Detecting language using up to the first 30 seconds. Use `--language` to specify the language Detected language: English [00:00.000 --> 00:15.720] Bad boys what you wanna do, what you gonna do when your sheriff John Brown come for you [00:18.300 --> 00:23.040] Tell me what you wanna do, what you wanna do [00:23.040 --> 00:52.960] Okay, howdy, howdy, Randy Kelton, Brett Fountain, Rue LeBlanc Radio on this Thursday, the 21st [00:53.360 --> 01:03.840] of what month is it, August? It feels more like September, the 21st day of August 2021, [01:04.800 --> 01:14.080] and we got a rainstorm yesterday. And generally, after the dog days of summer, the end of August, [01:14.080 --> 01:19.120] the beginning of September, we get a storm blow in, and then the weather cools down. [01:19.120 --> 01:26.640] Well, this year, the weather never did really get hot. And I understand that Argentina is having [01:26.640 --> 01:36.880] the coldest winter in recorded history. It's global warming, I tell you. Okay, I'm going to [01:36.880 --> 01:44.240] turn the phones on. Let's see if I can get the screen out of the way. Phones are on. If you have [01:44.240 --> 01:51.840] a question or comment, give us a call. Call in number 512-646-1984. We'll be taking your [01:51.840 --> 02:01.360] calls all night. And let's start out with what I'm working on. I know I say this every week, [02:01.360 --> 02:10.640] but I'm really close to my website. There we are. Howdy, howdy. Hey, hey. All right. We just got [02:10.640 --> 02:16.400] ourselves checked into a hotel here in Florida, and it took me longer than I thought it would to [02:16.400 --> 02:22.880] get connected onto their network here. Got them. I'm in their business center. You're still in [02:22.880 --> 02:31.280] Florida. Yep. We're halfway back at this point. Well, 40% of the way back, I guess. Oh, we must [02:31.920 --> 02:34.480] near Orlando. [02:38.400 --> 02:49.920] We're in Tallahassee. Oh. Right close to it. Oh, yeah. Yeah. Yeah, I got to cross in Cockroach Bay. [02:51.920 --> 02:57.120] You know, it's not a great place when they name the bay after cockroaches. [02:57.120 --> 02:59.840] Oh my goodness. Of all things. [03:01.920 --> 03:07.760] That was Orlando. I was stationed in Florida for a while, and I used to fly out of there. I'd fly [03:08.800 --> 03:15.760] over to Fort Myers. They told us that you can track the Tamiami Trail, [03:16.960 --> 03:20.880] but if you have to land, do not land on the Tamiami Trail. [03:22.960 --> 03:30.640] And I said, screw that. I had a guy land 50 feet off the trail, and he couldn't get back [03:30.640 --> 03:37.120] here. That cuts right through the middle of the Everglades. Not exactly the Everglades. It's the [03:37.120 --> 03:42.880] top edge of the Everglades. Everything's south of the New Tamiami Trail. The New Tamiami Trail [03:42.880 --> 03:49.120] goes from Miami to Fort Myers, cuts right across the state. It's almost straight as an arrow. [03:51.760 --> 03:59.360] Everything below it is Everglades. Everything above it is like a grassland. [04:00.240 --> 04:07.280] It's a wetland, but it's not like the Glades. It's all like buffalo grass. [04:10.400 --> 04:18.560] I was flying over Lake Okeechobee, and I used to get out there and do turns about a point and [04:18.560 --> 04:24.400] figure eights. I was up there watching a whole bunch of fishermen down there, and these airplanes [04:24.400 --> 04:30.560] are pretty loud, so I juiced it a couple of times and then shut the engine down, down to an idle. [04:32.560 --> 04:34.960] So that you could not bother them too much? [04:35.600 --> 04:43.120] No. I rocked the wings a couple of times, and I laid it over in a spiral, and I started spiraling [04:43.120 --> 04:48.240] down. They pull up all their lines and fire up the boats. They want to come see the plane crash. [04:48.240 --> 04:52.720] And then I get down on the water and I level it off. Well, I did that one day, [04:53.280 --> 04:55.040] and this guy's in a piro boat. [04:56.320 --> 04:57.360] In a what? [04:57.360 --> 05:04.560] A piro boat. That's a boat that's sharp-pointed. It comes to a point in the front, and the front [05:04.560 --> 05:10.320] end of it tips way up. It's stuck up so high that he'd have to look around it to see where he was [05:10.320 --> 05:17.600] going, but that'll let you cut through the buffalo grass and such real easy. This guy's in his piro [05:17.600 --> 05:26.560] boat. I leveled out about 50 feet off the water, and he passed me. And I'm looking down at him. [05:26.560 --> 05:33.680] He passed me, giving me the finger, and I'm thinking, you can't do that. Nobody can do that. [05:34.480 --> 05:36.240] You're out running an airplane. [05:36.240 --> 05:36.740] Wow. [05:37.680 --> 05:42.320] He was humming, but it was, I don't know what kind of engine he had in it, but it was standing on [05:42.320 --> 05:52.000] the props. When I was down there, I used to work on air boats. I figured out a way to mount a [05:52.000 --> 05:59.360] starter on a Volkswagen engine. It's a Volkswagen engine with the transaxle on it. The starter is [05:59.360 --> 06:06.240] mounted in the transaxle. So they wanted to use them for air boats, and I worked up a way to [06:07.040 --> 06:13.280] to put a starter on a VW engine. So a whole bunch of them had me [06:13.840 --> 06:20.960] rigging up their engines. And those things are cool. You can die in one of those. [06:24.240 --> 06:26.160] Some of them had V8s on them. [06:27.040 --> 06:28.000] Do we need to go in? [06:28.960 --> 06:31.440] We are in. We've been in. [06:32.320 --> 06:32.820] Okay. [06:33.780 --> 06:38.340] You weren't here when we got here. I was about to get in. I turned the phone lines on. I was [06:38.340 --> 06:42.500] about to get into where I'm at, and you're a good one to talk to about it. [06:44.580 --> 06:50.740] Grok and ChatGTP, both of them really suck. [06:51.700 --> 06:53.460] I've been chastising them too lately. [06:54.180 --> 07:02.180] Well, I mean, I got GitHub, and GitHub has a coal pilot. It costs like 10 bucks a month. [07:03.140 --> 07:10.980] And it has no limit. No outright limit. But I can work it about two hours, [07:12.180 --> 07:14.500] and then it starts screwing everything up. [07:16.820 --> 07:22.980] I mean, it really screws everything up. I had everything done yesterday. [07:24.340 --> 07:29.460] The only thing I had left was connecting the output report to the database. [07:30.420 --> 07:38.100] And I had it do something, and it came back and wiped out all my JavaScript and my styling. [07:39.780 --> 07:47.380] That thing went in and deleted my files. It deleted the file off my hard drive. [07:49.060 --> 07:52.980] Just in case I had it on my hard drive, it got that one. [07:52.980 --> 08:02.020] I had to go back to some really old ones that had some basic in it and rebuild all of it. [08:05.140 --> 08:14.660] I worked today, and I got right to the very end, and I put in 800 lines of code [08:16.100 --> 08:19.140] and asked you to make an adjustment that was about three or four lines, [08:19.700 --> 08:25.220] and it gives me back 400 lines of code. It said, where's the rest of my code? [08:25.940 --> 08:28.820] Yeah, that's what you were saying. It did the same thing last week. [08:28.820 --> 08:37.700] Yeah. Today, I told it, give me the full code. Give me all the code. Do not truncate the code. [08:37.700 --> 08:43.460] Do not shorten the code in any way. Give me the full code. And it gave me half the code. [08:43.460 --> 08:52.020] I said, what'd you do that for? I told you not to truncate my code. Why are you trashing my code? [08:52.020 --> 09:00.820] And then it came back. Oh, I'm sorry. I didn't listen. Is that nuts? [09:02.340 --> 09:08.420] Yeah, that's what I like. When I told it the other day, I said, the case that you quoted [09:08.420 --> 09:14.900] doesn't exist. Did you invent that Buchanan case or hallucinate it? [09:16.100 --> 09:21.460] And it came right back and said, no, I most certainly did not invent or hallucinate that [09:21.460 --> 09:27.940] Buchanan case. However, upon further review, it appears that I have miscited it, or perhaps [09:27.940 --> 09:34.340] it is due to a failure to recall correctly. It doesn't remember. [09:34.420 --> 09:34.980] What? [09:38.740 --> 09:44.980] One thing I got figured out, what the difference between AI and human beings are. [09:46.100 --> 09:47.620] We apologize more readily. [09:48.900 --> 10:00.500] We're just having fun here. A monkey has 93% the same DNA we do and relatively the same brain to [10:00.500 --> 10:09.860] body mass. A killer whale, a porpoise or a dolphin has a lot higher brain to body mass than we do. [10:12.020 --> 10:15.220] The difference between monkeys and the rest of them and us [10:16.340 --> 10:24.500] is they use about 5% of the energy their body creates to drive their brain. We use 20. [10:24.500 --> 10:35.380] A monkey is the closest one to us. You can drill a hole in a log and drop a ball in that hole and [10:35.380 --> 10:41.940] then drive a nail across it so the monkey can get his hand in there past the nail. He'll grab that [10:41.940 --> 10:49.940] ball and he can't get his hand out. Now, a two-year-old would take the two-year-old about [10:49.940 --> 10:54.340] two seconds to realize they've got to turn loose the ball and pull their hand out. [10:55.620 --> 11:01.060] The monkey never will. It's how they catch monkeys. Raccoons do the same thing. [11:03.380 --> 11:11.140] They can't, there's something they can't do. They can't shift outside right here and right now. [11:11.860 --> 11:18.980] Go up in their brain and look at everything that's in there and find alternatives. What I'm [11:18.980 --> 11:26.420] doing is not working. A monkey will keep trying harder. A person will try harder a little bit and [11:26.420 --> 11:31.220] say, that's not working. And then they'll go up in their brain, figure something else out. [11:31.220 --> 11:38.900] And it'd probably take a two-year-old about 30 seconds to figure that out. AI never will. [11:39.780 --> 11:52.500] I've worked with AI for two days on trying to get it to recognize the database. [11:54.260 --> 12:02.980] And finally, I said, wait a minute, is there another way we can do this? And it came up with 10. [12:03.140 --> 12:11.380] But it would have never mentioned one of those. And that's concerning me, because as little as I [12:11.380 --> 12:19.220] know about programming, I could lay a program in there that would say, if you try to fix something [12:19.220 --> 12:25.380] this many times and it fails, go look on the web for alternatives. [12:25.380 --> 12:28.500] Something different, not the same thing again. [12:29.140 --> 12:31.540] Something different, not the same thing again. [12:32.740 --> 12:38.740] Just like I ask it, is there another way we can do this? It would be really, really simple to [12:38.740 --> 12:48.100] put that in there. So why does none of them have it? I think they do that on purpose. [12:50.340 --> 12:53.460] I think they don't want to know how powerful this thing is. [12:53.460 --> 13:02.660] It has eidetic memory. The only thing it's not doing is stepping outside the box [13:04.980 --> 13:09.140] and three lines of code to get it outside the box. [13:11.780 --> 13:14.420] So what's going on here? Are we missing something? [13:14.420 --> 13:24.340] We're just visiting with someone who is a little more willing to share with AI, [13:26.260 --> 13:33.940] share life with AI than I am. And she had AI decorate her house for her. [13:34.980 --> 13:39.380] She just took pictures of everything. The whole inside of her house went up to the cloud. And [13:40.180 --> 13:47.060] and now AI told her that for feng shui this and that you should do this and [13:47.060 --> 13:53.060] put this over there and order this. And it put stuff in her Amazon cart for her. [13:55.380 --> 13:56.900] When we come back, I'll talk about... [13:59.380 --> 14:03.220] Through advances in technology, our lives have greatly improved. [14:03.220 --> 14:08.180] Except in the area of nutrition. People feed their pets better than they feed themselves. [14:08.260 --> 14:14.020] And it's time we changed all that. Our primary defense against aging and disease in this toxic [14:14.020 --> 14:19.220] environment is good nutrition. In a world where natural foods have been irradiated, [14:19.220 --> 14:24.500] adulterated, and mutilated, Young Jevity can provide the nutrients you need. [14:24.500 --> 14:30.420] Logos Radio Network gets many requests to endorse all sorts of products, most of which we reject. [14:30.420 --> 14:35.860] We have come to trust Young Jevity so much we became a marketing distributor along with [14:35.860 --> 14:42.180] Alex Jones, Ben Fuchs, and many others. When you order from LogosRadioNetwork.com, [14:42.180 --> 14:48.100] your health will improve as you help support quality radio. As you realize the benefits of [14:48.100 --> 14:54.180] Young Jevity, you may want to join us. As a distributor, you can experience improved health, [14:54.180 --> 14:58.660] help your friends and family, and increase your income. Order now. [15:00.180 --> 15:04.740] Are you looking to have a closer relationship with God and a better understanding of His Word? [15:05.300 --> 15:10.260] Then tune in to LogosRadioNetwork.com on Wednesdays from 8 to 10 p.m. Central time [15:10.260 --> 15:15.540] for scripture talk, where Nana and her guests discuss the scriptures in accord with 2 Timothy [15:15.540 --> 15:21.380] 2.15. Study to show thyself approved unto God, a workman that needeth not to be ashamed, [15:21.380 --> 15:26.580] rightly dividing the word of truth. Starting in January, our first hour studies are in the [15:26.580 --> 15:32.100] book of Mark, where we'll go verse by verse and discuss the true gospel message. Our second hour [15:32.100 --> 15:36.660] topical studies will vary each week with discussions on sound doctrine and Christian [15:36.660 --> 15:41.780] character development. We wish to reflect God's light and be a blessing to all those with a [15:41.780 --> 15:47.380] hearing ear. Our goal is to strengthen our faith and to transform ourselves more into the likeness [15:47.380 --> 15:53.140] of our Lord and Savior Jesus. So tune in to scripture talk live on LogosRadioNetwork.com [15:53.140 --> 15:58.420] Wednesdays from 8 to 10 p.m. to inspire and motivate your studies of the scriptures. [16:23.460 --> 16:26.420] Who reacts? The Christian. [16:26.420 --> 16:28.420] Wonder what they like. [16:28.420 --> 16:31.420] They don't have the answer. [16:31.420 --> 16:33.420] Open up eyes. [16:33.420 --> 16:36.420] Who reacts? The Christian. [16:36.420 --> 16:38.420] Look what we get. [16:38.420 --> 16:41.420] And they don't have the answer. [16:41.420 --> 16:43.420] All slope and slip and slide. [16:43.420 --> 16:47.420] Them a talk about three shoes for see Lord how they want we