Detecting language using up to the first 30 seconds. Use `--language` to specify the language Detected language: English [00:00.000 --> 00:09.500] Bad boys, bad boys, what you gonna do? [00:09.500 --> 00:15.620] What you gonna do when Sheriff John Brown come for you? [00:15.620 --> 00:25.340] Tell me what you wanna do, what you gonna do? [00:26.340 --> 00:29.340] Bad boys, bad boys, what you gonna do? [00:29.340 --> 00:37.340] What you gonna do when they come for you? [00:37.340 --> 00:40.340] When you were eight and you had bad traits [00:40.340 --> 00:42.840] You go to school and learn the golden rule [00:42.840 --> 00:45.840] So why are you acting like a bloody fool? [00:45.840 --> 00:48.340] If you get hot then you must get cool [00:48.340 --> 00:51.340] Bad boys, bad boys, what you gonna do? [00:51.340 --> 00:53.840] What you gonna do when they come for you? [00:53.840 --> 00:56.840] Bad boys, bad boys, what you gonna do? [00:56.840 --> 00:59.340] What you gonna do when they come for you? [00:59.340 --> 01:02.340] You chuck it on that one, you chuck it on this one [01:02.340 --> 01:04.840] You chuck it on your mother and you chuck it on your father [01:04.840 --> 01:07.340] You chuck it on your brother and you chuck it on your sister [01:07.340 --> 01:10.340] You chuck it on that one and you chuck it on me [01:10.340 --> 01:12.840] Bad boys, bad boys, what you gonna do? [01:12.840 --> 01:17.340] What you gonna do when they come for you? [01:23.840 --> 01:34.040] on this Thursday, the 24th day of July, 2025, and something outstanding just happened today. [01:34.040 --> 01:45.320] Here in the Dallas-Fort Worth area, we reached 100. The 24th of July, before we reach 100. [01:45.320 --> 01:57.240] Brett, this is global warming, I tell you. Argentina is having its coldest winter in recorded [01:57.240 --> 02:04.080] history. I was listening to a broadcast on public radio, and the broadcaster said, [02:04.080 --> 02:15.520] do you think this might have something to do with climate change? He was careful in his wording. [02:15.520 --> 02:19.160] So yeah, we just reached 100 today for the first time all year. [02:19.160 --> 02:23.520] Yeah, I don't get too concerned about that when I see people talking about, [02:23.520 --> 02:27.400] oh my goodness, it's been the last three years this or that, the last five years. [02:28.400 --> 02:37.320] The way I tend to just roll with it and think about the fact that the calendar of nature [02:38.520 --> 02:44.920] is not that closely tied to the calendar of Pope Gregory, the one that we're following [02:44.920 --> 02:46.760] around the world, the Gregorian calendar. [02:46.760 --> 02:49.000] Don't pick on him. He's from Chicago. [02:49.560 --> 03:00.920] Well, Pope Gregory made some adjustments to the calendar and got things a little bit more in line, [03:00.920 --> 03:12.200] but there's a pattern of every 19 years, a pattern of when things ebb and flow in [03:12.200 --> 03:13.160] distance from nature. [03:15.160 --> 03:19.080] There's an 11-year pattern, El Nino pattern. [03:19.800 --> 03:20.520] Well, that too. [03:20.520 --> 03:22.520] There's a 500-year pattern. [03:24.840 --> 03:30.920] And that 500-year pattern is an oscillation of five and a half to six degrees. [03:32.760 --> 03:39.640] So we are at the bottom of that oscillation. In the next 250 years, if we don't do anything, [03:39.640 --> 03:44.280] if we weren't even here, the temperature would rise five and a half to six degrees. [03:44.280 --> 03:46.760] This is the effect of the Younger Dryas. [03:47.400 --> 03:48.680] Oh, my gracious. [03:50.440 --> 03:51.560] What are we going to do about that? [03:55.960 --> 04:01.640] I think we think way too much of ourselves to imagine that we're the cause of everything. [04:01.640 --> 04:07.560] We're the bottom of a cycle, and they don't really know what that is. They think it is a sun cycle. [04:08.120 --> 04:11.720] But they got these numbers from the Pac-Is. [04:13.880 --> 04:18.920] And so we know it's going to rise five and a half to six degrees. [04:18.920 --> 04:28.360] And looking back in the historical record, there's nothing in the migration patterns [04:28.360 --> 04:33.400] and in anything to give an indication of this. [04:33.480 --> 04:43.960] So that means it had no effect. The seas rose, and the seas sunk, and there are cities now [04:43.960 --> 04:53.080] that are underwater. And we're at the bottom of a cycle. That I don't understand. They shouldn't [04:53.080 --> 04:58.760] be underwater at this point. I'm sorry. Yeah, they should be underwater because it's cooler. [04:59.320 --> 05:01.560] Yeah, they should be underwater because it's cooler. [05:03.000 --> 05:09.560] Well, if there were only one cycle going on, if there were only one effect, and it had a [05:09.560 --> 05:14.280] sine wave, let's say, and then we're at the bottom of that sine wave, and there's no other [05:14.280 --> 05:20.200] effects going on, well then, yeah, I could see that would be strange. But there are so many, [05:20.200 --> 05:27.320] and if you imagine the harmonics of multiple cycles of all these different lengths, then [05:28.200 --> 05:34.680] it's possible for all kinds of results to happen. Like you're at the bottom of one 500-year cycle, [05:34.680 --> 05:38.920] but you might be at or near the top of several other mitigating cycles. [05:41.080 --> 05:49.160] We don't even understand all of them yet. The record shows that carbon dioxide changes [05:49.160 --> 05:55.960] dramatically and has regularly over the past 12,000 years that we can tell. [06:01.560 --> 06:07.880] There's nothing happened. If you look at history, they talk about one time when there was an [06:09.000 --> 06:14.120] especially cold winter, but that was because of Krakatoa, [06:14.120 --> 06:26.440] the largest eruption in our experience blocked out the sun. Europe didn't have summer that year. [06:27.800 --> 06:31.240] But we know exactly why that did that. That was a volcanic eruption. [06:32.760 --> 06:42.360] And when they look for habitable planets out in the solar system, they look for planets that are [06:42.360 --> 06:51.080] between 6 and 12 degrees warmer than we are, because that's more conducive to the life that [06:51.080 --> 06:57.640] exists on this planet right now. 6 to 12 degrees. [06:57.640 --> 07:04.200] Yeah, everybody's whining. Well, the thing that happens, even in the greenhouse effect, [07:04.200 --> 07:11.320] the whole world doesn't get warmer. It gets warmer. Well, the whole world gets warmer, [07:11.320 --> 07:20.440] but the whole world doesn't get hot. We think about the whole world turning into a jungle, [07:20.440 --> 07:26.440] a tropical... No, I don't see that happening. [07:26.440 --> 07:33.640] That ain't how it works. The greenhouse effect will have little or no effect [07:33.640 --> 07:38.520] above the Tropic of Cancer or below the Tropic of Capricorn. It just won't have any effect. [07:39.480 --> 07:47.960] And between the Tropic of Cancer and the equator, the temperature will gradually increase, [07:49.320 --> 07:53.400] and it'll increase a little bit more at each place. Chicago will get warmer, [07:54.680 --> 08:00.520] and it won't get as much ice. The whole Midwest will get less ice in the summer. Canada will [08:00.600 --> 08:08.840] become more arable. They won't be as cold. I mean, if you're in a tropical environment, [08:08.840 --> 08:17.000] if you're in an Arabian desert, it's going to get hotter. Well, big deal. If it will already [08:17.000 --> 08:25.960] fry an egg on your hood, it don't make that much difference. Anyway, so much for that. [08:26.920 --> 08:33.320] Well, what about the cycles of people following the rule of law? How about the cycles of [08:34.600 --> 08:43.080] cause and effect in our attempts to make changes in that regard? You know, talk about climate [08:43.080 --> 08:49.560] change. I want to see some justice climate. I'm going to have Pastor Massad on tomorrow [08:49.560 --> 08:55.400] when I talk about this, but I guess I should... You haven't heard about it, so I'll mention it. [08:56.840 --> 09:04.440] I'm looking at Tulsi. Tulsi Gabbard went before a House committee, either a House or Senate committee, [09:06.440 --> 09:16.040] and showed declassified documents that showed where before this Russia scandal started, [09:16.040 --> 09:26.440] and that all of the investigative agencies came to the president and told him that they can find [09:26.440 --> 09:35.240] no evidence of Russian interference in the election. And he shut down all of that and [09:35.240 --> 09:43.640] wrote his own assessment that said that there was interference by Russia. He made it up. [09:43.640 --> 09:51.240] He propagated it and ordered it to be propagated, knowing it was a lie. [09:52.760 --> 09:56.520] The whole thing was a lie. We all knew that to start with. What we didn't know [09:57.480 --> 10:06.520] is it came from the president. That is treason. That's an attempted coup against the legal [10:06.520 --> 10:11.720] government of the United States. That's treason, and they're looking at charging Obama with treason. [10:13.720 --> 10:16.920] And it appears as though they got him dead bang. [10:18.840 --> 10:26.440] So when they said back in May and June how a lot of stuff has changed, but you ain't seen nothing [10:26.440 --> 10:36.520] yet, we are seeing what is likely to turn out to be the largest scandal in American history, [10:37.480 --> 10:47.160] by far bar none. When an American president, before he gets out of office, sets up a conspiracy [10:47.960 --> 10:51.240] to overthrow the legitimately elected government. [10:52.200 --> 10:53.320] Yeah, that's huge. [10:53.880 --> 11:01.080] That is high treason. That's an attempted coup. And the Democrats, [11:01.080 --> 11:10.520] the whole Democratic Party is engaged in this. And I'm hoping that it leads to the primary backers [11:10.520 --> 11:21.560] of the Democratic Party, primary being George Soros. If it can be shown that he funded [11:22.600 --> 11:29.400] this action, or some of this action, then he can be drawn into conspiracy. [11:29.400 --> 11:32.280] And Pence is in the middle of it as well. [11:33.560 --> 11:39.240] Do you have any hopes that Obama would try to throw Soros under the bus? [11:40.120 --> 11:42.280] Does he have any reason to do that? [11:43.000 --> 11:51.720] I don't know. I don't think there's anything Obama can do to cover his tracks. [11:52.360 --> 11:52.860] Okay. [11:53.640 --> 12:01.160] But there may be others that can throw somebody out. These guys are going to [12:01.160 --> 12:03.640] try to get the little guys to throw the big guys under the bus. [12:05.400 --> 12:11.720] I'm concerned that maybe Obama would say, I'm going to be a cooperative, I'm going to be [12:11.720 --> 12:18.680] your whistleblower, I'll be your informant, and so forth. I'll plead guilty to a traffic ticket. [12:19.640 --> 12:25.560] Yeah, that's good luck with that. He's the point of the spear. I don't think there's anything he [12:25.560 --> 12:32.600] can do. Our phones are not up yet. I don't think there's anything he can do [12:34.600 --> 12:40.840] that would get him off this dime, because he's the prize. And everybody involved with him [12:40.840 --> 12:48.920] knew. They all knew. This whole commission, they all knew. [12:52.840 --> 13:01.640] What's going to happen, man? The whole Democratic ruling body is likely to be subject to high [13:01.640 --> 13:07.240] treason. Everybody's scared, and they should be. [13:12.760 --> 13:20.360] Obama put out an inane statement that he did not deny any of this. He just said it didn't have any [13:20.360 --> 13:27.400] effect. I tried to overthrow the government, and it didn't work. We still ended up with Trump. [13:28.120 --> 13:32.120] It took four years, but we still ended up with him. [13:35.000 --> 13:41.000] Well, the phone lines are working now. We've got them open, and we do have one caller on the board. [13:41.640 --> 13:45.480] Carol, we see you there. We'll be with you in just a moment. Anybody else wants to call and [13:45.480 --> 13:53.320] get in line? It's 512-646-1984. And I got some other good news. [13:54.200 --> 14:02.040] Oh, I paid the Russians $10,000 to do this. Through advances in technology, our lives have [14:02.040 --> 14:07.320] greatly improved, except in the area of nutrition. People feed their pets better than they feed [14:07.320 --> 14:13.240] themselves, and it's time we changed all that. Our primary defense against aging and disease [14:13.240 --> 14:19.240] in this toxic environment is good nutrition. In a world where natural foods have been irradiated, [14:19.240 --> 14:25.400] adulterated, and mutilated, Young Jevity can provide the nutrients you need. Logos Radio [14:25.400 --> 14:31.080] Network gets many requests to endorse all sorts of products, most of which we reject. We have come [14:31.080 --> 14:37.160] to trust Young Jevity so much, we became a marketing distributor along with Alex Jones, [14:37.160 --> 14:43.880] Ben Fuchs, and many others. When you order from logosradionetwork.com, your health will improve [14:43.880 --> 14:49.160] as you help support quality radio. As you realize the benefits of Young Jevity, [14:49.160 --> 14:54.200] you may want to join us. As a distributor, you can experience improved health, [14:54.200 --> 15:01.400] help your friends and family, and increase your income. Order now. Are you looking to have a [15:01.400 --> 15:06.200] closer relationship with God and a better understanding of his word? Then tune in to [15:06.200 --> 15:11.720] logosradionetwork.com on Wednesdays from 8 to 10 p.m. Central Time for scripture talk, [15:11.720 --> 15:16.360] where Nana and her guests discuss the scriptures in accord with 2 Timothy 2 15. 