Detecting language using up to the first 30 seconds. Use `--language` to specify the language Detected language: English [00:00.000 --> 00:26.000] Bad boys, bad boys, whatcha gonna do, whatcha gonna do, whatcha gonna do, when Sheriff John Brown come for you, tell me, whatcha gonna do, whatcha gonna do, yeah [00:26.000 --> 00:37.000] Bad boys, bad boys, whatcha gonna do, whatcha gonna do, when they come for you, bad boys, bad boys, whatcha gonna do, whatcha gonna do, when they come for you [00:37.000 --> 00:48.000] When you were eight and you had bad traits, you go to school and learn the golden rule, so why are you acting like a bloody fool, if you get hot then you must get cool [00:48.000 --> 00:59.000] Bad boys, bad boys, whatcha gonna do, whatcha gonna do, when they come for you, bad boys, bad boys, whatcha gonna do, whatcha gonna do, when they come for you [00:59.000 --> 01:10.000] You chuck it on that one, you chuck it on this one, you chuck it on your mother and you chuck it on your father You chuck it on your brother and you chuck it on your sister You chuck it on that one and you chuck it on me [01:10.000 --> 01:13.000] Bad boys, bad boys What you're gonna do? [01:13.000 --> 01:16.000] What you're gonna do When they come for you? [01:16.000 --> 01:26.000] Bad boys, bad boys… [01:26.000 --> 01:30.200] What you're gonna do? [01:30.200 --> 01:33.000] What you're gonna do When they come for you? [01:33.000 --> 01:37.000] Nobody no giving no break police no giving no break [01:37.000 --> 01:48.480] Okay, howdy, howdy, Randy Kelton, Brett Fountain, Real Roll Radio on this Friday, October the [01:48.480 --> 01:54.560] 17th, 2025 and sorry, I'm a little late. [01:54.560 --> 01:55.560] It's my fault. [01:55.560 --> 01:56.560] I screwed it up. [01:56.560 --> 02:00.120] Wait, did you just say it's your fault? [02:00.120 --> 02:05.080] It is my fault because I'm, that's the kind of guy I am. [02:05.080 --> 02:07.040] I don't think I've ever heard that before. [02:07.040 --> 02:11.320] If I do something wrong, I take responsibility. [02:11.320 --> 02:15.520] But my dog ate my homework. [02:15.520 --> 02:18.040] So I couldn't help it. [02:18.040 --> 02:19.880] That must have been your wife's dog, right? [02:19.880 --> 02:22.000] Yeah, my wife's dog. [02:22.000 --> 02:23.000] Okay. [02:23.000 --> 02:27.360] So you got something to talk about? [02:28.360 --> 02:36.000] I've been all day serving service on somebody's lawsuit. [02:36.000 --> 02:37.000] It went good today. [02:37.000 --> 02:42.160] Yesterday, when I tried to do service, they jerked me around. [02:42.160 --> 02:52.280] So I called 9-1-1 on them in Texas where it is a crime to avoid service. [02:52.280 --> 02:54.440] Yeah, I was looking that up. [02:54.440 --> 03:02.200] It looks like other states have that too, but they just don't have it as clearly defined. [03:02.200 --> 03:05.800] Texas and Illinois both have it very clearly defined. [03:05.800 --> 03:13.560] And everybody else tackles it in the category of obstruction of justice. [03:13.560 --> 03:20.400] Well, at some stage on California, you can avoid all you want to. [03:20.400 --> 03:27.160] It's kind of a catch-as-you-catch-can. [03:27.160 --> 03:31.720] If they can hide from you, they can hide all they want to. [03:31.720 --> 03:38.640] But fortunately, we don't have that problem in Texas. [03:38.640 --> 03:42.440] So I'm a little late myself. [03:42.440 --> 03:47.560] I'm trying to get all my equipment up, so I'm a little distracted. [03:48.080 --> 03:52.480] Well, I didn't pay attention today to much of what's going on. [03:52.480 --> 03:55.480] There are people having so many issues. [03:55.480 --> 04:00.000] And boy, I hit it a little bit this morning early. [04:00.000 --> 04:05.800] And then I didn't look at it again until just a little while ago. [04:05.800 --> 04:10.120] And there are just so many big issues. [04:10.120 --> 04:16.400] People getting arrested for ridiculous nonsense. [04:16.400 --> 04:18.160] I'm definitely working on that. [04:18.160 --> 04:31.680] There have been kids taken away, thrown in jail for accusations that are just silly. [04:31.680 --> 04:32.960] It hurts, you know? [04:32.960 --> 04:35.040] You see all the... [04:35.040 --> 04:39.040] There's a problem with law. [04:39.120 --> 04:49.480] If you don't know the law and you've got somebody else who does, they can pretty well lead [04:49.480 --> 04:53.360] the judge around by his nose. [04:53.360 --> 04:59.040] Because on the one hand, where the law works in your favor, if you don't know and understand [04:59.040 --> 05:01.080] it, it works against you. [05:01.800 --> 05:09.320] Yeah, but then you also have the factor of the peace officers who are out there with [05:09.320 --> 05:13.240] the sharp end of the stick, they don't know the law. [05:13.240 --> 05:15.240] That's a big problem. [05:15.240 --> 05:17.240] I'm working on their sharp end of the stick. [05:17.240 --> 05:21.720] That causes a lot of pain for a lot of people. [05:21.720 --> 05:25.960] You know, you've got families that are being torn up because some peace officer doesn't [05:25.960 --> 05:29.000] understand the law. [05:29.480 --> 05:31.160] That part I am working on. [05:33.560 --> 05:44.600] I'm hoping that doing this show helps people to understand how we can short circuit some [05:44.600 --> 05:45.960] of that. [05:45.960 --> 05:46.440] Yeah. [05:46.440 --> 05:55.560] Well, like one lady, she says that all of a sudden they had police banging on their [05:55.560 --> 05:57.240] door and they didn't know it was the police. [05:57.240 --> 05:58.920] They didn't understand what was going on. [05:59.480 --> 06:03.320] Just a lot of yelling and banging on the door and people that sounded like a riot out [06:03.320 --> 06:06.760] there and they freaked out. [06:06.760 --> 06:08.600] They went and locked themselves in the hallway. [06:08.600 --> 06:11.480] Apparently they have a door to the hallway that can lock. [06:12.520 --> 06:15.400] They went into the hallway and locked themselves in there. [06:16.200 --> 06:21.320] And the guys at the front door broke the door down, came in yelling. [06:22.280 --> 06:31.640] And then this lady was calling 911 and saying, you know, please send somebody over here. [06:31.640 --> 06:32.760] I don't know what's going on. [06:34.360 --> 06:42.040] And then they came and they were banging on the hall door and they said that they were [06:42.040 --> 06:44.920] going to stick the canine dogs on her. [06:45.560 --> 06:48.440] If she doesn't come out, then they're going to make the dog attack her. [06:48.440 --> 06:53.560] And so she opened up the door. [06:53.560 --> 06:54.760] She goes, well, they're yelling. [06:54.760 --> 06:55.880] They're saying they're police. [06:55.880 --> 06:56.600] I don't believe them. [06:56.600 --> 06:58.760] I don't think police would act like this. [06:58.760 --> 07:04.040] She's telling the 911 people and they're saying they're police, but I don't think so. [07:04.920 --> 07:12.200] And yeah, they charged her with obstruction of justice, saying that she actively and [07:12.200 --> 07:14.680] physically prevented them from doing their duties. [07:15.080 --> 07:22.200] And what their duty that they're saying that they had, they had a search warrant for a person. [07:23.960 --> 07:29.240] So in order to serve that search, in order to execute the search warrant, [07:30.440 --> 07:32.760] they failed to present it. [07:32.760 --> 07:34.120] They didn't say it. [07:34.120 --> 07:36.840] They didn't show anything to her about a search warrant. [07:36.840 --> 07:39.560] So she didn't know until later that they were searching for a person. [07:40.520 --> 07:47.480] And when she unlocked the door and they got in the hallway, they went into her bedroom [07:48.360 --> 07:50.120] and her purse was on the bed. [07:50.680 --> 07:54.680] They rifled through everything in her purse, including all her personal documents and [07:54.680 --> 08:00.840] everything in there, as if the person could be hiding, apparently a very small person, huh? [08:03.480 --> 08:09.240] And they took a knife to her sofa, cut up the cushions of her sofa. [08:10.280 --> 08:17.080] So, yeah, they don't know their duties. [08:17.080 --> 08:20.520] They don't know how to serve a warrant there. [08:21.720 --> 08:25.640] She said that there ended up being 14 officers involved in this. [08:26.600 --> 08:28.680] We've got new law, fortunately. [08:31.400 --> 08:35.720] This wasn't a case that I was actually peripherally involved in. [08:36.520 --> 08:40.520] And she called me for help and it was out of my league. [08:41.160 --> 08:42.600] But she got things changed. [08:42.600 --> 08:46.760] She was out of Collin County. [08:47.560 --> 08:48.760] Oh, a different case. [08:48.760 --> 08:49.240] Okay. [08:49.240 --> 08:53.720] We're going to our sponsors, Randy Kelton, Brett Fountain, [08:53.720 --> 08:54.760] Weelard Radio. [08:55.560 --> 08:57.240] I don't know when this thing's going to shut off. [08:57.240 --> 08:58.040] We'll be right back. [09:01.000 --> 09:02.680] It's not turning off early, Brett. [09:06.120 --> 09:06.760] Gotcha, huh? [09:07.640 --> 09:10.120] Yeah, it's, but our deals would go off early. [09:10.120 --> 09:10.600] We'll be back. [09:35.720 --> 09:36.600] Court summons. [09:36.600 --> 09:38.600] How to answer letters and phone calls. [09:38.600 --> 09:41.240] How to get debt collectors out of your credit report. [09:41.240 --> 09:45.880] How to turn the financial tables on them and make them pay you to go away. [09:45.880 --> 09:50.760] The Michael Mears proven method is the solution for how to stop debt collectors. [09:50.760 --> 09:53.160] Personal consultation is available as well. [09:53.160 --> 09:56.520] For more information, please visit ruleoflawradio.com [09:56.520 --> 10:01.560] and click on the blue Michael Mears banner or email michaelmears at yahoo.com. [10:01.560 --> 10:03.880] That's ruleoflawradio.com [10:03.880 --> 10:09.400] or email m-i-c-h-a-e-l-m-i-r-r-a-s at yahoo.com [10:09.400 --> 10:11.800] to learn how to stop debt collectors now. [10:13.880 --> 10:17.080] Rule of Law Radio is proud to offer the rule of law traffic seminar. [10:17.080 --> 10:19.400] In today's America, we live in an us-against-them society. [10:19.400 --> 10:21.720] And if we, the people, are ever going to have a free society, [10:21.720 --> 10:24.600] then we're going to have to stand and defend our own rights. [10:24.600 --> 10:27.320] Among those rights are the right to travel freely from place to place, [10:27.320 --> 10:29.000] the right to act in our own private capacity, [10:29.000 --> 10:31.560] and most importantly, the right to due process of law. [10:31.640 --> 10:34.120] Traffic courts afford us the least expensive opportunity [10:34.120 --> 10:37.400] to learn how to enforce and preserve our rights through due process. [10:37.400 --> 10:40.440] Former Sheriff's Deputy Eddie Craig, in conjunction with Rule of Law Radio, [10:40.440 --> 10:42.920] has put together the most comprehensive teaching tool available [10:42.920 --> 10:45.240] that will help you understand what due process is [10:45.240 --> 10:47.160] and how to hold courts to the rule of law. [10:47.160 --> 10:49.320] You can get your own copy of this invaluable material [10:49.320 --> 10:52.520] by going to ruleoflawradio.com and ordering your copy today. [10:52.520 --> 10:54.520] By ordering now, you'll receive a copy of Eddie's book, [10:54.520 --> 10:57.080] The Texas Transportation Code, The Law Versus the Lie, [10:57.080 --> 10:59.560] video and audio of the original 2009 seminar, [10:59.560 --> 11:02.440] hundreds of research documents and other useful resource material. [11:02.440 --> 11:04.680] Learn how to fight for your rights with the help of this material [11:04.680 --> 11:07.400] from ruleoflawradio.com. Order your copy today [11:07.400 --> 11:10.440] and together we can have the free society we all want and deserve. [11:29.560 --> 11:52.920] The world is spinning like it's out of control [11:52.920 --> 11:56.680] on the edge of a hole inside a deep dark hole [11:56.760 --> 12:00.680] I'm always on the lookout for something to soothe my soul [12:03.320 --> 12:07.400] So I sit back and I watch the evidence unfold [12:08.520 --> 12:12.840] And I see justice is the goal [12:15.080 --> 12:19.400] Yeah, justice is the goal [12:22.200 --> 12:25.560] Sometimes we sail a little too far at sea [12:25.640 --> 12:28.760] And then we got to get back on course quick and easy [12:28.760 --> 12:31.720] We go under heavy advisory [12:31.720 --> 12:35.560] From the man that came all the way from Galilee [12:35.560 --> 12:38.440] I was looking for a safe and warm place to be [12:38.440 --> 12:40.360] Where I don't have to work so hard [12:40.360 --> 12:43.720] Okay, we are back, Randy Kelton. We're at Fountainville Radio [12:43.720 --> 12:46.440] and we have a lot of phone lines turned on. [12:47.480 --> 12:53.400] A call in number 512-646-1984. If you have a question or comment, [12:53.400 --> 12:58.520] give us