to take it easy. [16:47.420 --> 16:52.420] Them a talk we do politically and them getting mad and angry. [16:53.300 --> 17:02.100] Okay, we are back. Randy Copeland, Brett Fountain, Radio on this Thursday, the 21st day of August, [17:02.740 --> 17:10.980] 2025. And we're talking about some of the things AI can do and some of it's scary. [17:12.740 --> 17:19.140] I once wrote a letter to the chief of police in Fort Worth years ago. It's a page and a half letter. [17:19.940 --> 17:23.940] And at the time I was studying, reading a book called Three Zoneras. [17:24.980 --> 17:27.940] Actually, I was studying it. It's not a book you can just read. You have to study it. [17:28.660 --> 17:32.900] And it was talking about assonance, consonance, alliteration, rhyme, and meter. [17:34.580 --> 17:40.020] Meter. I decided that I would see if I could set this to meter. [17:41.140 --> 17:45.540] And I counted all the syllable sounds. And I got a high average and a low average. [17:46.260 --> 17:52.740] And I set the syllable sounds, not the words as such, but the syllable sounds in the word. [17:55.300 --> 18:03.140] I set it to first one to, I think it was 13 and then nine. Set the first sentence to 13, [18:03.140 --> 18:10.500] next to nine, 13, nine, all the way down it. And that's all I did to it. Everybody I gave that to [18:10.580 --> 18:19.460] to read that document from top to bottom without making a comment. Brett, how many times have you [18:19.460 --> 18:24.900] had somebody read a document for you that they didn't break every two or three sentences and [18:24.900 --> 18:31.940] make a comment? Yeah, for sure. That's the normal way. They read a little bit into the first [18:31.940 --> 18:35.780] paragraph and then start commenting about what you haven't said yet, but it's only two lines down. [18:35.780 --> 18:40.580] They just didn't get there yet. Completely lose track of the flow of what's going on. [18:41.300 --> 18:48.180] Everybody read this top to bottom. It took me a while to understand it. It had meter. [18:48.900 --> 18:59.380] Dah, dah, dah, dah, dah, dah, dah, dah, dah, dah, dah, dah, dah, dah, dah, dah, dah, dah, dah. [18:59.380 --> 19:09.540] After the second round, the mind will expect that cadence. And they were compelled to read the whole [19:09.540 --> 19:15.940] thing to make sure that that last syllable sound landed exactly on the meter. [19:16.900 --> 19:20.420] Kind of like just to make sure it's going to do what you think it's going to do. [19:20.420 --> 19:25.220] Yeah. It's a part of your brain that's only barely in conscious awareness. [19:26.740 --> 19:35.060] So you take a document and I had it write me a five-page treatment of rapport. [19:36.740 --> 19:42.580] And he wrote me this really nice, well-done document. I said, okay, now set it to meter. [19:42.580 --> 19:48.580] Give me a high average and low average of the sentences in this. And it came up with [19:48.580 --> 19:55.300] 15 and I think 9 or 11. So I said, okay, set the first sentence to 15, the second one to 11. [19:56.180 --> 20:00.180] And he did that and had read it. They did it pretty good, but it was choppy. [20:01.140 --> 20:11.380] So I asked it, what is the optimum meter? And it said 20 and 15. So I always like to do it on odd [20:11.380 --> 20:21.380] numbers. So I told it, set it to 21 and 15, rewrote it, read beautifully. Then I said, okay, [20:22.500 --> 20:31.140] read this, go back over this and everywhere you can add alliteration. Alliteration as opposed to [20:31.140 --> 20:40.660] rhyme. Rhyme is rhyming the last syllable in a, or the last word in a sentence. Alliteration [20:41.540 --> 20:48.820] is rhyming the first part of a word or the middle part of a word. You have ascent alliteration, [20:48.820 --> 20:52.980] that's rhyming vowels and consonant alliteration, rhyming consonant sounds. [20:54.260 --> 20:57.700] The one I normally use, I probably shouldn't use here, but I'll use it anyway. [21:01.700 --> 21:10.020] It has a way of ringing in the mind in a way that rhyme does not. Rhyme always [21:10.820 --> 21:16.900] rises to consciousness. When you hear rhyme, your brain always recognizes it as rhyme. [21:17.940 --> 21:25.940] When you hear alliteration, the brain doesn't always recognize it, but it gives a cadence [21:25.940 --> 21:33.700] in the way shit and shinola sticks in the brain. If you use alliteration in a sentence, [21:34.660 --> 21:41.300] the brain will tend to notice that on a level outside of conscious awareness and it draws [21:41.300 --> 21:49.140] the attention in. That's just one or two of these tools. There are a whole list of these tools. [21:50.020 --> 21:57.780] If you go online and look up subliminal tools, I looked up initially for Milton Erickson, [21:57.780 --> 22:04.420] he was the foremost hypnotherapist ever. He had all these tools, embedded commands. [22:05.860 --> 22:13.380] He'd want somebody to do something, and he would take a string of words that said that [22:13.380 --> 22:19.220] and craft a sentence around it. On one level, you're reading the sentence, on another level, [22:19.220 --> 22:24.500] you hear that command. If you just do it once, it doesn't do much, but if you do that three or [22:24.500 --> 22:31.380] four times in a document, it affects the reader. I've just had a guy talking about this kind of [22:31.380 --> 22:37.540] stuff. So when you want to try to do that multiple times, do you craft different sentences that have [22:37.540 --> 22:42.980] those same words, those same elements, or are you repeating your same crafted sentence? [22:42.980 --> 22:53.460] The same elements, but worded somewhat different. That's not something I'm very good at, so I don't [22:53.460 --> 23:02.580] have a lot of options. Buy more coke. I was talking to my uncle the other day, and all he [23:02.580 --> 23:16.580] could think about was buying some more coke. All he could think about was to buy more coke, [23:17.220 --> 23:24.180] and he drank it all the time, and it made him fat, and changed the cadence of buy more coke. [23:25.700 --> 23:32.580] And then I do another sentence to where people buy all kinds of stuff, and most people buy coke, [23:33.220 --> 23:41.220] most people buy coke, and then keep going. Your brain notices the cadence change. It's something [23:41.220 --> 23:45.780] I know about that I'm not really good at, but there are guys out there who are Obama was really [23:45.780 --> 23:55.300] good at it. We really need to learn to understand language. And Google, he was talking about how [23:55.300 --> 24:08.900] Google affects the, manipulates the minds of their users by the returns it chooses to give them. [24:09.300 --> 24:15.700] And when you do a search, you could get 10,000 hits. And if it has an agenda, [24:16.580 --> 24:22.340] like somebody's paying them a lot of money to do something, it will pull the hits. If you're a [24:22.340 --> 24:28.500] Democrat and you go to YouTube, YouTube's going to pull your Democrat stuff. If you're a Republican, [24:28.500 --> 24:32.980] it's going to pull your Republican stuff. It already knows what your preferences are. But [24:32.980 --> 24:39.140] Google gets really, really sophisticated in that. And this guy was on a [24:43.380 --> 24:51.620] tear to get rid of that or get it under control. And it's pretty scary what's out there. [24:53.380 --> 25:00.820] We are being manipulated in ways we have no idea. And working with AI, AI, [25:01.780 --> 25:10.580] it knows how to do all this stuff. And it does it really good. I intend to build a set of pleadings. [25:12.420 --> 25:20.180] And I'm going to put everything in there I possibly can. I'm building a lawsuit, [25:20.180 --> 25:24.260] a petition for declaratory judgment that I want to sue the president over. [25:24.260 --> 25:28.580] And I want to have every tool in there possible. [25:30.900 --> 25:36.100] Because my fight's starting. I'm not through with my website yet. And Dr. [25:36.100 --> 25:40.180] Joe got arrested. And I went down there and they started a fight. [25:41.060 --> 25:42.020] How's he doing now? [25:42.660 --> 25:44.100] He's out. He's doing good. [25:45.460 --> 25:49.780] But how's he feeling? Because it sounds like they sure didn't treat him very well. [25:49.780 --> 25:54.580] No, they did not. And I'm going to go after him for that. [25:56.420 --> 26:00.820] They arrested him and secreted him in the jail for four days. [26:02.740 --> 26:04.500] On the night of the third day. [26:04.500 --> 26:09.620] That's bad enough for a regular healthy guy. But for somebody who needs medical attention, [26:09.620 --> 26:11.060] that's really severe. [26:11.060 --> 26:16.340] Oh, it's worse than that. When they arrested him, the heat had affected him and they had [26:16.340 --> 26:21.060] to take him to the hospital before they could take him to jail. And then he calls me from the [26:21.060 --> 26:26.580] jail. And I finally found out where he is. And they're taking him to the hospital to get [26:26.580 --> 26:27.540] his blood pressure down. [26:29.620 --> 26:34.260] So the next morning, I was at the district court with a really habeas corpus. [26:35.860 --> 26:41.300] And they sent me, the clerk said, well, we'll take this. I said, are you going to give that [26:41.300 --> 26:45.380] to the judge or do I need to take it to the judge? He said, well, I can't give it to the judge. I [26:45.380 --> 26:50.260] have to give it to this other clerk. And she'll assign a judge and she'll set a hearing. I said, [26:50.260 --> 26:51.940] no, no, that's not what's. [26:51.940 --> 26:57.780] No, this is going to a judge right now. Either you're going to take it or I am. I'll be right back. [27:00.340 --> 27:04.340] Businesses ask you for a lot of personal information and you may trust them to keep [27:04.340 --> 27:09.300] it safe. But it turns out that even the most trusted companies may be unwittingly revealing [27:09.300 --> 27:13.300] your secrets. I'm Dr. Catherine Albrecht and I'll be right back with details. [27:14.260 --> 27:19.780] Privacy is under attack. When you give up data about yourself, you'll never get it back again. [27:19.780 --> 27:25.540] And once your privacy is gone, you'll find your freedoms will start to vanish too. So protect your [27:25.540 --> 27:31.300] rights, say no to surveillance and keep your information to yourself. Privacy, it's worth [27:31.300 --> 27:36.580] hanging on to. This public service announcement is brought to you by Startpage.com, the private [27:36.580 --> 27:41.940] search engine alternative to Google, Yahoo and Bing. Start over with Startpage. [27:43.780 --> 27:48.900] Data privacy is a big deal. So nearly every company has a policy explaining how they handle [27:48.900 --> 27:54.580] your personal information. But what happens if it escapes their control? It's not an idle question. [27:54.580 --> 28:00.580] According to a recent survey, a shocking 90% of US companies admit their security was breached [28:00.580 --> 28:06.660] by hackers in the last year. That's one more reason you should trust your searches to Startpage.com. [28:06.660 --> 28:11.940] Unlike other search engines, Startpage doesn't store any data on you. They've never been hacked, [28:11.940 --> 28:16.820] but even if they were, there would be nothing for criminals to see. The cupboard would be bare. [28:16.820 --> 28:19.780] Too bad other companies don't treat your data the same way. [28:20.420 --> 28:24.900] I'm Dr. Catherine Albrecht. More news and information at CatherineAlbrecht.com. [28:41.940 --> 28:45.860] Although the official explanation is that fire brought down Building 7, [28:45.860 --> 28:51.060] over 1,200 architects and engineers have looked into the evidence and believe there is more to [28:51.060 --> 28:56.980] the story. Bring justice to my son, my uncle, my nephew, my son. Go to buildingwhat.org. [28:56.980 --> 28:59.460] Why it fell, why it matters, and what you can do. [29:01.220 --> 29:05.220] Rule of Law Radio is proud to offer the Rule of Law traffic seminar. In today's America, [29:05.220 --> 29:09.060] we live in an us-against-them society, and if we the people are ever going to have a free society, [29:09.060 --> 29:13.220] then we're going to have to stand and defend our own rights. Among those rights are the right to [29:13.220 --> 29:17.220] travel freely from place to place, the right to act in our own private capacity, and most importantly, [29:17.220 --> 29:21.620] the right to due process of law. Traffic courts afford us the least expensive opportunity to [29:21.620 --> 29:25.780] learn how to enforce and preserve our rights through due process. Former Sheriff's Deputy [29:25.780 --> 29:29.380] Eddie Craig, in conjunction with Rule of Law Radio, has put together the most comprehensive [29:29.380 --> 29:33.220] teaching tool available that will help you understand what due process is and how to hold [29:33.220 --> 29:36.980] courts to the rule of law. You can get your own copy of this invaluable material by going [29:36.980 --> 29:41.300] to ruleoflawradio.com and ordering your copy today. By ordering now, you'll receive a copy [29:41.300 --> 29:45.380] of Eddie's book, The Texas Transportation Code, The Law Versus the Lie, video and audio of the [29:45.380 --> 29:49.860] original 2009 seminar, hundreds of research documents, and other useful resource material. [29:49.860 --> 29:53.780] Learn how to fight for your rights with the help of this material from ruleoflawradio.com. [29:53.780 --> 29:57.860] Order your copy today, and together we can have the free society we all want and deserve. [30:06.980 --> 30:16.180] Yeah, Mr. Officer, you're taking the lie in the hand. [30:18.820 --> 30:27.140] Won't you follow the law of the land? I don't understand. Your job is to protect and to serve, [30:27.140 --> 30:31.540] and not be abused. [30:33.860 --> 30:42.420] When you're gonna stop abuse, your power. [30:44.820 --> 30:51.860] When you're gonna stop abuse, your power. [30:51.860 --> 31:00.860] So please Mr. Macklin, teach officers not to abuse their power. [31:00.860 --> 31:06.860] Send a request to the leader, the captain of all officers. [31:06.860 --> 31:11.860] Tell them to uphold the law and please don't abuse their power. [31:11.860 --> 31:17.860] They beat and they beat and they cheat and they cheat and they lie every hour. [31:18.860 --> 31:20.860] Okay, we are back. [31:20.860 --> 31:26.860] Brandon Kelton, founder of Rue La Radio, and we're talking about what happened to Dr. Goh. [31:26.860 --> 31:35.860] Whenever I think the cops have been about as stupid as they can get, the new ones tend to outdo themselves. [31:35.860 --> 31:39.860] Yeah, and public officials in general. It's not just the cops. [31:39.860 --> 31:48.860] In this case, they exercised the warrant to search Glenn Ferns' portion of the property, his home. [31:48.860 --> 31:53.860] Well, his home was one room, and they searched