddy you don't care if the judge likes you you don't [57:04.960 --> 57:12.400] care if he's on your side under packer v is it packer v walker walker v packer friend [57:15.120 --> 57:22.240] walker v packer i believe okay walker v packer the court said a judge has no discretion [57:22.240 --> 57:30.480] in properly applying the law to the facts a failure to do so is an abuse of process [57:31.200 --> 57:38.000] i'm sorry an abuse of discretion an abuse of discretion that has the effect of denying [57:38.000 --> 57:45.120] citizen phone free access to enjoying right that's crime in every state so it's criminal [57:45.120 --> 57:53.200] for the judge to do that lawyers will never challenge the judge criminally cross-agency [57:53.200 --> 57:59.440] to do it all the time this is how we get their attention [58:02.800 --> 58:11.920] okay go ahead bread i'll let you bring us up okay well that is what we will be doing [58:11.920 --> 58:15.760] we're going after these guys in every way that they deserve [58:17.920 --> 58:18.320] it will be [58:19.840 --> 58:25.520] we do some misconduct complaints i kind of background i'm putting him on the spot there [58:25.520 --> 58:33.920] that's a dirty trick well we also have to flip around and find my clock yeah we have to kind of [58:36.240 --> 58:41.280] fix our time so we go out at the right time sometimes it's kind of difficult and [58:41.280 --> 58:46.960] i admit i set him up for that i thought we'll be right back [58:50.240 --> 58:55.840] the bible remains the most popular book in the world yet countless readers are frustrated [58:55.840 --> 59:01.840] because they struggle to understand it some new translations try to help by simplifying the text [59:01.840 --> 59:08.640] but in the process can compromise the profound meaning of the scripture enter the recovery version [59:08.640 --> 59:15.200] first this new translation is extremely faithful and accurate but the real story is the more than [59:15.200 --> 59:21.840] 9 000 explanatory footnotes difficult and profound passages are opened up in a marvelous way [59:22.400 --> 59:27.280] providing an entrance into the riches of the word beyond which you've ever experienced before [59:28.000 --> 59:32.720] bibles from america would like to give you a free recovery version simply for the asking [59:32.720 --> 59:43.120] me this comprehensive yet compact study bible is yours just by calling us toll free at 1-888-551-0102 [59:43.680 --> 59:50.000] or by ordering online at freestudybible.com that's freestudybible.com [59:52.640 --> 59:58.720] you're listening to the logos radio network at logosradionetwork.com [59:58.720 --> 01:00:04.560] the following is flashes brought to you by the long star lowdown [01:00:06.480 --> 01:00:13.120] markets for monday the 22nd of july 2019 open with precious metals gold 1429 dollars an ounce [01:00:13.120 --> 01:00:20.960] silver 16 dollars 45 cents an ounce copper $2.75 an ounce oil texas crude $55.63 a barrel [01:00:20.960 --> 01:00:28.640] brand crude $62.47 a barrel and cryptos in order of market cap bitcoin core 10 566 dollars and 52 [01:00:28.640 --> 01:00:37.040] cents ethereum 227 dollars and 26 cents xrp ripple 33 cents light coin $100 and 31 cents [01:00:37.040 --> 01:00:41.600] and bitcoin cash is at 324 dollars and 10 cents a crypto coin [01:00:41.600 --> 01:00:52.560] today in history the year 1916 the preparedness day bombing a time suitcase bomb was detonated [01:00:52.560 --> 01:00:58.400] on market street in san francisco during the world war one preparedness day parade killing 10 and [01:00:58.400 --> 01:01:07.600] entering 40 today in history and recent news since governor greg abbott signed house bill [01:01:07.600 --> 01:01:13.280] 1325 legalizing heaven attacks his law back in june county prosecutors around the state including [01:01:13.280 --> 01:01:17.920] houston austin sandtonia have been dropping marijuana possession charges and even refusing [01:01:17.920 --> 01:01:22.480] to file new ones since they are stipulating that they do not have the time or the laboratory [01:01:22.480 --> 01:01:27.280] equipment to test the earth for thc margaret moore the travis county district attorney [01:01:27.280 --> 01:01:32.000] announced earlier this month that she was dismissing 32 felony possession and delivery of marijuana [01:01:32.000 --> 01:01:36.800] cases because of the law mr abbott and other state officials including the attorney general [01:01:36.800 --> 01:01:41.200] stipulated in a letter that county district attorneys back on thursday that marijuana has [01:01:41.200 --> 01:01:46.560] not been decriminalized in texas and that these actions demonstrate a misunderstanding of how hb [01:01:46.560 --> 01:01:54.640] 1325 works as well as other cities too like the district attorney in el paso kajma asparza a democrat [01:01:54.640 --> 01:01:59.840] who also stated earlier this month that the law quote will not have an effect on the prosecution [01:01:59.840 --> 01:02:05.280] of marijuana cases in el paso however the issue was succinctly summarized by mr brandon ball [01:02:05.280 --> 01:02:10.000] and assistant public defender in harris county who stated that quote the law is constantly [01:02:10.000 --> 01:02:14.400] changing on what makes something illegal based on its chemical makeup it's important that if [01:02:14.400 --> 01:02:23.360] someone is charged with something the test matches what they're charged with a paper by [01:02:23.360 --> 01:02:28.800] tulane university identified a five and a half inch american pocket shark as the first of its kind [01:02:28.800 --> 01:02:34.880] in the gulf of mexico the specimen being only the second pocket shark ever captured or recorded [01:02:34.880 --> 01:02:40.320] with the other one being found way back in 1979 in the east pacific ocean according to the university [01:02:40.320 --> 01:02:46.720] paper the sharks it creates a luminous fluid from a gland near its front fins for the purposes [01:02:46.720 --> 01:03:05.680] hypothesized to lure and pray who may be drawn into the glow this is work roadie with your lowdown for july 22nd 2019 [01:03:17.120 --> 01:03:22.160] up [01:03:22.160 --> 01:03:50.160] Okay, we are back, this is the rule of law radio, I'm Brett Fountain, and I'm [01:03:50.160 --> 01:03:58.160] Brett Fountain, and we are here on the 4th of March 2021, and we're talking with Patti [01:03:58.160 --> 01:04:05.160] in Texas. Patti, have we pretty well covered the question you had on your mind tonight, [01:04:05.160 --> 01:04:08.160] or do you have something else you wanted to ask about? [01:04:08.160 --> 01:04:19.160] No, that kind of... I mean, it's all Greek to me, but I know you know what you're doing. [01:04:19.160 --> 01:04:25.160] Okay, Patti, you were going to send us some documents. [01:04:25.160 --> 01:04:35.160] I was going to send you... I don't have the documents. What documents? [01:04:35.160 --> 01:04:43.160] I think this was about the loan that your mother had, and we were going to pick it apart and [01:04:43.160 --> 01:04:49.160] say how fraudulent it was, and I think you were maybe going to get that from the title company, [01:04:49.160 --> 01:04:51.160] or I don't remember. [01:04:51.160 --> 01:04:59.160] I don't even know how to do that. I mean, most of the paperwork that my mom had in [01:04:59.160 --> 01:05:07.160] regards to the mortgage, right before when she first got dementia, she started [01:05:07.160 --> 01:05:13.160] shredding a whole bunch of stuff that I didn't even know she was shredding because I was working, [01:05:13.160 --> 01:05:17.160] and so all that paperwork is gone. [01:05:17.160 --> 01:05:24.160] Then put in a request to the foreclosing agency for it, or better yet, [01:05:24.160 --> 01:05:34.160] Brett, we need to prepare a qualified written request, and we'll ask for all of that [01:05:34.160 --> 01:05:37.160] in the qualified written request. [01:05:37.160 --> 01:05:40.160] Sounds good. [01:05:40.160 --> 01:05:43.160] Okay, we got that. Brett and I will talk about that, and we'll... [01:05:43.160 --> 01:05:50.160] I've got a template for one, all we have to do is put your name and address on it, [01:05:50.160 --> 01:06:00.160] and I specifically designed this qualified written request to be especially annoying. [01:06:00.160 --> 01:06:04.160] Because that's the kind of guy I am, so Brett and I... [01:06:04.160 --> 01:06:07.160] He wouldn't do that. [01:06:07.160 --> 01:06:15.160] That's why my wife has a ringer on her phone for me as a jackass prank. [01:06:15.160 --> 01:06:21.160] She only did that because I deserved it. [01:06:21.160 --> 01:06:28.160] Okay, we will get a qualified written request together for you, and then see if we can get those documents. [01:06:28.160 --> 01:06:31.160] Okay, thank you Patty. [01:06:31.160 --> 01:06:40.160] Now we're going to go to Scott in Texas, and speaking of annoying, hello Scott. [01:06:40.160 --> 01:06:47.160] Well, I heard my name mentioned, so I thought I would just have to go ahead and annoy the crap out of you. [01:06:47.160 --> 01:06:49.160] Okay. [01:06:49.160 --> 01:06:58.160] No, you know, originally when you were talking about how to get people to engage, [01:06:58.160 --> 01:07:02.160] you know, we were kind of talking about this a couple of days ago, [01:07:02.160 --> 01:07:12.160] and it seemed like one of the easiest ways to get people engaged is to start out with information requests. [01:07:12.160 --> 01:07:23.160] And I think that might be a good idea to put it actually on the traffic side is to have a tab that just says information requests in just one sentence. [01:07:23.160 --> 01:07:29.160] Like, did the officer have authority to even write you a ticket? [01:07:29.160 --> 01:07:34.160] And that right there is going to raise questions, and they're going to like, what do you mean, does he have authority? [01:07:34.160 --> 01:07:38.160] And then that's when you can start doing the information request to... [01:07:38.160 --> 01:07:47.160] I know this is going to apply to Texas, but send an information request to the DPS and also one to the municipality, [01:07:47.160 --> 01:07:53.160] and the municipality will jerk you around, and they typically don't answer. [01:07:53.160 --> 01:07:58.160] I did have a couple of municipalities that did answer, and when they did, [01:07:58.160 --> 01:08:04.160] they admitted that the cop didn't even have the authority to be enforcing the transportation code. [01:08:04.160 --> 01:08:08.160] But when you do want to the Texas Department of Transportation, [01:08:08.160 --> 01:08:14.160] they will give you a list of all the officers in the entire state of Texas, [01:08:14.160 --> 01:08:20.160] sheriff and municipal officers, sheriff deputies and municipal officers. [01:08:20.160 --> 01:08:28.160] And the last time I did it, there was only about, I think, like 300 total cops in the entire state. [01:08:28.160 --> 01:08:34.160] Okay, hold on, Scott. You're probably over everybody's head. [01:08:34.160 --> 01:08:37.160] Let me explain what Scott's talking about. [01:08:37.160 --> 01:08:47.160] The Texas Code of Criminal Procedure says that a sheriff's deputy can enforce the transportation code [01:08:47.160 --> 01:08:55.160] if the deputy has been appointed by the county commissioner's court as a traffic control officer, [01:08:55.160 --> 01:09:03.160] is paid by the county commissioner's court and rides a motorcycle, 701.001 through 003. [01:09:03.160 --> 01:09:12.160] So we put in a request for all the sheriff deputies who have been appointed as traffic control officers. [01:09:12.160 --> 01:09:24.160] Municipal police officers, there is nothing that authorizes a municipal police officer to enforce the transportation code in general. [01:09:24.160 --> 01:09:40.160] If the city enters into an agreement with the state, they can certify an officer to do DOT inspections. [01:09:40.160 --> 01:09:45.160] And there has to be a memorandum of understanding. [01:09:45.160 --> 01:09:53.160] There's two or three of them that must be passed back and forth between the Department of Public Safety and the municipalities. [01:09:53.160 --> 01:09:55.160] None of them do it. [01:09:55.160 --> 01:10:00.160] So those would be great things to ask the city for. [01:10:00.160 --> 01:10:14.160] A request, the copies of all memorandums of understanding between the municipality and the Department of Public Safety under what is it, 643.413? [01:10:14.160 --> 01:10:16.160] Scott. [01:10:16.160 --> 01:10:22.160] I thought it was 644.003. [01:10:22.160 --> 01:10:26.160] Okay, it's 644. [01:10:26.160 --> 01:10:28.160] Okay, something in there. [01:10:28.160 --> 01:10:30.160] I can look it back up. [01:10:30.160 --> 01:10:38.160] But there's a section in there and it has this crazy section in there that says which cities can do this. [01:10:38.160 --> 01:10:40.160] And it's insane. [01:10:40.160 --> 01:10:56.160] And when you read it, it's this convoluted mess that a county of over so many thousand that's so far away from another county of a million or more. [01:10:56.160 --> 01:11:04.160] And it's just like they got to stand on one foot and stick their finger in here and jump up and down and spin around all at the same time. [01:11:04.160 --> 01:11:06.160] It's that convoluted. [01:11:06.160 --> 01:11:09.160] Nobody ever has it. [01:11:09.160 --> 01:11:17.160] So it's a great things to ask them for because they will have no idea what you're talking about. [01:11:17.160 --> 01:11:28.160] And then when they don't respond timely, then you start filing against the city and you give them reason to want to drop your case to get you going. [01:11:28.160 --> 01:11:33.160] So information request, great idea. [01:11:33.160 --> 01:11:48.160] Well, what that's going to do is it's going to show them it's a real innocuous way to get them to engage with these public officials by, you know, just by letter. [01:11:48.160 --> 01:11:50.160] So you're not going down there. [01:11:50.160 --> 01:11:56.160] You're not having to, you know, personally visit with them, see them, get all nervous on that. [01:11:56.160 --> 01:12:04.160] You just sit right down, you know, spit that little information request out, drop it in the mail and just snuff them by mail. [01:12:04.160 --> 01:12:20.160] And then when they don't answer, like you say, then, you know, because we were talking, I was telling Brett the other day, you know, we were talking about doing information request to, you know, district attorneys or, you know, [01:12:20.160 --> 01:12:30.160] county or city attorneys or whatever for the municipal courts that I would just make it to where to as the custodian of the records. [01:12:30.160 --> 01:12:34.160] And Brett, he liked it because he wanted to name a specific person. [01:12:34.160 --> 01:12:49.160] And I said, well, the reason I would do it by just addressing the custodian of the records so that when they don't answer you, now you can do an information request for all the attorneys in that office. [01:12:49.160 --> 01:12:53.160] And you get to bar grieve all of them for it. [01:12:53.160 --> 01:13:00.160] So that was kind of a sneaky way to get them all included. [01:13:00.160 --> 01:13:12.160] And one thing I'm starting to enjoy doing is start out with the director of IT who won't suspect a thing and the director of HR who won't suspect a thing. [01:13:12.160 --> 01:13:23.160] And then you can get yourself an org chart, figure out