a call. But what you're speaking to is something I'm working on. [13:02.040 --> 13:07.320] I am trying to put public officials in a position [13:08.600 --> 13:13.480] to where they will pay a whole lot more attention to the law that affects them. [13:15.880 --> 13:19.560] It is my position that the police are not the problem. [13:20.040 --> 13:27.640] The police are like the high school kids in the high school parking lot. [13:27.640 --> 13:33.640] If you let them do anything they want to, they'll do anything they want to. [13:34.280 --> 13:37.240] And the police, you know, they're out there with the guns [13:37.240 --> 13:43.400] and they spend most of their time pulling over some 6% of the population. [13:43.400 --> 13:47.400] You know, 6% of the population does 96% of the crime. [13:47.400 --> 13:53.080] And these people are nuts. [13:56.280 --> 13:59.240] It's like a character type. [14:00.920 --> 14:05.800] They will say things to you, but the sound that comes out of their mouth [14:07.320 --> 14:11.000] is not like what comes out of our mouths. [14:11.640 --> 14:20.760] When you and I talk and we attempt to create meaning that actually means something, [14:22.280 --> 14:25.880] and we have this notion of truth and honor for the most part, [14:26.920 --> 14:29.720] these guys are police you're dealing with for the most part don't. [14:31.880 --> 14:34.600] They will say anything. [14:35.560 --> 14:40.520] Truth, rightness has nothing to do with anything. [14:40.520 --> 14:46.520] The only purpose of their vocalization is to get the outcome they want. [14:47.160 --> 14:48.680] They will say or do anything. [14:50.840 --> 14:51.640] It's just nuts. [14:51.640 --> 14:56.040] And the police spend most of their time dealing with these crazy folks. [14:56.840 --> 15:04.040] And then they stop one of us and they don't always shift that gear they should shift. [15:05.560 --> 15:08.440] So how do we remind them who we are? [15:10.440 --> 15:15.880] Well, for my part, I get two words I don't like from somebody carrying a gun. [15:15.880 --> 15:17.080] I'm calling 911. [15:19.160 --> 15:22.040] It's not because I want to file against them or anything like that. [15:23.240 --> 15:24.520] I just want to get their attention. [15:25.960 --> 15:27.240] Yeah, I've got this guy here. [15:27.240 --> 15:28.040] He's got a gun. [15:31.560 --> 15:33.800] What's the term, Brett? [15:33.800 --> 15:40.280] He is agitated and I'm afraid you might shoot me, [15:40.280 --> 15:42.440] get somebody out here to get him under control. [15:44.120 --> 15:44.840] I liked it. [15:44.840 --> 15:46.680] One time you used the word terrified. [15:47.880 --> 15:51.960] You told the 911 operator that I think this guy is terrified of me. [15:54.280 --> 15:55.160] That was it. [15:55.160 --> 15:57.080] And that's because I really thought he was. [15:57.880 --> 16:07.640] He was like, just a couple of weeks ago, I went to justice of the peace three in Tarrant County [16:09.320 --> 16:13.640] to file a criminal complaint against the district attorney, [16:15.000 --> 16:20.040] accusing the district attorney of Tarrant County of shielding criminal complaints [16:20.840 --> 16:25.880] against the officers that arrested Dr. Joe from the grand jury. [16:27.160 --> 16:32.440] I gave him notice of crime, instructed him to give notice to the grand jury, [16:35.880 --> 16:42.840] Article 2.03, let's see now it's 2A.106, commands him to do. [16:44.440 --> 16:45.240] He didn't do it. [16:46.600 --> 16:51.240] So I was filing criminal charges with this justice of the peace. [16:51.240 --> 16:52.920] That's who's supposed to do that. [16:53.880 --> 16:56.920] And the clerk, she looked at it. [16:56.920 --> 16:57.880] She didn't know what to do. [16:57.880 --> 17:00.040] She had never had a criminal complaint filed with her. [17:00.680 --> 17:01.320] It's amazing. [17:02.600 --> 17:06.680] Every time any of us do this, it's the first time that these guys ever saw it. [17:07.560 --> 17:07.960] Yeah. [17:07.960 --> 17:13.160] So she goes in the back and comes out with this bailiff. [17:15.080 --> 17:16.840] And he starts asking me questions. [17:16.840 --> 17:18.040] I said, who are you? [17:18.040 --> 17:19.000] He said, he's the bailiff. [17:19.000 --> 17:20.840] I said, well, your security. [17:21.720 --> 17:26.200] Right now I don't need security, but if I do need security, I'll call you. [17:26.200 --> 17:28.840] But right now I need to talk to the clerk, not you. [17:29.480 --> 17:31.800] And he didn't take that well at all. [17:32.920 --> 17:37.000] Got all excited, demanded to know what my business was there. [17:38.920 --> 17:41.720] Yeah, I instructed him to go. [17:41.720 --> 17:43.080] I pointed at the back. [17:43.080 --> 17:45.000] You go back in the back where you came from. [17:45.640 --> 17:47.480] If I need you, I'll summon you. [17:47.480 --> 17:48.680] He didn't like that either. [17:49.560 --> 17:50.680] If you could imagine that. [17:51.320 --> 17:53.480] And then he got excited and got upset. [17:53.480 --> 17:56.120] He never had anybody act like he needs to be summoned. [17:56.840 --> 17:57.080] Yeah. [17:58.520 --> 18:02.760] Didn't like the fact that I pointed my finger at him and told me about it. [18:02.760 --> 18:10.040] And I pointed right at him and told him to just be quiet and go in the back. [18:10.040 --> 18:12.040] And nobody needs you right now. [18:12.040 --> 18:13.640] And then he really freaked out. [18:14.840 --> 18:16.200] But yeah, I was worried about this guy. [18:17.080 --> 18:21.960] The guy's got a gun on his hip and he is absolutely out of control. [18:23.400 --> 18:28.440] So I dialed 911 and told him this guy's freaking out here and he's got a gun. [18:29.880 --> 18:32.280] And that made it even worse if you could imagine that. [18:34.840 --> 18:40.760] Well, I did not feel like I owed it to him to deescalate. [18:42.440 --> 18:44.520] Technically, I was trying to deescalate. [18:45.480 --> 18:47.240] I was the adult in the room. [18:48.360 --> 18:52.040] I was the citizen in the Republic. [18:52.040 --> 18:57.880] I had, through my other citizens, authorized him to carry that pistol. [18:57.880 --> 19:02.120] But I placed an incredible responsibility on him when he did. [19:03.560 --> 19:06.520] And he seemed to get that part. [19:06.520 --> 19:13.000] And it was my job as the adult to instruct my public officials. [19:13.960 --> 19:18.440] As far as I am concerned, I am a citizen in a Republic. [19:19.240 --> 19:25.720] And as a citizen in a Republic, it is my duty to maintain the governmental instruments [19:25.720 --> 19:26.920] that I have created. [19:27.720 --> 19:31.880] So I was doing my job and I expected him to do his. [19:32.440 --> 19:34.680] Well, that has started a cascade. [19:36.200 --> 19:41.000] I went back to the JP's office later after I called 911 and [19:41.640 --> 19:45.880] filed criminal charges against him with the police. [19:45.880 --> 19:49.320] And oh, it got pretty ugly. [19:49.320 --> 19:54.040] When the real police got there, not this constable, [19:54.920 --> 19:56.440] they calmed things down really well. [19:58.680 --> 20:03.880] But even they, first thing, told me I had to leave the building. [20:04.920 --> 20:07.560] And I said, well, certainly I'll leave the building. [20:07.560 --> 20:11.800] But you need to trespass me first. [20:13.320 --> 20:14.600] The officer said, what? [20:15.320 --> 20:20.040] Well, I'm in a public building here and normally I should have access to it. [20:20.040 --> 20:24.360] But if you don't want me to have access, just trespass me and I'll leave right away. [20:25.880 --> 20:27.800] Well, I don't need to trespass you. [20:27.800 --> 20:28.280] Yeah, you do. [20:28.280 --> 20:28.760] Yeah, you do. [20:30.200 --> 20:33.000] If you're going to ask me to leave the building, you've got to trespass me. [20:33.000 --> 20:37.160] And that's when they kind of got their professionalism together. [20:37.160 --> 20:39.080] They figured out. [20:39.080 --> 20:43.960] They kind of recognized, wait a second, I think he's trying to play us. [20:45.160 --> 20:49.160] This is not one of those crazies out there that we deal with all the time. [20:49.720 --> 20:51.560] He might know something that I don't know. [20:52.360 --> 20:54.520] And they did exactly what they should have done. [20:55.560 --> 21:01.000] They shifted gears, treated me with dignity and respect, and there was no difficulty at all. [21:02.840 --> 21:05.480] That's what I expect from all of my public officials. [21:06.440 --> 21:11.240] And if I don't get it, I'm not going to complain about it. [21:13.240 --> 21:15.800] I'm going to file verified criminal affidavits. [21:17.640 --> 21:18.760] That's my job. [21:20.280 --> 21:25.320] And if they don't like that being my job, hey, life is tough. [21:27.480 --> 21:30.520] Well, if they don't like having criminal complaints filed, [21:30.520 --> 21:32.680] then they could just, you know, not do the crime. [21:33.400 --> 21:37.160] Yeah, well, this is the problem I'm working on. [21:37.160 --> 21:44.120] They're not worried about me taking some action to curb their bad behavior. [21:45.720 --> 21:53.000] Because prosecuting attorneys, they are the problem. [21:54.360 --> 22:01.480] Now, idiot judges, wacko policemen, they are a problem. [22:02.680 --> 22:04.600] But they are not the problem. [22:06.600 --> 22:09.400] The problem is, is that our founders. [22:14.440 --> 22:17.400] It's clear cell phones have changed the way we live and work, [22:17.400 --> 22:19.640] but have they negatively affected our health? [22:19.640 --> 22:22.040] I'm Dr. Catherine Albrecht, and I'll be back in just a moment [22:22.040 --> 22:26.520] with new findings about how cell phones may actually alter our brain chemistry. [22:27.240 --> 22:29.160] Privacy is under attack. [22:29.160 --> 22:32.520] When you give up data about yourself, you'll never get it back again. [22:32.760 --> 22:37.560] And once your privacy is gone, you'll find your freedoms will start to vanish, too. [22:37.560 --> 22:42.840] So protect your rights, say no to surveillance, and keep your information to yourself. [22:42.840 --> 22:45.320] Privacy, it's worth hanging on to. [22:45.320 --> 22:48.920] This public service announcement is brought to you by Startpage.com, [22:48.920 --> 22:53.000] the private search engine alternative to Google, Yahoo, and Bing. [22:53.000 --> 22:54.920] Start over with Startpage. [22:56.600 --> 22:59.960] Cell phones emit radio frequency energy, it's a fact. [22:59.960 --> 23:03.080] But whether it's dangerous to have a phone beaming this kind of radiation [23:03.080 --> 23:04.920] near your head has been disputed. [23:04.920 --> 23:09.400] Some have blamed it for brain tumors, while cell phone companies have downplayed concerns. [23:09.400 --> 23:12.120] Well, now the Journal of the American Medical Association [23:12.120 --> 23:15.080] is confirming that cell phones affect brain chemistry. [23:15.080 --> 23:18.920] A study of 47 volunteers showed that glucose metabolism [23:18.920 --> 23:21.720] in the area of the brain closest to the cell phone antenna [23:21.720 --> 23:23.720] increases when the cell phone is on. [23:23.720 --> 23:27.000] While researchers aren't sure whether this exposure causes damage, [23:27.000 --> 23:28.760] I'm not taking any chances. [23:28.760 --> 23:32.280] I always keep the phone far from my body, and I use a corded headset. [23:32.840 --> 23:34.200] I'm Dr. Catherine Albrecht. [23:34.200 --> 23:36.920] More news and information at CatherineAlbrecht.com. [23:58.840 --> 24:02.680] Over 1,200 architects and engineers have looked into the evidence [24:02.680 --> 24:04.600] and believe there is more to the story. [24:04.600 --> 24:07.720] Bring justice to my son, my uncle, my nephew, my son. [24:07.720 --> 24:09.960] Go to buildingwatt.org. [24:09.960 --> 24:12.520] Why it fell, why it matters, and what you can do. [24:13.880 --> 24:16.680] Are you looking to have a closer relationship with God [24:16.680 --> 24:18.920] and a better understanding of his word? [24:18.920 --> 24:22.120] Then tune in to logosradionetwork.com on Wednesdays [24:22.120 --> 24:25.320] from 8 to 10 p.m. Central Time for Scripture Talk, [24:25.320 --> 24:27.800] where Nana and her guests discuss the scriptures [24:27.800 --> 24:29.960] in accord with 2 Timothy 2.15. [24:30.600 --> 24:32.920] Study to show thyself approved unto God, [24:32.920 --> 24:35.080] a workman that needed not to be ashamed, [24:35.080 --> 24:36.840] rightly dividing the word of truth. [24:37.480 --> 24:41.000] Starting in January, our first-hour studies are in the Book of Mark, [24:41.000 --> 24:45.000] where we'll go verse by verse and discuss the true gospel message. [24:45.000 --> 24:47.880] Our second-hour topical studies will vary each week [24:47.880 --> 24:51.480] with discussions on sound doctrine and Christian character development. [24:52.040 --> 24:54.600] We wish to reflect God's light and be a blessing [24:54.600 --> 24:56.520] to all those