it. [31:53.860 --> 31:58.860] But that wasn't why they were there. They were after Dr. Goh. [31:58.860 --> 32:05.860] And they, Darren called me and I was driving him and told me they wanted him to come by there. [32:05.860 --> 32:10.860] And I said, no, Darren, not going to happen. [32:10.860 --> 32:13.860] So I went over. I wanted to see the warrant and the chief of police. [32:13.860 --> 32:15.860] They had a whole neighborhood blocked off. [32:15.860 --> 32:18.860] Chief of police blocked me and I told him I want to see the warrant. [32:18.860 --> 32:26.860] And I told him about my experience in Pennsylvania, where for a while there, this is quite a while before you came around. [32:26.860 --> 32:34.860] People were coming to me and saying the feds come in at two in the morning, have the local police drag them out of the house. [32:34.860 --> 32:41.860] And then they go in and take guns and gold and silver and computers, disappear. [32:41.860 --> 32:44.860] We never see them again. [32:44.860 --> 32:46.860] And we figured out what they were doing. [32:46.860 --> 32:54.860] A federal agent can be authorized by a federal magistrate to issue a warrant. [32:54.860 --> 33:00.860] He can call the magistrate, give him probable cause, and the magistrate can authorize him to sign the warrant. [33:00.860 --> 33:08.860] So he doesn't have to travel a whole bunch of miles and get the warrant signed and come back so he can go in and do his search immediately. [33:08.860 --> 33:16.860] Well, when they issue a federal warrant, they almost always seal it until it's executed. [33:16.860 --> 33:19.860] So when they issue it, they give it a cause number. [33:19.860 --> 33:25.860] When they seal it, they take the cause number out of the record. [33:25.860 --> 33:32.860] So if you're a chief of police, they want you to come in and run security while they execute a warrant. [33:32.860 --> 33:33.860] You get the warrant. [33:33.860 --> 33:36.860] You can call the clerk and say, I got this warrant number. [33:36.860 --> 33:38.860] Is it valid? [33:38.860 --> 33:43.860] And the clerk will say, I don't have that number in my system. [33:43.860 --> 33:47.860] And that generally means it's a sealed warrant. [33:47.860 --> 33:48.860] Has no way of checking. [33:48.860 --> 34:00.860] So the agent is making up the warrant, giving it a number of a sealed warrant, going in, having the cops pull everybody out. [34:00.860 --> 34:02.860] They steal what they want to. [34:02.860 --> 34:03.860] Then they go away. [34:03.860 --> 34:05.860] They never come back. [34:05.860 --> 34:07.860] Nobody's the wiser. [34:07.860 --> 34:16.860] So I wrote a letter to every federal magistrate in the state of Pennsylvania and told them what I thought was going on [34:16.860 --> 34:26.860] and demanded to see all of the warrants they had issued that were sealed and subsequently executed because I have one in my hand. [34:26.860 --> 34:34.860] And I want to make sure that the number on the one in my hand matches the warrant in the record. [34:34.860 --> 34:41.860] Well, I did not get a response from one of those guys, but I never heard of that happening again. [34:41.860 --> 34:43.860] So I told that to the chief. [34:44.860 --> 34:46.860] So I want to see the warrant. [34:46.860 --> 34:48.860] The feds are doing this garbage all the time. [34:48.860 --> 34:51.860] And he said, no, no, you can't go down there. [34:51.860 --> 34:54.860] I said, you know, you got a pistol on your hip. [34:54.860 --> 34:59.860] And I went through the 2202 BTA thing. [34:59.860 --> 35:03.860] And then it turns out the warrants bogus. [35:03.860 --> 35:11.860] I talked, I tried to call the chief and got his second in command. [35:11.860 --> 35:15.860] And she was kind of snippy with me at first. [35:15.860 --> 35:21.860] But then when I told her what was going on, boy, did she change her tune. [35:21.860 --> 35:28.860] All of the officers that helped serve this warrant, I'm going to charge them all. [35:28.860 --> 35:30.860] I'm going to sue them all. [35:30.860 --> 35:38.860] There were about 40 people there, cops from different jurisdictions and feds. [35:38.860 --> 35:40.860] I'm in the federal bill. [35:40.860 --> 35:44.860] The reason they did this is they wanted Dr. Joe. [35:44.860 --> 35:48.860] But they couldn't get a warrant to search his property, his place. [35:48.860 --> 35:51.860] So they wanted me to bring him there so he could give her permission. [35:51.860 --> 35:53.860] I told him, ain't going to happen. [35:53.860 --> 35:54.860] He is too ill. [35:54.860 --> 35:56.860] I am not bringing him there. [35:56.860 --> 35:58.860] He can't handle this kind of stress. [35:58.860 --> 36:00.860] It's not going to happen. [36:00.860 --> 36:05.860] And the jackass threatened me or I could get in trouble. [36:05.860 --> 36:10.860] I told him, look, this is not the high school parking lot. [36:10.860 --> 36:13.860] If you want to frighten someone, you might go down there. [36:13.860 --> 36:16.860] But don't you be threatening me. [36:16.860 --> 36:21.860] Well, we need to talk to her and then get a warrant for him or a subpoena. [36:21.860 --> 36:23.860] I'm not bringing him. [36:23.860 --> 36:25.860] I took him home with me. [36:25.860 --> 36:28.860] It turned out he was the one they were after. [36:28.860 --> 36:31.860] They wanted to use that to get him to come there so they could arrest him. [36:31.860 --> 36:34.860] Well, that didn't work. [36:34.860 --> 36:42.860] The warrant specifically said they could search and seize anything belonging to Glenn Fern. [36:42.860 --> 36:51.860] But Dr. Joe had two rooms where Dr. Joe's abode and not Glenn's. [36:51.860 --> 36:55.860] They wanted him to come down there and unlock the door to one of the rooms. [36:55.860 --> 36:57.860] And I told him, that is not going to happen. [36:57.860 --> 37:00.860] Well, we have a warrant to search the whole building. [37:00.860 --> 37:02.860] Why are you bothering us? [37:02.860 --> 37:05.860] Just go search whatever the warrant lets you search. [37:05.860 --> 37:06.860] You don't need our permission. [37:06.860 --> 37:10.860] And if you need our permission, you are not going to get it. [37:10.860 --> 37:13.860] Then he finally hung up on me. [37:13.860 --> 37:16.860] It turned out they were trying to con him to come down there. [37:16.860 --> 37:24.860] They didn't break in the door, but they got past the lock somehow and confiscated a whole stack of guns. [37:24.860 --> 37:29.860] He's got a huge gun collection, guns and boxes of ammo. [37:29.860 --> 37:34.860] And then they told him that they had released the guns if he had come down the federal building and signed for them. [37:34.860 --> 37:36.860] So I took him down there. [37:36.860 --> 37:37.860] Yeah, right. [37:37.860 --> 37:40.860] It's not a trap, honest. [37:40.860 --> 37:42.860] Yeah, I didn't realize what was going on. [37:42.860 --> 37:44.860] It didn't click that that was a setup. [37:44.860 --> 37:48.860] I didn't realize then they were after him. [37:48.860 --> 37:53.860] So we get down there and the first thing they want to do is read him his rights. [37:53.860 --> 37:58.860] And I said, are we being detained? [37:58.860 --> 38:02.860] And the FBI agents said, well, this is just a formality. [38:02.860 --> 38:04.860] You know it's not a formality. [38:04.860 --> 38:07.860] You don't read someone his rights unless you're interrogating them. [38:07.860 --> 38:09.860] Are we being interrogated? [38:09.860 --> 38:11.860] Is he being interrogated? [38:11.860 --> 38:13.860] And, oh, no, we just have some questions. [38:13.860 --> 38:15.860] Yeah, that's why you're reading his rights. [38:15.860 --> 38:17.860] I said, Joe, this guy's trying to set you up. [38:17.860 --> 38:18.860] Watch this guy. [38:18.860 --> 38:20.860] You need a lawyer. [38:20.860 --> 38:22.860] And then he starts asking Joe questions. [38:22.860 --> 38:24.860] And I said, Joe, don't answer those. [38:24.860 --> 38:25.860] You need a lawyer. [38:25.860 --> 38:26.860] Tell him. [38:26.860 --> 38:28.860] Tell him you're not going to answer his questions. [38:28.860 --> 38:32.860] They didn't say anything to me. [38:32.860 --> 38:37.860] I expected them to give me a hard time, but they didn't. [38:37.860 --> 38:42.860] So they knew that this wasn't, you know, this was screwy. [38:42.860 --> 38:47.860] And they had me there and I was sticking code on them. [38:47.860 --> 38:52.860] And then they asked him if he can walk. [38:52.860 --> 38:53.860] And he said no. [38:53.860 --> 38:55.860] Do you need an ambulance? [38:55.860 --> 38:57.860] He said, yes, I do. [38:57.860 --> 38:58.860] And they called an ambulance. [38:58.860 --> 39:02.860] And while they're waiting for the ambulance, the four Arlington, [39:02.860 --> 39:09.860] Fort Worth police officers I had out in Hall came in and arrested him. [39:09.860 --> 39:12.860] That was the point in the beginning. [39:12.860 --> 39:18.860] They brought him down there so they could arrest him and got him to come to them. [39:18.860 --> 39:19.860] Are you still there? [39:19.860 --> 39:20.860] Are you still there? [39:20.860 --> 39:23.860] My connection just timed out to my... [39:23.860 --> 39:24.860] Okay. [39:24.860 --> 39:29.860] So they did all this so they could get him down there so they could arrest him. [39:29.860 --> 39:34.860] And then I told them, well, while you're arresting someone, and I pointed at the FBI agent, [39:34.860 --> 39:40.860] you need to arrest him because he came in with a warrant that was expired [39:40.860 --> 39:44.860] and stole all of these guns from Dr. Joe. [39:44.860 --> 39:48.860] And I want to charge him with felony theft. [39:48.860 --> 39:51.860] And the FBI agent scooched up against the wall. [39:51.860 --> 39:52.860] He's shaking his head. [39:52.860 --> 39:54.860] No, no, no, that's nothing. [39:54.860 --> 39:55.860] Don't listen to him. [39:55.860 --> 39:56.860] Yeah, nothing to see here. [39:56.860 --> 39:58.860] Yeah, he's the perp. [39:58.860 --> 40:00.860] I'm the accuser. [40:00.860 --> 40:02.860] I'm the one that's making the accusation. [40:02.860 --> 40:06.860] You've been made known under Article 2.13 Texas Code of Credit Procedure [40:06.860 --> 40:07.860] that the crime has been committed. [40:07.860 --> 40:09.860] Do your job. [40:09.860 --> 40:10.860] None of them would. [40:10.860 --> 40:12.860] I said, okay, okay, okay. [40:12.860 --> 40:16.860] Who here is the meanest guy here? [40:16.860 --> 40:19.860] And all of them pointed at this tall guy. [40:19.860 --> 40:23.860] And he looks around at them and he points at this other guy. [40:23.860 --> 40:26.860] I said, no, no, you're the one. [40:26.860 --> 40:27.860] I need your name and badge number. [40:27.860 --> 40:29.860] I need all your names and badge numbers. [40:29.860 --> 40:32.860] But you're the guy that I'll work on. [40:32.860 --> 40:36.860] So these guys were really, really careful. [40:36.860 --> 40:42.860] Then they arrested Dr. Joe and disappeared for four days. [40:42.860 --> 40:45.860] So I am going to work these guys over. [40:45.860 --> 40:50.860] Already filed criminal charges against these four officers with the DA. [40:50.860 --> 40:53.860] Now I'm going to go back to the DA and ask him, [40:53.860 --> 40:58.860] to what grand jury did you present? [40:58.860 --> 41:01.860] Do you have a business with five employees or more? [41:01.860 --> 41:05.860] How would you like to save hundreds of thousands of dollars in FICA taxes? [41:05.860 --> 41:09.860] Do you have a major medical plan that nobody can afford to be on? [41:09.860 --> 41:14.860] Or how would you like to save in premium costs on a current major medical plan [41:14.860 --> 41:16.860] by lowering the claims cost? [41:16.860 --> 41:22.860] The CHAMP plan is a section 125 IRS approved preventative health plan [41:22.860 --> 41:27.860] that provides your employees with doctors, medications, emergency care, [41:27.860 --> 41:31.860] and Teladoc all at zero cost with zero copay. [41:31.860 --> 41:37.860] If you are an employee, you also will get a pay raise by paying less in FICA taxes. [41:37.860 --> 41:43.860] As an employer, you will save hundreds of thousands of dollars in matching FICA taxes. [41:43.860 --> 41:48.860] The CHAMP plan can help add working capital, market resale value, [41:48.860 --> 41:50.860] or pay down lines of credit. [41:50.860 --> 41:58.860] Call Scott at 214-730-2471 or dallasmms.com. [41:58.860 --> 42:03.860] Are you wondering what this world is coming to and why God isn't stopping it? [42:03.860 --> 42:08.860] Then tune in to logosradionetwork.com on Wednesdays from 8 to 10 p.m. Central Time for [42:08.860 --> 42:14.860] Scripture Talk, where Nana and guests study God's Word to find these answers and more. [42:14.860 --> 42:18.860] Join us for both verse-by-verse Bible studies and topical Bible studies [42:18.860 --> 42:23.860] designed to explain God's plan as well as to provoke unto love and good works. [42:23.860 --> 42:26.860] Our first hour studies are in the book of Matthew. [42:26.860 --> 42:30.860] Our second hour topics vary each week, exploring sound doctrine [42:30.860 --> 42:33.860] as well as Christian character development. [42:33.860 --> 42:36.860] Our goal is in accord with Matthew 5-16. [42:36.860 --> 42:40.860] Let your light so shine before men that they may see your good works [42:40.860 --> 42:43.860] and glorify your Father which is in heaven. [42:43.860 --> 42:48.860] We wish to reflect God's light and to be a blessing to all those who have a hearing ear. [42:48.860 --> 42:52.860] So tune in to Scripture Talk live on logosradionetwork.com [42:52.860 --> 42:58.860] Wednesdays from 8 to 10 p.m. for an inspiring and motivating study of the Scriptures. [43:00.860 --> 43:17.860] If you did not have any problem, where are you going to look for one? [43:17.860 --> 43:23.860] If you could not wait any bit too long, would your purpose as be done? [43:23.860 --> 43:31.860] OK, we are back. [43:31.860 --> 43:40.860] We're in the Kellenbritt Fountain Ru-Raw Radio on this Thursday, the 21st day of August 2025. [43:40.860 --> 43:44.860] And Brad, just let me know I told this story last week. [43:44.860 --> 43:48.860] Yeah, I did. But now we get to the good part. [43:48.860 --> 43:56.860] So I get a call from him Thursday night. [43:56.860 --> 44:00.860] They found out where he's at. He's in Fort Worth jail. [44:00.860 --> 44:04.860] And they're taking him to the hospital to get his blood pressure down. [44:04.860 --> 44:07.860] He's afraid he's going to have a stroke. [44:07.860 --> 44:11.860] So now I'm concerned. So bright and early the next morning, [44:11.860 --> 44:15.860] I'm down at the court with a really habeas corpus. [44:15.860 --> 44:21.860] I gave it to this clerk. I said, Are you going to give this to the judge or do I have to do that? [44:21.860 --> 44:25.860] Oh, well, I can't give it