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[16:36.840 --> 16:43.320] And we're going to our callers, we're going to Carol in Texas. Carol, my producer said you sent [16:43.320 --> 16:53.240] us an email, but I have been remiss in that I have been building a set of software to create [16:53.240 --> 17:00.920] an electronic lawyer and I haven't checked my email in days. So I'm way behind. You want to [17:00.920 --> 17:03.720] give us an idea of what your issue is? [17:04.760 --> 17:09.400] Yes. We have a real big problem in Dallas probate court. [17:11.080 --> 17:12.840] Wait a minute. You're really soft. [17:13.960 --> 17:15.560] Okay. We have a really big problem. [17:15.560 --> 17:17.000] Don't say that to everybody. [17:18.520 --> 17:24.280] Your voice is soft. Brett's really soft, but that's because his belly sticks out there so far. [17:27.000 --> 17:30.280] Okay. Try that again. I'll put my hearing aid in. I'm an old guy. [17:30.280 --> 17:32.200] Okay. Can you hear me okay? [17:33.880 --> 17:36.120] Not great. Go ahead. [17:37.320 --> 17:41.080] Hold on. Is that better? [17:42.440 --> 17:43.320] No, not much. [17:43.880 --> 17:47.880] Not a whole lot. We'll just do the best with what we've got. Go ahead and tell us. [17:48.760 --> 17:56.440] Okay. In 2019, my brother Robert Kam passed away. Ten days before he passed, [17:56.440 --> 18:01.720] attorney David Pike changed his amended irrevocable trust in which I was named an [18:01.720 --> 18:07.560] error. To change an irrevocable trust, you must contact the name of the errors and go [18:07.560 --> 18:15.160] in front of a judge and that never happened. After my brother passed, my nephew, his son, [18:15.160 --> 18:25.800] and I disputed the changes. They then hired attorney James Fisher. In 2019, we went to court [18:25.800 --> 18:32.280] and around two weeks before the court date, they changed judges to John Payton. Payton did not have [18:32.280 --> 18:41.800] the authority by the state to be in the courtroom. Also, he has been demoted back. He lost his rights [18:41.800 --> 18:50.440] to be a judge a couple of years ago. Okay. In the courtroom, we had a medical doctor testify [18:50.440 --> 18:55.160] as she said that my brother Robert should have been in intensive care when they changed his trust. [18:56.120 --> 19:03.160] Also, in the courtroom, they showed a fake DNR signed by a pediatrician who never saw my brother [19:03.160 --> 19:09.080] and all the other documents from Pike's office were forged. These are all felonies they've done. [19:09.880 --> 19:15.800] Payton ruled against me, my nephew, and me without any findings of fact. Payton put a [19:15.800 --> 19:24.920] $236,000 judgment on me. Okay. Miller was really the chief judge in that courtroom, so they had [19:25.480 --> 19:30.760] Payton do the dirty work because Miller would have probably just barred Pike. [19:31.720 --> 19:38.520] So to put a judgment, the judgment had to have been signed by Miller 30 days after the court [19:38.520 --> 19:45.480] hearing. That never happened. So we appealed it, and then we found out later that Judge Margaret [19:45.480 --> 19:50.520] Jones Johnson, she's in there now, did not turn my file into the appeals court, which hurt us. [19:51.080 --> 19:57.080] But in 2019, the appeals court ruled in my favor that the judgment was not valid due to that it [19:57.080 --> 20:05.160] was never signed after 30 days. So I asked Fisher to remove it. He then took me back to probate [20:05.160 --> 20:14.040] court in 2022 and had Margaret Jones Johnson sign it nine years later, and she added another 30 to [20:14.040 --> 20:19.880] it. She knew nothing about my case and denied me from filing any paperwork, like violated my [20:19.880 --> 20:26.600] civil rights. I appealed them for some reason. They ruled against me, but it made no sense [20:26.600 --> 20:34.120] when in 2019 they ruled that it had to been signed 30 days after the court of the judge of records. [20:34.120 --> 20:38.760] Now Fisher is asking for all my financial records and wanting to do a deposition. [20:39.400 --> 20:45.640] This is all like a harassment and cover up for their fraud. So I'm asking for help. I don't know [20:45.640 --> 20:56.280] what to do. Wow. Way too complicated to do on a radio show. Huh? They said this is way too [20:56.280 --> 21:07.080] complicated to do on a radio show. I'm sorry. You have a lot of moving parts there. And so many [21:07.800 --> 21:15.000] individual issues, each of which requires you to be on the ball and hold somebody accountable [21:15.720 --> 21:21.960] real time in the moment. It's difficult once they've already started stacking up so much [21:21.960 --> 21:28.280] and nesting within each other to years later. It's so difficult to unravel all of that, [21:28.280 --> 21:36.280] as I guess you're already realizing. But let me ask for what I almost always ask for when I have [21:36.280 --> 21:43.320] someone who's been in the fight for a long time. When you've been in the fight for too long, [21:44.360 --> 21:53.480] sometimes you lose perspective. And the main thing you lose is direction, is chronology. [21:55.160 --> 22:02.280] What happened and when? Well, she seems to have that. Carol, are you reading from [22:03.000 --> 22:05.640] a prepared statement there? It seems like you got all the pieces. [22:06.520 --> 22:09.640] You got a lot of pieces, but I'm listening to this. [22:09.640 --> 22:11.320] Just don't have dates on them. [22:11.320 --> 22:17.560] There's a whole lot in between what you're talking about that we hadn't heard. [22:17.560 --> 22:18.680] Oh yeah, definitely. [22:19.320 --> 22:21.400] Have you written up a timeline? [22:23.480 --> 22:24.040] Have I what? [22:24.760 --> 22:29.400] Written up a timeline. You need to write a book. [22:29.640 --> 22:35.880] Write a book. Write a book on everything that happened. When you write the book, [22:37.160 --> 22:41.880] you'll find things where you say this happened here and this happened here and this happened here. [22:41.880 --> 22:44.760] And then you'll say, wait a minute, wait a minute, that didn't happen there, [22:44.760 --> 22:48.600] it happened back over here. And you start moving these around and getting them back in order. [22:50.680 --> 22:55.400] And once you've got a book, then go back and pull out the pertinent pieces. [22:56.040 --> 23:02.360] When a motion was filed, when an action was taken that did some harm, and what actions [23:02.360 --> 23:08.520] were taken by who, just the facts and a list of the facts of the case, [23:09.480 --> 23:15.800] then we can go over that and kind of have an idea. You'll start talking about something that happened [23:16.760 --> 23:25.080] and the context of what occurred is absolutely clear to you, but we don't have a clue. [23:26.360 --> 23:30.280] So, we're trying to stitch all these pieces together. You say you had this hearing, [23:30.280 --> 23:35.160] and they ruled against you improperly because of this, and we're saying, wait a minute, wait a minute. [23:36.280 --> 23:40.280] And they didn't allow you to file anything, and so it violated your civil rights. [23:40.280 --> 23:47.080] Whoa, whoa, can't blast past all of that because what exactly was it that you were trying to file? [23:47.080 --> 23:52.680] Is there a rule that says that you can or can't? What did the judge say about it? Was there a time [23:52.680 --> 23:57.960] limit? Was there, you know, there's some kind of a loophole that they were able to use against you, [23:57.960 --> 24:05.960] or did they just say, hey, we think you're mean and obnoxious and so we're not going to [24:05.960 --> 24:11.080] cooperate with you? You know what I mean? Did they come up with a good reason or [24:11.080 --> 24:14.760] any reason at all? That sort of thing. Pieces that are missing. [24:16.600 --> 24:20.360] It's real messy. I didn't think she would sign that judgment because I was like, [24:21.320 --> 24:26.600] the appeals court already ruled him by law. It's got to be signed by the judge of record 30 days [24:26.600 --> 24:29.000] after the court hearing. 30 days, right. [24:31.080 --> 24:36.040] Under what authority did they claim to be able to make a ruling nine years later? [24:38.360 --> 24:43.000] I have no idea. It's harassment. No, no, no, it's not just harassment. [24:43.000 --> 24:45.960] Well, that's your conclusion about it, but that's not what they said. [24:46.520 --> 24:52.920] That don't help us a bit. The judge didn't just come along nine years later and say, [24:54.440 --> 25:00.120] time doesn't make any difference. I can do anything I want to. The judge had some stated reason. It [25:00.120 --> 25:08.200] may have been BS, but he had one. What was it? Well, she's not a really good judge. I've heard [25:08.200 --> 25:12.280] that through a lot of people. See, this is what happens when [25:12.280 --> 25:18.520] someone's been in the fight too long. It stops being about the details and it starts being about [25:18.520 --> 25:25.960] the fight. You have them do things to you that you respond emotionally to, have strong emotional [25:25.960 --> 25:31.000] responses, and then you have another one, a strong emotional response, and then another one. [25:31.000 --> 25:36.440] And then when you tell the story, you go from one highly emotional issue to the next, to the next, [25:36.440 --> 25:42.600] to the next, and you leave out all that stuff in between. And we're sitting here trying to make [25:42.600 --> 25:48.360] sense of it. And all we have is the bad things that they did. [25:49.240 --> 25:51.480] I'll tell you what, Carol, I have a suggestion for you. [25:54.040 --> 26:02.920] This is something that I've done and it helped me to get my mind, to get things organized in a way [26:03.640 --> 26:13.160] that I would then be able to communicate a really complex entwining of matters to somebody else. [26:14.440 --> 26:21.720] And what I did, I got some little three by five index cards. And they got the lines on one side [26:21.720 --> 26:29.480] and they got a big just blank on the other. So I took those index cards and I started writing. [26:30.440 --> 26:40.920] I stood next to my bed and along the bottom close to me, I made a little row of all the names of [26:40.920 --> 26:47.320] everybody that was involved and I just kept on adding little cards in a little row. All up on [26:47.320 --> 26:53.080] the bed, I had a huge cloud of all of the actions that happened. And that way I could rearrange them [26:53.080 --> 26:57.880] around and start to make sense of them. We'll talk about that more on the other side. [27:00.440 --> 27:04.600] Businesses ask you for a lot of personal information and you may trust them to keep it [27:04.600 --> 27:09.640] safe. But it turns out that even the most trusted companies may be unwittingly revealing your [27:09.640 --> 27:13.400] secrets. I'm Dr. Catherine Albrecht and I'll be right back with details. [27:14.440 --> 27:19.960] Privacy is under attack. When you give up data about yourself, you'll never get it back again. [27:19.960 --> 27:24.760] And once your privacy is gone, you'll find your freedoms will start to vanish too. [27:24.760 --> 27:30.040] So protect your rights, say no to surveillance and keep your information to yourself. [27:30.040 --> 27:34.680] Privacy, it's worth hanging on to. This public service announcement is brought to you by [27:34.680 --> 27:42.040] StartPage.com, the private search engine alternative to Google, Yahoo and Bing. Start over with StartPage. [27:43.880 --> 27:49.000] Data privacy is a big deal. So nearly every company has a policy explaining how they handle [27:49.000 --> 27:54.680] your personal information. But what happens if it escapes their control? It's not an idle question. [27:54.680 --> 28:00.280] According to a recent survey, a shocking 90% of U.S. companies admit their security was [28:00.280 --> 28:05.080] breached by hackers in the last year. That's one more reason you should trust your searches [28:05.080 --> 28:11.080] to StartPage.com. Unlike other search engines, StartPage doesn't store any data on you. They've [28:11.080 --> 28:15.800] never been hacked, but even if they were, there would be nothing for criminals to see. The cupboard [28:15.800 --> 28:21.400] would be bare. Too bad other companies don't treat your data the same way. I'm Dr. Catherine [28:21.400 --> 28:24.920] Albrecht. More news and information at CatherineAlbrecht.com. [28:51.400 --> 29:05.320] The rule of law radio is proud to offer the rule of law traffic seminar. In today's America, [29:05.320 --> 29:09.080] we live in an us-against-them society, and if we the people are ever going to have a free society, [29:09.080 --> 29:13.240] then we're going to have to stand and defend our own rights. Among those rights are the right to [29:13.240 --> 29:17.240] travel freely from place to place, the right to act in our own private capacity, and most importantly, [29:17.240 --> 29:21.640] the right to due process of law. Traffic courts afford us the least expensive opportunity to [29:21.640 --> 29:26.040] learn how to enforce and preserve our rights through due process. Former Sheriff's Deputy Eddie [29:26.040 --> 29:29.960] Craig, in conjunction with rule of law radio, has put together the most comprehensive teaching tool [29:29.960 --> 29:34.120] available that will help you understand what due process is and how to hold courts to the rule of [29:34.120 --> 29:38.680] law. You can get your own copy of this invaluable material by going to ruleoflawradio.com and [29:38.680 --> 29:42.360] ordering your copy today. By ordering now, you'll receive a copy of Eddie's book, The Texas [29:42.440 --> 29:47.000] Transportation Code, The Law Versus the Lie, video and audio of the original 2009 seminar, [29:47.000 --> 29:50.920] hundreds of research documents, and other useful resource material. Learn how to fight for your [29:50.920 --> 29:54.840] rights with the help of this material from