with a hearing ear. [24:56.520 --> 24:59.960] Our goal is to strengthen our faith and to transform ourselves [24:59.960 --> 25:02.520] more into the likeness of our Lord and Savior Jesus. [25:03.080 --> 25:06.840] So tune in to Scripture Talk live on logosradionetwork.com [25:06.840 --> 25:09.000] Wednesdays from 8 to 10 p.m. [25:09.000 --> 25:12.040] to inspire and motivate your studies of the scriptures. [25:25.160 --> 25:31.160] Yeah, I got a warrant, and I'm gonna serve them [25:31.160 --> 25:36.680] to the head government them, prosecute them. [25:36.680 --> 25:38.680] Okay. [25:40.680 --> 25:42.680] Who said? [25:42.680 --> 25:47.720] Citizens are raised for distribution. [25:47.720 --> 25:52.200] Citizens are raised for addiction. [25:53.160 --> 25:58.360] Well, I need a prosecutor to come and help me prosecute them wicked leaders. [25:58.360 --> 26:00.360] You see, them murderers are liars. [26:00.360 --> 26:03.880] Them tell me, them are liars, not tell sweet stories. [26:03.880 --> 26:05.960] Me not believe, me say what them tell me. [26:05.960 --> 26:08.840] Three percent of America vote for Bushy. [26:08.840 --> 26:11.400] So how the hell he get the presidency? [26:11.400 --> 26:13.160] That's why me have a warrant for he. [26:14.120 --> 26:15.640] Everybody listen carefully. [26:15.640 --> 26:17.720] Listen to the words of the Three Shoes Passy. [26:17.720 --> 26:20.920] Citizens are raised for distribution. [26:23.080 --> 26:31.080] Okay, we are back. [26:31.080 --> 26:33.320] Randy Kelton, Brett Fountain, we live on radio. [26:33.320 --> 26:34.680] And I'm kind of rambling here. [26:34.680 --> 26:39.000] This is a subject that I really need to do a whole show on [26:40.520 --> 26:48.360] in order to get a presentation on this issue well-crafted. [26:49.320 --> 26:54.040] Because right now it is primarily what I'm doing. [26:54.920 --> 27:02.920] Everything I'm doing is about how to get the system to respond to us as citizens [27:02.920 --> 27:06.680] and how to create a methodology for doing this [27:06.680 --> 27:09.480] that other people can use without great difficulty. [27:11.400 --> 27:14.840] And there are a lot of moving parts. [27:15.560 --> 27:17.880] And I'm trying to get those organized. [27:17.960 --> 27:23.400] I'm building up a set of templates on the prosayfromhell.com website. [27:25.320 --> 27:32.600] And what I primarily want to do is build a set of questionnaires [27:32.600 --> 27:39.080] where someone can go to the site and click on a questionnaire. [27:39.080 --> 27:45.800] And it will first ask questions to determine what their particular issue is. [27:46.760 --> 27:50.040] And then go to a questionnaire about their issues. [27:50.600 --> 27:55.960] I have due process pretty well mapped out with questionnaires. [27:57.320 --> 28:02.760] What I haven't yet done is mapped out a questionnaire [28:02.760 --> 28:10.600] that will isolate a particular issue without doing a deep dive into that issue. [28:12.920 --> 28:13.880] But I'm working on it. [28:14.120 --> 28:16.360] There's just a lot of moving parts. [28:16.360 --> 28:21.000] And the thing to me and the portion of my questionnaires [28:21.000 --> 28:25.400] that I have the most exhaustive work done is due process. [28:26.600 --> 28:28.600] Because that's really the big deal. [28:29.880 --> 28:35.080] The first thing I want to find is where the public officials have [28:35.800 --> 28:39.160] either done things right or stepped across a legal line. [28:39.880 --> 28:45.640] And when they step across a legal line, I want to be like they are. [28:46.520 --> 28:49.400] Let me guess which of those scenarios is more common. [28:51.320 --> 28:52.840] Them stepping across the legal line? [28:53.800 --> 28:56.440] Always they step across the legal line. [28:58.040 --> 29:02.040] Even when they're nice, even when they think they're doing what they're supposed to be doing, [29:02.840 --> 29:05.960] even when they're trying to do what they should be doing, [29:06.920 --> 29:10.760] the problem is, is they're doing what they're trained to do. [29:13.320 --> 29:17.480] Like you said, the prosecutors being the primary problem, [29:18.840 --> 29:20.040] they did a lot of that training. [29:21.080 --> 29:22.040] Absolutely. [29:22.040 --> 29:25.880] And I went to a magistrate. [29:25.880 --> 29:34.280] And now this guy, when I first looked at him, he had every hair exactly in place. [29:34.280 --> 29:38.200] He reminded me of someone from the 30s. [29:39.240 --> 29:45.240] He had that look, greased down hair, greased handlebar mustache, [29:46.760 --> 29:49.400] every hair precisely in place. [29:49.400 --> 29:52.920] I looked at his office, I looked at his desk. [29:52.920 --> 29:54.200] There's nothing on his desk. [29:54.200 --> 29:56.920] His desk was absolutely, everything was perfect. [29:58.120 --> 30:01.240] And I thought anal sphincter. [30:01.560 --> 30:07.560] This guy is highly visual and people who are highly visual pay attention to that kind of stuff. [30:08.600 --> 30:15.960] People who are not highly visual, they tend to be more comfortable in their skin and in the life [30:15.960 --> 30:16.760] they live. [30:16.760 --> 30:20.280] And if something's a little out of place, it is not important to them. [30:20.280 --> 30:21.320] They don't notice it. [30:23.320 --> 30:29.000] Okay, we tend to be slobs, the kind of person it is. [30:29.080 --> 30:30.120] The kind of person it is. [30:30.120 --> 30:36.280] So clearly this guy was very anal and everything exactly in place. [30:37.000 --> 30:42.040] And turned out he was very full of himself. [30:42.840 --> 30:47.160] Turned out he was a war hero, fighter pilot, Bronze Star. [30:47.960 --> 30:52.680] So the guy was no chump, but I didn't know all that at the time. [30:52.680 --> 30:57.480] And the handlebar mustache, I recognized that thing immediately. [30:58.440 --> 31:05.160] Because there was a pilot in Vietnam that wore that handlebar mustache. [31:06.200 --> 31:13.720] Had I known that he was an ex-Air Force fighter pilot, then I would have commented on the handlebar. [31:14.360 --> 31:19.640] Because that's a mustache that Colonel Ols made famous. [31:20.200 --> 31:25.560] The most famous fighter pilot in Korea and Vietnam. [31:26.040 --> 31:30.600] So he appeared to be emulating Colonel Ols. [31:31.560 --> 31:33.240] That would have told me a lot about him. [31:33.240 --> 31:38.680] That would tell me that he wasn't emulating himself. [31:40.600 --> 31:46.280] But I did get that, that this was an image he was projecting. [31:47.640 --> 31:50.040] And I violated his image. [31:50.040 --> 31:53.800] He asked me, he had me sit down to chair and he sat down next to me. [31:54.520 --> 31:57.960] And asked me, I told him I had business with the court. [31:57.960 --> 32:00.600] And he asked me what the business was and I handed him two criminal complaints. [32:01.960 --> 32:12.280] And he said, very fatherly, Mr. Colton, in Texas, all complaints are given to the district attorney. [32:14.520 --> 32:17.640] And I looked him right in the eye and said, no they're not. [32:20.840 --> 32:22.840] Yeah, see what you mean. That popped his bubble. [32:23.800 --> 32:27.000] That did not go over well. [32:28.120 --> 32:30.200] And he said, we're done here. [32:32.520 --> 32:41.000] Well, I expect this guy to treat me with a level of dignity and respect. [32:42.680 --> 32:44.360] I am his employer. [32:45.000 --> 32:50.200] And had I known of his military background, I would have treated him somewhat different. [32:50.840 --> 32:53.080] I would have treated him like a subordinate. [32:54.600 --> 32:57.880] Well, maybe I wouldn't have treated it different because I did that anyway. [32:57.880 --> 33:01.640] I asked the bailiff to arrest him right away and things went downhill. [33:01.640 --> 33:06.600] But this is our job and I'm kind of off where I wanted to go. [33:09.640 --> 33:14.040] We are the citizens in a republic. [33:14.040 --> 33:15.560] In a republic. [33:17.480 --> 33:24.600] And as a citizen in a republic, it is our duty to maintain the governmental instruments [33:24.600 --> 33:25.640] we have created. [33:27.080 --> 33:33.880] And there is only one thing that separates us from BIM. [33:35.800 --> 33:37.720] I'm sorry, that's not the way to say that. [33:37.720 --> 33:48.520] There's only one thing that is different between a republic and a democracy that is [33:48.520 --> 33:49.880] functionally different. [33:51.480 --> 34:01.080] And that is my ability as a citizen to go to a grand jury for the purpose of controlling [34:01.080 --> 34:03.400] the governmental instruments I have created. [34:04.360 --> 34:08.920] That is the tool I have available and it makes prosecutors crazy. [34:11.080 --> 34:12.280] And with good cause. [34:12.280 --> 34:12.840] I get it. [34:14.120 --> 34:15.800] The prosecutor is the prosecutor. [34:16.840 --> 34:22.120] He's the one that has to take this to court and argue it before a jury or a judge. [34:23.480 --> 34:29.880] So what's this crap when you have someone who's not necessarily learning counsel [34:30.680 --> 34:32.920] making determinations a probable cause? [34:32.920 --> 34:35.080] He don't have to prosecute these things. [34:36.120 --> 34:41.400] So he finds probable cause and throws me a case that I can't win. [34:42.280 --> 34:44.440] I'm the guy that should make that determination. [34:45.880 --> 34:50.120] Well, our founders were very well aware of that issue. [34:51.080 --> 34:57.160] And they absolutely forbade prosecutors from making that determination. [34:57.160 --> 35:04.360] And created grand juries to stand between the public and the prosecutor. [35:06.680 --> 35:08.440] So what is this nonsense? [35:09.160 --> 35:10.760] A complaint goes to a prosecutor. [35:12.600 --> 35:19.480] I don't see anything in law that directs a criminal complaint to a prosecuted attorney. [35:20.200 --> 35:21.720] No, there aren't any. [35:21.720 --> 35:24.200] Although there is a place where he has a duty. [35:24.840 --> 35:28.280] If he gets a criminal complaint, he's supposed to direct it to the magistrate. [35:28.840 --> 35:29.080] Yeah. [35:29.080 --> 35:31.240] And that's because I'm a citizen or a Republican. [35:31.240 --> 35:32.360] I can do anything I want to. [35:33.800 --> 35:38.280] And if I happen to be in front of a prosecutor because he prosecutes crime and I don't know [35:38.280 --> 35:41.320] all these intricacies and I tell him that a crime has been committed, [35:42.680 --> 35:44.760] he has to give notice to some magistrate. [35:46.360 --> 35:48.840] I am supposed to give notice to a magistrate. [35:48.840 --> 35:53.000] Police are specifically commanded to give notice to some magistrate. [35:53.960 --> 35:57.560] Nothing requires anybody to give notice to a prosecutor. [35:58.360 --> 35:59.000] Exactly. [36:00.120 --> 36:02.840] Prosecutors don't like that and rightfully so. [36:02.840 --> 36:05.000] And we'll speak to that when we come back on the other side. [36:05.720 --> 36:08.840] Randy Kelton, Brett Fountain, Wheel of Law Radio with no callers. [36:12.200 --> 36:15.560] Do you have a business with five employees or more? [36:15.560 --> 36:19.400] How would you like to save hundreds of thousands of dollars in FICA taxes? [36:19.480 --> 36:23.560] Do you have a major medical plan that nobody can afford to be on? [36:23.560 --> 36:29.000] Or how would you like to save in premium costs on a current major medical plan by [36:29.000 --> 36:30.840] lowering the claims cost? [36:30.840 --> 36:37.640] The CHAMP plan is a section 125 IRS approved preventative health plan that provides your [36:37.640 --> 36:45.640] employees with doctors, medications, emergency care, and Teladoc all at zero cost with zero co-pay. [36:45.640 --> 36:51.640] If you are an employee, you also will get a pay raise by paying less in FICA taxes. [36:51.640 --> 36:57.880] As an employer, you will save hundreds of thousands of dollars in matching FICA taxes. [36:57.880 --> 37:00.840] The CHAMP plan can help add working capital, [37:00.840 --> 37:04.200] market resale value, or pay down lines of credit. [37:04.200 --> 37:12.120] Call Scott at 214-730-2471 or dallasmms.com. [37:13.080 --> 37:15.720] Are you the plaintiff or defendant in a lawsuit? [37:16.280 --> 37:21.080] Win your case without an attorney with Jurisdictionary, the affordable, easy to [37:21.080 --> 37:26.920] understand, 4-CD course that will show you how in 24 hours, step-by-step. [37:27.640 --> 37:31.320] If you have a lawyer, know what your lawyer should be doing. [37:31.320 --> 37:34.520] If you don't have a lawyer, know what you should do for yourself. [37:35.240 --> 37:40.040] Thousands have won with our step-by-step course and now you can too. [37:40.120 --> 37:45.400] Jurisdictionary was created by a licensed attorney with 22 years of case-winning [37:45.400 --> 37:51.160] experience. Even if you're not in a lawsuit, you can learn what everyone should understand [37:51.160 --> 37:55.560] about the principles and practices that control our