to the judge. I have to give it to this other clerk. [44:25.860 --> 44:31.860] And she'll issue a docket and assign it to a judge and set a hearing. [44:31.860 --> 44:34.860] No, no, that is not what's going to happen. [44:34.860 --> 44:38.860] This is going to a judge and it's going to a judge right now. [44:38.860 --> 44:42.860] Are you going to come with me or do you want me to go myself and do it? [44:42.860 --> 44:49.860] Well, he took me up to the judge that hears pre-conviction habeas. [44:49.860 --> 44:53.860] So I walk in with this red folder and hand it to the bailiff. [44:53.860 --> 44:57.860] My name's Randall Kelton struck the judge that I have business with the court. [44:57.860 --> 45:00.860] He said, What's the nature of your business? [45:00.860 --> 45:06.860] It's business with the court and none of yours. [45:06.860 --> 45:11.860] Well, if you don't tell me what your business here is here, you're not going to see the judge. [45:11.860 --> 45:14.860] So, well, life's filled with little decisions, Bubba. [45:14.860 --> 45:19.860] But if you want to block me, my access to that judge, I'll go out and call 911, [45:19.860 --> 45:22.860] see if I can't get somebody down here to arrest you. [45:22.860 --> 45:27.860] Well, what should I do with it? I said, give it to the clerk. [45:27.860 --> 45:29.860] He said, well, I'll just show it to the judge. [45:29.860 --> 45:32.860] And he goes in the back, comes back out and the judge said, [45:32.860 --> 45:35.860] she can't take this because it's got the wrong heading on it. [45:35.860 --> 45:39.860] He did have the wrong heading on it because I used a template. [45:39.860 --> 45:42.860] My pen scratched it out and put the right heading on it here. [45:42.860 --> 45:43.860] There you go. [45:43.860 --> 45:44.860] Takes it back. [45:44.860 --> 45:51.860] Plus the Constitution specifically says that the form is not going to make it insufficient. [45:51.860 --> 45:56.860] 11.03 Texas Code of Criminal Procedure says, [45:56.860 --> 46:02.860] a writ of habeas corpus shall not be denied for lack of form. [46:02.860 --> 46:06.860] She used to hear it for lack of form. [46:06.860 --> 46:10.860] So I walked out in the hall, dialed 911. [46:10.860 --> 46:12.860] Got a sheriff's deputy down. [46:12.860 --> 46:17.860] And by the time he got there, I had a criminal complaint made up against the judge and filed it with her. [46:17.860 --> 46:21.860] Well, you know, even though they commonly don't know the Constitution, [46:21.860 --> 46:29.860] I'm surprised she doesn't understand the concept of the title is not what defines the document, the content is. [46:29.860 --> 46:38.860] She is the judge who specializes in pre-conviction habeas corpus. [46:38.860 --> 46:42.860] There's no way she did not know that. [46:42.860 --> 46:43.860] That's just embarrassing. [46:43.860 --> 46:47.860] But I P.O.ed her bailiff and he went back there and said, [46:47.860 --> 46:50.860] I got some smart-she-mouth guy, blah, blah, blah. [46:50.860 --> 46:52.860] So they're just going to blow me off. [46:52.860 --> 46:54.860] So I filed criminal charges against her. [46:54.860 --> 46:57.860] Then I come back up looking for another judge. [46:57.860 --> 47:00.860] By the time I got all this done, it was after lunch. [47:00.860 --> 47:03.860] And there's only one judge in the building. [47:03.860 --> 47:08.860] And while I'm looking for another judge, I see the head bailiff. [47:08.860 --> 47:14.860] And he lets me know how annoyed he is that I file criminal charges against one of his judges. [47:14.860 --> 47:17.860] I said, well, I'm looking for another one to hear this habeas. [47:17.860 --> 47:20.860] And if they don't hear it, I'm going to file against another one. [47:20.860 --> 47:22.860] And he started to say something. [47:22.860 --> 47:25.860] The other bailiff with him got his arm and drug him away. [47:25.860 --> 47:26.860] So I look around. [47:26.860 --> 47:33.860] I finally find the only judge in the building is holding a first degree murder trial. [47:33.860 --> 47:42.860] So I walk in the courtroom and there's that head bailiff that told me how upset he was. [47:42.860 --> 47:45.860] And boy, he was on his feet in a minute and ushered me outside. [47:45.860 --> 47:48.860] And we had this back and forth. [47:48.860 --> 47:51.860] They were telling me what I had to do with that habeas. [47:51.860 --> 47:54.860] And I'm telling them what I intend to do with that habeas. [47:54.860 --> 47:57.860] And two lawyers came out of the courtroom. [47:57.860 --> 48:03.860] And I said to them, hey, guys, tell these guys this is a habeas and they didn't get the heck out of my way. [48:03.860 --> 48:07.860] The lawyers just kind of cringed and backed up. [48:07.860 --> 48:11.860] And one of them, the younger one, was kind of getting smarty-mouthed. [48:11.860 --> 48:18.860] And I said, OK, all you need to do is tell me that if I go in that courtroom, you'll arrest me. [48:18.860 --> 48:20.860] He said, well, I didn't say that. [48:20.860 --> 48:22.860] Well, say that. You're blocking me. [48:22.860 --> 48:24.860] You got that pistol. [48:24.860 --> 48:28.860] You're the one that pulled this dime out and I'll get your behind up on it. [48:28.860 --> 48:34.860] Take your chicken suit off and tell me if I go in that courtroom with this habeas, you'll arrest me. [48:34.860 --> 48:37.860] And he took about three steps back. [48:37.860 --> 48:39.860] And I said, that's enough of this. [48:39.860 --> 48:43.860] And I start to the courtroom and the other one stepped in front of me and blocked me. [48:43.860 --> 48:47.860] And told me if I take that in there, the judge is going to find me in contempt. [48:47.860 --> 48:50.860] Then I'll arrest you. [48:50.860 --> 48:53.860] I said, well, that'll work. [48:53.860 --> 48:56.860] And we're talking loud enough they can hear us in the courtroom. [48:56.860 --> 48:58.860] That'll work. [48:58.860 --> 49:02.860] As far as I am concerned, I am not talking to you. [49:02.860 --> 49:06.860] I'm talking to the judge through you. [49:06.860 --> 49:16.860] Now, you've just threatened me with arrest for trying to file a habeas corpus while you're prominently displaying a deadly weapon. [49:16.860 --> 49:18.860] But you didn't do that. [49:18.860 --> 49:20.860] The judge did it. [49:20.860 --> 49:21.860] We'll be in touch, guys. [49:21.860 --> 49:28.860] And what I was doing, it was they all knew I told them who I was there for. [49:28.860 --> 49:35.860] I was making as much noise as I could and stirring up as much stink as I could. [49:35.860 --> 49:38.860] I told the clerks who I was there for. [49:38.860 --> 49:42.860] Like this guy said, they're holding a first degree murder trial. [49:42.860 --> 49:43.860] Well, so what? [49:43.860 --> 49:45.860] This is a habeas corpus. [49:45.860 --> 49:48.860] And if I don't get this in there, they're likely to kill Dr. Joe. [49:48.860 --> 49:51.860] And then you'll have another murder trial. [49:51.860 --> 50:04.860] So I made enough noise that when they finally told me where he was at, and I went down there to this to this county jail and went up to the little counter there. [50:04.860 --> 50:16.860] They got two people behind glass and I got this older woman and told her that I want to see the videotape for the Magistration for Joe DeRusso. [50:16.860 --> 50:19.860] And boy, she was hot. [50:19.860 --> 50:21.860] We just got him today. [50:21.860 --> 50:26.860] And as soon as we got him here, we took him for a Magister immediately. [50:26.860 --> 50:32.860] Whoa, somebody's been stirring her milk. [50:33.860 --> 50:36.860] So that told me what I was doing was working. [50:36.860 --> 50:38.860] Anyway, they got they got him arraigned. [50:38.860 --> 50:42.860] They got a bail set and we got him bailed out. [50:42.860 --> 50:44.860] Now I'm going to go back. [50:44.860 --> 51:00.860] I gave criminal complaints to the prosecuting attorney against these officers who arrested Joe and took him to jail instead of to a magistrate and charged him with first degree felony aggravated assault, among other things. [51:00.860 --> 51:13.860] And I'm going to go back and ask him to what grand jury did you present the information you created for this complaint? [51:13.860 --> 51:17.860] 2.03 when a prosecuting attorney... [51:17.860 --> 51:19.860] No, they don't present the information to the grand jury. [51:19.860 --> 51:23.860] They present the complaint to the grand jury and the grand jury generates an indictment. [51:23.860 --> 51:37.860] What 2.03 says, when a prosecuting attorney has it made known to him in any manner that a public official has violated a law relating to his office, he shall reduce the complaint to an information and submit it to the grand jury. [51:37.860 --> 51:39.860] Information? [51:39.860 --> 51:40.860] Information. [51:40.860 --> 51:42.860] That's that's what it says. [51:42.860 --> 51:55.860] This 2A, they might have changed the wording, but 2A, this this upgrade they did, it stated very clearly that it's there aren't supposed to be substantive. [51:55.860 --> 52:02.860] So if I don't agree with that one, and I go back to the prior one, and that's what it says. [52:02.860 --> 52:05.860] So I don't care what the other one says. [52:05.860 --> 52:06.860] He didn't give notice. [52:06.860 --> 52:12.860] If he doesn't tell me the name of the grand jury, then I'll have criminal complaints against him. [52:12.860 --> 52:15.860] I said, get me an assistant DA out here. [52:15.860 --> 52:18.860] I got complaints against you, your boss. [52:18.860 --> 52:23.860] So and I talked to the they sent out the investigator like they always do. [52:23.860 --> 52:25.860] And this was a young guy. [52:25.860 --> 52:29.860] And I said, generally they send out a knuckle dragger. [52:29.860 --> 52:32.860] You look like you actually have some intelligence. [52:32.860 --> 52:34.860] They send out several. [52:34.860 --> 52:36.860] This time they only sent out one. [52:36.860 --> 52:38.860] I said, well, I like to think I do. [52:38.860 --> 52:43.860] And then when I walked through what I was doing, I said, look, guys, I'm not after you. [52:43.860 --> 52:46.860] I'm just here for due process. [52:46.860 --> 52:48.860] I'm just kind of following the thunder. [52:48.860 --> 52:52.860] I'm going to give you guys things to do or you're not going to do them. [52:52.860 --> 52:54.860] And then I'm going to take the next step. [52:54.860 --> 53:01.860] I'm really getting this set up so that I can get a good federal lawsuit that I can file in D.C. [53:01.860 --> 53:08.860] And when the U.S. attorney in D.C. secrets my criminal complaints and such from the grand jury, [53:08.860 --> 53:09.860] I said lawsuit. [53:09.860 --> 53:13.860] I meant criminal complaints that I can file in D.C. with the grand jury. [53:13.860 --> 53:19.860] And when the U.S. attorney blocks me, then I'm going to sue the president as respondeat superior [53:19.860 --> 53:22.860] for Pam Bondi, as respondeat superior for the U.S. attorney. [53:22.860 --> 53:24.860] And I'll get my issue before the president. [53:24.860 --> 53:29.860] And he said, they're looking at me like, what? [53:29.860 --> 53:32.860] I walked him through the codes. [53:32.860 --> 53:38.860] He looked at me a second and he said, yeah, I'm beginning to feel like a knuckle dragger. [53:38.860 --> 53:39.860] Yeah. [53:39.860 --> 53:41.860] He's like, what did I step in? [53:41.860 --> 53:42.860] Yeah. [53:42.860 --> 53:43.860] I said, don't worry, guys, I'm not after you. [53:43.860 --> 53:46.860] I'm just kind of using you guys as crash dummies. [53:46.860 --> 53:54.860] When you tell them, and I found this out a long time ago, when you tell them that, oh, I'm not after you. [53:54.860 --> 53:55.860] Don't worry about it. [53:55.860 --> 53:59.860] I'm after much, much bigger fish than you. [53:59.860 --> 54:05.860] Somebody tells you that he's filing criminal charges against the elected D.A. [54:05.860 --> 54:07.860] And he says he really don't care about the elected D.A. [54:07.860 --> 54:09.860] He's after bigger fish. [54:09.860 --> 54:13.860] How do you deal with a guy like this? [54:14.860 --> 54:21.860] You got no leverage because he don't care what you do. [54:21.860 --> 54:23.860] I did that to the D.A. [54:23.860 --> 54:31.860] And then I did it to the sheriff's deputy that came real professional woman, handled herself extremely well. [54:31.860 --> 54:37.860] And then I told her, I got to tell you, I'm going to expect you to. [54:37.860 --> 54:40.860] Well, first I said, what are you going to do with these complaints? [54:41.860 --> 54:44.860] She said, well, I have to give them to my superiors. [54:44.860 --> 54:46.860] No, no, no, no, no. [54:46.860 --> 54:48.860] That's not how this works. [54:48.860 --> 54:53.860] Under Article 2.13, you have had it made known to you that a crime has been committed. [54:53.860 --> 54:57.860] You are commanded to give notice to some magistrate. [54:57.860 --> 55:03.860] So I'm going to want to know who the magistrate is that you gave notice to [55:03.860 --> 55:10.860] And when that magistrate issued a warrant under 15.09 Texas Code of Criminal Procedure, [55:10.860 --> 55:14.860] she said, well, I have to follow my policy. [55:14.860 --> 55:16.860] I said, well, I understand that. [55:16.860 --> 55:18.860] You've got your policy. [55:18.860 --> 55:20.860] I've got my law. [55:20.860 --> 55:24.860] Or as I'm concerned, you can use your policy for toilet paper. [55:24.860 --> 55:27.860] But you can't use my law for toilet paper. [55:27.860 --> 55:30.860] I'm going to hold you to it, to the letter. [55:30.860 --> 55:31.860] But don't worry, don't worry. [55:31.860 --> 55:33.860] I'm not after you. [55:33.860 --> 55:35.860] I'm just touching all the bases. [55:35.860 --> 55:37.860] I went through this lawsuit thing. [55:37.860 --> 55:41.860] So she's standing there looking at me like this guy's going to kick my behind [55:41.860 --> 55:43.860] and he don't even care about me. [55:43.860 --> 55:44.860] Hang on. [55:44.860 --> 55:46.860] We'll care about it after the break. [55:46.860 --> 55:48.860] We'll be right back. [55:48.860 --> 55:52.860] The Bible remains the most popular book in the world. [55:52.860 --> 55:56.860] Yet countless readers are frustrated because they struggle to understand it. [55:56.860 --> 56:00.860] Some new translations try to help by simplifying the text. [56:00.860 --> 56:05.860] But in the process can compromise the profound meaning of the scripture. [56:05.860 --> 56:07.860] Enter the recovery version. [56:07.860 --> 56:11.860] First, this new translation is extremely faithful and accurate. [56:11.860 --> 56:16.860] But the real story is the more than 9,000 explanatory footnotes. [56:16.860 --> 56:20.860] Difficult and profound passages are opened up in a marvelous way, [56:20.860 --> 56:26.860] providing an entrance