people's contact information and their fax numbers and things that they typically don't want to tell you once you've started beating up on them. [01:13:23.160 --> 01:13:25.160] Right. [01:13:25.160 --> 01:13:46.160] And like I said, this would be just a real easy way to kind of ease them in to see how they're going to not answer you and to kind of get you go ahead and get you good and pissed off before you even walk in there because they're already jerking you around. [01:13:46.160 --> 01:13:57.160] And you know that they're going to jerk you around and now you're kind of already in that mindset and these guys don't even play fair and the only way they can win is by cheating. [01:13:57.160 --> 01:14:10.160] So head them off at the past and start burying them into paperwork and then they're starting to think, man, this person is already three steps ahead of me. [01:14:10.160 --> 01:14:12.160] Wait a minute, Scott. [01:14:12.160 --> 01:14:17.160] You can get charged with paper terrorism. [01:14:17.160 --> 01:14:30.160] Well, you get charged with paper terrorism when you were asking him for public information. [01:14:30.160 --> 01:14:36.160] So public information requests are one of my favorite things to do. [01:14:36.160 --> 01:14:52.160] Brett, and where I was arrested in the county I live in, Brett sent in an information request to the sheriff requesting all of the evidence of training of all officers in arrest procedures. [01:14:52.160 --> 01:15:00.160] And I mentioned this to a ex-Sharis deputy and he immediately said there is not. [01:15:00.160 --> 01:15:02.160] Right. [01:15:02.160 --> 01:15:08.160] So the sheriff wasn't fibbing Brett when he told you he had no record responsive to your request. [01:15:08.160 --> 01:15:17.160] But what that had the effect of doing is throwing all of the officers under the bus. [01:15:17.160 --> 01:15:27.160] The sheriff threw all his officers under the bus because they're arrested people and taking them to jail and the sheriff is saying I didn't tell him to do that. [01:15:27.160 --> 01:15:30.160] They did that on their own. [01:15:30.160 --> 01:15:35.160] So information requests can be great. [01:15:35.160 --> 01:15:40.160] If they don't give you the information, it gives you a lot of claims to make against them. [01:15:40.160 --> 01:15:45.160] If they do, you could generally use the information against them. [01:15:45.160 --> 01:15:55.160] And what Scott said about mailing it, if they can't see you, they don't feel like they can evaluate you. [01:15:55.160 --> 01:16:01.160] The best thing about Brett's anyone in my case, they're wondering who is this guy? [01:16:01.160 --> 01:16:04.160] He's guys coming in and hammering us. [01:16:04.160 --> 01:16:07.160] What are we dealing with here? [01:16:07.160 --> 01:16:12.160] Didn't they first tell you something about they assumed that it was you? [01:16:12.160 --> 01:16:16.160] Yeah, they did. [01:16:16.160 --> 01:16:24.160] But I think all shiny teeth and sweets met an armpits told them it wasn't. [01:16:24.160 --> 01:16:31.160] That's kind of an inside joke of what Brett used to address one of their lawyers. [01:16:31.160 --> 01:16:33.160] We'll address that. [01:16:33.160 --> 01:16:35.160] We'll come back on the other side. [01:16:35.160 --> 01:16:38.160] Randy Kelkin, Brett Fouton, Google Radio. [01:16:38.160 --> 01:16:43.160] I call in number 512-646-1984. [01:16:43.160 --> 01:16:45.160] We have one more caller on the board. [01:16:45.160 --> 01:16:51.160] John, we will get to you and we'll give you at least two minutes. [01:16:51.160 --> 01:16:53.160] That's more than usual. [01:16:53.160 --> 01:17:00.160] John, we'll be right back. [01:17:23.160 --> 01:17:26.160] We'll be a blessing to all those with a hearing ear. [01:17:26.160 --> 01:17:31.160] Join Nana and guests for both verse by verse Bible studies and topical Bible studies [01:17:31.160 --> 01:17:34.160] designed to provoke unto love and good works. [01:17:34.160 --> 01:17:38.160] Our verse by verse Bible studies will begin in the book of Matthew, [01:17:38.160 --> 01:17:41.160] where we will discuss one chapter per week. [01:17:41.160 --> 01:17:45.160] Our topical Bible studies will vary each week and will explore sound doctrine [01:17:45.160 --> 01:17:48.160] as well as Christian character development. [01:17:48.160 --> 01:17:55.160] So mark your calendar and join us live on LogosRadioNetwork.com Wednesdays from 8 to 10 p.m. [01:17:55.160 --> 01:18:04.160] starting January 8th for an inspiring and motivating discussion of the scriptures. [01:18:04.160 --> 01:18:09.160] It's the 2019 Logos Radio Network Annual Fundraiser and Gun Giveaway, [01:18:09.160 --> 01:18:11.160] sponsored by Central Texas Gun Works. [01:18:11.160 --> 01:18:15.160] Go to LogosRadioNetwork.com and enter to win. [01:18:15.160 --> 01:18:18.160] The amount is appreciated. Everything helps to keep us on the air. [01:18:18.160 --> 01:18:24.160] From Central Texas Gun Works, the grand prize up for grabs is the Spikes Tactical AR-15. [01:18:24.160 --> 01:18:27.160] More prizes and sponsors to be announced. [01:18:27.160 --> 01:18:30.160] Every $25 donation is a chance to win. [01:18:30.160 --> 01:18:36.160] When you purchase Randy Kelton's e-book, Regal 101, you get four chances to win. [01:18:36.160 --> 01:18:40.160] Purchase Eddie Craig's Traffic Seminar and get ten chances to win. [01:18:40.160 --> 01:18:44.160] If you've enjoyed the shows on Logos Radio Network, support our fundraiser [01:18:44.160 --> 01:18:49.160] so we can keep bringing you the best quality programming on talk radio today. [01:18:49.160 --> 01:18:52.160] We also accept Bitcoin and other cryptocurrencies. [01:18:52.160 --> 01:18:56.160] And remember, every $25 donation is a chance to win. [01:18:56.160 --> 01:19:15.160] LogosRadioNetwork.com for details and donate today. [01:19:27.160 --> 01:19:31.160] Well, I love you. [01:19:31.160 --> 01:19:36.160] Ain't gonna fool me with that same old trick again. [01:19:36.160 --> 01:19:41.160] I was blindsided, but now I can see you again. [01:19:41.160 --> 01:19:46.160] You put the fear in my pocket, took the money from my head. [01:19:46.160 --> 01:19:49.160] Ain't gonna fool me with that same... [01:19:49.160 --> 01:19:51.160] Okay, we are back. [01:19:51.160 --> 01:19:55.160] This is the rule of law radio for Randy Kelton. I'm Brett Fountain. [01:19:55.160 --> 01:19:58.160] And we're talking with Scott in Texas. [01:19:58.160 --> 01:20:02.160] So, Scott, go right on ahead. [01:20:02.160 --> 01:20:07.160] Okay, and just for clarification, that's $644.101. [01:20:07.160 --> 01:20:11.160] I just broke out my handy-dandy Texas... [01:20:11.160 --> 01:20:12.160] Oh, okay, yeah. [01:20:12.160 --> 01:20:17.160] It's the criminal motor vehicle law book, which everybody should own. [01:20:17.160 --> 01:20:25.160] And, yeah, $644.101 is the one that goes to the municipal officers. [01:20:25.160 --> 01:20:33.160] So, that's a good way to really start getting people to engage [01:20:33.160 --> 01:20:38.160] on how to show them how the system really works. [01:20:38.160 --> 01:20:42.160] Because if they do answer it, they're either gonna answer it [01:20:42.160 --> 01:20:47.160] with a non-responsive thing, non-responsive comply. [01:20:47.160 --> 01:20:50.160] That's when you get the bar grieve, whoever signs it, [01:20:50.160 --> 01:20:53.160] and you'll find that nobody will sign it. [01:20:53.160 --> 01:20:59.160] And if nobody signs it, then you can bar grieve everybody in that office, [01:20:59.160 --> 01:21:01.160] all the attorneys, because you don't know which one [01:21:01.160 --> 01:21:04.160] who filled this out and gave it to you. [01:21:04.160 --> 01:21:08.160] Wait a minute, Brett, you