American courts. [37:55.560 --> 38:01.800] You'll receive our audio classroom, video seminar, tutorials, forms for civil cases, [38:01.800 --> 38:04.440] pro se tactics, and much more. [38:04.440 --> 38:12.840] Please visit ruleoflawradio.com and click on the banner or call toll-free 866-LAW-EZ. [38:35.400 --> 38:41.240] Yeah, always, I must be careful what I'm wishing for. [38:42.600 --> 38:46.840] When I'm hungry, I like to know just what I'm fishing for. [38:47.560 --> 38:52.200] I ain't asking for much, I ain't trying to be no glutton. [38:53.640 --> 38:56.840] I'm just here making my living pushing buttons. [38:56.840 --> 39:08.440] I give my message out to anyone in shot and distance. I vote for bravery and against slavery. [39:08.440 --> 39:11.880] Okay, we are back. Randy Kelton, Brett Fountain, Rule of Law Radio. [39:11.880 --> 39:18.440] And if I sound like I'm kind of flopping around here, you're right. I'm trying to [39:19.400 --> 39:29.160] figure out the best way of saying this so it makes absolute sense what I'm talking about [39:29.160 --> 39:36.680] from the beginning so that when we walk into a governmental agency, [39:37.960 --> 39:47.960] we have our head positioned right as the citizen in a republic and what that means. [39:49.160 --> 39:57.720] But I made this cheeky little comment about no callers, and it was kind of churlish of me to do [39:57.720 --> 40:06.360] that. I think that got Tina tied, it stirred up. Hello, Ms. Tina. [40:07.560 --> 40:09.800] Hello, Mr. Fountain. [40:09.800 --> 40:14.040] Tell me you didn't call to comment on my churlish comment. [40:14.040 --> 40:21.480] No, I was trying not to do that. I could, but I wouldn't. [40:23.960 --> 40:25.720] So it's been a while. How are you? [40:27.960 --> 40:34.920] I'm doing pretty good. I was away on a little vacation in Colorado and ended up in the ER [40:34.920 --> 40:41.560] with kidney stones one day, but I did get excellent treatment at the ER, so I cannot complain. [40:42.360 --> 40:44.280] Wow, kidney stones. Sorry to hear that. [40:46.600 --> 40:50.440] It's probably the most painful thing I've ever gone through in my life. I don't want to go [40:50.440 --> 40:55.880] through it again, but we'll have to wait until it goes through my system. But other than that, I'm [40:55.880 --> 41:10.040] good. That kind of proves that Tina's got grit. You probably don't find that quite as funny as I do. [41:12.520 --> 41:20.840] Well, actually, it's interesting. I like the comparison. Why not? But I was just calling in [41:20.840 --> 41:32.840] to say that my wonderful nephew, who is the purveyor of Queen's English and proper pronunciation, [41:32.840 --> 41:39.720] which, you know, Randy needs to check out and learn, but he has not done that yet, [41:39.720 --> 41:48.520] but we'll save that for another time. Anyway, he introduced me to ChatGPP [41:49.800 --> 41:57.400] for some of the things I was doing in terms of trying to get some sponsorship for a new vehicle [41:57.400 --> 42:03.640] for all the charity work that I do. And he said, oh, you know, this is a question to ask. This is [42:03.640 --> 42:11.160] what we do. And I was blown away. And I said, well, okay, what about if I asked this? And he [42:11.160 --> 42:17.800] says, well, try to ask it this way. And I ended up going through quite a few things with it. [42:18.520 --> 42:28.120] And I did an attorney complaint to ChatGPP, which I'd been putting off because I was trying to [42:28.120 --> 42:37.000] figure out, oh, how do I write it? What do I do? And it was about the fact that he refused to [42:37.000 --> 42:51.400] send me a courtesy copy of any response. And he claims that he mailed it on the 5th of the month. [42:52.360 --> 43:02.840] I did not receive it until the 15th, which of course really impacted my time to respond. [43:04.360 --> 43:11.640] And when I looked at the envelope, it's one of those, you know, I don't know where they have [43:11.640 --> 43:17.720] a meter in their office. Right. Yeah. The meter mark. So it doesn't have a postmark on it. [43:17.720 --> 43:24.440] No. So they love those things. Yeah, they do. And they could put it in the mail engine. They [43:24.440 --> 43:32.520] can say they put it in the mail on the 5th, but there's no proof except their type signature. [43:32.520 --> 43:40.360] It's not signed. It's just a S and their name type. And, you know, I promised I'd put it in there. [43:40.360 --> 43:46.840] Well, where's the proof that you put it in there on the 5th if I didn't get it till the 15th? [43:47.720 --> 43:53.240] Mm-hmm. And so I thought, I'm going to write an attorney comment because he has my email address. [43:54.120 --> 43:58.680] He could, as they generally do with other attorneys, give them a courtesy copy, [44:00.360 --> 44:09.240] which I have done with him, but I won't do again. And so Chat GPT came up with a really nice response [44:09.880 --> 44:15.960] within three minutes. And then I said, well, could you just alter this and that? And yeah, [44:16.840 --> 44:23.080] I was able to get it out the next day where I would have probably procrastinated a little [44:23.080 --> 44:25.880] because I was like, okay, how am I going to write this? What am I going to say? [44:26.680 --> 44:34.360] They came up with the law and all kinds of things in such a quick time. Now I'm sure [44:36.200 --> 44:42.680] if you're doing an actual complaint, you probably have to do a lot of checking, but to be able to [44:43.400 --> 44:49.800] throw out an attorney complaint letter within minutes, I think is very useful [44:50.840 --> 44:57.000] to all of us who struggle with that because we have so many time constraints. [44:59.320 --> 45:06.440] Yeah, it is very quick, but there is one serious issue that it still has. [45:07.320 --> 45:08.520] And what is that? [45:08.520 --> 45:18.440] A lot of that apparently very well-constructed dialogue is really horse poop. [45:19.720 --> 45:24.360] You've really got to watch it, especially if it's citing case law. [45:25.960 --> 45:29.800] I find that ChatGTB when it cites case law is always wrong. [45:29.800 --> 45:44.280] I checked what it said about the fact of being able of notifying the other side in a timely manner [45:44.920 --> 45:54.600] of a response was correct. Now it was a very simple complaint, so it's not major, [45:54.680 --> 46:00.680] and I'm sure you have to check. I don't think I would have it write an actual complaint, [46:00.680 --> 46:10.280] but to make an attorney complaint, I thought it was very good and very helpful in saying, [46:10.280 --> 46:14.360] hey, throw this out there. This is what it says about this, this, and this, [46:14.920 --> 46:23.640] and I would not have done that as quickly and got it into the state bar [46:24.600 --> 46:26.840] as quickly as I would if I hadn't used them. [46:28.600 --> 46:34.280] Let me comment on that. That I have found it is very good with language. [46:35.480 --> 46:35.980] Yes. [46:36.440 --> 46:39.960] It is an excellent tool for manipulating the language, [46:40.200 --> 46:46.200] but I think there's something that has been deliberately introduced into it [46:47.640 --> 46:58.200] that causes it not to be so accurate. ChatGTB is so good that it can produce such really nice prose, [46:59.480 --> 47:02.280] but then it gets case law that's always wrong. [47:02.280 --> 47:16.120] I'm looking at it thinking, okay, how can I give it a preface to whatever I'm going to ask [47:17.320 --> 47:25.560] that will sort out this problem? I asked ChatGTB and I asked Grok. I was comparing them to see how [47:25.560 --> 47:30.760] they did one to the other, and I asked them to write me a short brief. I don't even remember [47:30.760 --> 47:37.640] what it was about. Both of them wrote a short brief, and they were both well done and just [47:37.640 --> 47:44.360] somewhat different, but the first case they cited was the same on both of them, and it was wrong. [47:46.040 --> 47:56.600] I ask it to, for every case that it cited, do not cite a quotation, that is a paraphrase, [47:57.160 --> 48:05.160] go into the case and find that quotation from the case. If you cannot find the paraphrase [48:05.160 --> 48:12.120] that you reference inside the case, don't use it. I did that to both of them, and both of them [48:12.920 --> 48:17.960] were unable to find the paraphrase in the first case, so they both found another case. [48:19.880 --> 48:21.880] Exactly the same case. [48:22.600 --> 48:27.160] That's what I said. It's exactly what I said. [48:29.400 --> 48:35.240] What? Exactly the same case, and it did find the correct quotation. [48:36.840 --> 48:42.680] So I thought about that from a programmatic perspective, and Brett's programmer, you get [48:42.680 --> 48:51.720] this, all I had to do was tell Grok, don't give me any case you can't find the quotation you're [48:51.720 --> 48:59.480] referencing inside the case. So why haven't the programmers already done that? [49:02.120 --> 49:12.760] And Grok, which is X, and Chat did exactly the same thing, exactly the same way. I'm thinking [49:12.840 --> 49:20.600] there's an engine underneath both of those that are the same, and this is a very simple [49:21.880 --> 49:29.080] way of making both of those more accurate. Brett, why didn't they put that in there? [49:30.360 --> 49:35.800] Well, they told it to learn. They're having it learn from you, expecting you to teach it that. [49:36.600 --> 49:42.920] But they didn't tell it not to cite a quotation from a case [49:44.440 --> 49:46.840] where the quotation was not in the case. [49:51.480 --> 49:56.760] How is it supposed to know that's important, though? It looks at across the internet, across [49:56.760 --> 50:02.440] all of its source material, and it sees lawyers doing this all the time, and theirs is not backed [50:02.440 --> 50:07.800] up. So the pattern is just to make a case and make it look like this. [50:09.800 --> 50:14.120] Style it in italics and give it some numbers and put a year on it. [50:14.120 --> 50:21.640] So in order to get Grok to give me trash, it had to be programmed to give me trash. [50:24.280 --> 50:29.160] Because the command to stop the trash was so simple and basically straightforward, [50:29.160 --> 50:35.720] but they never put it in there. I don't get that one. Hang on. Randy Kelton, Brett Fountain, [50:35.720 --> 50:40.680] we was on our radio. Eric, I see you there. We'll get to you shortly. Our calling number, [50:40.680 --> 50:50.280] 512-646-1984, we'll be taking your calls all night. And Brett, I did my outros too soon, [50:50.280 --> 50:53.720] so you have to fill in my empty space so we don't sound dumb on the air. [50:54.680 --> 51:00.360] Well, sometimes it's fun probing and prompting these AIs to explain their foibles to you. [51:02.360 --> 51:06.280] Would you like to make more definite progress in your walk with God? [51:06.280 --> 51:12.360] Bibles for America is offering a free study Bible and a set of free Christian books that can really [51:12.360 --> 51:17.560] help. The New Testament Recovery Version is one of the most comprehensive study Bibles available [51:17.560 --> 51:22.440] today. It's an accurate translation, and it contains thousands of footnotes that will help [51:22.440 --> 51:28.760] you to know God and to know the meaning of life. The free books are a three-volume set called Basic [51:28.760 --> 51:33.640] Elements of the Christian Life. Chapter by chapter, Basic Elements of the Christian Life [51:33.640 --> 51:40.040] clearly presents God's plan of salvation, growing in Christ, and how to build up the church. [51:40.040 --> 51:46.440] To order your free New Testament Recovery Version and Basic Elements of the Christian Life, call [51:46.440 --> 52:01.320] Bibles for America toll free at 888-551-0102. That's 888-551-0102. Or visit us online at bfa.org. [52:01.320 --> 52:07.160] Live, free speech radio, logosradionetwork.com. [52:14.360 --> 52:19.320] The Bill of Rights contains the first 10 amendments of our Constitution. They guarantee the specific [52:19.320 --> 52:24.360] freedoms Americans should know and protect. Our liberty depends on it. I'm Dr. Catherine Albrecht, [52:24.360 --> 52:28.840] and I'll be right back with an unforgettable way to remember one of your constitutional rights. [52:29.400 --> 52:34.920] Privacy is under attack. When you give up data about yourself, you'll never get it back again. [52:34.920 --> 52:39.720] And once your privacy is gone, you'll find your freedoms will start to vanish too. [52:39.720 --> 52:45.880] So protect your rights, say no to surveillance, and keep your information to yourself. Privacy, [52:45.880 --> 52:51.080] it's worth hanging on to. This public service announcement is brought to you by Startpage.com, [52:51.080 --> 52:57.080] the private search engine alternative to Google, Yahoo, and Bing. Start over with Startpage. [52:58.040 --> 53:02.920] Imagine your mom and dad are getting ready for bed. They pull back the covers and find a third [53:02.920 --> 53:07.960] party there. He announces, I'm