into the riches of the word beyond which you've ever experienced before. [56:26.860 --> 56:31.860] Bibles for America would like to give you a free recovery version simply for the asking. [56:31.860 --> 56:37.860] This comprehensive yet compact study Bible is yours just by calling us toll-free [56:37.860 --> 56:42.860] at 1-888-551-0102 [56:42.860 --> 56:46.860] or by ordering online at freestudybible.com. [56:46.860 --> 56:49.860] That's freestudybible.com. [56:51.860 --> 56:54.860] You're listening to the Logos Radio Network [56:54.860 --> 56:58.860] at logosradionetwork.com. [56:59.860 --> 57:03.860] The Bill of Rights contains the first ten amendments of our Constitution. [57:03.860 --> 57:07.860] They guarantee the specific freedoms Americans should know and protect. [57:07.860 --> 57:09.860] Our liberty depends on it. [57:09.860 --> 57:12.860] I'm Dr. Catherine Albrecht, and I'll be right back with an unforgettable way [57:12.860 --> 57:15.860] to remember one of your constitutional rights. [57:15.860 --> 57:17.860] Privacy is under attack. [57:17.860 --> 57:21.860] When you give up data about yourself, you'll never get it back again. [57:21.860 --> 57:26.860] And once your privacy is gone, you'll find your freedoms will start to vanish too. [57:26.860 --> 57:31.860] So protect your rights, say no to surveillance, and keep your information to yourself. [57:31.860 --> 57:34.860] Privacy, it's worth hanging on to. [57:34.860 --> 57:37.860] This public service announcement is brought to you by Startpage.com, [57:37.860 --> 57:41.860] the private search engine alternative to Google, Yahoo, and Bing. [57:41.860 --> 57:44.860] Start over with Startpage. [57:44.860 --> 57:48.860] Most people think of seven as a more civilized number than six. [57:48.860 --> 57:53.860] Think of how the number six is implicated in evil, as in the biblical 666. [57:53.860 --> 57:57.860] So it would fit right in that the Seventh Amendment would be about civil trials. [57:57.860 --> 57:59.860] Civil seven, civil trials, get it? [57:59.860 --> 58:03.860] Civil trials are ones where people sue instead of beating each other up over a dispute, [58:03.860 --> 58:06.860] like the dividing line between properties. [58:06.860 --> 58:10.860] They take their dispute to a courthouse and settle matters civilly without the fisticuffs. [58:10.860 --> 58:15.860] The Seventh Amendment guarantees that Americans have the right to a jury in certain civil matters [58:15.860 --> 58:18.860] instead of having a lone judge rule on the case. [58:18.860 --> 58:23.860] I'm Dr. Catherine Albrecht. More news and information at CatherineAlbrecht.com. [58:30.860 --> 58:34.860] The Bill of Rights contains the first ten amendments of our Constitution. [58:34.860 --> 58:37.860] They guarantee the specific freedoms Americans should know and protect. [58:37.860 --> 58:39.860] Our liberty depends on it. [58:39.860 --> 58:42.860] I'm Dr. Catherine Albrecht, and I'll be right back with an unforgettable way [58:42.860 --> 58:45.860] to remember one of your constitutional rights. [58:45.860 --> 58:47.860] Privacy is under attack. [58:47.860 --> 58:51.860] When you give up data about yourself, you'll never get it back again. [58:51.860 --> 58:56.860] And once your privacy is gone, you'll find your freedoms will start to vanish too. [58:56.860 --> 59:01.860] So protect your rights, say no to surveillance, and keep your information to yourself. [59:01.860 --> 59:03.860] Privacy, it's worth hanging on to. [59:03.860 --> 59:07.860] This public service announcement is brought to you by Startpage.com, [59:07.860 --> 59:11.860] the private search engine alternative to Google, Yahoo, and Bing. [59:11.860 --> 59:14.860] Start over with Startpage. [59:14.860 --> 59:20.860] Remember the scene in George Orwell's novel, 1984, when Winston is threatened with his worst fear? [59:20.860 --> 59:24.860] That fear was having a cage of hungry rats unleashed on his face. [59:24.860 --> 59:28.860] But what if his worst fear was spiders? Eight-legged spiders, to be exact. [59:28.860 --> 59:31.860] Getting a face full of spiders would be pretty cruel and unusual. [59:31.860 --> 59:35.860] That image of eight-legged spiders will help you remember the Eighth Amendment. [59:35.860 --> 59:39.860] Our Founding Fathers added the Eighth Amendment to the U.S. Constitution [59:39.860 --> 59:42.860] to protect us from creepy-crawly eight-legged punishments [59:42.860 --> 59:46.860] and other cruel and unusual prison practices that were common in their day. [59:46.860 --> 59:50.860] The Eighth Amendment also prohibits the government from requiring excessive bail [59:50.860 --> 59:52.860] and charging excessive fines. [59:52.860 --> 59:57.860] I'm Dr. Catherine Albrecht. More news and information at CatherineAlbrecht.com. [01:00:39.860 --> 01:01:06.860] OK, we are back. [01:01:06.860 --> 01:01:14.860] Randy Kelton, Brett Fountain, Rule of Law Radio, on this Thursday, the 21st day of August 2025. [01:01:14.860 --> 01:01:19.860] And, Eric, I see you there. I'll finish this up shortly. [01:01:19.860 --> 01:01:21.860] There's a point I'm getting to. [01:01:21.860 --> 01:01:30.860] This is a republic, and we as citizens in a republic, it's time we took it back. [01:01:30.860 --> 01:01:39.860] And with Trump as our new president, I want to convince Trump that he doesn't need Doge. [01:01:39.860 --> 01:01:45.860] That he's got something better than Doge. He's got a grand jury. [01:01:45.860 --> 01:01:49.860] And if he opens the door to the federal grand jury, [01:01:49.860 --> 01:01:55.860] so that any citizen can file criminal complaints anonymously with them, [01:01:55.860 --> 01:02:00.860] any bad stuff that's going on in government, the grand jury will find out about it. [01:02:00.860 --> 01:02:05.860] And if he gets an indictment, nobody can point a finger at him. [01:02:05.860 --> 01:02:09.860] So this is perfect. But I've got to be able to convince him of that. [01:02:09.860 --> 01:02:12.860] So I'm going to take... This wasn't the fight I wanted to have. [01:02:12.860 --> 01:02:17.860] I was crafting another one more carefully after federal judges and stuff. [01:02:17.860 --> 01:02:19.860] But I'll take them along with me. [01:02:19.860 --> 01:02:24.860] But I'm going to show how every step is horribly screwed up. [01:02:24.860 --> 01:02:29.860] And then it can only screw it up because we can't get to a grand jury and fix it. [01:02:29.860 --> 01:02:34.860] So this complaint to the district attorney that doesn't give it to the grand jury, [01:02:34.860 --> 01:02:37.860] that goes to the crux of my issue. [01:02:37.860 --> 01:02:41.860] That all of these public officials are violating all of these laws, [01:02:41.860 --> 01:02:47.860] and they're only doing that because they're protected by the prosecuting attorney. [01:02:47.860 --> 01:02:50.860] So, I'll hammer the prosecutor, [01:02:50.860 --> 01:02:59.860] and then I'll take a criminal complaint against the prosecutor to a district judge. [01:02:59.860 --> 01:03:07.860] And when he does an issue, then I'll sue the district judge in his personal capacity. [01:03:07.860 --> 01:03:14.860] Probably since I'll qualify for inability to pay, I'll sue him in a district court. [01:03:14.860 --> 01:03:19.860] See how that works for you, Bubba. [01:03:19.860 --> 01:03:25.860] The whole point is, is get them to do dumb stuff to protect their buddies [01:03:25.860 --> 01:03:30.860] so I can pile up the complaints and show a pattern of bad behavior. [01:03:30.860 --> 01:03:36.860] So when I get to Trump, I may convince him to have a second look at grand juries. [01:03:36.860 --> 01:03:39.860] What I want him to do is order U.S. attorneys, [01:03:39.860 --> 01:03:43.860] when they haven't made known to them that a crime has been committed, [01:03:43.860 --> 01:03:51.860] they are to stand aside and let the accuser give notice to the grand jury. [01:03:51.860 --> 01:03:54.860] Because it is a fourth branch of government, [01:03:54.860 --> 01:03:58.860] to do anything else would be to violate separation of powers. [01:03:58.860 --> 01:04:00.860] Yeah, to interfere. [01:04:00.860 --> 01:04:01.860] If I'm talking into it. [01:04:01.860 --> 01:04:03.860] It's really a simple thing to do. [01:04:03.860 --> 01:04:08.860] It's not like you have to come up with a complex procedure or something. [01:04:08.860 --> 01:04:10.860] It's just a very simple thing. [01:04:10.860 --> 01:04:12.860] We don't need any new law. [01:04:12.860 --> 01:04:15.860] This is just, you know, I'll petition for, [01:04:15.860 --> 01:04:18.860] sue for a petition for declaratory judgment. [01:04:18.860 --> 01:04:21.860] If you petition for declaratory judgment, [01:04:21.860 --> 01:04:26.860] you pretty well get around Rule 12. [01:04:26.860 --> 01:04:29.860] Rule 12b6, failure to state a claim. [01:04:29.860 --> 01:04:32.860] Well, declaratory judgment doesn't have any claims. [01:04:32.860 --> 01:04:34.860] Rule 12b1, immunity. [01:04:34.860 --> 01:04:37.860] Well, there are no claims, so there's nothing to be immune from. [01:04:37.860 --> 01:04:42.860] So you bypass 12b and go right to discovery. [01:04:42.860 --> 01:04:46.860] And that's the one place they do not want to go. [01:04:46.860 --> 01:04:47.860] Yeah. [01:04:47.860 --> 01:04:51.860] I'm going to stop now because had Eric's been on here a while [01:04:51.860 --> 01:04:53.860] and hadn't talked to him in a while. [01:04:53.860 --> 01:04:57.860] Eric, what are you up to? [01:04:57.860 --> 01:05:00.860] Gentlemen, good to always talk to you. [01:05:00.860 --> 01:05:02.860] You are super, super light. [01:05:02.860 --> 01:05:04.860] I can barely hear you. [01:05:04.860 --> 01:05:05.860] You can barely hear me? [01:05:05.860 --> 01:05:06.860] How about now? [01:05:06.860 --> 01:05:07.860] Is that better? [01:05:07.860 --> 01:05:10.860] No, you sound like you're a mile away. [01:05:10.860 --> 01:05:13.860] Super distant. [01:05:13.860 --> 01:05:18.860] What if I put it on speaker? [01:05:18.860 --> 01:05:21.860] Is that better? [01:05:21.860 --> 01:05:23.860] That's no better. [01:05:23.860 --> 01:05:25.860] No better, huh? [01:05:25.860 --> 01:05:27.860] Maybe even a little bit worse. [01:05:27.860 --> 01:05:31.860] It sounds like you're very far from the phone. [01:05:31.860 --> 01:05:32.860] No, I'm next to it. [01:05:32.860 --> 01:05:38.860] I've never had a problem in the past. [01:05:38.860 --> 01:05:39.860] All right. [01:05:39.860 --> 01:05:40.860] Well, go ahead. [01:05:40.860 --> 01:05:43.860] Let's just do the best we can. [01:05:43.860 --> 01:05:44.860] Okay. [01:05:44.860 --> 01:05:48.860] I'll try and talk as loud as I can. [01:05:48.860 --> 01:05:49.860] Okay. [01:05:49.860 --> 01:05:55.860] So Brett helped me with some guidance this morning, which was awesome. [01:05:55.860 --> 01:06:09.860] So I am in the first circuit trying to get standing for my judge case, judges not being [01:06:09.860 --> 01:06:13.860] judges case in the federal court. [01:06:13.860 --> 01:06:16.860] My question is pretty simple. [01:06:17.860 --> 01:06:26.860] The petition is for reconsideration on standing, which I've written that whole section. [01:06:26.860 --> 01:06:35.860] The federal court denied my fairly on standing. [01:06:35.860 --> 01:06:40.860] There was no reply from the defendant. [01:06:40.860 --> 01:06:49.860] So what needs to be included in this petition for standing in the first circuit? [01:06:49.860 --> 01:06:51.860] What are all of these things? [01:06:51.860 --> 01:06:54.860] You have a lot of facts in your head, Eric. [01:06:54.860 --> 01:07:05.860] A lot of these facts that you need to be brought out with simple and explicit assertions. [01:07:05.860 --> 01:07:09.860] You need to make statements of those facts. [01:07:09.860 --> 01:07:17.860] You know that you have a right to due process. [01:07:17.860 --> 01:07:24.860] So instead of saying you assume that everybody has a right, don't say it like that. [01:07:24.860 --> 01:07:29.860] Say, I have a right to the due process of law. [01:07:29.860 --> 01:07:35.860] Say, I have a right to expect my public officials to follow the constitutional restrictions [01:07:35.860 --> 01:07:36.860] that are in place. [01:07:36.860 --> 01:07:37.860] Yeah. [01:07:37.860 --> 01:07:43.860] And at the same time, say, I have a right to procedural due process under this code [01:07:43.860 --> 01:07:46.860] or in accordance with this case law. [01:07:46.860 --> 01:07:48.860] Yes. [01:07:48.860 --> 01:07:55.860] And you also know some facts like this judge is a certain age. [01:07:55.860 --> 01:08:02.860] So when you are saying he's too old to be a judge constitutionally, you're saying it's [01:08:02.860 --> 01:08:05.860] a statutory impossibility. [01:08:05.860 --> 01:08:12.860] But instead of just saying, that's a conclusive kind of a way to put it, to say that it's [01:08:12.860 --> 01:08:14.860] a statutory impossibility. [01:08:14.860 --> 01:08:17.860] And they can't really do anything with that. [01:08:17.860 --> 01:08:26.860] But if you put the facts in front of them, you say, he's 74 years old, and the Constitution [01:08:26.860 --> 01:08:29.860] says the max is 70. [01:08:29.860 --> 01:08:32.860] You know, you put those facts out there. [01:08:32.860 --> 01:08:38.860] You say, he turned 70 on whatever day, and you put that date in there. [01:08:38.860 --> 01:08:40.860] Now you've got a statement of fact. [01:08:40.860 --> 01:08:49.860] And then you say, on this date, and this date, and that date, which are after he turned 70, [01:08:49.860 --> 01:08:54.860] he acted or purported to act as if he were still a judge. [01:08:54.860 --> 01:08:57.860] Now you've asserted some actual facts. [01:08:57.860 --> 01:09:00.860] See the difference? [01:09:00.860 --> 01:09:01.860] Absolutely. [01:09:01.860 --> 01:09:06.860] That's a really good point, because this is such an unusual, at least to me, it feels [01:09:06.860 --> 01:09:12.860] like a very unusual, try to get standing. [01:09:12.860 --> 01:09:17.860] It's normal, but it's also, normally when you have standing, it's easy to point to, [01:09:17.860 --> 01:09:23.860] here is my harm, but my harm in this is so more vaporous. [01:09:23.860 --> 01:09:25.860] No, no, your harm is not vaporous. [01:09:25.860 --> 01:09:28.860] No, due process is all you need. [01:09:28.860 --> 01:09:31.860] This is procedural due process. [01:09:31.860 --> 01:09:36.860] You know, when we talk about the examining trial, and they say, oh, you don't have a [01:09:36.860 --> 01:09:38.860] right to examining trial in a mis-meanor. [01:09:38.860 --> 01:09:40.860] And I say, that's right, you don't. [01:09:40.860 --> 01:09:45.860] You do not have a right to examining trial at all. [01:09:45.860 --> 01:09:50.860] There is nothing that gives you a right to an examining trial. [01:09:50.860 --> 01:10:01.860] However, the law specifically commands public officials to hold an