ruleoflawradio.com. Order your copy today, [29:54.840 --> 29:57.960] and together we can have the free society we all want and deserve. [30:12.840 --> 30:16.280] Yeah, Mr. Officer, you're taking the law in the hand. [30:18.920 --> 30:27.240] Won't you follow the law of the land? I don't understand. Your job is to protect and to serve, [30:28.440 --> 30:31.800] not be an abuse. Not be served. [30:31.800 --> 30:43.720] When you're going to stop abuse, your power. When you're going to stop abuse, your power. [30:44.840 --> 30:54.760] When you're going to stop abuse, your power. When you're going to stop abuse, your power. [30:55.720 --> 31:00.440] So please, Mr. Macklin, teach officers not to abuse their power. [31:01.400 --> 31:09.480] Send a request to the leader, the captain of all officers. Tell them to uphold the law, [31:09.480 --> 31:15.240] and please don't abuse their power. They beat and they beat and they cheat and they cheat and they [31:15.240 --> 31:24.200] lie every hour. So, Mr. Officer. Okay, we are back. Randy Kelton, Brett Felton, Rule of Law Radio. [31:25.000 --> 31:33.000] And we're talking to Carol in Texas. And I got your email from the producer and checked it, [31:33.000 --> 31:40.680] and I don't have an email from you. I sent three yesterday, last night. [31:41.480 --> 31:46.600] Oh, yesterday. And you're right at the top, but I didn't see any. [31:47.800 --> 31:49.800] Let me get it. Let me write down. [31:50.360 --> 31:55.000] Yeah, I have nothing from you. I did a search on your email. It's not in there. [31:58.840 --> 32:01.480] Well, maybe you don't. Okay. [32:01.480 --> 32:08.760] Here, let me get it. I was on your website and I took the emails off your website. I sent it [32:08.760 --> 32:09.960] to three different people. [32:09.960 --> 32:17.800] Did you send it to, what's his name? [32:19.160 --> 32:23.880] Brad who keeps inviting me to a show he puts on Thursday night when I'm doing a show. [32:26.360 --> 32:27.880] Are you talking about Eddie? [32:27.880 --> 32:31.320] Eddie Craig. Did you send it to Eddie Craig? [32:31.320 --> 32:34.120] I sent it to. Okay, hold on just a minute. [32:34.760 --> 32:42.840] Let's see. Okay. [32:49.320 --> 33:02.680] At Eddie, Deborah at ruleoflawradio.com and Eddie at ruleoflawradio.com and Randy. [33:04.120 --> 33:05.720] Is that y'all's web email? [33:06.520 --> 33:11.960] Yeah, that's our emails, but I didn't get it. Maybe you got a typo or something in the address. [33:15.240 --> 33:17.480] Maybe Deborah and Eddie would have gotten it though. [33:19.320 --> 33:24.520] Yeah. Okay. I got the emails off your website. So that's what I did. [33:26.760 --> 33:31.640] Well, Eddie's doing a show tonight at the same time we're doing the show, the chump. [33:31.640 --> 33:33.720] Okay. [33:33.720 --> 33:36.920] But I don't have a link to his show. I've seen you over him. [33:36.920 --> 33:42.040] It's a paid class. It's a paid class. It's not a show. [33:42.040 --> 33:46.040] But I think he does a free one on Thursdays. [33:48.440 --> 33:49.000] Anyway. [33:49.000 --> 33:51.000] His Thursdays is the paid class. [33:52.040 --> 33:59.160] Anyway, let me continue with this suggestion for Carol about index cards. [33:59.480 --> 34:00.680] Yeah. [34:00.680 --> 34:05.880] Well, you know what? The main thing I need to know is what I should do now with this, [34:05.880 --> 34:13.960] with him wanting to do a, he wants all of my bank statements and wants to do the disposition. [34:15.080 --> 34:16.600] Does he have a judgment? [34:18.680 --> 34:21.080] Yeah, but it's not, you know, like I said. [34:21.880 --> 34:25.800] Okay. I got that. But if he has a judgment, he has a judgment. [34:25.800 --> 34:28.040] So the first thing you have to do is attack the judgment. [34:29.960 --> 34:39.240] I'm going to have to see it. I mean, I don't have enough. This is a long running case. [34:39.240 --> 34:42.040] How long has he had the judgment? [34:43.480 --> 34:46.280] Oh, he just got it finalized a couple months ago. [34:47.800 --> 34:48.120] Okay. [34:48.120 --> 34:50.840] A couple of months. That's a long time. [34:50.840 --> 34:54.520] Have you filed an appeal on any of this? [34:55.400 --> 35:01.800] That's what I put in the paper. I did file appeal. And for some reason they ruled against me [35:01.800 --> 35:04.200] when in 2019 they said it was, [35:05.400 --> 35:10.360] Don't argue, I'm trying to get what's going on and so you appealed the judgment [35:11.000 --> 35:14.040] and the appellate court affirmed the judgment. [35:15.800 --> 35:16.360] Yes. [35:16.360 --> 35:17.800] How long ago has that been? [35:17.800 --> 35:27.160] It was probably in 2024 and then we took it to the Supreme Court and they denied it. [35:27.160 --> 35:28.160] What do you mean denied? [35:28.160 --> 35:29.160] They denied it? [35:29.160 --> 35:30.160] They're trying to hear it? [35:30.160 --> 35:31.160] That's the case. [35:31.160 --> 35:32.160] Yeah. [35:32.160 --> 35:33.160] Yeah. [35:33.160 --> 35:35.160] They're sick of me. [35:35.160 --> 35:36.160] That's pretty final. [35:36.160 --> 35:37.160] Right. [35:37.160 --> 35:38.160] Yeah. [35:38.160 --> 35:40.640] That's going to be really hard to overcome. [35:40.640 --> 35:44.080] So how big is the judgment? [35:44.080 --> 35:46.920] $286,000. [35:47.560 --> 35:50.160] How good is your credit? [35:50.160 --> 35:53.360] It's excellent. [35:53.360 --> 36:03.480] With a $280,000 judgment, do you have enough assets to cover that judgment? [36:03.480 --> 36:04.480] No. [36:04.480 --> 36:07.480] Then you don't have any credit. [36:07.480 --> 36:08.480] So. [36:08.480 --> 36:11.480] He's wanting my bank account. [36:11.480 --> 36:12.480] Hold on. [36:12.480 --> 36:13.480] Hold on. [36:13.600 --> 36:17.320] Just do a Chapter 7. [36:17.320 --> 36:18.600] It's an unsecured debt. [36:18.600 --> 36:19.600] It goes bye-bye. [36:19.600 --> 36:37.920] They sued Alex Jones for, what, several billion and they won and he bankrupted. [36:37.920 --> 36:39.960] So you do a Chapter 7. [36:39.960 --> 36:41.160] It's an unsecured loan. [36:41.160 --> 36:43.240] It's an unsecured debt. [36:43.240 --> 36:44.240] Okay. [36:44.240 --> 36:45.240] Yeah. [36:45.240 --> 36:56.240] It is so long and after you, once you get a denial from the Supreme, that's final. [36:56.240 --> 37:01.000] Then you can't go back and argue into it now, just bankrupt out from under him. [37:01.000 --> 37:05.680] You think there's, I mean, obviously, I don't know why I'm even asking this because we can't [37:05.680 --> 37:10.080] see all the details, but do you think there's possibility that she could go to the federal [37:10.080 --> 37:18.120] courts and challenge the state courts declining to hear her appeal? [37:18.120 --> 37:23.320] Because she has a right to appeal and they just decided not to pick it up. [37:23.320 --> 37:29.680] If there is no federal claim implicated, then no. [37:29.680 --> 37:30.760] There may be. [37:30.760 --> 37:34.560] We don't know because we can't see all these details. [37:34.560 --> 37:38.320] I would want to be able to see if you've got some federal claims in there and it's been [37:38.360 --> 37:43.680] such a long time, you'd have to get the federal claims right on the end here. [37:43.680 --> 37:51.960] But the thing about a federal claim is what gets you into court and what stops them is [37:51.960 --> 37:56.840] not what you can prove up at the end of the day. [37:56.840 --> 38:00.760] What gets you into court is the claim that you make. [38:00.760 --> 38:03.520] So you make... [38:03.680 --> 38:05.680] Carol, do you understand what he's saying by that? [38:05.680 --> 38:07.680] Do you get what that means? [38:07.680 --> 38:14.240] What gets me in the court is by what the claim I make. [38:14.240 --> 38:17.960] Wait, say that again? [38:17.960 --> 38:21.160] What gets me in the court is by the claim I make. [38:21.160 --> 38:26.280] Could you understand what she said, decline by may? [38:26.280 --> 38:27.880] I think she's repeating. [38:27.880 --> 38:31.280] I think she's saying the claim I make. [38:32.040 --> 38:34.200] So, yes, Carol, that's correct. [38:34.200 --> 38:35.720] It's the claim you make. [38:35.720 --> 38:44.360] It's not what you're able to prove, but being in the federal court, he's saying what gets [38:44.360 --> 38:51.800] you there is the kind of claim that you make, which cause of action you choose. [38:51.800 --> 38:58.200] If you make a claim that rings in the federal court, then that gets you in the court. [38:58.600 --> 39:06.320] Now, you may not be able to prove up that claim, but that's proven up comes later. [39:06.320 --> 39:14.600] First, you get the suit filed, and then they've got 21 days to file an answer, and then they [39:14.600 --> 39:20.280] file an answer, and you file a motion to strike their answer for whatever reason. [39:20.280 --> 39:24.040] If you think creatively, you can come up with one. [39:24.200 --> 39:34.920] And then they've got 30 days to respond to your opposition to their answer, and it just [39:34.920 --> 39:35.920] goes back. [39:35.920 --> 39:36.920] You start filing motions back and forth. [39:36.920 --> 39:40.320] You keep them in court another three or four years. [39:40.320 --> 39:47.320] I had a guy in San Diego, they tried to foreclose on him, and I wrote him up a two-page suit. [39:47.320 --> 39:53.880] Wells Fargo was the lender, Wells Fargo was the servicer, and Wells Fargo did the foreclosure. [39:53.880 --> 39:57.320] And that almost never happens, so they're all the same one. [39:57.320 --> 40:03.080] So we made up a suit that said, who the heck are you? [40:03.080 --> 40:04.520] We don't know who you are. [40:04.520 --> 40:09.840] We never enter into contract with you, never enter into contract with your alleged principal. [40:09.840 --> 40:11.840] Prove it up. [40:11.840 --> 40:21.640] The point was, Wells Fargo claimed they had a mortgage contract with him, and he didn't [40:21.640 --> 40:23.160] have to admit that. [40:23.160 --> 40:27.440] So he said, no, you don't, prove it. [40:27.440 --> 40:32.840] And we did that because the problem with the foreclosure industry is they screw up everything [40:32.840 --> 40:34.240] and they can't prove anything. [40:34.240 --> 40:38.040] So they wound up in court for seven years. [40:38.040 --> 40:46.160] Before we got to the California Supreme, and they denied my cert, man, it was a good cert. [40:46.160 --> 40:51.440] And then he went back and just paid him off. [40:51.440 --> 40:54.960] He lived in the property for seven years. [40:54.960 --> 40:59.080] It's a $3,500 a month property. [40:59.080 --> 41:02.480] Do you have a business with five employees or more? [41:02.480 --> 41:06.280] How would you like to save hundreds of thousands of dollars in FICA taxes? [41:06.280 --> 41:10.560] Do you have a major medical plan that nobody can afford to be on? [41:10.560 --> 41:16.120] Or how would you like to save in premium costs on a current major medical plan by lowering [41:16.120 --> 41:17.680] the claims cost? [41:17.680 --> 41:24.280] The Champ Plan is a Section 125 IRS approved preventative health plan that provides your [41:24.280 --> 41:31.840] employees with doctors, medications, emergency care, and Teladoc all at zero cost, with zero [41:31.840 --> 41:32.840] co-pay. [41:32.840 --> 41:38.560] If you are an employee, you also will get a pay raise by paying less in FICA taxes. [41:38.560 --> 41:44.720] As an employer, you will save hundreds of thousands of dollars in matching FICA taxes. [41:44.720 --> 41:50.360] The Champ Plan can help add working capital, market resale value, or pay down lines of [41:50.360 --> 41:51.360] credit. [41:51.360 --> 42:00.000] Call Scott at 214-730-2471 or DallasMMS.com. [42:00.000 --> 42:04.520] Are you wondering what this world is coming to and why God isn't stopping it? [42:04.520 --> 42:10.240] Then tune in to LogosRadioNetwork.com on Wednesdays from 8 to 10 p.m. Central Time for Scripture [42:10.240 --> 42:15.560] Talk, where Nana and guests study God's Word to find these answers and more. [42:15.560 --> 42:20.640] Join us for both verse-by-verse Bible studies and topical Bible studies designed to explain [42:20.640 --> 42:25.140] God's plan as well as to provoke unto love and good works. [42:25.140 --> 42:27.960] Our first hour studies are in the book of Matthew. [42:27.960 --> 42:33.200] Our second hour topics vary each week, exploring sound doctrine as well as Christian character [42:33.200 --> 42:34.600] development. [42:34.600 --> 42:40.060] Our goal is in accord with Matthew 5-16, let your light so shine before men that they may [42:40.060 --> 42:44.180] see your good works and glorify your Father which is in heaven. [42:44.180 --> 42:48.340] We wish to reflect God's light and to be a blessing to all those who have a hearing [42:48.340 --> 42:49.340] ear. [42:49.340 --> 42:56.300] So tune in to Scripture Talk live on LogosRadioNetwork.com Wednesdays from 8 to 10 p.m. for an inspiring [42:56.300 --> 42:58.380] and motivating study of the Scriptures. [43:11.060 --> 43:18.060] If you did not have any problems, where are you going to look for one? [43:18.060 --> 43:24.060] If you could not wait any bit too long, would your purpose have to be done? [43:24.060 --> 43:30.060] Such a symptom and a soldier, a warrior of love, scuffling to keep the peace. [43:30.060 --> 43:36.060] All they're taking is a misunderstanding, and somebody calls the police. [43:36.060 --> 43:57.060] Okay, we are back. [43:57.060 --> 44:03.060] Randy Kelton, Brett Fountain, Rue of La Radio, and over the break, we checked our emails. [44:03.060 --> 44:06.060] If you ever didn't get it, I didn't get it. [44:06.060 --> 44:08.060] Eddie Craig, he's not on with us. [44:08.060 --> 44:11.060] He does a Monday night show, so he's not here. [44:11.060 --> 44:15.060] But it could be that you got the email