with the military and I'm sleeping here tonight. That shocking image [53:07.960 --> 53:12.760] of a third party in my parents' bed reminds me what the third amendment was designed to prevent. [53:12.760 --> 53:17.480] It protects us from being forced to share our homes with soldiers, a common demand in the days [53:17.480 --> 53:22.520] of our founding fathers. Third party, third amendment, get it? So if you answer a knock at [53:22.840 --> 53:27.320] your door and guys in fatigues demand lodging, tell them to dust off their copy of the Bill of [53:27.320 --> 53:32.200] Rights and reread the third amendment. I'm Dr. Catherine Albrecht. More news and information [53:32.200 --> 53:46.920] at CatherineAlbrecht.com. The Bill of Rights contains the first 10 amendments of our [53:46.920 --> 53:51.400] constitution. They guarantee the specific freedoms Americans should know and protect. [53:51.400 --> 53:55.480] Our liberty depends on it. I'm Dr. Catherine Albrecht and I'll be right back with an [53:55.480 --> 53:58.760] unforgettable way to remember one of your constitutional rights. [53:59.400 --> 54:04.920] Privacy is under attack. When you give up data about yourself, you'll never get it back again. [54:04.920 --> 54:09.720] And once your privacy is gone, you'll find your freedoms will start to vanish too. [54:09.720 --> 54:15.880] So protect your rights. Say no to surveillance and keep your information to yourself. Privacy, [54:15.880 --> 54:21.080] it's worth hanging on to. This public service announcement is brought to you by Startpage.com, [54:21.080 --> 54:27.000] the private search engine alternative to Google, Yahoo and Bing. Start over with Startpage. [54:28.680 --> 54:33.160] Imagine four eyes staring at you through binoculars, a magnifying glass or a pair of [54:33.160 --> 54:38.440] x-ray goggles. That imagery reminds me that the fourth amendment guarantees Americans freedom from [54:38.440 --> 54:44.120] unreasonable search and seizure. Fourth amendment, four eyes staring at you, get it? Unfortunately, [54:44.120 --> 54:48.840] the government is trampling our fourth amendment rights in the name of security. Case in point, [54:48.840 --> 54:53.640] TSA airport scanners that peer under your clothing. When government employees demand [54:53.640 --> 54:58.680] a peep at your privates without probable cause, I say it's time to sound the constitutional alarm [54:58.680 --> 55:03.160] bells. Join me in asking our representatives to dust off the bill of rights and use their [55:03.160 --> 55:08.120] googly eyes to take a gander at the fourth. I'm Dr. Catherine Albrecht. More news and [55:08.120 --> 55:11.400] information at CatherineAlbrecht.com. [55:38.120 --> 56:06.840] Okay, howdy, howdy, Randy Kelton, we're at Fountain Boulevard radio. On this Friday, [56:07.720 --> 56:19.400] the 17th day of October 2025, and our call in number 512-646-1984, and we were talking to [56:19.400 --> 56:32.600] sweet Tina. Okay. That's right. Not to be mixed up with the Charlie's Tina, because we don't have [56:32.680 --> 56:40.120] Charlie's Tina. Well, Tina helped me out here when we were going to break. I said foibles, [56:40.120 --> 56:47.800] and Randy was asking me, who uses that word? I said, well, I don't know, but I think maybe Tina [56:47.800 --> 56:59.240] would get it. Is that a legit word? It is a legit word. Well, I wasn't saying it wasn't legit. [56:59.720 --> 57:05.640] It's just, I don't think I've ever used that word in polite conversation. [57:07.240 --> 57:14.200] Well, it's basically a minor weakness or eccentricity in someone's character. [57:14.840 --> 57:22.680] I must ask my nephew to do a little skit on it and see what he comes up with, because he's [57:22.680 --> 57:28.840] very good at that. But it means a minor four or shortcoming in a character or behavior. [57:31.240 --> 57:38.040] So there you go. I do like the use of those terms that we don't use a lot. [57:38.760 --> 57:47.400] I read a book by Robert Louis Stevenson. As far as I'm concerned, the trashy his book he ever wrote [57:47.400 --> 57:56.760] was Treasure Island. It was pulp trash. He just used the standard techniques, the way to [57:57.400 --> 58:03.320] draw people in and keep them moving along. I've read a book called The Master of the Ballon Tray. [58:04.360 --> 58:11.160] Long, boring. It took a while to figure out something he was doing. [58:11.560 --> 58:19.160] It was as if he would look up words and find the second or third meaning. [58:21.400 --> 58:27.160] In one case, he was speaking to someone doing something. We thought he did this for one reason, [58:27.160 --> 58:37.400] but on closer inspection, we found he had another ground. Ground. I knew exactly what he meant, [58:38.280 --> 58:47.960] but I had never heard it used that way. I'd never heard ground in terms of motivations. [58:49.160 --> 58:57.000] I'd never heard it used in the singular that way. That got me paying attention. It appeared as though [58:57.000 --> 59:04.920] he was doing an experiment where he took words and used a definition that's not common. [59:04.920 --> 59:08.440] That sounds like a fun project. [59:09.000 --> 59:13.720] Yeah. At first, when I didn't realize what he was doing, it was long and boring, but [59:14.520 --> 59:18.920] when I realized what he was doing, I caught him doing it all over the place. That made it [59:18.920 --> 59:29.640] a lot more interesting. I can tell you're enthralled by this. We probably need to talk [59:29.640 --> 59:36.120] about something more focused on what you want to talk about instead of this arcane nonsense. [59:40.120 --> 59:43.640] Okay, Tina, let's go back to what you want to talk about. [59:43.640 --> 59:53.320] Progressing. Well, I think that CHAT GPT has a lot of good points, maybe not quite as good [59:53.320 --> 01:00:05.160] from legal. I used it also for I'm doing this charity event where I get donations from wineries [01:00:05.160 --> 01:00:12.040] and we use it for our local charity. We sell wine tickets. Last year, I raised $11,000 with [01:00:12.040 --> 01:00:20.200] this particular winery. I wanted to send a letter out to people encouraging them as to why to [01:00:20.200 --> 01:00:27.080] purchase a ticket and how they could help our local community. CHAT GPT came up with a wonderful [01:00:27.080 --> 01:00:35.400] email. I put the basics in, but it turned it into something really good. Then I asked it to put some [01:00:36.280 --> 01:00:42.520] things together to send to the wineries who donated wine to say, hey, this is [01:00:43.320 --> 01:00:49.320] what you could put on your social media or website as to how you are helping your community. [01:00:49.320 --> 01:00:57.320] It came up with some fabulous phrases that I would not have even thought of. It really helped [01:00:57.320 --> 01:01:07.480] me to put some things together for this charity event. It was just over and above what I had [01:01:07.480 --> 01:01:17.160] thought of. It saved me so much time and effort. I was able to go in and one of them, I said, [01:01:17.400 --> 01:01:25.400] could you do it this way on this one? Less than 60 seconds later, I had a different version and [01:01:25.400 --> 01:01:31.560] then they said, how about this version? How about we try this? I had four different versions to [01:01:32.280 --> 01:01:39.480] look at and say, hey, I like this one better or this one might work. In terms of saving time for [01:01:40.040 --> 01:01:46.280] other things other than legal, maybe just a letter that you want to send or an email you want to send [01:01:46.280 --> 01:01:58.920] to some attorney general or whatever, it would be extremely helpful in making it sound much more [01:01:58.920 --> 01:02:04.520] professional than you might be struggling to make yourself because you're overwhelmed with everything [01:02:04.520 --> 01:02:10.200] you're doing in regular life. I think that's where it really shines. [01:02:10.200 --> 01:02:17.080] I'd like to speak to something that may make you somewhat uncomfortable. [01:02:19.800 --> 01:02:26.040] I've spent a lot of time studying language and how to use language to [01:02:28.120 --> 01:02:36.280] move the mind of your listener. In that research, I found some interesting tools. There's a book [01:02:36.280 --> 01:02:50.040] called Three Genres. It's a book on how to write poetry in prose. It has technical tools in there [01:02:50.040 --> 01:02:57.400] that you normally don't come across, assonance, consonance, alliteration, rhyme, and meter. [01:02:58.200 --> 01:03:06.760] I was working with AI and I thought I'd do a little experiment to see what it could do with meter. [01:03:08.440 --> 01:03:15.720] For a long time, originally country western songs were done traditionally, [01:03:16.760 --> 01:03:24.760] where the meter of the lyrics landed exactly on the note of the song. [01:03:24.760 --> 01:03:36.520] I heard the wreck on the highway. Then for a while, they started doing country western songs [01:03:36.520 --> 01:03:42.520] where they had music over here on the side and they had lyrics on the other side. The two didn't [01:03:42.520 --> 01:03:48.040] seem to have anything to do with each other. Finally, I guess that was an experiment that [01:03:48.040 --> 01:03:55.160] didn't work out well because they went back to proper meter. Well, you can do meter in prose [01:03:55.160 --> 01:04:02.680] the same way. I had it write me a presentation. I don't even remember what it was about. [01:04:03.800 --> 01:04:10.760] Then I asked it, can you set that to meter? Look at all of the sentences in this, [01:04:11.560 --> 01:04:19.880] find the number of syllable sounds in the sentence, and then find me a high average [01:04:19.880 --> 01:04:30.440] and a low average. It did that. Then I asked it to set the first sentence to the high average [01:04:30.440 --> 01:04:37.560] number of syllable sounds, the second sentence to the low average syllable sounds. I had done [01:04:37.560 --> 01:04:44.200] that years ago with a letter to the chief of police of Fort Worth. I had a half a dozen people [01:04:44.200 --> 01:04:54.440] read it. Every person who read that read it to the last word. It was a page and a half [01:04:55.400 --> 01:05:03.000] before making a comment. Tina, you've had people read your stuff and they read the first sentence [01:05:03.000 --> 01:05:07.720] and they start commenting right away. Then they get lost in their comments and you can't even [01:05:07.720 --> 01:05:14.040] get them to go through the whole document without them commenting and moving away and changing [01:05:14.040 --> 01:05:22.920] subject. These people read this page and a half letter front to back before making a single comment. [01:05:22.920 --> 01:05:29.400] I watched that and said, holy mackerel, this is nuts. It took me a while to really figure out [01:05:29.400 --> 01:05:37.320] what was going on. They're hearing this beat in the background like iambic pentameter. [01:05:44.680 --> 01:05:53.080] If I do ta-da-da-da-da-da-da-da-da-da-da-da-da-da-da-da-da-da-da-da, oops, one too many. [01:05:53.720 --> 01:06:02.200] The brain will notice that immediately and trip over it. The brain is really powerful. [01:06:03.640 --> 01:06:11.560] If you write something and set it to meter, these people read that whole document with this [01:06:11.560 --> 01:06:22.920] tune, this meter in the background expecting the last word of the last sentence to land [01:06:22.920 --> 01:06:34.360] squarely on meter. It turns out chat is really good at that. You can take two documents, [01:06:34.440 --> 01:06:41.480] they look exactly the same just from a cursory glance but they read so much better if you've [01:06:41.480 --> 01:06:49.960] set it to meter. There are several other tools of that nature that you can get chat to add in there [01:06:49.960 --> 01:06:58.440] and nobody will notice it but it constructs language that's more attuned the way the living [01:06:58.440 --> 01:07:10.600] mind does what it does. Am I making sense, Tina? Yes, you are. I still think that it has got a lot [01:07:10.600 --> 01:07:21.800] to offer to the average person who is overwhelmed and might not participate or do something that [01:07:21.800 --> 01:07:26.920] they should just because they're thinking, I just can't do this, I don't know where to start. [01:07:29.240 --> 01:07:37.880] It may give them that impetus to start. Some people will just put it in there without checking [01:07:37.880 --> 01:07:42.760] it. Others will say, yeah, this is pretty good, let me check a little bit further. [01:07:44.440 --> 01:07:51.480] I think that's where it has a lot of benefit for those who are so overwhelmed with [01:07:52.200 --> 01:07:54.840] life that they don't want to fight when they should. [01:07:58.440 --> 01:08:05.480] I couldn't hear all of that breath but it sounded like you had the same response most people get [01:08:06.520 --> 01:08:13.320] that they feel like if you ask chat to do something this sophisticated that [01:08:14.120 --> 01:08:20.280] rings outside the conscious awareness, you feel