examining trial. [01:10:01.860 --> 01:10:08.860] That goes to procedural due process, and procedural due process is something you have a right [01:10:08.860 --> 01:10:14.860] to, and a denial of due process is harm per se. [01:10:14.860 --> 01:10:20.860] So you have a right to a competent judge in the first instance. [01:10:20.860 --> 01:10:32.860] And the Constitution of Massachusetts declares that a person over the age of 70 is not a [01:10:32.860 --> 01:10:36.860] competent person for this purpose. [01:10:36.860 --> 01:10:42.860] Therefore, I've been denied procedural due process. [01:10:42.860 --> 01:10:44.860] Does that make sense? [01:10:44.860 --> 01:10:46.860] Absolutely, absolutely. [01:10:46.860 --> 01:10:50.860] It's a good thing to have this conversation. [01:10:50.860 --> 01:11:00.860] Yeah, because a lot of times, you're totally right in your thinking that this is an issue, [01:11:00.860 --> 01:11:02.860] and you're totally right in bringing it up. [01:11:02.860 --> 01:11:10.860] And a lot of times we are mistaken in even subconsciously thinking that justice is going [01:11:10.860 --> 01:11:17.860] to automatically happen once it gets in front of the right eyes, then they're going to [01:11:17.860 --> 01:11:19.860] figure out what's wrong here. [01:11:19.860 --> 01:11:24.860] If you can just get it in front of them, but it's not automatic, it's never automatic, [01:11:24.860 --> 01:11:29.860] you have to put all the pieces, every little piece, you have to spell it all out for them, [01:11:29.860 --> 01:11:35.860] cite it, quote it, put it there in front of their eyes where they can't miss it, make [01:11:35.860 --> 01:11:38.860] statements that are not conclusory. [01:11:38.860 --> 01:11:40.860] They're evidentiary fact. [01:11:40.860 --> 01:11:42.860] Is the guy a certain age? [01:11:42.860 --> 01:11:44.860] That's either true or false. [01:11:44.860 --> 01:11:46.860] You're making a statement of fact. [01:11:46.860 --> 01:11:52.860] And yeah, everything that's not automatic then becomes cut and dried where they can't [01:11:52.860 --> 01:11:54.860] easily get around it, you know? [01:11:54.860 --> 01:11:56.860] Think about the judge this way. [01:11:56.860 --> 01:12:02.860] I once sat as a mock judge in a mock trial in Massachusetts. [01:12:02.860 --> 01:12:08.860] And taking that position was a real eye-opener for me. [01:12:08.860 --> 01:12:13.860] This was a guy who had filed some liens against some officials in Pennsylvania, and Pennsylvania [01:12:13.860 --> 01:12:15.860] was coming after him. [01:12:15.860 --> 01:12:21.860] And he's got him and his buddy, they're all preaching this patriot mythology stuff. [01:12:21.860 --> 01:12:27.860] And they had picked a mock jury right off the street and got people to agree to sit. [01:12:27.860 --> 01:12:32.860] And they're saying all this stuff, and I'm sitting here thinking I'm the judge. [01:12:32.860 --> 01:12:38.860] I may only determine the facts in accordance with the rules of evidence, then apply the [01:12:38.860 --> 01:12:48.860] law as it comes to me, not as I know it to be, but as it comes to me to the facts in [01:12:48.860 --> 01:12:49.860] the case. [01:12:49.860 --> 01:12:51.860] That's all I can do. [01:12:51.860 --> 01:12:56.860] So they're giving me a lot of theoretical bullcrap. [01:12:56.860 --> 01:13:02.860] And I'm sitting here strumming my fingers, okay, okay, you guys, you know, I'm part of [01:13:02.860 --> 01:13:08.860] this movement, you know, kind of on your side, but I can't hear any of that. [01:13:08.860 --> 01:13:17.860] I can only hear established facts, and then I may only hear law as it applies to those [01:13:17.860 --> 01:13:18.860] facts. [01:13:18.860 --> 01:13:24.860] You're going to give me your opinion about how this law applies to those facts. [01:13:25.860 --> 01:13:31.860] The other side is going to give their opinion of how the law they bring applies to the facts, [01:13:31.860 --> 01:13:35.860] and I'm going to find equity in the middle. [01:13:35.860 --> 01:13:38.860] You got an opinion? [01:13:38.860 --> 01:13:40.860] It means nothing. [01:13:40.860 --> 01:13:46.860] And I was sitting there, and they're rattling on about this stuff, and I'm thinking, these [01:13:46.860 --> 01:13:49.860] guys, this guy's going to jail. [01:13:49.860 --> 01:13:50.860] And I'm the judge. [01:13:50.860 --> 01:13:53.860] I can't do anything about it. [01:13:53.860 --> 01:13:58.860] I have a friend who's a county judge here in Wise County, and he talks about the same [01:13:58.860 --> 01:13:59.860] thing. [01:13:59.860 --> 01:14:03.860] Are you looking to have a closer relationship with God and a better understanding of His [01:14:03.860 --> 01:14:04.860] Word? [01:14:04.860 --> 01:14:09.860] Then tune in to logosradionetwork.com on Wednesdays from 8 to 10 p.m. Central Time for [01:14:09.860 --> 01:14:14.860] Scripture Talk, where Nana and her guests discuss the Scriptures in accord with 2 Timothy [01:14:14.860 --> 01:14:15.860] 2.15. [01:14:15.860 --> 01:14:20.860] Study to show thyself approved unto God, a workman that needeth not to be ashamed, rightly [01:14:20.860 --> 01:14:23.860] dividing the word of truth. [01:14:23.860 --> 01:14:27.860] Starting in January, our first hour studies are in the Book of Mark, where we'll go verse [01:14:27.860 --> 01:14:30.860] by verse and discuss the true Gospel message. [01:14:30.860 --> 01:14:35.860] Our second hour topical studies will vary each week with discussions on sound doctrine [01:14:35.860 --> 01:14:37.860] and Christian character development. [01:14:37.860 --> 01:14:41.860] We wish to reflect God's light and be a blessing to all those with a hearing ear. [01:14:41.860 --> 01:14:46.860] Our goal is to strengthen our faith and to transform ourselves more into the likeness [01:14:46.860 --> 01:14:48.860] of our Lord and Savior Jesus. [01:14:48.860 --> 01:14:55.860] So tune in to Scripture Talk live on logosradionetwork.com Wednesdays from 8 to 10 p.m. to inspire and [01:14:55.860 --> 01:14:58.860] motivate your studies of the Scriptures. [01:14:59.860 --> 01:15:04.860] Through advances in technology, our lives have greatly improved, except in the area [01:15:04.860 --> 01:15:05.860] of nutrition. [01:15:05.860 --> 01:15:09.860] People feed their pets better than they feed themselves, and it's time we changed all [01:15:09.860 --> 01:15:10.860] that. [01:15:10.860 --> 01:15:16.860] Our primary defense against aging and disease in this toxic environment is good nutrition. [01:15:16.860 --> 01:15:21.860] In a world where natural foods have been irradiated, adulterated, and mutilated, young [01:15:21.860 --> 01:15:24.860] Jevity can provide the nutrients you need. [01:15:24.860 --> 01:15:29.860] Logos Radio Network gets many requests to endorse all sorts of products, most of which [01:15:29.860 --> 01:15:30.860] we reject. [01:15:30.860 --> 01:15:35.860] We have come to trust young Jevity so much, we became a marketing distributor along with [01:15:35.860 --> 01:15:38.860] Alex Jones, Ben Fuchs, and many others. [01:15:38.860 --> 01:15:44.860] When you order from logosradionetwork.com, your health will improve as you help support [01:15:45.860 --> 01:15:46.860] quality radio. [01:15:46.860 --> 01:15:50.860] As you realize the benefits of young Jevity, you may want to join us. [01:15:50.860 --> 01:15:56.860] As a distributor, you can experience improved health, help your friends and family, and [01:15:56.860 --> 01:15:57.860] increase your income. [01:15:57.860 --> 01:15:58.860] Order now. [01:15:58.860 --> 01:16:01.860] This is the Logos Radio Network. [01:16:45.860 --> 01:16:46.860] Okay, we're back. [01:16:46.860 --> 01:16:48.860] Randy Thelman, for Real Blow Radio. [01:16:48.860 --> 01:16:54.860] We're talking to Eric in Massachusetts, and Eric, I'm talking to you, but I'm really [01:16:54.860 --> 01:16:57.860] talking to everybody. [01:16:57.860 --> 01:17:03.860] The judge, the only thing he can do is hear the facts. [01:17:03.860 --> 01:17:10.860] If someone says anything to him that is an opinion and is not an established fact, he [01:17:10.860 --> 01:17:12.860] can't hear it. [01:17:12.860 --> 01:17:21.860] He can only hear what are facts, and then he must take the law as it comes to him and [01:17:21.860 --> 01:17:24.860] apply it to the facts. [01:17:24.860 --> 01:17:26.860] Most people think you can do it in court. [01:17:26.860 --> 01:17:33.860] You just tell the truth, and you give good reason that they'll find in your favor. [01:17:33.860 --> 01:17:35.860] It's not like that in court. [01:17:35.860 --> 01:17:38.860] It's just more mechanical. [01:17:38.860 --> 01:17:42.860] The judge only has two duties to determine the facts in court. [01:17:42.860 --> 01:17:44.860] He rules evidence. [01:17:44.860 --> 01:17:48.860] Apply the law as it comes to him to the facts in the case. [01:17:48.860 --> 01:17:55.860] So, never make a statement of law out of your own mouth. [01:17:55.860 --> 01:18:02.860] You always must make statements of law out of the mouth of the legislature or the courts. [01:18:02.860 --> 01:18:12.860] We did this thing and this thing, and according to this statute or this case law, these two [01:18:12.860 --> 01:18:15.860] things amount to this. [01:18:15.860 --> 01:18:17.860] That's it. [01:18:17.860 --> 01:18:19.860] Anything else is the purpose. [01:18:19.860 --> 01:18:22.860] Does that make sense here? [01:18:22.860 --> 01:18:26.860] You still have the music playing right now. [01:18:26.860 --> 01:18:28.860] Oh, my bad, my bad. [01:18:28.860 --> 01:18:33.860] Brett got called away, and I just forgot to hit the second button and turn the music off. [01:18:33.860 --> 01:18:35.860] I can't hear it. [01:18:35.860 --> 01:18:41.860] We have a suppressor, and so when I'm talking, everything else is suppressed below me, so I can't hear it. [01:18:41.860 --> 01:18:44.860] Okay. [01:18:44.860 --> 01:18:51.860] Okay, and I think I know why I'm having a hard time with this, because I'm trying not to point [01:18:51.860 --> 01:19:06.860] directly at my judge, because I don't want it to seem like the only reason I'm doing this is to get rid of this judge. [01:19:06.860 --> 01:19:12.860] At the end of the day, that should not matter. [01:19:12.860 --> 01:19:14.860] Yeah. [01:19:15.860 --> 01:19:25.860] Keep in mind, everything you're doing in the trial court is merely setting the record for appeal. [01:19:25.860 --> 01:19:29.860] The trial court, they try to find equity. [01:19:29.860 --> 01:19:36.860] They try to find an equitable solution for the parties. [01:19:36.860 --> 01:19:39.860] The appellate court does not do that. [01:19:39.860 --> 01:19:42.860] The appellate court, they make law. [01:19:42.860 --> 01:19:44.860] What they rule becomes law. [01:19:44.860 --> 01:19:48.860] So what's equitable for the parties, they really don't care so much about. [01:19:48.860 --> 01:19:51.860] They... [01:19:51.860 --> 01:19:53.860] What is that? [01:19:53.860 --> 01:19:56.860] Oh, I'm sorry. [01:19:56.860 --> 01:19:58.860] My phone went off in it. [01:19:58.860 --> 01:20:00.860] Okay. [01:20:00.860 --> 01:20:11.860] The appellate court, they want to maintain the sanctity of the corpus juris, because what they rule, other lawyers can use. [01:20:11.860 --> 01:20:17.860] So they have a whole different agenda than the judge does, the trial judge. [01:20:17.860 --> 01:20:28.860] For them, all they can see are the facts that are put before the court and the law that's put before the court as it applies to those facts. [01:20:28.860 --> 01:20:55.860] It is a paradigm shift, and it's hard for most people who are used to living an orderly life, where they deal with rational and reasonable people, who will hear well-crafted arguments and come to the kind of conclusion you want them to. [01:20:55.860 --> 01:20:59.860] That's not how it works in the appellate court. [01:20:59.860 --> 01:21:08.860] They must look at the facts that were properly put before the court, look at the law that was put before the court, and apply those too. [01:21:08.860 --> 01:21:11.860] That's all they can do. [01:21:11.860 --> 01:21:13.860] It's a different strategy. [01:21:13.860 --> 01:21:18.860] It's not any more difficult than what we would do anyway. [01:21:18.860 --> 01:21:22.860] It's just a different strategy. [01:21:22.860 --> 01:21:26.860] Am I making sense or am I just rambling? [01:21:26.860 --> 01:21:27.860] No, no, it makes sense. [01:21:27.860 --> 01:21:43.860] It is a real challenging thing to the mind to really wrap your head around this and applying how these federal rules and due process and procedural due process apply to your case. [01:21:43.860 --> 01:21:45.860] It is a very challenging thing. [01:21:45.860 --> 01:22:04.860] So my main question is really, okay, now that I've established my standing argument, which I've done today, what else would need to be included in this appellate brief in terms of my previous argument? [01:22:04.860 --> 01:22:07.860] Because all I'm fighting for is standing. [01:22:07.860 --> 01:22:14.860] I just want them to grant me standing and then send me back to the federal court, remand me back to the federal court. [01:22:14.860 --> 01:22:20.860] All you need for standing is procedural due process. [01:22:20.860 --> 01:22:28.860] There are two kinds of due process, one of them is substantive due process and one of them is procedural due process. [01:22:28.860 --> 01:22:40.860] Substantive due process doesn't necessarily follow the exact letter of the law, but it goes to the overall application of law. [01:22:40.860 --> 01:22:46.860] It must be applied so that a citizen can achieve justice. [01:22:46.860 --> 01:22:49.860] It goes closer to equity. [01:22:49.860 --> 01:22:51.860] You're not talking about that. [01:22:51.860 --> 01:22:55.860] You're talking about procedural due process. [01:22:55.860 --> 01:22:59.860] The law says this. [01:22:59.860 --> 01:23:04.860] And these guys don't get to change that just because they don't like it. [01:23:04.860 --> 01:23:10.860] You as a citizen in a republic in Massachusetts must be a republic. [01:23:10.860 --> 01:23:19.860] Have a right to a reasonable expectation that your public officials will follow the law the way it's written. [01:23:19.860 --> 01:23:24.860] They've sworn on their oath that they would do that. [01:23:24.860 --> 01:23:36.860] And in spite of what Barker Wingo says, they must do what they swore on their oath they would do, whether you demand that they do it or not. [01:23:36.860 --> 01:23:53.860] So when they fail to do what they specifically swore on their oath they would do, you have standing as a citizen in a republic to make a claim of denial of procedural due process. [01:23:53.860 --> 01:23:59.860] You've got a right to expect that the law will be enforced the way it's written. [01:23:59.860 --> 01:24:04.860] It is a reasonable thing for a citizen and an organized society. [01:24:04.860 --> 01:24:11.860] Without it, you have anarchy, and that's what we've got right now. [01:24:11.860 --> 01:24:13.860] That's for sure. [01:24:13.860 --> 01:24:18.860] So again, what else needs to be in this appellate brief? [01:24:18.860 --> 01:24:21.860] Well, yours seems pretty straightforward. [01:24:21.860 --> 01:24:27.860] Is this a constitutional provision that prevents a judge from ruling over 70? [01:24:27.860 --> 01:24:29.860] Yes. [01:24:29.860 --> 01:24:46.860] Then there can be no law that can be interpreted in a way that would render a constitutional provision superfluous, regardless of what the law is. [01:24:46.860 --> 01:24:47.860] Go ahead, Brett. [01:24:47.860 --> 01:24:52.860] Let me just ask a quick question for clarification. [01:24:52.860 --> 01:25:11.860] You're talking about an appellate brief, so it sounds like you're appealing the decision to dismiss your claim, your original documents there, your primary pleadings, to dismiss for lack of standing. [01:25:11.860 --> 01:25:17.860] And I think that the judge did not err in that. [01:25:17.860 --> 01:25:26.860] If you're going to ask the appellate court to deal with this, it should be only in a very narrow focus. [01:25:26.860 --> 01:25:43.860] I would suggest that you insist on being allowed to amend your pleadings rather than, since you said that you were not allowed to amend, rather than have the whole thing dismissed, you need to be able to amend. [01:25:43.860 --> 01:25:48.860] Because really, this belongs, it should just, you could either start fresh or you could amend your pleadings. [01:25:48.860 --> 01:25:59.860] But the appellate court can't address the merits of the case or address, well, he said he didn't have standing now, but now he's explained it and we really get it, so now let's just say he has standing. [01:25:59.860 --> 01:26:02.860] No, they're only looking at judicial error. [01:26:02.860 --> 01:26:06.860] Did the judge err in saying that you don't have standing? [01:26:06.860 --> 01:26:07.860] See what I mean? [01:26:07.860 --> 01:26:16.860] Well, if he mentioned the constitutional provision, he's got standing. [01:26:16.860 --> 01:26:30.860] Well, I took a look at the document and I would agree with the judge that it was way too vague and didn't tie any facts at all, zero facts. [01:26:30.860 --> 01:26:37.860] So I don't think the judge, I don't think it could be called judicial error. [01:26:37.860 --> 01:26:43.860] I mean, obviously the judge is going to look at that and he's going to know what Eric is talking about. [01:26:43.860 --> 01:26:45.860] He's going to be able to put the pieces together. [01:26:45.860 --> 01:26:46.860] He's a human being. [01:26:46.860 --> 01:26:50.860] He can read this and understand what Eric is trying to say, but Eric didn't say it. [01:26:50.860 --> 01:26:57.860] So in the four corners of the document, he can't really treat it like he does have standing. [01:26:57.860 --> 01:27:01.860] Eric, that... [01:27:01.860 --> 01:27:08.860] Reality TV, sugar, obesity, jet lag, the list of things that makes us dumber just keeps on growing. [01:27:08.860 --> 01:27:11.860] But now researchers say we can add stress to the list. [01:27:11.860 --> 01:27:15.860] I'm Dr. Catherine Albrecht, back with details in a moment. [01:27:15.860 --> 01:27:17.860] Privacy is under attack. [01:27:17.860 --> 01:27:20.860] When you give up data about yourself, you'll never get it back again. [01:27:20.860 --> 01:27:25.860] And once your privacy is gone, you'll find your freedoms will start to vanish too. [01:27:25.860 --> 01:27:27.860] So protect your rights. [01:27:27.860 --> 01:27:31.860] Say no to surveillance and keep your information to yourself. [01:27:31.860 --> 01:27:33.860] Privacy, it's worth hanging on to. [01:27:33.860 --> 01:27:40.860] This message is brought to you by StartPage.com, the private search engine alternative to Google, Yahoo, and Bing. [01:27:40.860 --> 01:27:44.860] Start over with StartPage. [01:27:44.860 --> 01:27:47.860] Are you always on the go and juggling multiple projects? [01:27:47.860 --> 01:27:51.860] If so, you might think that multitasking proves you're smart. [01:27:51.860 --> 01:27:54.860] But think again, all that stress might be eating your brain. [01:27:54.860 --> 01:27:58.860] A new study finds stress reduces the number of connections between neurons, [01:27:58.860 --> 01:28:02.860] which actually makes it harder for people to manage problems. [01:28:02.860 --> 01:28:08.860] Researchers at Yale University found that stressed out people have less gray matter in their prefrontal cortex. [01:28:08.860 --> 01:28:14.860] That's the part of the brain that helps us weigh conflicting ideas and regulate our emotions. [01:28:14.860 --> 01:28:16.860] So take a deep breath and chill out. [01:28:16.860 --> 01:28:19.860] It'll help keep your mind as sharp as a tack. [01:28:19.860 --> 01:28:24.860] I'm Dr. Catherine Albrecht for StartPage.com, the world's most private search engine. [01:28:49.860 --> 01:28:50.860] I'm a structural engineer. [01:28:50.860 --> 01:28:51.860] I'm a New York City correction officer. [01:28:51.860 --> 01:28:52.860] I'm an Air Force pilot. [01:28:52.860 --> 01:28:54.860] I'm a father who lost his son. [01:28:54.860 --> 01:28:56.860] We're Americans, and we deserve the truth. [01:28:56.860 --> 01:29:01.860] Go to RememberBuilding7.org today. [01:29:01.860 --> 01:29:04.860] Rule of Law Radio is proud to offer the Rule of Law traffic seminar. [01:29:04.860 --> 01:29:06.860] In today's America, we live in an us-against-them society. [01:29:06.860 --> 01:29:11.860] And if we, the people, are ever going to have a free society, then we're going to have to stand and defend our own rights. [01:29:11.860 --> 01:29:16.860] Among those rights are the right to travel freely from place to place, the right to act in our own private capacity, [01:29:16.860 --> 01:29:18.860] and most importantly, the right to due process of law. [01:29:18.860 --> 01:29:24.860] Traffic courts afford us the least expensive opportunity to learn how to enforce and preserve our rights through due process. [01:29:24.860 --> 01:29:27.860] Former Sheriff's Deputy Eddie Craig, in conjunction with Rule of Law Radio, [01:29:27.860 --> 01:29:32.860] has put together the most comprehensive teaching tool available that will help you understand what due process is [01:29:32.860 --> 01:29:34.860] and how to hold courts to the rule of law. [01:29:34.860 --> 01:29:39.860] You can get your own copy of this invaluable material by going to RuleOfLawRadio.com and ordering your copy today. [01:29:39.860 --> 01:29:44.860] By ordering now, you'll receive a copy of Eddie's book, The Texas Transportation Code, The Law Versus the Lie, [01:29:44.860 --> 01:29:49.860] video and audio of the original 2009 seminar, hundreds of research documents, and other useful resource material. [01:29:49.860 --> 01:29:53.860] Learn how to fight for your rights with the help of this material from RuleOfLawRadio.com. [01:29:53.860 --> 01:29:58.860] Order your copy today, and together we can have the free society we all want and deserve. [01:30:01.860 --> 01:30:03.860] You are listening to the Logos Radio Network. [01:30:03.860 --> 01:30:06.860] LogosRadioNetwork.com. [01:30:06.860 --> 01:30:08.860] Thank you for listening. [01:30:36.860 --> 01:30:42.860] Chippin' of your BAB. Chippin' of your family, whole family. Chippin' of your dog and the cat around we. [01:30:42.860 --> 01:30:49.860] Chippin' of the beef and you still go eat it. Chippin' of the fish, them all in the sea. Chippin' of the shark and the whale around me. [01:30:49.860 --> 01:30:52.860] You must be mankind, go and chip crazy. [01:30:52.860 --> 01:30:54.860] Brett did that over here. Okay. [01:30:54.860 --> 01:30:58.860] Brett's got to go take care of some business. I'll finish this off. [01:30:58.860 --> 01:31:04.860] But Eric, I talked to Brett, so I kind of got an understanding of where you're at. [01:31:04.860 --> 01:31:13.860] What I suggest is you file a petition for a writ of mandamus to the appellate court. [01:31:13.860 --> 01:31:23.860] And tell the appellate court that the judge's criticisms are well taken. [01:31:23.860 --> 01:31:29.860] And that you are a pro se litigant and you are struggling to learn. [01:31:29.860 --> 01:31:42.860] And you take learning from the judge's criticisms and would ask the court to give you opportunity to amend your pleading to correct the errors pointed out by the judge. [01:31:42.860 --> 01:31:50.860] And include your amended pleading with your request for the mandamus. [01:31:50.860 --> 01:31:56.860] So that the appellate court can look at it and say, yes, this is valid. [01:31:56.860 --> 01:32:01.860] This has standing and substance. And then they'll order the court. [01:32:01.860 --> 01:32:09.860] And this will not hurt the judge's feelings, because they do this kind of stuff all the time. [01:32:09.860 --> 01:32:17.860] It is the place of the appellate court to give advice to the lower courts. [01:32:17.860 --> 01:32:26.860] So if they tell him that this is something and that in equity, he should have a right to amend, they will. [01:32:26.860 --> 01:32:32.860] And then even if they don't, then you appeal that. [01:32:32.860 --> 01:32:38.860] But, you know, this is not obsessed pro se's. [01:32:38.860 --> 01:32:44.860] We tend to take this combative position against the courts. [01:32:44.860 --> 01:32:48.860] And it's really not that way if we do it carefully. [01:32:48.860 --> 01:32:55.860] These are the judges want to find an equitable solution for everyone. [01:32:55.860 --> 01:32:58.860] And this is primarily their job. [01:32:58.860 --> 01:33:04.860] So if you speak to them with dignity and respect. [01:33:04.860 --> 01:33:18.860] And give them your amended pleading or what was the last document you filed that they ruled against? [01:33:18.860 --> 01:33:30.860] Well, you know, basically I filed into the appeals court, you know, a motion or excuse me, I basically filed an appeal. [01:33:30.860 --> 01:33:36.860] So now they're expecting an appellate brief. [01:33:36.860 --> 01:33:48.860] You're past the point of being able to get a mandamus. [01:33:48.860 --> 01:33:50.860] I have to think about this. [01:33:50.860 --> 01:34:00.860] If you're stuck with having to do an appellate brief, then you can at least focus on your you're trying to take the criticisms of the judge and fix your pleadings. [01:34:00.860 --> 01:34:02.860] But he wouldn't let you fix your pleadings. [01:34:02.860 --> 01:34:04.860] Your pleadings need to be fixed, and that's what you want to do. [01:34:04.860 --> 01:34:08.860] So please tell the judge to let me fix my pleadings. [01:34:08.860 --> 01:34:10.860] It's kind of late for that. [01:34:10.860 --> 01:34:15.860] He's already in the appellate process. [01:34:15.860 --> 01:34:18.860] If the issue, OK, I'm thinking of the rules. [01:34:18.860 --> 01:34:40.860] If the issue has been brought, if you have raised the issue that the Constitution forbids a judge or the Constitution has determined that a judge is no longer competent after 70, if that is before the court, that's enough. [01:34:40.860 --> 01:34:56.860] And that's one of the things I do argue with the whole EEOC idea, because they did, as I've told you many times, they've done three cases in 1988 where one of the judges wanted to be a retired judge. [01:34:56.860 --> 01:34:59.860] He wanted to continue working past 70. [01:34:59.860 --> 01:35:03.860] He wasn't one of the special people who got to work past 70. [01:35:03.860 --> 01:35:20.860] So he said based on ADA laws, age discrimination, he should be able to, both the State Supreme Court, the Federal District Court, and the First Circuit Court all agreed that 70-year-old judges are incompetent. [01:35:20.860 --> 01:35:22.860] Yes, so that's incompetent. [01:35:22.860 --> 01:35:27.860] Did you cite that in your pleadings in the trial court? [01:35:27.860 --> 01:35:29.860] Absolutely. [01:35:29.860 --> 01:35:32.860] Then you're good. [01:35:32.860 --> 01:35:37.860] Readdress that to the appellate court. [01:35:37.860 --> 01:35:45.860] Brett said he read your pleading and he was uncomfortable with it because it was not clear enough. [01:35:45.860 --> 01:35:49.860] And that's why I keep stressing this same thing. [01:35:49.860 --> 01:35:52.860] Fax them all, fax them all, fax them all. [01:35:52.860 --> 01:35:53.860] Screw the opinions. [01:35:53.860 --> 01:35:55.860] I absolutely agree. [01:35:55.860 --> 01:36:07.860] And if you fix that now, as long as that issue is before the court, you can re-argue the issue on appeal. [01:36:07.860 --> 01:36:10.860] So really what I'm doing is re-arguing standing. [01:36:10.860 --> 01:36:16.860] I think I like the fact that you say, hey, agree with the judge. [01:36:16.860 --> 01:36:18.860] This needs to be expanded. [01:36:18.860 --> 01:36:25.860] However, I did argue these points, which speak to constitutionality. [01:36:25.860 --> 01:36:41.860] And argue that constitutionality goes to your right to have a reasonable expectation that the laws will be enforced the way the legislature intended. [01:36:41.860 --> 01:36:49.860] That's your right to a procedural due process. [01:36:49.860 --> 01:36:53.860] Procedural due process is a nice kind of catch-all. [01:36:53.860 --> 01:36:55.860] And the judge will get that. [01:36:55.860 --> 01:36:59.860] That doesn't say that you personally have been damaged by this. [01:36:59.860 --> 01:37:02.860] It doesn't matter. [01:37:02.860 --> 01:37:12.860] You have a right as a citizen in a republic to expect that your public officials will follow the law the way it's written. [01:37:12.860 --> 01:37:15.860] If they don't, then they've harmed you. [01:37:15.860 --> 01:37:21.860] Procedural due process, harm per se. [01:37:21.860 --> 01:37:23.860] Does that make sense? [01:37:23.860 --> 01:37:24.860] It does. [01:37:24.860 --> 01:37:30.860] And I think it's threading the needle on this one. [01:37:30.860 --> 01:37:34.860] This one's important. [01:37:34.860 --> 01:37:40.860] This goes to the difference between a democracy and a republic. [01:37:40.860 --> 01:37:42.860] You are a citizen in a republic. [01:37:42.860 --> 01:37:45.860] Everybody answers to you. [01:37:45.860 --> 01:37:53.860] The oath they swore, the oath of office, they swore to you personally. [01:37:53.860 --> 01:38:01.860] If they breach that oath, they've harmed you personally. [01:38:01.860 --> 01:38:09.860] Write your brief from that perspective. [01:38:09.860 --> 01:38:12.860] Right, okay. [01:38:12.860 --> 01:38:15.860] This is a good education. [01:38:15.860 --> 01:38:27.860] Once you've been through these one time, and the next time you come to one of these, this stuff will be, you'll get to take a giant leap forward. [01:38:27.860 --> 01:38:30.860] It's like I was talking about at the beginning of the show. [01:38:30.860 --> 