wrong. [44:15.060 --> 44:23.060] It's real common for people to send stuff to Rue of La Radio or RueofLaw.com instead [44:23.060 --> 44:26.060] of RueofLawRadio.com. [44:26.060 --> 44:30.060] So you might check to see if you got that part wrong. [44:30.060 --> 44:36.060] Anyway, Brett wanted to talk about cards. [44:36.060 --> 44:38.060] Yeah, those index cards. [44:38.060 --> 44:44.060] I found it very helpful for me, and I recommend it in a situation that's complicated like yours. [44:44.060 --> 44:50.060] Everything that happened, every time there was an action of some kind, there was a hearing, [44:50.060 --> 44:53.060] something got denied, something got appealed. [44:53.060 --> 44:54.060] There was a judgment. [44:54.060 --> 44:59.060] Somebody pretended like they were a judge, and you found out later they were not even qualified. [44:59.060 --> 45:03.060] All of these little actions happened. [45:03.060 --> 45:07.060] And then you write it down on a card and throw it out there on the bed, and now you've got [45:07.060 --> 45:12.060] this big cloud of things that happened. [45:12.060 --> 45:16.060] And every time there's a new person involved, some new lawyer, oh, Miller did this. [45:16.060 --> 45:18.060] Pike did that. [45:18.060 --> 45:25.060] And then you have a new card that goes across the bottom row there that's up close to you. [45:25.060 --> 45:32.060] And the row grows and the cloud grows until you feel like you've pretty much just unloaded everything. [45:32.060 --> 45:35.060] You've gotten everything off your chest. [45:35.060 --> 45:39.060] Everything you can remember is represented somewhere there on the bed. [45:39.060 --> 45:45.060] You know, this could be on a table or anywhere, but then once it's all laid out there, [45:45.060 --> 45:50.060] then you can start to organize these things into groups of what happened. [45:50.060 --> 45:53.060] This is what happened in the lower court. [45:53.060 --> 45:56.060] This is what happened in the appellate court. [45:56.060 --> 46:04.060] And you start to distill them down into chronological order, even. [46:04.060 --> 46:09.060] And you can see, I don't know if you're familiar with swim lanes. [46:09.060 --> 46:13.060] Swim lanes can help, too, depending on how you group them. [46:13.060 --> 46:21.060] But you start to get a visual picture of the chronology, and it really helps because then you start noticing, [46:21.060 --> 46:23.060] wait a second, how is there something appealed? [46:23.060 --> 46:25.060] There was no judgment to appeal. [46:25.060 --> 46:26.060] Oh, yeah. [46:26.060 --> 46:29.060] I need to put that in there, too. [46:29.060 --> 46:38.060] And when you do a three-by-five card, you put in what happened and then you can put in some explanation and such. [46:38.060 --> 46:47.060] But since you've got a card with four square borders on it, it tends to keep you from drifting from one thing to another. [46:47.060 --> 46:53.060] When you talk to somebody about this, you say, those dirty rotten scoundrels, they did this and then you're talking about that. [46:53.060 --> 46:55.060] And that reminds me, they did this and then they did this. [46:55.060 --> 46:56.060] Exactly. [46:56.060 --> 46:57.060] You're listening. [46:57.060 --> 46:59.060] You're jumping from one thing to another. [46:59.060 --> 47:02.060] You know exactly what happened, but we don't. [47:02.060 --> 47:06.060] And if you do that with your records to the court, the court doesn't either. [47:06.060 --> 47:13.060] So you put them on three-by-five cards, then you stay confined within that subject matter. [47:13.060 --> 47:14.060] Right. [47:14.060 --> 47:19.060] Then you lay them out and you can set them back in the order they're supposed to be in. [47:19.060 --> 47:22.060] Does that make sense? [47:22.060 --> 47:27.060] So what's going on now with this judgment? [47:27.060 --> 47:34.060] Do you think I could ask Governor Abbott, ask the Attorney General if it's illegal? [47:34.060 --> 47:40.060] The first thing we want to look at is do you have a federal claim? [47:41.060 --> 47:44.060] Did they violate any federal laws? [47:44.060 --> 47:46.060] Okay, I'll check that out. [47:46.060 --> 47:52.060] And whether they did or not, you can claim they did. [47:52.060 --> 47:58.060] If it looks like they did and it looks like they could have, you can make the claim. [47:58.060 --> 48:06.060] Now, if I were a lawyer, the state bar would just frown all over me for saying that. [48:06.060 --> 48:08.060] Because that's not fair. [48:08.060 --> 48:11.060] Well, life is tough. [48:11.060 --> 48:12.060] Deal with it. [48:12.060 --> 48:18.060] And if you're a lawyer, the one thing to understand about lawyers is they are low-hanging fruit. [48:18.060 --> 48:21.060] You still have things you can do. [48:21.060 --> 48:31.060] If the lawyers have done anything inappropriate or improper, you can go back and sue them. [48:31.060 --> 48:40.060] If anybody's got deep pockets, the lawyer's got a million-dollar rider on their errors and emissions policies. [48:40.060 --> 48:51.060] And the one thing you don't understand is you're so busy, so caught up in trying to figure out how to win your case [48:51.060 --> 48:57.060] that you don't really understand the secondary things you can do. [48:57.060 --> 49:01.060] Those lawyers, they got all kinds of secondary things they can do. [49:01.060 --> 49:10.060] Brett, tell them about the 90-something-year-old woman that were trying to take her house, and you took that over to help her. [49:10.060 --> 49:21.060] Well, you know, this lady was...she's been living in this house, lived there all of her life, and it was her mother's house, and it passed to her. [49:21.060 --> 49:25.060] And there was no dispute about the house belonging to her. [49:25.060 --> 49:38.060] But her mother, her late mother, had left a pattern of...the house had been paid off forever ago. [49:38.060 --> 49:44.060] And so the mother would go get a loan against the equity of the house, get a few thousand dollars, [49:44.060 --> 49:47.060] do a little something, and then, you know, pay it back, and then it would be back to zero. [49:47.060 --> 49:53.060] And every once in a while, she would want a few more thousand dollars, and she would go do that and pay it off. [49:54.060 --> 50:02.060] And here comes, long after the mother is gone and everything's been zero for a long time, [50:02.060 --> 50:10.060] here comes somebody with an old...one of the beginnings of those loans. [50:10.060 --> 50:15.060] And, of course, they conveniently lost the end of it, but they had the beginning of it, [50:15.060 --> 50:22.060] and they were waving it to the court and saying, there's money owed against this house, and we're putting a foreclosure. [50:22.060 --> 50:27.060] We're doing a lien and a foreclosure, and they were trying to take this lady's house away. [50:29.060 --> 50:30.060] Wow. [50:30.060 --> 50:36.060] Yeah, well, I think what Randy is getting at is that during the process, [50:36.060 --> 50:47.060] I was bar grieving the unethical lawyers for various violations of the ethics rules, and they kept disappearing. [50:47.060 --> 50:54.060] The lawyers kept disappearing off the case, and somebody else would knew would pop up a different name and a different name. [50:54.060 --> 51:02.060] And I went through 12 of them, like at the whole law firm. [51:02.060 --> 51:06.060] That's because he bar grieved the snot out of him. [51:08.060 --> 51:13.060] And every time one of the lawyers would do something, not only that lawyer, [51:13.060 --> 51:24.060] but also that lawyer's bosses would get in trouble until they finally...the judge...the lady got to keep her house. [51:24.060 --> 51:29.060] I don't recall if the judge ruled in her favor or if they backed off. [51:29.060 --> 51:35.060] I can't remember at this point. It's been some years ago, but I do remember she got to keep her house. [51:35.060 --> 51:39.060] Lawyers are low-hanging fruit. [51:40.060 --> 51:48.060] They come in huffing and puffing and railing in righteous indignation, and you bar grieve them. [51:48.060 --> 51:54.060] You bar grieve them for something. It's really not a big deal. [51:54.060 --> 51:58.060] And the bar gets it, even if it is a big deal. [51:58.060 --> 52:02.060] When the bar gets it, the bar's going to throw it in the trash, and they're going to send you this letter that says, [52:02.060 --> 52:12.060] No matter what you accuse them of, the bar is going to throw it in the trash. [52:12.060 --> 52:18.060] Now, the first time that happens to you, you're going to feel frustrated and betrayed [52:18.060 --> 52:24.060] and feel like everything that you just now tried to do was worthless and it didn't amount to anything. [52:24.060 --> 52:28.060] That's the way you're going to feel about that when you get that letter. [52:29.060 --> 52:33.060] No, no, that's the way you would have felt before this show. [52:33.060 --> 52:35.060] The first time. [52:35.060 --> 52:37.060] Before you heard this show. [52:37.060 --> 52:41.060] Yeah, but by now when I see that, I just laugh. [52:41.060 --> 52:47.060] Because the reason he laughs is if you file a valid bar grievance against a lawyer, [52:47.060 --> 52:50.060] the state bar is going to throw it in the trash. [52:50.060 --> 52:54.060] And that's a good thing. [52:54.060 --> 53:01.060] The reason it's a good thing is they all carry errors in emissions policies, and generally a million-dollar rider. [53:01.060 --> 53:07.060] And their insurance company knows that if somebody files a bar grievance against a lawyer, [53:07.060 --> 53:11.060] the state bar is going to get that grievance and throw it in the trash. [53:11.060 --> 53:16.060] So they don't care if the grievance is valid or not. [53:16.060 --> 53:20.060] It's the only way they have of gauging their level of risk. [53:20.060 --> 53:26.060] There are nine underwriters of legal errors and emissions in the country. [53:26.060 --> 53:29.060] All of them were underwritten by Lloyds of London. [53:29.060 --> 53:32.060] All of them have the same requirements. [53:32.060 --> 53:37.060] I had a bankruptcy attorney years ago mention this to me. [53:37.060 --> 53:41.060] And when he told me what was going on, I was grinning from ear to ear. [53:41.060 --> 53:45.060] And he said, I shouldn't have told you that. [53:45.060 --> 53:49.060] No, you should not. [53:49.060 --> 53:52.060] A friend of his gets his bar card. [53:52.060 --> 53:54.060] He don't get picked up by an attorney. [53:54.060 --> 54:00.060] So he goes down and gets on the attorney wheel and gets appointed to this criminal client. [54:00.060 --> 54:01.060] The client disappears. [54:01.060 --> 54:07.060] Eleven months later, he goes to the court and said, I can't find my client and asked to be removed from the case. [54:07.060 --> 54:08.060] The judge removed him. [54:08.060 --> 54:10.060] A month later, the guy shows up. [54:10.060 --> 54:15.060] He is PO'd that his lawyer abandoned him and filed a bar grievance. [54:15.060 --> 54:22.060] He canceled his law, his malpractice insurance immediately. [54:22.060 --> 54:25.060] One bar grievance your first year of practice. [54:25.060 --> 54:26.060] Valid, invalid. [54:26.060 --> 54:27.060] They don't care. [54:27.060 --> 54:28.060] They cancel immediately. [54:28.060 --> 54:29.060] Two bar grievances. [54:29.060 --> 54:31.060] In one year of practice, they cancel. [54:31.060 --> 54:35.060] Three, they'll cancel your law firm's malpractice insurance. [54:35.060 --> 54:37.060] Valid, invalid. [54:37.060 --> 54:41.060] They don't care. [54:41.060 --> 54:44.060] Lawyers are low hanging fruit. [54:44.060 --> 54:48.060] They don't care about the sword of Damocles. [54:48.060 --> 54:55.060] Well, we don't quite have time for that story. [54:55.060 --> 54:59.060] I could even play the thing on the air when we come back from sponsors. [54:59.060 --> 55:07.060] But to just give you a really short synopsis, there's somebody who was being accused. [55:08.060 --> 55:19.060] And his defense attorney that he hired was just really lame and kept on trying to wheel [55:19.060 --> 55:26.060] and deal with the prosecutor and never would return my buddy's calls. [55:26.060 --> 55:28.060] So my buddy comes to me and he says, what do I do? [55:28.060 --> 55:30.060] I said, well, what has he done? [55:30.060 --> 55:32.060] And we talked about it. [55:32.060 --> 55:36.060] And he scribbled a little note, bar grievance. [55:36.060 --> 55:38.060] State bar grievance or something like that. [55:38.060 --> 55:39.060] He wrote. [55:39.060 --> 55:43.060] He was going to get back to me about it. [55:43.060 --> 55:45.060] The lawyer saw it and the fireworks started. [55:45.060 --> 55:47.060] I'll tell you about that on the other side. [55:47.060 --> 55:49.060] We'll be right back. [55:49.060 --> 55:52.060] The Bible remains the most popular book in the world. [55:52.060 --> 55:57.060] Yet countless readers are frustrated because they struggle to understand it. [55:57.060 --> 56:00.060] Some new translations try to help by simplifying the text, [56:00.060 --> 56:05.060] but in the process can compromise the profound meaning of the scripture. [56:05.060 --> 56:08.060] Enter the recovery version. [56:08.060 --> 56:12.060] First, this new translation is extremely faithful and accurate, [56:12.060 --> 56:17.060] but the real story is the more than 9,000 explanatory footnotes. [56:17.060 --> 56:21.060] Difficult and profound passages are opened up in a marvelous way, [56:21.060 --> 56:27.060] providing an entrance into the riches of the word beyond which you've ever experienced before. [56:27.060 --> 56:32.060] Bibles for America would like to give you a free recovery version simply for the asking. [56:32.060 --> 56:42.060] This comprehensive yet compact study Bible is yours just by calling us toll free at 1-888-551-0102 [56:42.060 --> 56:46.060] or