like you're trying to manipulate people. [01:08:22.760 --> 01:08:24.920] But isn't that what language is all about? [01:08:25.800 --> 01:08:26.680] Of course. [01:08:27.640 --> 01:08:33.640] So everything is manipulation. It's not about positive or negative, this is just about [01:08:33.640 --> 01:08:45.320] manipulation. I look at it as we're trying to transmit complex mindsets to people. [01:08:45.320 --> 01:08:56.440] So we should use every tool that's available to transmit what's in my mind to someone else's mind. [01:09:00.040 --> 01:09:05.720] No two people are the same so it's really, really hard to try to take something out of my mind and [01:09:05.720 --> 01:09:10.280] stick it into your mind. I use words that I have meanings for. [01:09:10.840 --> 01:09:17.480] Are you being harassed by debt collectors with phone calls, letters or even lawsuits? [01:09:17.480 --> 01:09:23.080] Stop debt collectors now with the Michael Mears proven method. Michael Mears has won six cases [01:09:23.080 --> 01:09:27.880] in federal court against debt collectors and now you can win too. You'll get step-by-step [01:09:27.880 --> 01:09:32.920] instructions in plain English on how to win in court using federal civil rights statutes, [01:09:32.920 --> 01:09:38.680] what to do when contacted by phone, mail or court summons, how to answer letters and phone calls, [01:09:38.680 --> 01:09:43.240] how to get debt collectors out of your credit report, how to turn the financial tables on them [01:09:43.240 --> 01:09:49.400] and make them pay you to go away. The Michael Mears proven method is the solution for how to [01:09:49.400 --> 01:09:54.280] stop debt collectors. Personal consultation is available as well. For more information, [01:09:54.280 --> 01:09:59.480] please visit ruleoflawradio.com and click on the blue Michael Mears banner or email [01:09:59.560 --> 01:10:09.400] michaelmears at yahoo.com. That's ruleoflawradio.com or email m-i-c-h-a-e-l-m-i-r-r-a-s at yahoo.com [01:10:09.400 --> 01:10:15.000] to learn how to stop debt collectors now. I love logos. Without the shows on this network, [01:10:15.000 --> 01:10:19.400] I'd be almost as ignorant as my friends. I'm so addicted to the truth now that there's no going [01:10:19.400 --> 01:10:25.080] back. I need my truth fixed. I'd be lost without logos and I really want to help keep this network [01:10:25.080 --> 01:10:29.160] on the air. I'd love to volunteer as a show producer but I'm a bit of a Luddite and I really [01:10:29.160 --> 01:10:34.920] don't have any money to give because I spent it all on supplements. How can I help logos? Well, [01:10:34.920 --> 01:10:39.880] I'm glad you asked. Whenever you order anything from Amazon, you can help logos. You can order [01:10:39.880 --> 01:10:45.800] your supplies or holiday gifts. First thing you do is clear your cookies. Now go to logosradio [01:10:45.800 --> 01:10:52.200] network.com. Click on the Amazon logo and bookmark it. Now when you order anything from Amazon, [01:10:52.200 --> 01:10:58.280] you use that link and logos gets a few pesos. Do I pay extra? No. Do you have to do anything [01:10:58.280 --> 01:11:05.000] different when I order? No. Can I use my Amazon Prime? No. I mean, yes. Wow, giving without doing [01:11:05.000 --> 01:11:11.800] anything or spending any money. This is perfect. Thank you so much. We are welcome. Happy holidays, [01:11:11.800 --> 01:11:15.400] Logos. [01:11:41.800 --> 01:12:09.800] Okay, we are back and Brett and I were talking on the break about ways to [01:12:10.760 --> 01:12:18.920] manipulate AI so that it's more intuitive for human beings and how to teach AI to do [01:12:18.920 --> 01:12:27.800] mental context and Brett said, do we even know what Tina called in for? No, we just went off [01:12:27.800 --> 01:12:37.880] on our own thing. Tina, let's go back. You called in to talk about how well AI had worked for you. [01:12:38.600 --> 01:12:41.960] So let's go back to your subject instead of drifting off on mine. [01:12:44.120 --> 01:12:51.320] Well, I just felt that it worked very well for the attorney complaint that I [01:12:52.920 --> 01:13:00.120] had needed to write and was kind of blocking because I had so much else going on [01:13:01.080 --> 01:13:10.200] and it came up with something very quickly. I mean, within minutes and it had a very good [01:13:12.600 --> 01:13:20.520] outlook on it and it talked about how the rule, the rule of law where they're required to, [01:13:22.040 --> 01:13:29.640] I'm trying to think of it off the top of my head, not waste time and to allow the other party to be [01:13:29.640 --> 01:13:41.320] notified properly and timely and when I looked at the rule, it was correct and so it gave me [01:13:42.120 --> 01:13:46.680] the confidence to just say, hey, you know, I don't have a lot of time for this. [01:13:46.680 --> 01:13:51.240] I need to get this in there and they did come back and say, hey, we need a little bit more [01:13:51.240 --> 01:13:58.600] information. Have you complained about this before? Because this particular response from the attorney [01:13:59.400 --> 01:14:07.320] to a filing I'd made, they claimed they had mailed it on the fifth of the month. [01:14:08.360 --> 01:14:16.280] I did not receive it until the 15th. Now, I know the mail can be slow, but 10 days [01:14:17.720 --> 01:14:26.440] was past mail and the courts deem you to have received something within five to seven days [01:14:27.240 --> 01:14:34.680] if an attorney signs a paper, says, you know, proof of service that I put it in the mail on this day. [01:14:34.680 --> 01:14:39.640] Well, there's no signature on that proof of service. It's just F and their type name. [01:14:40.600 --> 01:14:47.320] The envelope, there is no date stamp and no timestamp. It's just, you know, one of those [01:14:47.320 --> 01:14:54.360] generic postage stamps and I talked to the post office staff and they said, well, you know, [01:14:54.360 --> 01:15:00.120] is there any proof of this? And they said, no, it's just one of those stamped meters. [01:15:00.120 --> 01:15:07.080] They can put it into the mail anytime they like after they stamped it. We all know attorneys lie. [01:15:08.520 --> 01:15:14.440] So if they say they put it in the mail on the fifth and it didn't arrive to me until 10 days later, [01:15:15.240 --> 01:15:17.320] no, I don't think they put it in the mail on the fifth. [01:15:18.360 --> 01:15:23.480] Exactly. You know what, Tina, I caught my attorney doing that one time. You might [01:15:23.480 --> 01:15:28.600] remember that Ms. Patty, the lady that was, she was having her house foreclosed on. [01:15:30.040 --> 01:15:35.160] Well, part of the deal when I was going through all those attorneys left and right, [01:15:35.160 --> 01:15:40.040] I kept on grieving them. They disappear and I'd get another one to find something he did wrong. [01:15:41.160 --> 01:15:50.600] Well, one of them put in some document to the court and sent a copy that I'm supposed to receive [01:15:51.560 --> 01:15:57.720] from some other remote office they had, like, I don't know, Alaska or something. And it was, [01:16:00.360 --> 01:16:05.080] I don't know if they just, maybe they meter marked it and then sent it over there or sent [01:16:05.080 --> 01:16:11.880] an email and had it remotely printed. But it came from, physically from, some ridiculously far place [01:16:12.920 --> 01:16:19.400] instead of right there in the Metroplex. And the only way that that got caught was because [01:16:20.360 --> 01:16:25.080] the ridiculously far place stamped their postmark on top of their meter mark. [01:16:28.760 --> 01:16:30.120] So I have our grieved them for that. [01:16:32.440 --> 01:16:37.560] And nothing ever happens, but at least we're letting them know, hey, you know what? These [01:16:37.560 --> 01:16:44.200] people lie. Don't, don't, we cannot trust an attorney is going to put something in the mail [01:16:44.280 --> 01:16:50.280] when they say they put it in the mail because there is no proof. They're putting it in for [01:16:50.280 --> 01:17:01.560] a stuff like, just like years ago when the bank sent me a notification about this hearing [01:17:02.680 --> 01:17:09.960] and the case that the property's in California, the attorney's in California, the case is in [01:17:09.960 --> 01:17:16.520] California. And lo and behold, the proof of service of them sending this notice of the court [01:17:16.520 --> 01:17:23.880] case came from Texas. Well, let's see, why would you have to do that? Just like your case, Randy, [01:17:25.240 --> 01:17:31.000] why isn't it coming from California where the attorney's office is? Why is it coming from some [01:17:31.000 --> 01:17:38.840] remote office with some, you know, low level employee typing his name, not even signing it. [01:17:38.840 --> 01:17:45.640] And that's against the rules, but nothing ever comes of it. No matter what you complain about, [01:17:45.640 --> 01:17:52.760] oh, they really didn't do anything wrong. Oh, really? They didn't want me to get this mailing [01:17:52.760 --> 01:17:58.920] and they didn't want me to depose the person who claims they nailed it because they knew it would [01:17:58.920 --> 01:18:08.360] be very expensive if not impossible for me to depose them in Texas. Just like you might not [01:18:08.360 --> 01:18:11.960] have been able to depose them coming from some remote place in Alaska or whatever. [01:18:17.320 --> 01:18:26.760] So what I'm saying is that having AI help us process just save a little time and maybe [01:18:27.320 --> 01:18:32.600] throw out some attorney complaints that are simple, not the complex ones because you really have to [01:18:32.600 --> 01:18:40.760] work at those, but some of the simple ones, even if it throws out five that as you know, [01:18:40.760 --> 01:18:47.880] Randy says it does ding them and their record, even if it's not, you know, talking about potting [01:18:47.880 --> 01:18:53.000] their hair on the left, it's talking about them not mailing something and they can't prove it. [01:18:54.440 --> 01:19:00.200] So let's throw these out there very quickly to save us time and ding the attorney. [01:19:00.680 --> 01:19:02.840] Yeah, I like that. [01:19:06.280 --> 01:19:11.480] Because they're going to deny it anyway. They might ask for more information like they asked me [01:19:11.480 --> 01:19:15.960] how often have you, you know, talked to the quarterback this, what have you done about this? [01:19:15.960 --> 01:19:22.440] Well, there it is in my pleading, you know, this attorney didn't do this and they haven't [01:19:22.440 --> 01:19:27.800] notified giving me the courtesy notification by email, which would be very simple to do. [01:19:30.360 --> 01:19:38.920] It's obviously deliberate. They notify other attorneys by email. Here is your courtesy [01:19:38.920 --> 01:19:45.000] notice. A hard copy is in the mail. Right. But not that would be simple, but they don't want [01:19:45.000 --> 01:19:54.120] you to have it quickly. They want you to have it as late as possible. To give you less chance of [01:19:54.200 --> 01:20:02.120] being able to respond. So by using AI, it allowed me to just make this very quick complaint, [01:20:03.240 --> 01:20:08.360] throw it in the mail and I have a response and I've responded to them already. [01:20:10.360 --> 01:20:13.400] Nothing may come of it, but it's there on record. [01:20:15.800 --> 01:20:19.400] And that's the whole point of it. Am I correct? [01:20:19.400 --> 01:20:26.760] Correct. Yeah, you put that on record. That's true. In the case, that doesn't put anything [01:20:26.760 --> 01:20:32.520] in record on the case, if that's what you mean, that kind of record. But yeah, on there, yeah, [01:20:32.520 --> 01:20:42.200] it dings them. So yeah. That dings them, but I also did put a statement in my reply brief saying, [01:20:42.200 --> 01:20:47.560] this is what happened. I put a copy of the envelope where it didn't give any date or [01:20:47.560 --> 01:20:55.880] timestamps. I put a copy of the attorney's type name with an S beside it. What proof is that? [01:20:57.800 --> 01:21:02.520] His assistant could have typed it. Anybody could have typed that and said they put it in the mail. [01:21:02.520 --> 01:21:09.240] That's not proving that the attorney read and signed off on it. I don't buy these [01:21:09.320 --> 01:21:11.480] electronic signatures from these attorneys. [01:21:14.920 --> 01:21:20.440] So it's in the case, you know, it's with the attorney board of professional conduct and it [01:21:20.440 --> 01:21:26.200] was very quick and easy to do. And I would not have got it done as quickly and easily [01:21:26.200 --> 01:21:30.440] if I'd tried to sit there and write it myself because I was overwhelmed with too many other [01:21:30.440 --> 01:21:40.280] things I was doing. So yeah, that totally makes sense. It's just a helpful tool. [01:21:41.160 --> 01:21:46.280] It's not perfect. We know that, but it's a very helpful tool to save us time [01:21:47.080 --> 01:21:51.080] and to get us on track and making more of these