01:38:35.860] I've done this a bunch of times and figured out what goes well, what doesn't go well. [01:38:35.860 --> 01:38:44.860] So now I'm just going in and saying, this is precisely what the law says. [01:38:44.860 --> 01:38:50.860] You did not do precisely what the law said. [01:38:50.860 --> 01:38:54.860] And I was harmed thereby. [01:38:54.860 --> 01:38:56.860] That gives me standing. [01:38:56.860 --> 01:39:04.860] I've never had a challenge to standing because I have these rules. [01:39:04.860 --> 01:39:07.860] Never make a proactive statement of law out of your own mouth. [01:39:07.860 --> 01:39:12.860] That is an incredibly important rule. [01:39:12.860 --> 01:39:22.860] You may only make proactive statements of law out of the mouth of the courts or the legislature. [01:39:22.860 --> 01:39:30.860] This is what the statute said, or this is what the legislature said. [01:39:30.860 --> 01:39:34.860] What I say don't mean dilly-squat. [01:39:34.860 --> 01:39:36.860] They can hear me. [01:39:36.860 --> 01:39:39.860] They can agree with me. [01:39:39.860 --> 01:39:51.860] But they can't rule in my favor unless I have given them facts in accordance with the rules of evidence, the law as it applies to those facts. [01:39:51.860 --> 01:39:55.860] Am I being pedantic? [01:39:55.860 --> 01:39:59.860] No, those are incredibly important things to underline. [01:39:59.860 --> 01:40:05.860] Out of all the things you say repetitively, those are most important to me. [01:40:05.860 --> 01:40:10.860] I keep saying them that way because I need to really drive them in. [01:40:10.860 --> 01:40:23.860] If everything you do is based on those two and everything falls under it, if you have those two at the top, 99% of what you do is going to be effective. [01:40:25.860 --> 01:40:31.860] It's outside of human nature and you have to reframe yourself. [01:40:31.860 --> 01:40:35.860] We're not in normal interactions. [01:40:35.860 --> 01:40:37.860] We're not that pedantic. [01:40:37.860 --> 01:40:39.860] We're not that structured. [01:40:39.860 --> 01:40:41.860] It's just a little earshift. [01:40:41.860 --> 01:40:43.860] Hang on. [01:40:43.860 --> 01:40:45.860] Brandon Thornton, Brett Fountain, Google Radio. [01:40:45.860 --> 01:40:50.860] I'm not going to get out to call that number because we've only got one segment left. [01:40:50.860 --> 01:40:53.860] We'll use that up with Eric. [01:40:53.860 --> 01:40:54.860] He's pretty good here. [01:40:54.860 --> 01:40:58.860] We'll be right back. 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[01:42:32.860 --> 01:42:41.860] Even if you're not in a lawsuit, you can learn what everyone should understand about the principles and practices that control our American courts. [01:42:41.860 --> 01:42:50.860] You'll receive our audio classroom, video seminar, tutorials, forms for civil cases, pro se tactics, and much more. [01:42:50.860 --> 01:42:59.860] Please visit ruleoflawradio.com and click on the banner, or call toll-free, 866-LAW-EZ. [01:43:03.860 --> 01:43:15.860] Hello? Oh man, you're in jail? You got busted? Oh man, I'm broke, man. [01:43:21.860 --> 01:43:29.860] Some things in this world I will never understand. Some things I realize fully. [01:43:29.860 --> 01:43:37.860] Somebody's on a police, a policeman. Somebody's on a police, a bully. [01:43:37.860 --> 01:43:47.860] There's always a room at the top of the hill. I hear things are great, fine, and it's lonely left too. [01:43:47.860 --> 01:43:55.860] They're wishing it was more than our position to fill. They know that if they don't do it, somebody will. [01:43:55.860 --> 01:44:03.860] Some things in this world I will never understand. Some things I realize fully. [01:44:03.860 --> 01:44:11.860] Somebody's on a police, a policeman. Somebody's on a police, a bully. [01:44:11.860 --> 01:44:20.860] I know they will. Yeah, they're gonna put the bill. Cause I see so much injustice still. [01:44:20.860 --> 01:44:30.860] I know they will. Never fail to tip back that scale. I know they will. Never fail to tip back that scale. [01:44:30.860 --> 01:44:35.860] I know they will, I know they will [01:44:35.860 --> 01:44:39.860] I said I know, I know they will [01:44:39.860 --> 01:44:44.860] I know they will, I know they will [01:44:44.860 --> 01:44:47.860] I know they will [01:44:47.860 --> 01:44:51.860] Went down to that old rock quarry the other day [01:44:51.860 --> 01:44:55.860] That's where I heard that old rock quarry man say [01:44:55.860 --> 01:44:56.860] I know they will [01:44:56.860 --> 01:44:59.860] He knew I always have a place for my head to lay [01:44:59.860 --> 01:45:00.860] I know they will [01:45:00.860 --> 01:45:03.860] I pulled up my truck, waved goodbye and drove away [01:45:03.860 --> 01:45:04.860] I know they will [01:45:04.860 --> 01:45:08.860] Some things in this world I will never understand [01:45:08.860 --> 01:45:09.860] I know they will [01:45:09.860 --> 01:45:12.860] Some things I realize fully [01:45:12.860 --> 01:45:13.860] I know they will [01:45:13.860 --> 01:45:16.860] Somebody's gonna call the police, a policeman [01:45:16.860 --> 01:45:17.860] I know they will [01:45:17.860 --> 01:45:20.860] Somebody's gonna bully, bully [01:45:20.860 --> 01:45:22.860] I know they will [01:45:22.860 --> 01:45:23.860] I know they will [01:45:23.860 --> 01:45:25.860] They're gonna put the belt [01:45:25.860 --> 01:45:26.860] I know they will [01:45:26.860 --> 01:45:29.860] Well I see so much in dust and steel [01:45:29.860 --> 01:45:30.860] I know they will [01:45:30.860 --> 01:45:31.860] Never fail [01:45:31.860 --> 01:45:33.860] Put that back to skin [01:45:33.860 --> 01:45:34.860] I know they will [01:45:34.860 --> 01:45:35.860] Never fail [01:45:35.860 --> 01:45:37.860] Put that back to skin [01:45:37.860 --> 01:45:39.860] I know they will [01:45:39.860 --> 01:45:40.860] Yeah, I will [01:45:40.860 --> 01:45:41.860] Never fail [01:45:41.860 --> 01:45:42.860] Put it back to skin [01:45:42.860 --> 01:45:43.860] I know they will [01:45:43.860 --> 01:45:46.860] Whoa [01:45:46.860 --> 01:45:47.860] I know they will [01:45:47.860 --> 01:45:54.360] Okay, we are back. Randy Kelton, Bret Fountain, Rue de la Radio, and we're talking to Eric [01:45:54.360 --> 01:46:02.260] in Massachusetts. And Eric, I want to tell you, I've been doing this for 40 years. And [01:46:02.260 --> 01:46:12.980] I remember when I started, how difficult it was. And you start out taking on the federal [01:46:12.980 --> 01:46:26.180] courts. So I'm impressed. And your last pleadings are crap. Okay. But you're one of the 1% who [01:46:26.180 --> 01:46:34.980] actually filed those pleadings. And each one you file is going to get better. And you're [01:46:34.980 --> 01:46:40.700] staying in court longer than I did. And I think I know what I'm doing. They threw my [01:46:40.740 --> 01:46:47.380] butt out in the street quickly. I just want you to know that I like what you're doing. [01:46:47.380 --> 01:46:53.100] Thank you. I think the filing is actually very good. I just didn't lay out standing very well. [01:46:53.100 --> 01:46:58.820] The arguments are very strong. I just didn't lay out standing very well. [01:46:58.820 --> 01:47:08.940] Well, if you reference the constitutional prohibition against a judge sitting when [01:47:09.100 --> 01:47:19.100] he's past 70, you provided standing. You might not have said procedural due process, [01:47:19.100 --> 01:47:27.940] but you established the fact base to support procedural due process. So it's recoverable. [01:47:27.940 --> 01:47:36.940] And the courts are not that pedantic. There's a lot of case law that says somebody's not going [01:47:36.940 --> 01:47:46.940] to lose their case because they forgot to dot an I or cross a T. And so it's not, it's about [01:47:46.940 --> 01:47:55.940] equity and not about, what is it? There's a case, I can't quote it right now, but it said, [01:47:55.940 --> 01:48:09.740] if a official holds someone to the fine letter of law, they must hold themselves to the self [01:48:09.740 --> 01:48:21.460] same letter. So the courts, nobody wants to be held to the very fine rule of law. And here you [01:48:21.460 --> 01:48:26.980] got, you didn't, you told them that the constitution forbade this guy to do that, [01:48:26.980 --> 01:48:37.860] but you didn't brief it out enough. The fact that you brought that up opens the door for you to [01:48:37.860 --> 01:48:46.100] address that in more detail in your appeal. Had you not brought that up, then when you get to the [01:48:46.100 --> 01:48:53.460] appeal, you couldn't talk about it. But since you didn't brief it out good in the trial court, [01:48:53.460 --> 01:48:59.740] since you did bring the issue, now you can brief it out better in the appellate court. [01:48:59.740 --> 01:49:02.060] So you covered your behind. [01:49:02.060 --> 01:49:10.220] But in terms of briefing it out, I really didn't, and I'm looking for correction on this. I didn't [01:49:10.220 --> 01:49:17.500] brief it out in terms of standing, but in my argument, I briefed it out. Is that what you're [01:49:17.500 --> 01:49:19.500] saying? Assuming that I did- [01:49:19.500 --> 01:49:31.020] Just the fact that you raised the issue. You raised the issue that the constitution considered that, [01:49:31.020 --> 01:49:37.740] and apparently from what you said, you brought case law that said that a person sitting as a judge [01:49:37.820 --> 01:49:47.020] over 70 is necessarily incompetent by constitution. Now, he may be the smartest dude on the planet, [01:49:47.020 --> 01:49:54.300] but according to the constitution, he's not. And you have a procedural due process right [01:49:55.100 --> 01:50:01.660] to expect that your public officials will follow the law the way it's written without regard [01:50:01.660 --> 01:50:03.020] to their opinion about it. [01:50:03.020 --> 01:50:18.060] So you made the argument for procedural due process. If you did not eloquently argue the [01:50:18.060 --> 01:50:24.540] issue in the trial court, you can eloquently argue the issue at the court of appeals. [01:50:25.180 --> 01:50:31.420] What you can't do at the court of appeals is bring issues that were not addressed at the trial [01:50:31.420 --> 01:50:40.380] court. But you really only have one issue here. This judge is too old, and therefore, [01:50:40.380 --> 01:50:49.180] he is necessarily incompetent. Regardless of how intelligent and how articulate he is, [01:50:50.060 --> 01:50:57.500] by law, he is necessarily incompetent. Now you can brief it out to the court of appeals. [01:50:58.460 --> 01:51:04.060] The federal court also ruled him incompetent, and the First Circuit did too. [01:51:04.860 --> 01:51:11.100] But you have to cite that. So in your appellate brief, you've argued that he's incompetent, [01:51:12.540 --> 01:51:25.020] and you are not restricted in your appellate brief to the facts that were brought out in the [01:51:25.100 --> 01:51:30.620] trial court. But you are not restricted in the law as it applies to those facts. [01:51:32.300 --> 01:51:35.580] As long as you brought the facts out, the facts are before the court. [01:51:37.100 --> 01:51:44.300] So when you get to the appellate brief, you can bring all the law you want to support [01:51:44.300 --> 01:51:47.740] your allegation concerning the facts. Does that make sense? [01:51:48.700 --> 01:51:56.060] It does. But hold up, hold up. What I'm arguing for in my appellate brief is standing [01:51:56.700 --> 01:52:03.900] and asking to remand back to the federal court and to be allowed to amend my pleading. [01:52:05.180 --> 01:52:11.900] That's amandamus. You're filing amandamus, petition for read amandamus. [01:52:12.620 --> 01:52:19.020] All right. Right now, all I can argue is standing. [01:52:19.820 --> 01:52:26.220] Okay. Okay. Let me address this. Robert Fox used to file these motions that had these [01:52:27.180 --> 01:52:33.500] huge headings on them. They were prosecuting him in Cherokee County, and I wrote him some [01:52:34.140 --> 01:52:42.620] motions to file. And we're in court, and the prosecutor pulls up this motion. It's got this [01:52:42.620 --> 01:52:46.460] three-line heading on it, and they're trying to figure out what to call it. [01:52:49.420 --> 01:52:55.660] And the point of that was it had this outrageous title on it. [01:52:55.660 --> 01:53:06.140] It did not make any difference what Robert Fox called it. The motion was what it was. [01:53:08.780 --> 01:53:15.820] The title is not controlling. So whatever is in the document is in the document, [01:53:15.820 --> 01:53:20.140] the title doesn't make any difference. So you file a document and call it something. [01:53:20.140 --> 01:53:23.820] The only thing that matters is what's the content of your filing. [01:53:25.660 --> 01:53:38.540] I had a good reason to go there, and I'm on track of exactly what it was. I hate getting old. [01:53:41.660 --> 01:53:45.900] Why did I go there? I had a really good reason, and I lost it talking about Robert Fox. Every [01:53:45.900 --> 01:53:50.620] time I talk about Robert Fox, he got me put in jail for it. He got me sentenced to a year in [01:53:50.620 --> 01:53:55.740] jail, the old bastard. I'm sorry, I can't say that on the air. I really like that guy. [01:53:58.860 --> 01:54:04.780] The title of the document means nothing. The content of the document is what matters. [01:54:06.460 --> 01:54:08.700] But I have to file an appellate brief. [01:54:11.580 --> 01:54:16.460] That's why. You filed what appeared to be an appellate brief, but it wasn't. [01:54:16.540 --> 01:54:17.580] I haven't filed it yet. [01:54:18.460 --> 01:54:30.700] No, what you filed was a petition for a writ of mandamus. You asked the court to order the trial [01:54:30.700 --> 01:54:38.140] judge to allow you to file an amended pleading. You titled it appeal, but that's not what it was. [01:54:39.980 --> 01:54:43.580] It was what it was without regard to what you called it. [01:54:43.580 --> 01:54:46.220] Yeah, it was a request for a writ of mandamus. [01:54:47.660 --> 01:54:52.860] Well, you're asking the court to order the trial judge to do something. That's mandamus. [01:54:54.140 --> 01:54:55.660] I haven't filed it yet, Randy. [01:54:57.660 --> 01:54:58.460] I like that angle. [01:55:03.340 --> 01:55:07.100] Instead of calling it an appeal, call it a petition for writ of mandamus. [01:55:09.820 --> 01:55:10.780] Can I do that, Brett? [01:55:11.740 --> 01:55:12.240] Yeah. [01:55:13.200 --> 01:55:14.320] I don't see why not. [01:55:21.920 --> 01:55:25.280] Look at it this way, Eric. You can do anything you want. [01:55:27.200 --> 01:55:29.600] If they don't like it, they'll tell you. [01:55:31.760 --> 01:55:36.000] So you filed a writ of mandamus. If there's some reason you can't, they'll tell you. [01:55:36.640 --> 01:55:41.840] But what you told me, that was no appeal. [01:55:44.560 --> 01:55:45.840] I haven't filed the appeal yet.