want to address that [01:21:08.160 --> 01:21:12.160] and how all the lawyers are responsible? [01:21:12.160 --> 01:21:18.160] Yeah, what I do is I find one lawyer, some lowman on the totem pole, [01:21:18.160 --> 01:21:22.160] he did a little something and he signed his name to it. [01:21:22.160 --> 01:21:26.160] Well, I go and get his bar number and he gets a bar grievance [01:21:26.160 --> 01:21:28.160] for his indiscretions. [01:21:28.160 --> 01:21:32.160] But then his supervisor really should have trained him better. [01:21:32.160 --> 01:21:36.160] In Texas, we have Rule 501 that says so. [01:21:36.160 --> 01:21:42.160] And so the part of the supervisor is it bears that responsibility, [01:21:42.160 --> 01:21:45.160] just as if the supervisor had done that error. [01:21:45.160 --> 01:21:50.160] And then there's another that's 501A and 501B says the partners. [01:21:50.160 --> 01:21:53.160] All the partners of the law firm are responsible. [01:21:53.160 --> 01:21:57.160] So you'll find the partners of the law firm, it's pretty easy to look up, [01:21:57.160 --> 01:22:01.160] and they're all getting in trouble too. [01:22:01.160 --> 01:22:07.160] It doesn't take long before they start having words with each other. [01:22:07.160 --> 01:22:11.160] By trouble, are you saying that you bar grieve all the members of the firm [01:22:11.160 --> 01:22:14.160] for not collecting the one recalcitrance? [01:22:14.160 --> 01:22:15.160] Yes. [01:22:15.160 --> 01:22:22.160] And how many bar grievances does it take to get their malpractice insurance canceled? [01:22:22.160 --> 01:22:24.160] I've heard three, but I don't know. [01:22:24.160 --> 01:22:26.160] I don't know how that exactly works. [01:22:26.160 --> 01:22:31.160] We've had that experience for a law firm, three bar grievances. [01:22:31.160 --> 01:22:36.160] So if he bar grieves all the lawyers and they got more than three, [01:22:36.160 --> 01:22:39.160] likely they're going to have to shut their law firm down [01:22:39.160 --> 01:22:41.160] and bring it up under a different name. [01:22:41.160 --> 01:22:45.160] Russell Mortland was in a bankruptcy. [01:22:45.160 --> 01:22:50.160] Halfway through, the lawyer on the other side quit [01:22:50.160 --> 01:22:52.160] and they brought in a new firm. [01:22:52.160 --> 01:22:55.160] At the end of the bankruptcy, the original lawyer came back for some reason [01:22:55.160 --> 01:22:59.160] and complained that Mr. Mortland had filed three bar grievances against him. [01:22:59.160 --> 01:23:04.160] And at the end of the year, they couldn't get malpractice insurance [01:23:04.160 --> 01:23:10.160] and had to shut down the firm and reopen it in another name. [01:23:10.160 --> 01:23:11.160] Aw. [01:23:11.160 --> 01:23:14.160] Poor babies. [01:23:14.160 --> 01:23:16.160] I'm about to shed a tear. [01:23:16.160 --> 01:23:19.160] I was afraid you would. [01:23:19.160 --> 01:23:23.160] Now you'll probably never file another bar grievance. [01:23:23.160 --> 01:23:27.160] Oh, I can't wait. [01:23:27.160 --> 01:23:30.160] That was tears of joy, Ray. [01:23:30.160 --> 01:23:33.160] Okay, Scott. [01:23:33.160 --> 01:23:36.160] We kind of bushwhacked you, didn't we? [01:23:36.160 --> 01:23:40.160] Did you have an issue that I didn't give you an opportunity to address? [01:23:40.160 --> 01:23:46.160] Well, you know, I was talking to Jay earlier today [01:23:46.160 --> 01:23:49.160] and we were talking about ERCOT. [01:23:49.160 --> 01:23:54.160] I think this is going to go into a little bit of a lengthier conversation [01:23:54.160 --> 01:23:56.160] than I want to get into tonight. [01:23:56.160 --> 01:23:58.160] I'm going to call you in the morning [01:23:58.160 --> 01:24:02.160] and kind of go over a couple of things that I found out [01:24:02.160 --> 01:24:05.160] because of their growth negligence. [01:24:05.160 --> 01:24:11.160] And since people have died because of this freeze around here, [01:24:11.160 --> 01:24:14.160] you know, there's potentially some, you know, [01:24:14.160 --> 01:24:18.160] heavy duty things that could be brought up about this. [01:24:18.160 --> 01:24:23.160] So I'll go ahead and jump off here for right now, [01:24:23.160 --> 01:24:29.160] but this is going to be going to public hazard bonds [01:24:29.160 --> 01:24:35.160] and things like that that you might want to kind of look into a little bit stronger. [01:24:35.160 --> 01:24:40.160] So anyhow, that's all I got right now. [01:24:40.160 --> 01:24:44.160] And hopefully that little bit about helping to get people engaged [01:24:44.160 --> 01:24:49.160] with the information request is something that can really [01:24:49.160 --> 01:24:54.160] get people kind of motivated just to see how these courts [01:24:54.160 --> 01:24:56.160] and stuff are going to respond. [01:24:56.160 --> 01:24:59.160] But I can say that once they get the information [01:24:59.160 --> 01:25:01.160] from the Texas Department of Transportation [01:25:01.160 --> 01:25:04.160] and compare that to how the city responds, [01:25:04.160 --> 01:25:10.160] that's going to be a huge eye-opener because it was for me. [01:25:10.160 --> 01:25:17.160] Okay, on that, in that regard, I read a document [01:25:17.160 --> 01:25:20.160] by the state legislature about this issue [01:25:20.160 --> 01:25:27.160] and they were complaining that when the cities do enter in these agreements, [01:25:27.160 --> 01:25:31.160] then they send their officers out to do DOT inspections [01:25:31.160 --> 01:25:35.160] and they write fines, they're supposed to send part of those fines back [01:25:35.160 --> 01:25:39.160] to the Department of Public Safety, but they hadn't been doing it. [01:25:39.160 --> 01:25:44.160] And there were some several hundreds of millions of dollars [01:25:44.160 --> 01:25:52.160] that they had denied the state because they didn't abide by the law concerning these issues. [01:25:52.160 --> 01:25:55.160] So it's a touchy issue with the legislature. [01:25:55.160 --> 01:26:00.160] So it will really be touchy with the municipalities [01:26:00.160 --> 01:26:03.160] when you start asking questions in this regard. [01:26:03.160 --> 01:26:09.160] Okay. All right, I'll let y'all go. [01:26:09.160 --> 01:26:11.160] Okay, thank you, Scott. [01:26:11.160 --> 01:26:15.160] Okay, now we're going to go to John in New York. [01:26:15.160 --> 01:26:17.160] Hello, John. [01:26:17.160 --> 01:26:19.160] Who? John in New York? [01:26:19.160 --> 01:26:21.160] Oh, that must be me. [01:26:21.160 --> 01:26:23.160] I hope it's you. [01:26:23.160 --> 01:26:25.160] Yeah, I think it's me. [01:26:25.160 --> 01:26:28.160] Okay, what I'm going to do, I just want to know [01:26:28.160 --> 01:26:34.160] if the cops, the judge, or the DA have violated any rights, [01:26:34.160 --> 01:26:39.160] like in this case, I say they violated the person's First Amendment rights [01:26:39.160 --> 01:26:42.160] when they set up the defendant's probation rules. [01:26:42.160 --> 01:26:47.160] I'm probably wrong, but I just want to make sure if I'm not right. [01:26:47.160 --> 01:26:50.160] Here we go. Some of the probation... [01:26:50.160 --> 01:26:55.160] Okay, you could be wrong, but you've been calling in to show for a long time [01:26:55.160 --> 01:26:58.160] and we've listened to a lot of stuff you brought, [01:26:58.160 --> 01:27:01.160] and I can attest to the fact that I think Brett will agree. [01:27:01.160 --> 01:27:03.160] You're not right. [01:27:03.160 --> 01:27:05.160] I'm not right. [01:27:05.160 --> 01:27:07.160] Okay, go ahead. [01:27:07.160 --> 01:27:09.160] Oh, God. [01:27:09.160 --> 01:27:13.160] We'll try it. We'll try it. Here we go. [01:27:13.160 --> 01:27:15.160] I'm going to give you some examples. [01:27:15.160 --> 01:27:17.160] It'll take about 45 seconds for the examples. [01:27:17.160 --> 01:27:19.160] Here we are. [01:27:19.160 --> 01:27:23.160] She can't use the computers at the library without permission. [01:27:23.160 --> 01:27:27.160] She can't use any social media, can't go on any social media, [01:27:27.160 --> 01:27:28.160] cannot pose... [01:27:28.160 --> 01:27:30.160] Wait, wait, wait, wait. Hold on, hold on. [01:27:30.160 --> 01:27:32.160] Give us a little background. [01:27:32.160 --> 01:27:36.160] Who can't use it and who told them they can't use it? [01:27:36.160 --> 01:27:40.160] Well, let's see. [01:27:40.160 --> 01:27:43.160] This is the girl... This is ongoing now. [01:27:43.160 --> 01:27:47.160] This is the girl that supposedly called the local cops 300 times [01:27:47.160 --> 01:27:49.160] a couple years ago. [01:27:49.160 --> 01:27:53.160] It's just about 14 months ago now, and she got probation. [01:27:53.160 --> 01:27:58.160] So she called the local cops 300 times, and she got probation. [01:27:58.160 --> 01:28:05.160] This is an OCD person, and she is like people who collect cars [01:28:05.160 --> 01:28:09.160] or collect stamps or coins or antiques. [01:28:09.160 --> 01:28:12.160] She likes memorabilia of the police. [01:28:12.160 --> 01:28:14.160] She's got all kinds of memorabilia. [01:28:14.160 --> 01:28:17.160] She's got handcuffs. She's got all kinds of stuff. [01:28:17.160 --> 01:28:20.160] A year later, after she called the police, [01:28:20.160 --> 01:28:23.160] supposedly 300 times, with one of those... [01:28:23.160 --> 01:28:26.160] I guess she used one of those joke apps. [01:28:26.160 --> 01:28:29.160] You know, it says some kind of a silly joke, [01:28:29.160 --> 01:28:31.160] and it laughs and it hangs up. [01:28:31.160 --> 01:28:34.160] I don't know if that's what she used, unknown. [01:28:34.160 --> 01:28:39.160] But anyway, a year later, she posted a picture of the local cops [01:28:39.160 --> 01:28:44.160] through circles around their head and put the word bang. [01:28:44.160 --> 01:28:47.160] And now, the most... [01:28:47.160 --> 01:28:49.160] I know, I know it's not good. [01:28:49.160 --> 01:28:54.160] But now, she bought a sweatshirt and had it custom printed. [01:28:54.160 --> 01:28:58.160] And on the custom printing, it says, quote, [01:28:58.160 --> 01:29:04.160] I hate the YCSO, unquote. [01:29:04.160 --> 01:29:09.160] And YCSO, she means the Yates County Sheriff's Office. [01:29:09.160 --> 01:29:12.160] But YCSO could mean a lot of things. [01:29:12.160 --> 01:29:15.160] And she put it on Facebook. [01:29:15.160 --> 01:29:17.160] She's not supposed to use Facebook. [01:29:17.160 --> 01:29:19.160] That's okay. [01:29:19.160 --> 01:29:21.160] Maybe she's not supposed to use Facebook, [01:29:21.160 --> 01:29:25.160] but there's nothing wrong about saying, I hate cops. [01:29:25.160 --> 01:29:28.160] Right. And I spoke at the time. [01:29:28.160 --> 01:29:30.160] I spoke to a psychologist about her. [01:29:30.160 --> 01:29:32.160] And this wasn't an official thing. [01:29:32.160 --> 01:29:34.160] It was a friend of mine. [01:29:34.160 --> 01:29:36.160] Here we go. [01:29:36.160 --> 01:29:40.160] And he said that you were out of time. [01:29:40.160 --> 01:29:42.160] Randy Kelton, Brett Fountain. [01:29:42.160 --> 01:29:44.160] Real radio. [01:29:44.160 --> 01:29:47.160] Call in number 512-646-1984. [01:29:47.160 --> 01:29:50.160] We've got two segments, and John's our last caller, [01:29:50.160 --> 01:29:53.160] so we might have time for one more. [01:29:53.160 --> 01:29:56.160] So if you have a question or comment, give us a call. [01:29:56.160 --> 01:29:58.160] We'll be right back. [01:30:03.160 --> 01:30:06.160] Reality TV, sugar, obesity, jet lag, [01:30:06.160 --> 01:30:10.160] the list of things that makes us dumber just keeps on growing. [01:30:10.160 --> 01:30:13.160] But now researchers say we can add stress to the list. [01:30:13.160 --> 01:30:37.160] I'm Dr. Kaepernald Brecht. Back with details in a moment. [01:30:44.160 --> 01:30:48.160] Are you always on the go and juggling multiple projects? [01:30:48.160 --> 01:30:52.160] If so, you might think that multitasking proves you're smart. [01:30:52.160 --> 01:30:56.160] But think again, all that stress might be eating your brain. [01:30:56.160 --> 01:31:00.160] A new study finds stress reduces the number of connections between neurons, [01:31:00.160 --> 01:31:04.160] which actually makes it harder for people to manage problems. [01:31:04.160 --> 01:31:07.160] Researchers at Yale University found that stressed-out people [01:31:07.160 --> 01:31:10.160] have less gray matter in their prefrontal cortex. [01:31:10.160 --> 01:31:14.160] That's the part of the brain that helps us weigh conflicting ideas [01:31:14.160 --> 01:31:16.160] and regulate our emotions. [01:31:16.160 --> 01:31:18.160] So take a deep breath and chill out. [01:31:18.160 --> 01:31:21.160] It'll help keep your mind as sharp as a tack. [01:31:21.160 --> 01:31:24.160] I'm Dr. Kaepernald Brecht for startpage.com, [01:31:24.160 --> 01:31:27.160] the world's most private search engine. [01:31:31.160 --> 01:31:34.160] This is Building 7, a 47-story skyscraper [01:31:34.160 --> 01:31:37.160] that fell on the afternoon of September 11th. [01:31:37.160 --> 01:31:39.160] The government says that fire brought it down. [01:31:39.160 --> 01:31:44.160] Over 1,500 architects and engineers have concluded it was a controlled demolition. [01:31:44.160 --> 01:31:47.160] Over 6,000 of my fellow service members have given their lives. [01:31:47.160 --> 01:31:50.160] Thousands of my fellow force responders have died. [01:31:50.160 --> 01:31:51.160] I'm not a conspiracy theorist. [01:31:51.160 --> 01:31:52.160] I'm a structural engineer. [01:31:52.160 --> 01:31:53.160] I'm a New York City correction officer. [01:31:53.160 --> 01:31:54.160] I'm an Air Force pilot. [01:31:54.160 --> 01:31:56.160] I'm the father who lost his son. [01:31:56.160 --> 01:31:59.160] We're Americans, and we deserve the truth. [01:31:59.160 --> 01:32:10.160] Rememberbuilding7.org today. [01:32:29.160 --> 01:32:32.160] Rural Law Radio has put together the most comprehensive teaching tool available [01:32:32.160 --> 01:32:34.160] that will help you understand what the process is [01:32:34.160 --> 01:32:36.160] and how to hold courts to the rule of law. [01:32:36.160 --> 01:32:38.160] You can get your own copy of this invaluable material [01:32:38.160 --> 01:32:41.160] by going to RuralLawRadio.com and ordering your copy today. [01:32:41.160 --> 01:32:43.160] By ordering now you'll receive a copy of Eddie's book, [01:32:43.160 --> 01:32:46.160] the Texas Transportation Code, The Law vs. the Lie, [01:32:46.160 --> 01:32:48.160] video and audio of the original 2009 seminar, [01:32:48.160 --> 01:32:51.160] hundreds of research documents and other useful resource material. [01:32:51.160 --> 01:32:53.160] Learn how to fight for your rights with the help of this material [01:32:53.160 --> 01:32:55.160] from RuralLawRadio.com. [01:32:55.160 --> 01:33:00.160] Order your copy today and together we can have the pre-society we all want and deserve. [01:33:00.160 --> 01:33:19.160] You are listening to the Logos Radio Network. LogosRadioNetwork.com [01:33:30.160 --> 01:33:58.160] I just wanted to know if any of these are violations of a, well I spoke to a psychologist about [01:33:58.160 --> 01:34:07.160] her who I happened to know and an MD medical doctor had been treating her for OCD with pills [01:34:07.160 --> 01:34:15.160] and the psychologist told me that he himself has OCD so he understands all this behavior [01:34:15.160 --> 01:34:20.160] and it's typical of what an OCD person does. So