complaints. [01:21:51.080 --> 01:22:03.640] Well, I think you're exactly right. I hope that more people will get more complaints out because [01:22:03.640 --> 01:22:06.360] my goodness, they certainly are earning complaints. [01:22:07.560 --> 01:22:09.880] Oh, they certainly are. You are right about that. [01:22:14.120 --> 01:22:20.040] Sorry, soft drink lovers. Even diet drinks can make you fat. The new study shows that diet soda [01:22:20.040 --> 01:22:24.760] drinkers gain much more weight than people who avoid the stuff. I'm Dr. Catherine Albrecht and [01:22:24.760 --> 01:22:31.400] I'll be back in a moment with a scoop on supposedly skinny sodas. Privacy is under attack. When you [01:22:31.400 --> 01:22:36.440] give up data about yourself, you'll never get it back again. And once your privacy is gone, [01:22:36.440 --> 01:22:42.360] you'll find your freedoms will start to vanish too. So protect your rights, say no to surveillance [01:22:42.360 --> 01:22:48.120] and keep your information to yourself. Privacy, it's worth hanging onto. This public service [01:22:48.120 --> 01:22:53.400] announcement is brought to you by Startpage.com, the private search engine alternative to Google, [01:22:53.400 --> 01:23:00.440] Yahoo and Bing. Start over with Startpage. Artificial sweeteners cut the calories and [01:23:00.440 --> 01:23:06.280] help you lose weight, right? Wrong. Researchers at UT San Antonio followed hundreds of diet [01:23:06.280 --> 01:23:11.720] soda drinkers for nearly a decade. They found that regularly drinking diet soda expanded people's [01:23:11.720 --> 01:23:17.400] waistlines five times more than no soda at all. The study's authors say artificial sweeteners [01:23:17.400 --> 01:23:22.600] trigger the appetite, but unlike regular sugars, don't deliver anything to squelch it. Waking up [01:23:22.600 --> 01:23:27.560] hunger without satisfying it leads to cravings, which can result in a larger overall calorie [01:23:27.560 --> 01:23:32.280] intake. So use natural sweeteners to maintain a healthy weight. And if you need to shed some [01:23:32.280 --> 01:23:37.960] pounds, avoid the sweet stuff altogether and drink water instead. I'm Dr. Catherine Albrecht, [01:23:37.960 --> 01:23:46.200] more news and information at CatherineAlbrecht.com. This is building seven, a 47 story skyscraper that [01:23:46.200 --> 01:23:50.680] fell on the afternoon of September 11th. The government says that fire brought it down. However, [01:23:50.680 --> 01:23:56.520] 1500 architects and engineers concluded it was a controlled demolition. Over 6,000 of my fellow [01:23:56.520 --> 01:24:01.160] service members have given their lives. Thousands of my fellow first responders are dying. I'm not [01:24:01.160 --> 01:24:05.000] a conspiracy theorist. I'm a structural engineer. I'm a New York City correction officer. I'm an [01:24:05.000 --> 01:24:10.440] Air Force pilot. I'm a father who lost his son. We're Americans and we deserve the truth. Go to [01:24:10.440 --> 01:24:12.680] rememberbuildingseven.org today. [01:24:41.000 --> 01:24:44.840] has put together the most comprehensive teaching tool available that will help you understand what [01:24:44.840 --> 01:24:48.920] due process is and how to hold courts to the rule of law. You can get your own copy of this [01:24:48.920 --> 01:24:53.640] invaluable material by going to ruleoflawradio.com and ordering your copy today. By ordering now, [01:24:53.640 --> 01:24:57.560] you'll receive a copy of Eddie's book, the Texas transportation code, the law versus the lie, [01:24:57.560 --> 01:25:02.120] video and audio of the original 2009 seminar, hundreds of research documents and other useful [01:25:02.120 --> 01:25:05.400] resource material. Learn how to fight for your rights with the help of this material from [01:25:05.400 --> 01:25:10.440] ruleoflawradio.com. Order your copy today and together we can have the free society we all want [01:25:10.440 --> 01:25:22.440] and deserve. Looking for some truth? You found it. logosradionetwork.com. [01:25:35.400 --> 01:25:53.880] Okay. We are back. Brandy Keltner, Brett Fountain, ruleoflawradio and finishing. [01:25:53.880 --> 01:25:57.400] I think we're about done here, Tina. Do you have anything else for us? [01:25:58.680 --> 01:26:02.360] No, no, I'm just going to let you go to the next corner. Thank you. [01:26:02.360 --> 01:26:08.840] Thank you very much. Okay, Mary, I see you there. We'll get to you. Now we're going to [01:26:09.720 --> 01:26:12.680] Eric in Massachusetts. Hello, Eric. [01:26:17.800 --> 01:26:19.880] Eric, did we put you to sleep with? [01:26:23.240 --> 01:26:24.120] Hello, Eric. [01:26:24.840 --> 01:26:36.680] Okay. If you wake up, we're still there. That was Mary that dropped off. Okay. I'm going to [01:26:37.560 --> 01:26:42.680] leave Eric on. I think he just did. Eric, are you there? [01:26:46.600 --> 01:26:51.720] Not here. Okay. I'm going to leave Eric unmuted in case he wakes up, [01:26:52.360 --> 01:26:59.880] unless he starts snoring, in which case, Mary, what do you have for us today? [01:27:05.480 --> 01:27:08.680] Wake up, wake up. Snap out of it. [01:27:09.160 --> 01:27:09.640] Eric. [01:27:13.720 --> 01:27:17.000] Well, if you snooze, you lose, Eric. What? [01:27:21.640 --> 01:27:25.000] If you snooze, you lose. I'm not snoozing. [01:27:28.200 --> 01:27:31.560] Brett, can you hear them? They're both. No, I couldn't quite tell. [01:27:32.760 --> 01:27:36.440] Is that Eric in the background? Yeah, I'm here. Eric, are you there? [01:27:37.320 --> 01:27:39.880] I'm here. All right. [01:27:42.760 --> 01:27:47.400] Okay. What do you have for us, Eric? Well, believe it or not, [01:27:50.280 --> 01:27:53.160] my case, my eviction case is over. [01:27:55.880 --> 01:28:02.600] It wasn't my 40 plus motions. It wasn't the fact that the court never had jurisdiction. [01:28:03.400 --> 01:28:08.440] It wasn't the fact that there was perjury. It wasn't the fact that there were two [01:28:08.440 --> 01:28:14.680] interlocutory appeals and an appeal to the Supreme Court of Massachusetts. [01:28:16.440 --> 01:28:18.600] It was the tenant decided to leave. [01:28:19.080 --> 01:28:28.760] Whoa. So, she just decided to move out. Now you don't have to fight this anymore. [01:28:31.000 --> 01:28:36.040] Any idea why she decided to leave? I don't know. I have no idea. [01:28:37.480 --> 01:28:39.720] The judge was surprised. I do know that. [01:28:39.800 --> 01:28:44.280] From what you said before this, up to this point, the judge is probably disappointed [01:28:45.080 --> 01:28:47.320] because he didn't get to steal more rent from you. [01:28:51.640 --> 01:28:59.080] Quite true. But here's what I faced. There's some background noise going on. It might be Tina or [01:28:59.080 --> 01:29:01.880] somebody. Let me mute Tina. [01:29:01.880 --> 01:29:15.240] Okay. Not Tina, Mary. Okay. Go ahead, Eric. [01:29:16.440 --> 01:29:26.360] So, here's what I faced. I had the option to continue the eviction hearing [01:29:26.920 --> 01:29:34.600] because the tenant owed me money. And here's what the judge offered me. [01:29:36.760 --> 01:29:46.680] So, I had two contempts against me, which was $10,000 each. So, I had $20,000 against me. [01:29:47.640 --> 01:29:48.440] Oh my goodness. [01:29:49.320 --> 01:30:05.480] I had, well, part of the health department, they can fine you. And it's only coming out [01:30:05.480 --> 01:30:08.200] of the health department, which is interesting. The health department, [01:30:08.200 --> 01:30:17.080] because he filed a criminal complaint against me, he filed it in January of 2024. [01:30:18.040 --> 01:30:23.960] Wait, is this the little mini fake health department? The one man show? [01:30:25.000 --> 01:30:30.360] Just, yes. Just his town, this town specifically, yes, [01:30:33.320 --> 01:30:41.880] is not a legitimate health department. But the rules are from the state health department. [01:30:42.040 --> 01:30:48.840] They created their own, you know, these are administrative rules. So, [01:30:51.240 --> 01:31:02.520] their rules say, there's nothing under that law. They're basically codes. So, the code allows for [01:31:03.320 --> 01:31:16.120] a $100 fine every day that is not rectified. So, from the point, I guess from the point at [01:31:16.120 --> 01:31:26.360] which he originally wrote it up, not even from the date that he filed the criminal complaint, [01:31:26.360 --> 01:31:32.440] I think it's from the date that he wrote it up, which was about, [01:31:34.760 --> 01:31:39.320] in the judge's estimation, like 700 days or something like that. [01:31:41.400 --> 01:31:48.680] Okay. But if this is talking about something like that two foot square that didn't get painted [01:31:49.320 --> 01:31:56.120] and she wouldn't let you in to paint it, refused you access, well, then that's her [01:31:56.440 --> 01:32:03.320] $7,000 bill. No, that'd be a $70,000. Oh, good grief. [01:32:04.760 --> 01:32:14.520] So, the judge is saying to me, well, you know, that's about $70,000. And then he asked, [01:32:16.120 --> 01:32:25.880] he asked the health department guy, and he said, well, that's just per, you know, per issue. [01:32:26.840 --> 01:32:31.880] So, I potentially had four issues, let's say. [01:32:35.880 --> 01:32:42.920] Wow. So, $70,000 for just one issue. If I had four issues, that's $280,000. [01:32:44.040 --> 01:32:53.160] Plus 20 grand for just being in contempt. Plus, if I went forward, so I had the option of, [01:32:53.160 --> 01:32:59.720] if I wanted to go forward, he was going to do my criminal hearing first. And if he did the [01:32:59.720 --> 01:33:06.440] criminal hearing, I would have a criminal record if, by chance, his magistrate, because he's the [01:33:06.440 --> 01:33:11.560] first justice of this court, even though he's retired, he's still the first justice of this [01:33:11.560 --> 01:33:22.440] court, his magistrate would, you know, might find me a, you know, has committed this crime. [01:33:24.840 --> 01:33:34.520] And then he would adjudicate the crime, right? So, the hearing would be under him. Now the law, [01:33:35.720 --> 01:33:41.000] the law that allows for this says it's supposed to be heard in the superior court, [01:33:41.000 --> 01:33:44.040] but he's in the district court. He's a district court judge. [01:33:45.080 --> 01:33:50.520] And I said, well, he gets to do what he wants, right? What's that? He gets to do what he wants. [01:33:51.400 --> 01:33:57.640] I guess. So, I said, the law says it goes to the superior court. How does it get transferred to [01:33:57.640 --> 01:34:03.400] the superior court? And he said, no, no, you have that wrong. I go, that's what the law says. [01:34:04.120 --> 01:34:05.560] He goes, that's not the way it works. [01:34:06.200 --> 01:34:14.760] Yeah. That's exactly the problem that you were addressing with over 70. [01:34:18.440 --> 01:34:22.840] So, I could have, I could have, you know, if I wanted to try and collect money from her [01:34:23.720 --> 01:34:29.080] in his court, in his court, and if I wanted to continue that eviction, [01:34:29.480 --> 01:34:35.960] I, you know, I would have to pay my $20,000, potentially face, I don't know, 70 to $280,000 [01:34:36.760 --> 01:34:50.040] in fine and potentially have a criminal record. So, he gave me two weeks to consider it. We came [01:34:50.040 --> 01:34:55.320] back and he said, all right, what do you want to do? And, you know, we kind of had this whole [01:34:55.400 --> 01:35:01.960] conversation that I just went over with you again. And I said, well, you said last time [01:35:01.960 --> 01:35:06.920] that I'm kind of staring down the barrel of a gun and I guess I have to agree. So, [01:35:06.920 --> 01:35:13.800] I guess it doesn't make sense for me to continue this. So, I guess I'll drop the eviction case. [01:35:13.800 --> 01:35:24.680] Okay. So, I did. But all I did was I dropped the eviction case. [01:35:26.120 --> 01:35:32.600] I didn't necessarily not allow her to not pay, you know what I mean? So, [01:35:32.600 --> 01:35:35.160] I can file a lawsuit against her still. Yeah. [01:35:36.600 --> 01:35:41.000] So, I was kind of like, my head wasn't really, you know, thinking and I was kind of like, [01:35:41.320 --> 01:35:46.360] I still want to be able to sue her and, you know, like I wasn't sure. So, I immediately called [01:35:46.360 --> 01:35:54.520] Alexis right afterwards. And I was talking with him about it. And since we're rolling into the [01:35:54.520 --> 01:36:01.400] break, we'll leave this as a cliffhanger until after the break. Let's see if we can get Randy [01:36:01.400 --> 01:36:15.960] to run off the cliff instead. Okay. Do you have a business with five employees or more? How would [01:36:15.960 --> 01:36:21.080] you like to save hundreds of thousands of dollars in FICA taxes? Do you have a major medical plan [01:36:21.080 --> 01:36:27.480] that nobody can afford to be on? Or how would you like to save in premium costs on a current [01:36:27.480 --> 01:36:34.600] major medical plan by lowering the claims cost? The CHAMP plan is