by ordering online at freestudybible.com. [56:46.060 --> 56:49.060] That's freestudybible.com. [56:50.060 --> 56:59.060] You're listening to the Logos Radio Network at logosradionetwork.com. [56:59.060 --> 57:04.060] The Bill of Rights contains the first ten amendments of our Constitution. [57:04.060 --> 57:08.060] They guarantee the specific freedoms Americans should know and protect. [57:08.060 --> 57:10.060] Our liberty depends on it. [57:10.060 --> 57:16.060] I'm Dr. Catherine Albrecht, and I'll be right back with an unforgettable way to remember one of your constitutional rights. [57:16.060 --> 57:18.060] Privacy is under attack. [57:18.060 --> 57:21.060] When you give up data about yourself, you'll never get it back again. [57:21.060 --> 57:26.060] And once your privacy is gone, you'll find your freedoms will start to vanish too. [57:26.060 --> 57:31.060] So protect your rights, say no to surveillance, and keep your information to yourself. [57:31.060 --> 57:34.060] Privacy, it's worth hanging on to. [57:34.060 --> 57:38.060] This public service announcement is brought to you by Startpage.com, [57:38.060 --> 57:42.060] the private search engine alternative to Google, Yahoo, and Bing. [57:42.060 --> 57:45.060] Start over with Startpage. [57:45.060 --> 57:49.060] Most people think of seven as a more civilized number than six. [57:49.060 --> 57:53.060] Think of how the number six is implicated in evil, as in the biblical 666. [57:53.060 --> 57:57.060] So it would fit right in that the Seventh Amendment would be about civil trials. [57:57.060 --> 58:00.060] Civil seven, civil trials, get it? [58:00.060 --> 58:04.060] Civil trials are ones where people sue instead of beating each other up over a dispute, [58:04.060 --> 58:06.060] like the dividing line between properties. [58:06.060 --> 58:11.060] They take their dispute to a courthouse and settle matters civilly without the fisticuffs. [58:11.060 --> 58:16.060] The Seventh Amendment guarantees that Americans have the right to a jury in certain civil matters [58:16.060 --> 58:19.060] instead of having a lone judge rule on the case. [58:31.060 --> 58:35.060] The Bill of Rights contains the first ten amendments of our Constitution. [58:35.060 --> 58:38.060] They guarantee the specific freedoms Americans should know and protect. [58:38.060 --> 58:40.060] Our liberty depends on it. [58:40.060 --> 58:43.060] I'm Dr. Catherine Albrecht, and I'll be right back with an unforgettable way [58:43.060 --> 58:46.060] to remember one of your constitutional rights. [59:10.060 --> 59:16.060] Remember the scene in George Orwell's novel, 1984, when Winston is threatened with his worst fear? [59:16.060 --> 59:20.060] That fear was having a cage of hungry rats unleashed on his face. [59:20.060 --> 59:24.060] But what if his worst fear was spiders? Eight-legged spiders, to be exact. [59:24.060 --> 59:27.060] Getting a face full of spiders would be pretty cruel and unusual. [59:27.060 --> 59:31.060] That image of eight-legged spiders will help you remember the Eighth Amendment. [59:31.060 --> 59:35.060] Our Founding Fathers added the Eighth Amendment to the U.S. Constitution [59:35.060 --> 59:38.060] to protect us from creepy-crawly eight-legged punishments [59:38.060 --> 59:42.060] and other cruel and unusual prison practices that were common in their day. [59:42.060 --> 59:46.060] The Eighth Amendment also prohibits the government from acquiring excessive bail [59:46.060 --> 59:48.060] and charging excessive fines. [59:48.060 --> 59:53.060] I'm Dr. Catherine Albrecht. More news and information at CatherineAlbrecht.com. [01:00:05.060 --> 01:00:07.060] Check out Babylon. [01:00:07.060 --> 01:00:09.060] I'm bound down with one nation. [01:00:09.060 --> 01:00:12.060] Both of them operate the land wrong. [01:00:12.060 --> 01:00:15.060] I'm also a Republican and they're a scratch man. [01:00:15.060 --> 01:00:17.060] Tell them I'm a libertarian. [01:00:17.060 --> 01:00:19.060] They say we're bound to lose, but we're bound to win. [01:00:19.060 --> 01:00:21.060] Come rock on, man. [01:00:21.060 --> 01:00:23.060] Chant for justice and peace. [01:00:23.060 --> 01:00:25.060] Chant for peace. [01:00:25.060 --> 01:00:27.060] Chant for justice and peace. [01:00:27.060 --> 01:00:29.060] Chant for our worst fears. [01:00:29.060 --> 01:00:31.060] Chant for our worst fears. [01:00:31.060 --> 01:00:33.060] Chant for justice and peace. [01:00:33.060 --> 01:00:35.060] Chant for justice and peace. [01:00:35.060 --> 01:00:37.060] Chant for justice and peace. [01:00:37.060 --> 01:00:39.060] Chant of rubies. [01:00:39.060 --> 01:00:41.060] Chant of rubies. [01:00:41.060 --> 01:00:43.060] Chant for our worst fears. [01:00:43.060 --> 01:00:45.060] Chant for our worst fears. [01:00:45.060 --> 01:00:47.060] Neither of them will me chant when me see. [01:00:47.060 --> 01:00:51.060] Say all man was created equally. [01:00:51.060 --> 01:00:54.060] Chant down Babylon and do it daily. [01:00:54.060 --> 01:00:58.060] And when night come, pray for everybody. [01:00:58.060 --> 01:01:01.060] Say one by one me have to chant them on. [01:01:01.060 --> 01:01:05.060] Me chant down Babylon because Babylon is wrong. [01:01:05.060 --> 01:01:08.060] The only right man me say is the rest, come on. [01:01:08.060 --> 01:01:12.060] We take me say Lord man, devout young man. [01:01:12.060 --> 01:01:15.060] To chant down Babylon now not later. [01:01:15.060 --> 01:01:19.060] To let Babylon know say we getting greater. [01:01:19.060 --> 01:01:22.060] We guide the donkey, me say choose yella Lee. [01:01:22.060 --> 01:01:26.060] Say Jesus Christ shall rescue him. [01:01:26.060 --> 01:01:29.060] Chant down one by one. [01:01:29.060 --> 01:01:32.060] Chant for justice and peace. [01:01:32.060 --> 01:01:35.060] Chant for justice and peace. [01:01:35.060 --> 01:01:38.060] Chant for our worst fears. [01:01:38.060 --> 01:01:41.060] Well, well me the business what them say. [01:01:41.060 --> 01:01:43.060] Me no business what them do. [01:01:43.060 --> 01:01:47.060] They want to see the rest of man fail not get through. [01:01:47.060 --> 01:01:50.060] But ye the rest of man man him know what him a do. [01:01:50.060 --> 01:01:54.060] He call down God Almighty and him do that for true. [01:01:54.060 --> 01:01:57.060] And I know who be do and know hellow how you do. [01:01:57.060 --> 01:02:01.060] The rest of man a something he must follow through. [01:02:01.060 --> 01:02:04.060] Creator a something God bless you. [01:02:04.060 --> 01:02:08.060] And as a rest of man you have to do what is true. [01:02:08.060 --> 01:02:11.060] Chant down Babylon one by one. [01:02:11.060 --> 01:02:14.060] Chant for justice and peace. [01:02:14.060 --> 01:02:17.060] Chant for justice and peace. [01:02:17.060 --> 01:02:20.060] Chant for our worst fears. [01:02:20.060 --> 01:02:23.060] Chant for our worst fears. [01:02:24.060 --> 01:02:27.060] Chant for our worst fears. [01:02:27.060 --> 01:02:30.060] Chant for our worst fears. [01:02:30.060 --> 01:02:33.060] Chant for our worst fears. [01:02:33.060 --> 01:02:36.060] Chant for our worst fears. [01:02:36.060 --> 01:02:39.060] Chant for our worst fears. [01:02:39.060 --> 01:02:42.060] Chant for our worst fears. [01:02:42.060 --> 01:02:45.060] Chant for our worst fears. [01:02:45.060 --> 01:02:48.060] Chant for our worst fears. [01:02:48.060 --> 01:02:51.060] Chant for our worst fears. [01:02:51.060 --> 01:02:54.060] Chant for our worst fears. [01:03:21.060 --> 01:03:24.060] Chant for our worst fears. [01:03:24.060 --> 01:03:27.060] Chant for our worst fears. [01:03:27.060 --> 01:03:30.060] Chant for our worst fears. [01:03:30.060 --> 01:03:33.060] Chant for our worst fears. [01:03:33.060 --> 01:03:36.060] Chant for our worst fears. [01:03:36.060 --> 01:03:39.060] Chant for our worst fears. [01:03:39.060 --> 01:03:42.060] Chant for our worst fears. [01:03:42.060 --> 01:03:45.060] Chant for our worst fears. [01:03:46.060 --> 01:03:49.060] Chant for our worst fears. [01:03:49.060 --> 01:03:52.060] Chant for our worst fears. [01:03:52.060 --> 01:03:55.060] Chant for our worst fears. [01:03:55.060 --> 01:03:58.060] Chant for our worst fears. [01:03:58.060 --> 01:04:01.060] Chant for our worst fears. [01:04:05.060 --> 01:04:08.060] Chant for our worst fears. [01:04:08.060 --> 01:04:11.060] Chant for our worst fears. [01:04:11.060 --> 01:04:14.060] Chant for our worst fears. [01:04:14.060 --> 01:04:17.060] Chant for our worst fears. [01:04:18.060 --> 01:04:21.060] Chant for our worst fears. [01:04:21.060 --> 01:04:24.060] Chant for our worst fears. [01:04:24.060 --> 01:04:27.060] Chant for our worst fears. [01:04:28.060 --> 01:04:31.060] Chant for our worst fears. [01:04:31.060 --> 01:04:34.060] Chant for our worst fears. [01:04:34.060 --> 01:04:37.060] Chant for our worst fears. [01:04:37.060 --> 01:04:40.060] Chant for our worst fears. [01:04:40.060 --> 01:04:50.300] a client of Dr. Vieth. I made all this stuff up. It cost Dr. Vieth $12,000 and six months [01:04:50.300 --> 01:04:56.460] to clear that complaint against him. You file a complaint against a doctor, the medical [01:04:56.460 --> 01:05:03.740] board really rings them out big time. You file a bar grievance against a lawyer, they [01:05:03.740 --> 01:05:14.460] don't squat. That's my story and I'm sticking to it. So, but do you church companies know [01:05:14.460 --> 01:05:25.140] that now? Anyway, go ahead about the Sordidomocles. Oh, well, yeah, there was the lawyer. My friend [01:05:25.140 --> 01:05:29.220] called the lawyer to ask him, Hey, what's going on? We need to figure out what's going [01:05:29.220 --> 01:05:38.940] on with this case. I need to know where you stand. And the lawyer proceeds to, well, [01:05:38.940 --> 01:05:43.580] I can't work with you anymore. And I can't work like this. You're, what are you talking [01:05:43.580 --> 01:05:48.620] about? You can't work like this. You won't ever tell me what's going on. Well, now you're [01:05:48.620 --> 01:05:54.860] talking about bar grieving me. And my friend's like, what do you mean? Bar grieving you? [01:05:54.860 --> 01:06:00.620] What are you talking about? Well, he says, well, I saw what you wrote over there. Well, [01:06:00.620 --> 01:06:05.020] that wasn't, I didn't bar grieve you. I was just, that was just a note. How do you know [01:06:05.020 --> 01:06:13.040] that had anything to do with you? Well, how do I know it didn't start getting so scared [01:06:13.040 --> 01:06:22.660] and demonstrating to everybody how freaked out he gets at the very idea that he could [01:06:22.660 --> 01:06:27.980] get bar grieved. And so he was saying, I'm not going to work like that with a gun to [01:06:27.980 --> 01:06:35.820] my head and a sword to my throat. I'm not doing it. And, and he relayed to my buddy [01:06:35.820 --> 01:06:45.140] that he had been trained by a judge long ago, that if the topic of a grievance even comes [01:06:45.140 --> 01:06:52.380] up, even if there's a hint of a grievance, you drop that client, you leave, you do not [01:06:52.380 --> 01:07:00.860] even in contact with them, you get away from that person before they can grieve you. [01:07:00.860 --> 01:07:07.220] He should never admit a thing like that. That's what happened in my case. The lawyer mentioned [01:07:07.220 --> 01:07:12.140] that and he saw me grinning from ear to ear. Oh, I shouldn't have told you that. That's [01:07:12.140 --> 01:07:18.620] right. You shouldn't. If the courts have been jerking you around, this is something [01:07:18.620 --> 01:07:25.580] you do all along the way. You do that. You file a bar grievance quick and often and at [01:07:25.580 --> 01:07:35.300] every opportunity. Okay, we have a couple more callers and we are into our second hour. [01:07:35.300 --> 01:07:43.100] So I'm going to go ahead and go to Bina in California. Is that correct? Bina? B E N [01:07:43.100 --> 01:07:51.100] A? It sure is. Not to be confused with Bino or whatever you call it. Not Biner, not Bino, [01:07:51.100 --> 01:08:02.060] but Bina. I don't want to be politically incorrect here. I would never say or even imply that [01:08:02.060 --> 01:08:07.580] you're a Biner from California. There you go, Biner. Well, for the record, I never planned [01:08:07.580 --> 01:08:12.780] to see that movie, Randy, so I have to rely on you for the humor of that joke, okay? Okay. [01:08:12.860 --> 01:08:17.900] But listen, it's been a minute since I've called in. Nice to hear you guys on the air. I'm sitting [01:08:17.900 --> 01:08:27.740] here smiling as I'm driving in lovely LA and you and Brett have inspired me to take on the county [01:08:27.740 --> 01:08:37.260] of Los Angeles, FYI. Oh, wow. Yeah, yeah. Okay, if you take on the county of Los Angeles, [01:08:38.060 --> 01:08:47.500] you have to enjoy yourself. Yeah, that's a requirement. Yeah. We have Bob from California. [01:08:47.500 --> 01:08:54.700] He's near San Diego and he picked a fight just for practice, just to have a fight [01:08:55.660 --> 01:09:00.940] with the Riverside. And he would call in just laughing and giggling at all the stuff they were [01:09:00.940 --> 01:09:06.140] doing. If you're not having fun, you're not doing it right. Okay. What do you want to do to LA County [01:09:06.140 --> 01:09:14.460] area? Well, enjoy and I already have out a little thing map that I want to do. Here's the story. [01:09:14.460 --> 01:09:21.180] Everybody's talking about and reading about the insanity here in Los Angeles with the thievery, [01:09:21.180 --> 01:09:27.980] the malfeasance in terms of housing. It's disgusting. You drive around, there are [01:09:27.980 --> 01:09:34.220] families, there are people, professionals living in their cars, living in the streets. So I've [01:09:34.220 --> 01:09:38.780] decided I'm going to use my skills, my communication skills, and what you lovely [01:09:38.780 --> 01:09:44.380] gentlemen have taught me about law. And