now here we go. [01:34:20.160 --> 01:34:26.160] I just want to know if the cops, the judge or the DA have violated any right like in this case. [01:34:26.160 --> 01:34:31.160] I think they violated her First Amendment right when they set up her probation rules. [01:34:31.160 --> 01:34:37.160] Here hold on, let me, I got to scroll this down, I got a list and it's a short list [01:34:37.160 --> 01:34:45.160] but I didn't want to forget anything. She can't use the computers at the library without permission. [01:34:45.160 --> 01:34:50.160] She can't use any social media. She cannot post on her timeline. [01:34:50.160 --> 01:34:57.160] She was told she cannot buy another laptop computer without permission. [01:34:57.160 --> 01:35:05.160] That really irritates me. She was told she cannot be on the Internet unless it's for YouTube music [01:35:05.160 --> 01:35:11.160] or YouTube movies. That irritates me. They all irritate me. [01:35:11.160 --> 01:35:17.160] She was told she cannot play grand fest auto because it's too violent. [01:35:17.160 --> 01:35:24.160] They told her she can't play grand fest auto. That gives me a burr in my saddle [01:35:24.160 --> 01:35:29.160] and whether it's violent or not, it still gives me a burr in my saddle. [01:35:29.160 --> 01:35:31.160] So with any of you... [01:35:31.160 --> 01:35:39.160] Okay, you're talking to a couple of guys from Texas and we really understand what a burr in the saddle means. [01:35:39.160 --> 01:35:41.160] Gloria. [01:35:41.160 --> 01:35:43.160] We got grass burrs down here. [01:35:43.160 --> 01:35:48.160] I didn't know they had those saddles up in New York. [01:35:48.160 --> 01:35:55.160] Well, they do now because Cuomo has given us the fuse so we'll get to that in a minute. [01:35:55.160 --> 01:36:01.160] Okay, so far I have a question about the nature of these restrictions. [01:36:01.160 --> 01:36:08.160] Are these restrictions part of a pre-deal? [01:36:08.160 --> 01:36:15.160] Well, let's put it this way. As far as I know, instead of jail, they gave her probation [01:36:15.160 --> 01:36:20.160] and then she had to agree to these rules that they set down for her. [01:36:20.160 --> 01:36:24.160] Okay, these do not go to contractual rights. [01:36:24.160 --> 01:36:31.160] I'm sorry, they don't go to constitutional rights or statutory rights. They go to a contract. [01:36:31.160 --> 01:36:38.160] If she agreed to these restrictions in a contract, she doesn't get to cry and complain about them later [01:36:38.160 --> 01:36:40.160] unless she wants to go back to jail. [01:36:40.160 --> 01:36:47.160] She doesn't have to abide by all of these restrictions. She can go sit there out of time in jail. [01:36:47.160 --> 01:36:52.160] I see. So in other words, they really haven't violated her rights. [01:36:52.160 --> 01:36:56.160] This was a condition of her probation. [01:36:56.160 --> 01:36:59.160] Yes, this is by agreement. [01:36:59.160 --> 01:37:02.160] Okay, so in other words, she can't complain about this. [01:37:02.160 --> 01:37:08.160] Okay, thank you for answering that question and now I'll give you a quick update on Mr. Cuomo. [01:37:08.160 --> 01:37:10.160] I know you're going to be interested in this one. [01:37:10.160 --> 01:37:14.160] Oh yes, I want to hear the dirt on him. [01:37:14.160 --> 01:37:24.160] Killer Cuomo, as I call him, and I thought I invented that name, but I heard Gerald Salenti saying Killer Cuomo. [01:37:24.160 --> 01:37:28.160] So I guess I'm not the first one to say it, but anyway, I thought I was. [01:37:28.160 --> 01:37:31.160] Killer Cuomo is playing it smart. [01:37:31.160 --> 01:37:36.160] He made a tear-jerking emotional announcement. [01:37:36.160 --> 01:37:42.160] I'm so sorry, and it sounded like this. He sounded like he was crying. [01:37:42.160 --> 01:37:49.160] I'm so sorry, but I didn't know I was ascending women with what I said. [01:37:49.160 --> 01:37:59.160] So this is a clever attempt to draw attention away from the fact that he committed mass murder. [01:37:59.160 --> 01:38:03.160] It's an attempt to draw attention away from the fact that he committed mass murder. [01:38:03.160 --> 01:38:05.160] How clever of him. [01:38:05.160 --> 01:38:10.160] So that's the recent update, and they're really, they're talking about it more and more and more. [01:38:10.160 --> 01:38:20.160] And the only thing I can figure is, remember when Bill Clinton, remember when Bill Clinton got Monica Lewinsky thrown in his face? [01:38:20.160 --> 01:38:22.160] Yes. [01:38:22.160 --> 01:38:32.160] Mr. Clinton must have been wavering a little bit out of the way of what the shadow government wanted him to do. [01:38:32.160 --> 01:38:43.160] So in order to get him back in line, I say that they all of a sudden, Monica Lewinsky popped into the news media, [01:38:43.160 --> 01:38:53.160] and she would never have popped into the news media had he been walking a straight and narrow line with the shadow government [01:38:53.160 --> 01:38:55.160] than what they wanted him to do. [01:38:55.160 --> 01:39:02.160] So all of a sudden, Monica Lewinsky came into the picture, but I think that's what's going on with Mr. Cuomo. [01:39:02.160 --> 01:39:07.160] I can't picture him not following the directives of the Chinese documents. [01:39:07.160 --> 01:39:12.160] But there's something that's going on here where they want him out of the picture. [01:39:12.160 --> 01:39:22.160] Maybe they think he's going to go on to be president and they want somebody else worse than him to be president, not him. [01:39:22.160 --> 01:39:27.160] So there's something going on. I've done news so long. [01:39:27.160 --> 01:39:34.160] I know when there's an underlying agenda and there's something going on here with why they're turning on him. [01:39:34.160 --> 01:39:42.160] Well, what I've pretty well come to suspect is about everything we hear on the news is not true. [01:39:42.160 --> 01:39:47.160] It's all propaganda, all what they want us to hear and believe. [01:39:47.160 --> 01:39:55.160] But to say that there's a shadow government, you know, I hear lots of talk about a shadow government. [01:39:55.160 --> 01:40:02.160] I'm not sure what that is. All I've ever got was talk about a shadow government. [01:40:02.160 --> 01:40:08.160] I've never got anything that I would construe as evidence of a shadow government. [01:40:08.160 --> 01:40:13.160] So what could that shadow government be? [01:40:13.160 --> 01:40:24.160] The shadow government, well, if you listened to the address that President Eisenhower made when he was leaving office, [01:40:24.160 --> 01:40:34.160] he referred to the shadow government as the industrial, the military industrial... [01:40:34.160 --> 01:40:42.160] Military industrial complex. Beware the military industrial complex is what he said. [01:40:42.160 --> 01:40:45.160] Yeah, beware of it. That's right. [01:40:45.160 --> 01:40:52.160] And then Kennedy, three weeks before Kennedy was shot, what a coincidence. [01:40:52.160 --> 01:40:58.160] Three weeks before Kennedy was shot, what a coincidence. He made a similar statement. [01:40:58.160 --> 01:41:06.160] And I can't recall. The part that they show is short, but I can't remember what it said. [01:41:06.160 --> 01:41:14.160] The same basic thing about being hidden and so on and so forth. [01:41:14.160 --> 01:41:21.160] The shadow government is very simple. We have a system of checks and balances. [01:41:21.160 --> 01:41:24.160] We've got the executive branch, which is the president. [01:41:24.160 --> 01:41:29.160] We've got the judicial branch, which are the Supreme Court and all the other courts. [01:41:29.160 --> 01:41:37.160] Incidentally, they signed an agreement in 1947 with the United Nations, the American Bar Association, [01:41:37.160 --> 01:41:41.160] signed an agreement in 1947 with the United Nations. [01:41:41.160 --> 01:41:47.160] And that has put the United Nations in charge of the court in this country ever since. [01:41:47.160 --> 01:41:55.160] And that's why you guys are doing what you do helping people against corrupt court because they signed an agreement. [01:41:55.160 --> 01:41:57.160] That was just one of the things. [01:41:57.160 --> 01:42:00.160] What agreement was that? [01:42:00.160 --> 01:42:05.160] Well, I can't quote you. I used to know what was in it. [01:42:05.160 --> 01:42:13.160] But what it did, it effectively turned over the control of the court under the direction of the United Nations. [01:42:13.160 --> 01:42:18.160] And they are not the good guys that we learned about in our grammar school books. [01:42:18.160 --> 01:42:28.160] Okay, that's pretty profound. And I've heard this kind of thing ever since I've been doing radio and been into this area of research. [01:42:28.160 --> 01:42:34.160] But I have never found that agreement or any information to back it up. [01:42:34.160 --> 01:42:41.160] Well, that could be because it gets wiped as many times as it can from the history books. [01:42:41.160 --> 01:42:48.160] Just like the real reason for the Civil War was not what they say. And the real reason for the Revolutionary War was not what they say. [01:42:48.160 --> 01:42:57.160] It gets conveniently wiped from the books because if you know it, then you're going to be savvy and privy to what's going on today. [01:42:57.160 --> 01:43:00.160] And they don't want you to apply. [01:43:00.160 --> 01:43:06.160] Okay, I have a problem with that. This is the kind of stuff I've been getting for a long time. [01:43:06.160 --> 01:43:12.160] There's a lot of unfounded assertions and allegations. They may sound reasonable. [01:43:12.160 --> 01:43:18.160] And the more we hear them, the more they sound true. [01:43:18.160 --> 01:43:28.160] But unless we have some hard evidence underlying this, it's just shucking and jiving. [01:43:28.160 --> 01:43:36.160] Well, no, I couldn't. I've got to try it. I've got to try it. I could give it to you, but it would take a lot. [01:43:36.160 --> 01:43:43.160] Okay, hang on. That's where our sponsors, Randy Kelton, Brett Fountain, and we have our radio. [01:43:43.160 --> 01:43:47.160] I'm not going to give up calling, but we're going to our last segment. [01:43:47.160 --> 01:44:00.160] So hang on. We'll be right back. 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I'm Brett Fountain, [01:46:40.160 --> 01:46:43.160] and we are talking with John in New York. [01:46:43.160 --> 01:46:49.160] John, you were just talking about some ideas you had about what may have happened, [01:46:49.160 --> 01:46:54.160] and you say that you could produce the proof at some point. [01:46:54.160 --> 01:47:01.160] It might take a while, but then did you have something else that you wanted to talk about? [01:47:01.160 --> 01:47:06.160] John, are you there? [01:47:06.160 --> 01:47:07.160] Oh, John. [01:47:07.160 --> 01:47:13.160] Okay, try that unmute if you may be hearing something. [01:47:13.160 --> 01:47:15.160] Okay, am I here? [01:47:15.160 --> 01:47:18.160] No, we hear you. Yes, go ahead. [01:47:18.160 --> 01:47:26.160] Well, I'll just give you one example, then I'll clear the air so that you can go to your next call. [01:47:26.160 --> 01:47:30.160] Long story short, there's one example. [01:47:30.160 --> 01:47:43.160] The Revolutionary War, they always tell us, was fought because of housing soldiers in the colonist homes without their permission, [01:47:43.160 --> 01:47:48.160] taxation without representation, too much tax. [01:47:48.160 --> 01:47:54.160] Let's see, there were other grievances, but those were the main ones, and they would be correct. [01:47:54.160 --> 01:47:59.160] They would be right, but Benjamin Franklin said it himself. [01:47:59.160 --> 01:48:04.160] I mean, what better guy to explain things than Benjamin Franklin? [01:48:04.160 --> 01:48:14.160] He said, and I quote, oh, it wasn't so much the tax, yeah, it was a pain in the neck. It wasn't the tax, though, that caused the Revolution. [01:48:14.160 --> 01:48:20.160] It was the fact that they were forcing the currency just like the currency of today. [01:48:20.160 --> 01:48:30.160] They were forcing the currency on the colonists, and every time they forced the bank notes of England to be used in this country before it was a country, [01:48:30.160 --> 01:48:39.160] the colonists realized they were losing their shirt, and every time they printed their own currency, there was prosperity for all. [01:48:39.160 --> 01:48:42.160] And they did that a grand total of three times. [01:48:42.160 --> 01:48:48.160] They were on the English bank notes, and they said, hey, we can't do this. We're losing our shirt. [01:48:48.160 --> 01:48:53.160] So they went to their own colonist money supply. They printed their own currency. [01:48:53.160 --> 01:48:58.160] Then England said, no, you got to be on the bank notes, so they put them back on the bank notes. [01:48:58.160 --> 01:49:05.160] And by the third time that they were put on the bank notes, they had enough, and that's what sparked the Revolution. [01:49:05.160 --> 01:49:15.160] They fall over fiat currency, and they don't want you to know that, because if you know that, then you know they're doing the same thing to us today. [01:49:15.160 --> 01:49:20.160] But that was stricken from the history of it. So that's one perfect example. [01:49:20.160 --> 01:49:28.160] And I'd rather like to know that also. Let's go to your call. [01:49:28.160 --> 01:49:35.160] Yeah, fiat currency is a big deal. Nobody wants to address it in political circles, but it really is a big deal. [01:49:35.160 --> 01:49:51.160] Yeah, and I've heard, I've read and heard about the bank's own issue about the unstable currencies. The colonists, the banks used to put out their own currency. [01:49:51.160 --> 01:50:02.160] And the English, from their perspective, had a relatively good reason for doing that. They wanted to keep a stable currency. [01:50:02.160 --> 01:50:21.160] Except that, like now, with our fiat currency that we have, the Federal Reserve notes, having that, using the Federal Reserve notes, puts you under taxation issues that Barter did not put you under. [01:50:21.160 --> 01:50:30.160] And yeah, that was a part of the Revolution, but that was only one part of it. There's a lot more to it. [01:50:30.160 --> 01:50:45.160] Well, the colonists realized that because the money supply was created by someone else and controlled by someone else, they also controlled inflation, deflation, recession, and so on and so forth. [01:50:45.160 --> 01:50:49.160] And that's what they were objecting to. [01:50:49.160 --> 01:50:54.160] And that goes back to the Templars. [01:50:54.160 --> 01:51:04.160] Yeah, well, Lincoln and Kennedy were into the same thing and Stonewall Jackson. They tried to kill Stonewall Jackson over it. They tried to kill Lincoln and they succeeded. [01:51:04.160 --> 01:51:23.160] And they tried to kill JFK and they succeeded there. Each of these people were trying to get off of the fiat currency, and therefore the Rothschilds and the other international bankers would not have their claws into us making money off our dead bodies. [01:51:23.160 --> 01:51:30.160] And that's the way it was. Whoever controls, and Thomas Jefferson said it, whoever controls the currency, you don't need... [01:51:30.160 --> 01:51:38.160] I fear the controllers of currency more than I do standing armies. He said that himself. [01:51:38.160 --> 01:51:47.160] So if you pull the pieces together, you'll