even if I don't succeed, I want to bring as much fever [01:09:44.380 --> 01:09:52.060] and heat to these criminals as I possibly can. I'm so sick of them lying, deceiving and stealing [01:09:52.060 --> 01:10:01.820] money. Now, their housing authority recently was in federal court in the ninth central district [01:10:02.380 --> 01:10:08.060] before a judge who lambasted them, but didn't do anything except give them an opportunity [01:10:08.060 --> 01:10:12.460] to reform. This is what they do here. I've lived here long enough to kind of see the pattern. [01:10:13.100 --> 01:10:19.020] They get busted for what they do. And then they get an opportunity to reform themselves and rename. [01:10:19.020 --> 01:10:22.540] And that's exactly what they've done now. They don't get removed from office. [01:10:23.500 --> 01:10:31.660] Um, they gave the, the criminal, um, who ran the housing authority, some woman [01:10:32.460 --> 01:10:39.260] hand selected by good old Karen Bass, the mayor, um, no comment beyond that. Um, [01:10:40.620 --> 01:10:48.380] she was given, I think 120 days to leave her position. The last time I checked, and I think [01:10:48.460 --> 01:10:55.580] this all was happening around March or April. So when I asked, actually, when you call the numbers, [01:10:55.580 --> 01:11:01.740] you get the doodoo, the number you have called, somebody answered, yet they're still functioning. [01:11:02.300 --> 01:11:08.700] So a friend of mine who works for the county told me that they now are operating under a [01:11:08.700 --> 01:11:17.180] different name and county workers. This is just a little intel from my friend, got emails asking [01:11:17.180 --> 01:11:26.140] for suggestions on how this new agency should do their work. This is atrocious and this is ridiculous. [01:11:26.140 --> 01:11:31.500] Wow. These people are absolutely retarded and I want to take them on. I really, really want to [01:11:31.500 --> 01:11:35.740] take them on. It's not like they have any constraints of law or anything. They're going [01:11:35.740 --> 01:11:41.420] to just get some opinions of the people that decide how they want to do things. Yeah. From, [01:11:41.420 --> 01:11:47.980] from what my friend is saying now, the allocated budget for housing was in the billion, [01:11:48.540 --> 01:11:54.860] billion, and they don't know there is no accountability. Now I'll post it to this, [01:11:54.860 --> 01:12:02.620] to the chat, but there was a report done where it was evidence that they had no tracking, [01:12:02.620 --> 01:12:07.980] that they had no idea who got the money. The woman who ran the housing authority, [01:12:07.980 --> 01:12:12.940] Latavia Lasson, right? She looks like a man, but anyway, I digress. [01:12:13.980 --> 01:12:20.940] Okay. Hold on, Vena. Normally when people call in about corruption like this, [01:12:23.260 --> 01:12:28.860] we're aghast. How can somebody be so corrupt? But you're in California. [01:12:29.900 --> 01:12:31.420] Yeah. Yawn. [01:12:31.420 --> 01:12:37.020] Yeah. Yawn, yawn, yawn. Okay. You've listened to our show. You've listened to what we do. [01:12:37.820 --> 01:12:44.220] Yeah. So if you want to take them on, you can go in there and you can demand that they do what [01:12:44.220 --> 01:12:50.460] they're supposed to do and you can jump up and down rail rights indignation and they'll yawn. [01:12:50.460 --> 01:12:59.260] Oh, big deal. How many of these public officials have you filed criminal charges against with [01:12:59.260 --> 01:13:08.380] another public official? Let's say we got a judge here who adjudicated that this public official did [01:13:08.380 --> 01:13:16.540] something wrong and rather than hold them to rule of law, they said, okay, okay. You didn't stop at [01:13:16.540 --> 01:13:23.020] the stop sign, but we'll see. We'll watch you. If you stop at it next time, it'll be okay. [01:13:23.020 --> 01:13:25.820] I'm only going to give you 120 more chances. [01:13:25.820 --> 01:13:32.860] Yeah. Yeah. So you go to that judge and file criminal charges against this person. [01:13:35.100 --> 01:13:40.060] And when that judge does an issue once, then you go after the judge. [01:13:41.740 --> 01:13:46.300] And I'm thinking in terms of escalating out of California as soon as possible, [01:13:46.940 --> 01:13:54.460] like finding the federal charges and go into the federal, go into the FBI DOJ. [01:13:55.580 --> 01:13:58.220] Act in concert and collusion one with the other. [01:13:59.740 --> 01:14:04.780] Are you looking to have a closer relationship with God and a better understanding of his word? [01:14:04.780 --> 01:14:09.820] Then tune in to LogosRadioNetwork.com on Wednesdays from 8 to 10 p.m. Central time [01:14:09.820 --> 01:14:15.100] for scripture talk, where Nana and her guests discuss the scriptures in accord with 2 Timothy [01:14:15.100 --> 01:14:20.940] 2.15. Study to show thyself approved unto God, a workman that needeth not to be ashamed, [01:14:20.940 --> 01:14:26.140] rightly dividing the word of truth. Starting in January, our first hour studies are in the [01:14:26.140 --> 01:14:31.660] book of Mark, where we'll go verse by verse and discuss the true gospel message. Our second hour [01:14:31.660 --> 01:14:36.700] topical studies will vary each week with discussions on sound doctrine and Christian character [01:14:36.700 --> 01:14:42.380] development. We wish to reflect God's light and be a blessing to all those with a hearing ear. 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LogosRadioNetwork gets many requests to endorse [01:15:27.900 --> 01:15:33.740] all sorts of products, most of which we reject. We have come to trust YoungGevity so much, [01:15:33.740 --> 01:15:39.340] we became a marketing distributor, along with Alex Jones, Ben Fuchs, and many others. [01:15:39.340 --> 01:15:46.060] When you order from LogosRadioNetwork.com, your health will improve as you help support quality [01:15:46.060 --> 01:15:52.380] radio. As you realize the benefits of YoungGevity, you may want to join us. As a distributor, [01:15:52.380 --> 01:15:58.300] you can experience improved health, help your friends and family, and increase your income. [01:15:58.300 --> 01:15:59.100] Order now. [01:16:28.300 --> 01:16:43.420] I was blindsided, but now I can see your plan. You put the fear in my pockets, [01:16:43.420 --> 01:16:49.660] took the money from my hand. Ain't gonna fool me with that same old trick again. [01:16:58.300 --> 01:17:18.700] Ain't gonna drop me with that same old sucker punch. I get it now, but then I must have been [01:17:18.700 --> 01:17:24.060] out for lunch. Back then you had room to move, but now you're feeling better. [01:17:24.140 --> 01:17:31.820] Okay, we are back. We're in California. Bina, you're in the perfect position. [01:17:33.820 --> 01:17:43.180] To start with, tell me, Bina, what is the functional difference between a democracy [01:17:43.180 --> 01:17:50.940] and a republic? I know the theoretical blah, blah, blah stuff, but functionally in the real world, [01:17:51.820 --> 01:17:58.460] what is the difference? Well, from my understanding, a democracy represents [01:17:59.340 --> 01:18:06.460] the majority, 51%, whereas a republic respects the rights of the one. [01:18:07.260 --> 01:18:09.900] Okay, yeah, that sounds great, but what does that mean? [01:18:11.580 --> 01:18:13.420] Well, Randy. [01:18:15.740 --> 01:18:17.100] This is a trick question. [01:18:17.100 --> 01:18:21.660] Well, I don't have a quick answer for you. [01:18:21.660 --> 01:18:29.260] Yeah, I know. I did that on purpose, because as a citizen in a republic, it is my duty and my [01:18:29.260 --> 01:18:38.220] authority to maintain the governmental instruments that I have created, and what tool or tools do I [01:18:38.220 --> 01:18:46.540] have available to me to do that with? As far as I can tell, there's only one. [01:18:47.580 --> 01:18:50.460] That's a federal grand jury. [01:18:52.460 --> 01:18:53.260] Federal, okay. [01:18:54.460 --> 01:19:02.060] Federal grand jury was the genes of our founders. We've had lots of democracies in history, [01:19:02.060 --> 01:19:08.300] and they all fail. I think it was Washington that said, and always Jefferson, said that [01:19:09.260 --> 01:19:15.820] grand, that democracies are as violent in their creation as they are in their demise, [01:19:16.620 --> 01:19:23.260] and they are all short-lived. They tend to live 200 years. They all hated democracies. They knew [01:19:23.260 --> 01:19:36.060] they were problems, so they come up with this magic formula, a republic, and what separated a [01:19:36.380 --> 01:19:45.820] republic from a democracy. That was the ability of a citizen to bypass all three branches of [01:19:45.820 --> 01:19:50.860] government and go to a grand jury that wasn't a part of any of those branches. [01:19:52.940 --> 01:20:01.740] That was the genius. However, the executive and the judicial, they don't want us bypassing them. [01:20:01.740 --> 01:20:05.020] They want to control everything, and that's what happens in a democracy. [01:20:06.700 --> 01:20:12.140] They'll do everything they can to deny us access to a grand jury. [01:20:13.500 --> 01:20:19.260] I'm going to suggest that you set them up. Play them like a cheap fiddle, and I got one here. [01:20:20.620 --> 01:20:24.860] I got a cop friend to come over and brought me a three-inch long fiddle. [01:20:26.460 --> 01:20:31.820] You can hold it with your thumb and forefinger, and the end of it will rest against your palm. [01:20:31.820 --> 01:20:36.540] You can play them. [01:20:40.220 --> 01:20:41.020] Is that great? [01:20:43.580 --> 01:20:49.260] Let's play these guys like cheap fiddles. I sent the Fifth Circuit, [01:20:50.620 --> 01:20:58.060] ruled on my appeal. I filed a 150-page criminal complaint, and rule 51. Is it 51 or 52, Brett, [01:20:58.060 --> 01:21:03.580] that says that the federal court must address every issue in a suit? [01:21:05.980 --> 01:21:06.860] I don't know. [01:21:06.860 --> 01:21:14.940] I think it's 52. Well, I filed a 150-page civil suit. I sued all the highest judges in Texas, [01:21:15.820 --> 01:21:22.700] and I appealed it to the Fifth Circuit. The Fifth Circuit responded to my appeal after [01:21:22.700 --> 01:21:28.220] I paid them $700 to do it. They said, this suit is frivolous, dismissed with prejudice. [01:21:30.060 --> 01:21:37.340] I said, is that a fact, Jack? I paid you guys $700 to rule on every issue in this case, [01:21:37.340 --> 01:21:42.620] and you didn't do it. That's failure to provide good faith and fair services. [01:21:44.220 --> 01:21:49.340] Since you acted with the three of you, and you acted in concert and collusion, [01:21:49.340 --> 01:21:53.500] that was three people acting in concert and collusion, one with the other, to deny me [01:21:53.500 --> 01:22:01.340] informed free access to or enjoyment of a right. As I read 18 U.S. Code 241, that is a felony. [01:22:02.780 --> 01:22:10.380] So I filed felony charges against the Fifth Circuit judges with the grand jury in Fort Worth, [01:22:11.340 --> 01:22:15.500] the federal courthouse in Fort Worth. Well, the federal judge at the federal courthouse in Fort [01:22:15.500 --> 01:22:21.500] Worth and the federal clerk intercepted my communication with forming the grand jury. [01:22:23.340 --> 01:22:28.380] Yeah, they treated it like I filed a civil suit and dismissed my case for failing to [01:22:30.540 --> 01:22:37.740] pay the filing charge. I say, is that a fact, Jack? Well, I'm immersed in something else, [01:22:37.740 --> 01:22:43.580] and I'm just about to finish up. So I'm going to take a criminal complaint against the federal [01:22:43.580 --> 01:22:48.620] judge in Fort Worth and the federal clerk. I'm going to accuse them of interfering with the [01:22:48.620 --> 01:22:57.980] public mail and obstruction of justice and conspiring one with the other to shield the [01:22:57.980 --> 01:23:06.300] Fifth Circuit judges from prosecution for allegations that they violated 18 U.S. Code 241. [01:23:06.300 --> 01:23:15.900] And I'm going to accuse them of violating 18 U.S. Code 241 in order to shield the Fifth Circuit [01:23:15.900 --> 01:23:24.220] judges. And I'm going to file it with the grand jury at the address of the U.S. attorney in Fort [01:23:24.220 --> 01:23:29.500] Worth. In Dallas, Fort Worth, you'd expect the U.S. attorney's office to be in Dallas, but it's not [01:23:29.500 --> 01:23:36.940] in Fort Worth. What if you were to, instead of doing a criminal charge, what if you were to [01:23:37.580 --> 01:23:44.540] do a civil lawsuit and make it Bivens? No, no, no, no, we can't get Bivens yet. This is not Bivens. [01:23:44.540 --> 01:23:50.460] If it's a federal judge that is doing that deprivation of your right, then that's Bivens. [01:23:50.540 --> 01:23:53.900] Yeah, but I've got another plan. We don't have to sue them. [01:23:53.900 --> 01:23:58.460] And you can charge them, and you can say, your claim's $700. [01:23:59.980 --> 01:24:03.580] Yeah, we can do that, but the court's just going to jerk us around, [01:24:05.180 --> 01:24:10.780] and we'll be in court for the next 10 years. So, I have a different plan. [01:24:12.540 --> 01:24:19.820] I file it addressed to the U.S. attorney's office, addressed to the foreman of the grand jury. [01:24:21.420 --> 01:24:25.660] And inside, you'll have two folders, one folder and another. [01:24:27.100 --> 01:24:30.380] The outside folder will be addressed to the foreman of the grand jury. [01:24:32.460 --> 01:24:37.420] If you open the outside folder, there's another folder inside, and there's a cover letter on it [01:24:37.420 --> 01:24:48.860] that asks the foreman to initial this cover letter. Do not sign it. As we have problems with the U.S. [01:24:48.860 --> 01:24:57.660] attorney's secreting criminal complaints from grand juries, and since the U.S. attorney has [01:24:57.660 --> 01:25:03.820] a rubber stamp with your name on it, that he uses to rubber stamp superseding indictments, [01:25:05.580 --> 01:25:09.020] we want to make sure that the U.S. attorney doesn't get this letter, [01:25:09.020 --> 01:25:10.780] rubber stamp it, and send it back to us. [01:25:12.060 --> 01:25:15.660] And that's brilliant, because the people that are serving on the grand jury [01:25:15.820 --> 01:25:20.380] are not really going to understand that. They're going to look at that, and they're going to say, [01:25:20.380 --> 01:25:27.900] wait a second, what? Are you telling me that that guy over there, that scrawny guy in the [01:25:27.900 --> 01:25:33.580] tie over there, that I don't like the sound of his voice every day? And you're telling me that [01:25:34.380 --> 01:25:38.780] he has my signature on a stamp? [01:25:38.780 --> 01:25:48.060] Yeah. Well, see, the point is, the grand jury foreman will never see this letter, [01:25:49.420 --> 01:25:53.340] because the last thing the U.S. attorney wants the foreman to know [01:25:54.780 --> 01:26:01.260] is that he has a rubber stamp that he uses to stamp superseding indictments. They go in and [01:26:01.260 --> 01:26:06.780] try to find something they can get any kind of indictment on, no matter how minor. [01:26:06.860 --> 01:26:15.580] Once they have an indictment, now they commit the funds to do serious investigation. And any [01:26:16.060 --> 01:26:25.740] subsequent claims they find, they're superseding. They get an indictment, and any indictment that [01:26:26.620 --> 01:26:31.900] comes out of the investigation of this one, they're superseding, and they just rubber stamp them. [01:26:31.900 --> 01:26:39.740] They got an ex-football player kicker, who the IRS was after, we got him off, [01:26:40.780 --> 01:26:51.020] because we sent a request to the San Diego federal grand jury court reporter and asked for the [01:26:51.020 --> 01:26:58.460] voucher that that court reporter filed for the grand jury hearing on the date of this indictment. [01:26:59.340 --> 01:27:08.700] Reality TV, sugar, obesity, jet lag, the list of things that makes us dumber just keeps on growing. [01:27:08.700 --> 01:27:13.260] But now researchers say we can add stress to the list. I'm Dr. Catherine Albrecht, [01:27:13.260 --> 01:27:19.420] back with details in a moment. Privacy is under attack. When you give up data about yourself, [01:27:19.420 --> 01:27:24.460] you'll never get it back again. And once your privacy is gone, you'll find your freedoms will [01:27:24.460 --> 01:27:30.620] start to vanish too. So protect your rights, say no to surveillance, and keep your information to [01:27:30.620 --> 01:27:37.020] yourself. Privacy, it's worth hanging on to. This message is brought to you by startpage.com, [01:27:37.020 --> 01:27:43.020] the private search engine alternative to Google, Yahoo, and Bing. Start over with Startpage. [01:27:44.780 --> 01:27:50.300] Are you always on the go and juggling multiple projects? If so, you might think that multitasking [01:27:50.300 --> 01:27:55.420] improves your smart. But think again, all that stress might be eating your brain. [01:27:55.420 --> 01:28:00.140] A new study finds stress reduces the number of connections between neurons, which actually [01:28:00.140 --> 01:28:05.740] makes it harder for people to manage problems. Researchers at Yale University found that stressed [01:28:05.740 --> 01:28:10.620] out people have less gray matter in their prefrontal cortex. That's the part of the brain [01:28:10.620 --> 01:28:17.180] that helps us weigh conflicting ideas and regulate our emotions. So take a deep breath and chill out. [01:28:17.180 --> 01:28:23.180] It'll help keep your mind as sharp as a tack. I'm Dr. Catherine Albrecht for startpage.com, [01:28:23.180 --> 01:28:25.100] the world's most private search engine. [01:28:30.220 --> 01:28:35.660] This is Building 7, a 47-story skyscraper that fell on the afternoon of September 11. [01:28:35.660 --> 01:28:41.180] The government says that fire brought it down. However, 1,500 architects and engineers concluded [01:28:41.180 --> 01:28:45.420] it was a controlled demolition. Over 6,000 of my fellow service members have given their lives. [01:28:45.660 --> 01:28:50.300] Thousands of my fellow first responders are dying. I'm not a conspiracy theorist. I'm a structural [01:28:50.300 --> 01:28:54.380] engineer. I'm a New York City correction officer. I'm an Air Force pilot. I'm a father who lost his [01:28:54.380 --> 01:28:59.980] son. We're Americans, and we deserve the truth. Go to rememberbuilding7.org today. [01:29:01.740 --> 01:29:05.740] Rule of Law Radio is proud to offer the Rule of Law traffic seminar. In today's America, [01:29:05.740 --> 01:29:09.500] we live in an us-against-them society. And if we, the people, are ever going to have a free society, [01:29:09.500 --> 01:29:13.660] then we're going to have to stand and defend our own rights. Among those rights are the right to [01:29:13.660 --> 01:29:17.660] travel freely from place to place, the right to act in our own private capacity, and most importantly, [01:29:17.660 --> 01:29:22.060] the right to due process of law. Traffic courts afford us the least expensive opportunity to [01:29:22.060 --> 01:29:26.220] learn how to enforce and preserve our rights through due process. 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Order your copy today [01:29:55.260 --> 01:30:03.100] and together we can have the free society we all want and deserve. You are listening to the Logos [01:30:03.100 --> 01:30:06.060] Radio Network, logosradionetwork.com. [01:30:33.500 --> 01:30:42.220] Okay, we are back, Randy Kelton, Bret Fountain, Rule of Law Radio, [01:30:42.860 --> 01:30:49.660] and we're talking to Ben in California. What I'm doing is setting them up. So I send this [01:30:51.580 --> 01:30:59.260] communication to the grand jury foreman, but the only address I have for the grand jury [01:30:59.260 --> 01:31:04.620] is the U.S. Attorney's Office. So I address it to the foreman, send it to the U.S. Attorney's [01:31:04.620 --> 01:31:09.980] Office, and put this cover letter and ask the foreman to send it, to initial it, and send it [01:31:09.980 --> 01:31:16.300] back to me. I do the same thing, but with postcards. I'll say, send me this postcard back. [01:31:17.100 --> 01:31:21.340] Instead of a self-addressed stamp envelope, you could do the same thing with the postcard. [01:31:21.340 --> 01:31:27.820] This one's a little more sophisticated in that I want to make sure I don't get that back. [01:31:30.060 --> 01:31:35.500] Because when I don't get it back, then I have reason to believe and do believe that the U.S. [01:31:35.500 --> 01:31:40.940] Attorney intercepted the mail and secreted it from the grand jury, and that's exactly what he will [01:31:40.940 --> 01:31:48.460] do. Because when he reads this cover letter, and I'm telling the grand jury foreman that the U.S. [01:31:48.460 --> 01:31:55.180] Attorney has a rubber stamp with his name on it, the way he does not want that to go to the foreman. [01:31:55.180 --> 01:32:03.740] Yeah, we put in a request for the voucher from the grand jury court reporter, [01:32:03.740 --> 01:32:10.060] that's so the court reporter can get paid. So this is all money stuff. They can never [01:32:10.060 --> 01:32:16.140] hide that kind of stuff. And we got a response back from the court reporter who said there [01:32:16.140 --> 01:32:26.620] was no grand jury hearing that day. We got an indictment here with the foreman's signature on [01:32:26.620 --> 01:32:37.580] it that day. Bubba, how's that work? So this is the strategy. When the U.S. Attorney sees that, [01:32:38.620 --> 01:32:44.940] there is no chance the foreman's going to see this. So we won't get that letter back. [01:32:46.460 --> 01:32:54.780] When we don't get that letter back after seven, ten days, then we have reason to believe and [01:32:54.780 --> 01:33:02.380] do believe that the U.S. Attorney interfered with the U.S. mail, I think that's 18 U.S. Code 1346. [01:33:03.420 --> 01:33:14.060] 1341. 41, 41, yes. And that the U.S. Attorney acted to shield the accused from prosecution. [01:33:15.020 --> 01:33:21.900] So we make up a complaint against the U.S. Attorney and send it to the U.S. Attorney [01:33:22.700 --> 01:33:30.860] in Washington, D.C. with the same cover letter. And when we don't get that cover letter back, [01:33:30.860 --> 01:33:38.620] we sue President Trump as respondee at Superior for, what's her name? [01:33:39.580 --> 01:33:46.220] Pam Bondi. Pam Bondi. So as respondee at Superior for the head U.S. Attorney in D.C. [01:33:47.180 --> 01:33:54.940] and then we make the argument to President Trump, you're having problems with public officials in [01:33:54.940 --> 01:34:03.420] California not doing their jobs. They're misappropriating public funds. If you will [01:34:03.420 --> 01:34:14.140] simply have Pam Bondi direct the U.S. Attorneys that a communication with the grand jury is a [01:34:14.140 --> 01:34:22.700] communication to a fourth branch of government. As the grand jury is not a part of the executive [01:34:22.700 --> 01:34:30.940] branch, it is not a part of the judicial branch, as specified by Scalia in Montgomery v. State, [01:34:31.580 --> 01:34:38.780] where he said while the district judge impanels the grand jury, once a grand jury is impaneled, [01:34:39.900 --> 01:34:47.340] the district court has no more say or control over that grand jury. It is in effect a fourth [01:34:47.340 --> 01:34:55.020] branch of government. It's exempted from both the executive and the judicial. And yeah, it has a [01:34:55.020 --> 01:35:02.860] short term comparatively. That group of people has a term that when they're convened and impaneled [01:35:02.860 --> 01:35:10.060] that they don't stay there as long as the district judge. But while they're in session, [01:35:11.580 --> 01:35:16.620] they've got their own thing going. They're independent and they can examine into anything [01:35:16.620 --> 01:35:27.580] they want to, federal or civil. So you tell the president that you got grand juries. [01:35:28.940 --> 01:35:34.540] If some bad stuff's going on in government and somebody in government knows about it, [01:35:34.540 --> 01:35:42.300] if they can go directly to a federal grand jury and do so anonymously, you'll find out all this stuff. [01:35:42.300 --> 01:35:48.700] And if you get a federal grand jury indictment, nobody can point a finger at you. [01:35:50.140 --> 01:35:56.460] You got the grand jury as a shield. So I want to get several of these suits against the president. [01:35:58.540 --> 01:36:06.540] If you sue the president and just sue the president for petition for declaratory judgment [01:36:07.020 --> 01:36:16.300] and ask the court to rule that the president, as the head of the executive branch, has no power [01:36:16.300 --> 01:36:24.780] to deny access to the grand jury by a citizen, that it has the effect of violating the separation [01:36:24.780 --> 01:36:29.900] of powers. But you really don't want to sue him. You don't care about that. You just want him to [01:36:29.900 --> 01:36:40.460] read it. I sued all the highest judges in Texas for $485 million. I never imagined I'd get [01:36:40.460 --> 01:36:48.620] anything from the suit. It'd be nice, but the whole point was I got all the judges of the [01:36:48.620 --> 01:36:52.700] court of criminal appeals and I sue them in their personal capacity in the federal court. [01:36:54.140 --> 01:36:55.980] You think they're not going to read that suit? [01:36:55.980 --> 01:37:02.300] Absolutely, they're going to read that suit. Pam Bondi is going to read that suit. [01:37:04.300 --> 01:37:12.940] And if you can convince Pam Bondi that this would give her an incredible tool that she could use, [01:37:14.620 --> 01:37:20.860] and then she explained the suit to the president, if we can encourage the president to open, [01:37:20.860 --> 01:37:28.700] to force local federal U.S. attorneys to open direct access to federal grand juries. [01:37:30.300 --> 01:37:31.980] As it should have been already. [01:37:31.980 --> 01:37:39.340] Exactly. We'll return this democracy back to a republic. Does that make sense, Bina? [01:37:41.980 --> 01:37:48.300] It makes a lot of sense. I've heard you say it before. And because I know that all eyes are on [01:37:48.300 --> 01:37:56.540] California Newsome, aka Newscom or whatever people call him, this really is a crisis, Randy. [01:37:56.540 --> 01:38:02.140] I take it very seriously. I'm not being histrionic. And while I sound impassioned, [01:38:02.140 --> 01:38:08.940] I'm approaching this very level-headed. And I intend to put everything in order. I've already [01:38:08.940 --> 01:38:14.860] collected a lot of data. And I want to just add this one little detail about what this [01:38:14.860 --> 01:38:22.940] malfeasent director did. She actually granted her husband's nonprofit, NGO, [01:38:23.580 --> 01:38:31.260] a multimillion-dollar contract, and then claimed to have no knowledge of this disbursement when [01:38:34.140 --> 01:38:36.060] I don't know anything about it. [01:38:36.060 --> 01:38:39.580] Yeah. Did she have access to federal funds in doing this? [01:38:41.020 --> 01:38:41.500] Pardon? [01:38:42.220 --> 01:38:46.140] Did she have access to federal funds that she used in this process? [01:38:46.620 --> 01:38:48.140] Oh, yeah. These are federal funds. [01:38:48.140 --> 01:38:49.900] Yeah. That drops you right into the Fed. [01:38:51.420 --> 01:38:51.900] Yeah. [01:38:51.900 --> 01:39:00.940] And the point is, when you go in there, don't ever ask them to do anything you actually want them to do. [01:39:03.100 --> 01:39:06.060] Because everything you do should be a setup. [01:39:07.420 --> 01:39:07.740] Yeah. [01:39:07.740 --> 01:39:14.380] Now, if they think that everything you do is