find out that these wars were not fought over the same things that the history books exactly tell it. [01:51:47.160 --> 01:51:52.160] It's partly true, but not all of it's true. [01:51:52.160 --> 01:51:58.160] So that's basically it. I can tell you. And JFK was murdered over it. He was going to go... [01:51:58.160 --> 01:52:07.160] He was not only going to dissolve the Federal Reserve, but he was going to go off of the international currency that we have, because that's what we're on. [01:52:07.160 --> 01:52:17.160] We're on an international currency. That's what it boils down to. It's not Federal Reserve notes at all. It's like Federal Express. It's not federal. [01:52:17.160 --> 01:52:26.160] Same thing. So that's basically it. And I appreciate giving me a chance to say that about it. [01:52:26.160 --> 01:52:32.160] Okay. Do you have any updates on the COVID vaccine issue? [01:52:32.160 --> 01:52:41.160] Oh, yeah. It's just like the election of 2020. The more they looked, the more they found fraud. [01:52:41.160 --> 01:52:47.160] And when they thought they were done finding it, they found even more and even more. It's never ending. [01:52:47.160 --> 01:52:51.160] Let's see if I can remember the most recent that came out. [01:52:51.160 --> 01:52:57.160] There are... I think it was, let's see, Merck backed away from its own vaccine. [01:52:57.160 --> 01:53:08.160] I'm going to say that again. Merck backed away from its own vaccine, because too many people were having serious adverse reactions and some of them were dying. [01:53:08.160 --> 01:53:12.160] Let's see. I'd say that's adverse. [01:53:12.160 --> 01:53:17.160] Yeah. Death is a real bad side effect. It will ruin your whole day. [01:53:17.160 --> 01:53:22.160] Let's see. What else? [01:53:22.160 --> 01:53:30.160] Now you're hearing more and more about the nanobots and the nanoparticles that they're putting in the vaccine. [01:53:30.160 --> 01:53:45.160] And more and more medical doctors with good standing in the community and who are famous for their ability in a particular field like this one have spoken out. [01:53:45.160 --> 01:53:52.160] And I can't give you any names right now. It's all in the file, but you'll look on the Internet. You'll find it. [01:53:52.160 --> 01:54:00.160] There was doctor after doctor who was saying that these vaccines are a vehicle. They're a Trojan horse. [01:54:00.160 --> 01:54:07.160] And they are filling the vaccines or want to fill all the vaccines with nanoparticles. [01:54:07.160 --> 01:54:17.160] Recently, there were two doctors and I can't remember their name. They came under fire from the medical establishment. [01:54:17.160 --> 01:54:29.160] Because of their research, they found that not only were there metal adjuvants like mercury and let's see, they put mercury, formaldehyde. [01:54:29.160 --> 01:54:35.160] These are in the general vaccines like the MMRs and the Rubellish and all that stuff. [01:54:35.160 --> 01:54:42.160] They find that in the vaccines, there are adjuvants and we've known about them for a long time. [01:54:42.160 --> 01:54:51.160] Robert F. Kennedy, Jr. knows about them. Okay, wait a minute. Having difficulty with the term metal adjuvants. [01:54:51.160 --> 01:55:00.160] An adjuvant is essentially a wedding agent. It's something used to hold something else in solution. [01:55:00.160 --> 01:55:07.160] A metal adjuvant seems to be a contradiction of terms. [01:55:07.160 --> 01:55:18.160] Okay, but it's not. I'll explain. These metal adjuvants like mercury are supposed to spur the immune system into action. [01:55:18.160 --> 01:55:32.160] But in the process, it creates cytokine storms in children's brains because two-year-olds or two-month-olds or six-month-olds, their brains are just developing. [01:55:32.160 --> 01:55:43.160] And what happens is they get a cocktail of all these shots and when it hits the brain, and the whole body in general, there's a cytokine storm. [01:55:43.160 --> 01:55:47.160] Cytokine storm meaning that the immune system goes hog wild. [01:55:47.160 --> 01:55:58.160] And what they're doing is they're pressing the human immune system so far that it goes into a cytokine storm and your own immune system just kills you. [01:55:58.160 --> 01:56:03.160] Your own immune system makes the brain swell up. Your own immune system causes other body reactions. [01:56:03.160 --> 01:56:09.160] Now that's general vaccines. That's the background. Now I'm going to go on to the COVID. [01:56:09.160 --> 01:56:20.160] Okay, brain swell up encephalitis. I haven't heard that associated with vaccines. [01:56:20.160 --> 01:56:31.160] Oh, yeah. Oh, no. Trust me. I did about 2,500 hours on vaccines alone. I did 2,500 hours and I lost track after that. [01:56:31.160 --> 01:56:38.160] So anyway, I'm giving you what real medical doctors have come up with and real researchers. [01:56:38.160 --> 01:56:43.160] And there had been people murdered over this information because they didn't want it to come out. [01:56:43.160 --> 01:56:53.160] But it's out. It's out there. And Robert Kennedy is a good man. Robert F. Kennedy Jr., you go to his website and he'll teach you a lot about vaccines. [01:56:53.160 --> 01:57:00.160] He's very, very good with it. Okay, now let me go back and then I'll come forward with the COVID-19. [01:57:00.160 --> 01:57:08.160] The vaccines have adjuvants. And those adjuvants are designed to spur, and you'll understand that in Texas, [01:57:08.160 --> 01:57:14.160] to spur the immune system onto them to doing something. All right. [01:57:14.160 --> 01:57:19.160] And now some of the other adjuvants they use are like mercury, thimerosal. [01:57:19.160 --> 01:57:26.160] And mercury is the third most toxic element in the entire universe, medically. [01:57:26.160 --> 01:57:36.160] And how you put a poison and inject it directly into the bloodstream suddenly is good for you. I don't think so. [01:57:36.160 --> 01:57:40.160] Anyway, so you've got all these different things in the vaccine. [01:57:40.160 --> 01:57:47.160] Mercury, formaldehyde, squalene, antibiotic, straight animal piracy. [01:57:47.160 --> 01:57:54.160] Okay, I'm sorry. We are out of time. [01:57:54.160 --> 01:58:00.160] This is Grant Kelkin, Brett Fountain, Rural Radio. And thank you, John. [01:58:00.160 --> 01:58:02.160] You're always a source of good information. [01:58:02.160 --> 01:58:09.160] That's a lot of good information. A source of information. Whether it's good or not, we'll see how that works out. [01:58:09.160 --> 01:58:16.160] Thank you, John. No free rides here. We'll be back next week on, I'm sorry, we'll be back tomorrow night, [01:58:16.160 --> 01:58:23.160] on our eight, four-hour info marathon. My clock is not working, so I don't know how many seconds I have. [01:58:23.160 --> 01:58:32.160] Oh, there we go. Okay. Thank you all for listening. Good night. [01:58:32.160 --> 01:58:37.160] Oh, there it is. I got 15 seconds left. You could have gone home in a second. [01:58:37.160 --> 01:58:44.160] Okay. Make sure you come back tomorrow night for more fun and games. [01:58:44.160 --> 01:58:50.160] Good night. [01:58:50.160 --> 01:58:57.160] Bibles for America is offering absolutely free, a unique study Bible called the New Testament Recovery Version. [01:58:57.160 --> 01:59:04.160] The New Testament Recovery Version has over 9,000 footnotes that explain what the Bible says, verse by verse, [01:59:04.160 --> 01:59:08.160] helping you to know God and to know the meaning of life. [01:59:08.160 --> 01:59:11.160] Order your free copy today from Bibles for America. [01:59:11.160 --> 01:59:20.160] Call us toll free at 888-551-0102 or visit us online at bfa.org. 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