for the purpose of setting them up, [01:39:16.300 --> 01:39:24.620] they might actually do it right. And if you can start them doing it right, we win. [01:39:26.700 --> 01:39:37.260] If not, and you get Pam Bondi to order them to make the grand jury open for the public, we win. [01:39:38.220 --> 01:39:46.380] It's not that we want anybody indicted. It's that we want them to look at the prospect [01:39:47.180 --> 01:39:49.820] of being put in front of a federal grand jury. [01:39:51.980 --> 01:39:57.260] I walked into my district attorney's office. I'd known him for years. We were good friends. [01:39:58.140 --> 01:40:02.060] He's sitting with his head in his hand. I said, what's the matter, Greg? [01:40:02.060 --> 01:40:07.500] And he looked up at me with this full-on look on his face and said, those darn grand jurors. [01:40:08.220 --> 01:40:12.940] You never know what they're going to do. I looked up at the ceiling, [01:40:12.940 --> 01:40:20.300] held up both hands and said, there is a God. I don't care what the grand jury does. [01:40:21.580 --> 01:40:26.700] If all of these public officials think about the grand jury the way my prosecutor does, [01:40:28.540 --> 01:40:35.420] who wants to play Russian roulette with their security, with their liberty, and with their [01:40:35.420 --> 01:40:40.620] finances? If they never know what they're going to do, the last thing you're going to want is to [01:40:40.620 --> 01:40:47.500] be put in front of them. That's my story and I'm sticking to it. Randy Kelton, Brett Fountain, [01:40:47.500 --> 01:40:54.620] we love radio. We'll be right back. We've got two more callers. We're going to have time for them. [01:40:54.620 --> 01:40:58.940] I'm going to bring Roger in on the next one. You hang on. I'm not done. [01:40:58.940 --> 01:41:04.060] Do you have a business with five employees or more? How would you like to save hundreds [01:41:04.060 --> 01:41:09.260] of thousands of dollars in FICA taxes? Do you have a major medical plan that nobody can afford [01:41:09.260 --> 01:41:16.220] to be on or how would you like to save in premium costs on a current major medical plan by lowering [01:41:16.220 --> 01:41:24.140] the claims cost? The CHAMP plan is a section 125 IRS approved preventative health plan that provides [01:41:24.140 --> 01:41:31.740] your employees with doctors, medications, emergency care, and tele-docs all at zero cost with zero [01:41:31.740 --> 01:41:38.860] co-pay. If you are an employee, you also will get a pay raise by paying less in FICA taxes. 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[01:43:16.220 --> 01:43:19.260] So [01:43:26.220 --> 01:43:28.380] some things I realize [01:43:30.540 --> 01:43:37.260] somebody's gonna police that policeman somebody's gonna police the police [01:43:37.820 --> 01:43:40.780] so [01:43:57.900 --> 01:44:01.580] okay we are back randy kelton breath fountain rule of law radio we're in our last [01:44:02.300 --> 01:44:08.300] segment and we're talking to bina bina i am not done with you [01:44:09.580 --> 01:44:15.740] i really need someone in california to kick their behinds and often [01:44:17.100 --> 01:44:22.540] the best way to be kicked their behinds is by doing it in a way that they don't see it coming [01:44:23.660 --> 01:44:30.620] right if you set these guys up so you can take them to a federal court to a federal [01:44:30.620 --> 01:44:38.220] us attorney you want one that's a democrat that's sure not to do what you want him to do [01:44:39.820 --> 01:44:45.660] because if he doesn't then you can jump right out to dc and if we get a number of people making [01:44:45.660 --> 01:44:55.100] waves in dc and these people are not as hard to get to as you would think i went to a senate [01:44:55.100 --> 01:45:05.900] subcommittee hearing on criminal justice in texas at the time texas had 29 million people [01:45:08.620 --> 01:45:13.580] there were 136 people there 105 of them were lobbyists [01:45:15.740 --> 01:45:22.300] there was on the order of one person per million of the population [01:45:23.260 --> 01:45:27.340] at the senate subcommittee hearing on criminal laws that affect us all [01:45:29.420 --> 01:45:33.820] and when these lobbyists are up there talking the the senators are up there [01:45:33.820 --> 01:45:40.620] pulling hair out of their ears picking their nose checking their their email i mean they're [01:45:40.620 --> 01:45:48.380] they're texting on their phone but when a citizen stood up they all sat up and listened [01:45:48.380 --> 01:45:53.580] and nobody takes them on [01:45:55.980 --> 01:46:03.260] if the public knew how powerful their testimony before subcommittees could be [01:46:04.140 --> 01:46:10.940] these be these senators would be flooded but we don't realize how powerful we are [01:46:11.660 --> 01:46:18.700] if you sue the president of the united states in the federal court in washington dc [01:46:20.620 --> 01:46:22.540] you are going to get their attention [01:46:25.020 --> 01:46:29.740] the president's going to find out about it because he's the defendant [01:46:32.380 --> 01:46:36.060] you can as an individual you really can get to these people [01:46:36.700 --> 01:46:45.660] and if we get him to recognize the power of a grand jury to control local government [01:46:47.100 --> 01:46:56.380] i suspect he is open for ideas right now what do you think bina i'm ready well bina i have a [01:46:56.380 --> 01:47:03.740] suggestion for you as you're writing your first document go ahead and continue [01:47:04.060 --> 01:47:09.820] and continue to write the next one that you know the way that it's probably going to go [01:47:10.460 --> 01:47:15.100] go ahead and write the next one and write the next one and write the next one and you'll have [01:47:15.100 --> 01:47:20.220] three or four documents right there in one because you know what's going to happen just to do an [01:47:20.220 --> 01:47:27.900] insert page break and keep right on going okay because you you don't know the date when it's [01:47:27.900 --> 01:47:33.260] going to happen and you don't necessarily know the name you might know the name but you pretty [01:47:33.260 --> 01:47:40.300] much know how this is going to go so go ahead and map it out and put the documents all in line like [01:47:40.300 --> 01:47:45.180] then it takes the pressure off of you like you you spend one night you know you stay up late on one [01:47:45.180 --> 01:47:50.460] friday night or saturday night and you just go ahead and get yourself some snacks and just stay [01:47:50.460 --> 01:47:55.900] up late and work through several documents at once because you know how it's going to go and [01:47:55.900 --> 01:48:02.940] that takes the pressure of it it kind of makes it fun because you know what they're gonna do [01:48:03.500 --> 01:48:09.020] and then sure enough 12 days later here it is and then you go yep i knew that was going to happen [01:48:09.660 --> 01:48:14.940] and you go into your second document that you already wrote up and you just put the date in it [01:48:16.780 --> 01:48:26.220] if you send me an address i'll send you one of these fiddles okay the greatest one i had was [01:48:26.300 --> 01:48:36.220] playing the the the chief justice of the texas supreme like a cheap fiddle that was wonderful [01:48:37.900 --> 01:48:43.660] i asked him to do something i absolutely knew he wouldn't do and when he didn't i sued him for [01:48:43.660 --> 01:48:49.340] 20 million dollars in his personal capacity in the federal court how's that for you mama [01:48:49.980 --> 01:48:55.020] so there have been indictments randy on some of these characters they have we're not going to get [01:48:55.020 --> 01:49:02.700] indictments don't count on entitlement doesn't matter that would be gravy yeah who likes to play [01:49:02.700 --> 01:49:12.460] russian roulette it's like my my prosecutor said those darn grand jurors okay you did not you went [01:49:12.540 --> 01:49:17.820] before a grand jury and you did not get indicted this time [01:49:19.980 --> 01:49:26.700] this time but those darn grand jurors you never know what they're gonna do [01:49:28.620 --> 01:49:31.340] it's not about getting people indicted or get them in trouble [01:49:32.220 --> 01:49:36.860] it's about giving them reason to act appropriately [01:49:36.860 --> 01:49:47.420] it's in the bible it's not about passing judgment on them it's about giving people [01:49:47.420 --> 01:49:56.780] reason to do things the right way the first time we had that power and the public officials [01:49:57.340 --> 01:50:02.940] to cover their themselves gradually took that away from us and we didn't fight to get it back [01:50:03.420 --> 01:50:07.500] but we can i'm running out of time i got five minutes [01:50:09.260 --> 01:50:17.340] i'm gonna leave you in roger are you there yes i am do you have some comments on point [01:50:19.100 --> 01:50:24.780] um yeah uh it's hard you sending the envelope wait a minute wait a minute you sound like you [01:50:24.780 --> 01:50:30.860] have your head in the toilet okay i'm gonna take it off and i only said that because roger's from [01:50:30.860 --> 01:50:37.340] wisconsin and i know a lot of people from wisconsin so uh that's not so unlikely [01:50:39.020 --> 01:50:46.140] okay okay are you on a hands-free device or something um can you hear me now that's better [01:50:47.420 --> 01:50:56.060] okay so i was i was thinking wouldn't they just send out a notice like we no longer accept [01:50:56.060 --> 01:50:59.500] uh mineral envelopes inside of mineral envelope [01:51:03.180 --> 01:51:11.180] i don't care what they do yeah right and then who cares you send a [01:51:12.300 --> 01:51:20.700] a document to the federal grand jury if anybody touches that other than the foreman of the grand [01:51:20.700 --> 01:51:25.980] jury you don't care what they do with it you file criminal charges against them [01:51:27.500 --> 01:51:34.780] tampering shielding oh we got 18 us code 241 242 we got all kind of stuff [01:51:35.500 --> 01:51:43.340] and like i told the first caller it's not what you can prove up in court that gets you in court [01:51:43.660 --> 01:51:51.260] it is the claim that you make when i make a claim against the u.s attorney or like i'm going to do [01:51:51.820 --> 01:51:58.940] for fort worth against the federal judge for tampering with the u.s mail for intercepting [01:51:58.940 --> 01:52:05.980] a communication sent to a federal grand jury which is not a part of the judiciary [01:52:05.980 --> 01:52:10.780] of the judiciary he intercepted that communication [01:52:12.780 --> 01:52:23.020] violation but 18 u.s code three was it the 1341 right yes it doesn't matter if i build it up or [01:52:23.020 --> 01:52:34.620] not i made the claim u.s attorney though do no do what you know no i sent it to the grand jury [01:52:34.620 --> 01:52:40.220] the whole point is getting them to not do what they're commanded to do by law [01:52:41.180 --> 01:52:46.060] so we can take it up you want to take it out of the hands of the one who did it [01:52:47.260 --> 01:52:53.660] the federal the judge in fort worth did this so i'm going to file against him [01:52:55.100 --> 01:53:01.100] with the federal grand jury with the u.s attorney and when he don't give it to the grand jury [01:53:01.100 --> 01:53:06.940] now i'm going to be kicking his behind because the federal judge screwed up [01:53:07.900 --> 01:53:13.500] he's not going to be a happy camper he's going to feel like he's being screwed and you're right you [01:53:13.500 --> 01:53:21.420] are that was a whole point was was you initially the outside envelope is addressed to the u.s [01:53:21.420 --> 01:53:29.020] attorney right correct no it is addressed to the foreman of the grand jury at the u.s attorney's [01:53:29.020 --> 01:53:40.220] address the only address you have is either the federal court or the the federal u.s attorney [01:53:40.940 --> 01:53:51.020] when you send a a document address to someone in government and you get the wrong address you see [01:53:51.020 --> 01:53:57.580] the federal grand jury does not have a published address well actually it turned out they did [01:53:58.300 --> 01:54:03.100] and their published address was the federal courthouse in fort worth [01:54:05.580 --> 01:54:12.060] that's what i sent it to not not not the to the u.s attorney well i sent it to the u.s it sent it [01:54:12.060 --> 01:54:19.340] to the federal courthouse first and the judges intercepted it so since that didn't work then [01:54:19.340 --> 01:54:25.020] i'm going to send it to the u.s attorney's office address to the former of the grand jury because [01:54:25.020 --> 01:54:30.540] he's the one that deals with the grand jury so he's got this document addressed to the foreman [01:54:32.380 --> 01:54:39.340] the fact that the address is not exactly the address of the grand jury he still has a duty [01:54:39.340 --> 01:54:48.300] to get that document to the recipient if he doesn't then i'm going to accuse him of secreting [01:54:49.340 --> 01:54:54.860] that document from the grand jury now maybe he didn't maybe he just threw it in the trash [01:54:55.980 --> 01:55:03.020] but he still interfered in u.s mail if that wasn't the right address then he needed to give it back [01:55:03.020 --> 01:55:11.900] to the u.s mail and tell him what the address was maybe he's not required to i'm gonna accuse [01:55:11.900 --> 01:55:22.140] him of it anyway i don't care i just need a excuse no matter how tenuous or bs it is [01:55:22.140 --> 01:55:30.940] to get me to the u.s attorney in dc so i can engage pam bondy as responde at superior [01:55:31.580 --> 01:55:38.540] it doesn't matter if she could defeat my claim who cares i get to make the claim [01:55:40.140 --> 01:55:47.260] i'll accuse her of directing her u.s attorney to secret that from the grand jury [01:55:47.260 --> 01:55:48.860] and thereby breaching