a section 125 IRS approved [01:36:34.600 --> 01:36:41.240] preventative health plan that provides your employees with doctors, medications, emergency [01:36:41.240 --> 01:36:48.680] care, and Teladoc all at zero cost with zero copay. If you are an employee, you also will get [01:36:48.680 --> 01:36:55.240] a pay raise by paying less in FICA taxes. As an employer, you will save hundreds of thousands of [01:36:55.240 --> 01:37:02.360] dollars in matching FICA taxes. The CHAMP plan can help add working capital market resale value [01:37:02.360 --> 01:37:13.960] or pay down lines of credit. Call Scott at 214-730-2471 or dallasmms.com. Are you the [01:37:13.960 --> 01:37:19.800] plaintiff or defendant in a lawsuit? Win your case without an attorney with Jurisdictionary, [01:37:19.880 --> 01:37:26.200] the affordable, easy to understand, four CD course that will show you how in 24 hours, [01:37:26.200 --> 01:37:33.160] step-by-step. If you have a lawyer, know what your lawyer should be doing. If you don't have a lawyer, [01:37:33.160 --> 01:37:39.000] know what you should do for yourself. Thousands have won with our step-by-step course, and now [01:37:39.000 --> 01:37:45.560] you can too. Jurisdictionary was created by a licensed attorney with 22 years of case-winning [01:37:45.560 --> 01:37:51.320] experience. Even if you're not in a lawsuit, you can learn what everyone should understand [01:37:51.320 --> 01:37:57.000] about the principles and practices that control our American courts. You'll receive our audio [01:37:57.000 --> 01:38:04.680] classroom, video seminar, tutorials, forms for civil cases, pro se tactics, and much more. [01:38:04.680 --> 01:38:11.800] Please visit ruleoflawradio.com and click on the banner or call toll-free 866-LAW-EZ. [01:39:34.680 --> 01:39:41.000] Word of Almighty, lend a helping hand. Me say as you go along, [01:39:41.000 --> 01:39:49.000] no lay comma. Me say knock you down, man. Carry the barn if you don't plant no seed. [01:39:49.000 --> 01:39:55.560] My friend, Lord, you better have a good breed. You better live your life up fully, [01:39:55.560 --> 01:39:57.720] because you know me. [01:40:25.560 --> 01:40:53.880] There's K. We are back, man, to count the breath on the Rule of Law Radio. And this has been [01:40:53.880 --> 01:41:02.360] so interesting that I actually unmuted my mic. In the last segment, I had all these really [01:41:02.360 --> 01:41:06.360] intelligent and insightful comments, and everybody was just ignoring me. [01:41:09.880 --> 01:41:10.920] You know, sometimes… [01:41:10.920 --> 01:41:14.360] Pete Slauson Did all of your insightful comments sound [01:41:14.360 --> 01:41:15.480] a little bit like snoring? [01:41:15.480 --> 01:41:20.040] Kip Fries Yeah, kind of like that. Sometimes I think that I am so important, [01:41:21.000 --> 01:41:27.160] that God has so made the world so as to annoy me personally. [01:41:29.160 --> 01:41:31.720] What about Eric? Eric, do you ever get that feeling? [01:41:31.720 --> 01:41:39.480] Eric Fries Apply it to me. I'm not exactly sure what you're saying. I'm kind of confused. [01:41:39.480 --> 01:41:46.200] Kip Fries Now you're giving me the comment I get from most people. [01:41:46.200 --> 01:41:57.160] Pete Slauson Okay, so this is kind of disturbing. This woman moves out and you still have a claim, [01:41:58.040 --> 01:42:07.480] and the judge has used all of these tools to foreclose you from exercising your claim. [01:42:07.880 --> 01:42:17.640] Eric Fries Not exactly. Not exactly. So I'm very focused on trying to, you know, I need to collect [01:42:17.640 --> 01:42:24.040] from her. I need to be able to sue her, or I need to, you know, again, because they committed [01:42:24.040 --> 01:42:33.800] perjury. And, you know, I was so sort of focused on that. And I didn't want to…I wanted to kind [01:42:33.800 --> 01:42:41.000] of keep the eviction thing going. And I kind of wasn't exactly clear. But the judge had, you know, [01:42:41.000 --> 01:42:48.040] a giant two-barrel shotgun, double-barrel shotgun in my head, and told me, you're staring down the [01:42:48.040 --> 01:42:55.800] edge of the end of a barrel. And so I dropped it. And I wasn't…again, you know, I was shaken, [01:42:55.800 --> 01:43:02.440] and I was kind of not really clear. And I called Alexis, and I go, Alexis, here's what I did. [01:43:03.000 --> 01:43:08.840] And he goes, he goes, yeah, you want to sue them in Superior Court anyway. And I go, [01:43:08.840 --> 01:43:14.760] oh, my God, you're so right. Why would I want to sue him? Why would I want to sue the tenant [01:43:14.760 --> 01:43:21.400] in this eviction court? I wouldn't. Take it to another state court. [01:43:22.360 --> 01:43:30.120] So I'm curious. We kind of missed a little piece there about the offer that the…the [01:43:32.360 --> 01:43:39.640] offer that the judge made to you. Was the judge saying to you that if you'll just drop your [01:43:40.280 --> 01:43:47.480] eviction case, then all of this other stuff that's stacked up against you will just dissolve it all? [01:43:48.280 --> 01:43:54.760] I'm sorry, you're right. I didn't…I didn't clarify that. Yes. So that was the offer he made [01:43:54.760 --> 01:44:02.680] me. You dropped the eviction case, which was just…really just an eviction, right? It was [01:44:02.680 --> 01:44:08.200] only per se for the eviction, although, you know, some money aspects were there or whatever. [01:44:10.440 --> 01:44:16.520] Wow, that in itself just sounds so unjust. How crazy is that? [01:44:17.080 --> 01:44:20.600] Just the very offer. It sounds repugnant. [01:44:20.600 --> 01:44:28.440] Oh, yeah. Yeah, it's a plea deal. It's a plea deal. I said that to him. This is a plea deal. [01:44:29.400 --> 01:44:32.600] Yeah, I get you're right. I can't accept this plea deal, Your Honor. [01:44:36.600 --> 01:44:40.040] But yeah, I mean, I'm not faulting you for taking it. I'm saying that's…it [01:44:41.240 --> 01:44:46.040] just seems so unjust that the judge would even let those words come out of his mouth [01:44:46.680 --> 01:44:53.640] to tie these issues together. If there is justice to be had in either of those situations, [01:44:53.640 --> 01:45:00.680] whether you earned some of that contempt or you earned these…you're supposed to pay $300,000 or [01:45:00.680 --> 01:45:10.120] not, those shouldn't be tied together. You know what? You just stop talking about a judge that [01:45:10.120 --> 01:45:16.440] shouldn't be on the bench anymore. Stop talking about it and, you know, we'll make all your stuff [01:45:16.440 --> 01:45:23.160] just go away. Wait a minute. You know, when I go after these public officials, [01:45:24.840 --> 01:45:32.440] I've got landmines I lay down in front of them so that they give me tools I can use against them [01:45:32.440 --> 01:45:41.640] later. It sounds like this judge, he's probably been through a thousand cases like this. [01:45:42.200 --> 01:45:46.680] It sounds like he's been laying landmines down in front of you the whole time. [01:45:48.600 --> 01:45:54.280] This is not his first rodeo. It's your first rodeo. It's not his. He's done this a lot. [01:45:54.680 --> 01:45:59.320] So he knows how to set you up on the front end so he can hammer you on the back end. [01:46:02.840 --> 01:46:08.040] And listening, it sounds like he was doing to you what I'm trying to do to these police officers [01:46:08.040 --> 01:46:15.640] and judges. He set you up. He and I were both laying landmines. I mean, I went this far along [01:46:16.760 --> 01:46:24.520] to build a federal case. He never had jurisdiction. Even to this day, he never had jurisdiction. [01:46:26.520 --> 01:46:32.200] Well, then you still have your federal case. Exactly. I've always had that. I knew that wasn't [01:46:32.200 --> 01:46:39.480] I wasn't giving that up. But what I was afraid of is if I give up the eviction, [01:46:40.120 --> 01:46:46.920] I'm also giving up the right to sue her. No, I don't see those necessarily being connected. [01:46:47.880 --> 01:46:51.320] Right. I know. But I was thinking that. I was thinking that in my head [01:46:52.200 --> 01:46:59.640] during when I went through it. That part of the plea deal is I'm giving up the right to sue her. [01:46:59.640 --> 01:47:04.760] But that wasn't what he was asking for. He was asking for to end the eviction case. [01:47:07.080 --> 01:47:08.360] You end the eviction case. [01:47:09.320 --> 01:47:11.560] Because the eviction case has become moot. [01:47:12.760 --> 01:47:17.400] Exactly. It didn't matter at that point. Why wouldn't I give it up? [01:47:18.520 --> 01:47:24.040] Well, it's probably because in the eviction case, you have been so vocal about this [01:47:24.840 --> 01:47:29.480] constitutional issue of him being on the bench, and you've made a big deal out of that. [01:47:30.600 --> 01:47:35.240] But if you make the whole case go away, then that includes this. [01:47:35.240 --> 01:47:39.960] No, it doesn't. If he has claims against the judge, [01:47:41.560 --> 01:47:48.920] just because the claim against the defendant goes away, that doesn't make the claims against the [01:47:48.920 --> 01:47:59.480] judge go away. Yeah, I don't think he even knows about the federal lawsuit. I don't [01:47:59.800 --> 01:48:10.840] think he's worried about it if he does know about it. He feels pretty untouchable, like most of them [01:48:10.840 --> 01:48:23.640] do. Going back to my very first hearing, I didn't even finish my first sentence. The very first [01:48:23.640 --> 01:48:30.760] sentence I said in that hearing, I didn't even get to finish, because he interrupted with the word [01:48:31.320 --> 01:48:43.080] denied. At no point in that first hearing did the tenant ever ask to stay in the apartment. [01:48:45.480 --> 01:48:52.840] How did he make that happen? She didn't have a counterclaim, and she didn't even answer [01:48:54.200 --> 01:49:01.960] the complaint, as she's obligated to. That sounds like Walker v. Packer. [01:49:01.960 --> 01:49:14.600] Have you looked for a Massachusetts or whatever circuit you're in for a case that is similar to [01:49:14.600 --> 01:49:21.640] Walker v. Packer? I have searched for that before. You know what? That might be a good AI [01:49:21.640 --> 01:49:26.680] ask Brock or whatever to see if they can find it, but I haven't found anything like that. [01:49:26.680 --> 01:49:35.800] Okay, hold on. Let me explain to everybody else. Walker v. Packer. It says a judge has no discretion [01:49:36.680 --> 01:49:42.600] in properly applying the law to the facts. A failure to do so is an abuse of discretion. [01:49:43.400 --> 01:49:52.760] That seems so fundamental that I would expect it to be reflected in every circuit. Okay, go ahead. [01:49:52.760 --> 01:49:57.640] I was just kind of giving context. That's good. But this is well beyond that, [01:49:57.640 --> 01:50:03.800] because he never had jurisdiction. So again, as I told you, nine months in, [01:50:04.600 --> 01:50:09.960] he's trying to start the hearing, and I said, you got a problem, Your Honor. You don't have [01:50:10.440 --> 01:50:15.960] jurisdiction. She never replied. She never answered the complaint. She never did a counterclaim. Okay, [01:50:15.960 --> 01:50:21.480] go do that right now, Ms. Tennant, and make sure you give him a copy. [01:50:23.720 --> 01:50:26.760] And she never gave me a copy, so he still never had jurisdiction. [01:50:30.040 --> 01:50:31.880] That definitely needs to go to the feds. [01:50:31.880 --> 01:50:38.040] But it didn't matter. It didn't matter to him. [01:50:41.160 --> 01:50:48.360] That's what I find with public officials. He was doing what he has always been doing, [01:50:49.560 --> 01:50:54.280] what everybody else has been doing, and have never had a problem with it. [01:50:55.000 --> 01:50:59.640] And you come along and raise an issue, he's not impressed. [01:51:02.440 --> 01:51:08.040] The Bible remains the most popular book in the world, yet countless readers are frustrated [01:51:08.040 --> 01:51:14.040] because they struggle to understand it. Some new translations try to help by simplifying the text, [01:51:14.040 --> 01:51:20.520] but in the process can compromise the profound meaning of the scripture. Enter the recovery [01:51:20.520 --> 01:51:27.000] version. First, this new translation is extremely faithful and accurate, but the real story is the [01:51:27.000 --> 01:51:33.880] more than 9,000 explanatory footnotes. Difficult and profound passages are opened up in a marvelous [01:51:33.880 --> 01:51:39.560] way, providing an entrance into the riches of the word beyond which you've ever experienced before. [01:51:40.200 --> 01:51:45.000] Bibles for America would like to give you a free recovery version simply for the asking. [01:51:45.480 --> 01:51:51.080] This comprehensive yet compact study Bible is yours just by calling us toll free [01:51:51.080 --> 01:52:02.200] at 1-888-551-0102 or by ordering online at freestudybible.com. That's freestudybible.com. [01:52:03.400 --> 01:52:08.440] You are listening to the Logos Radio Network, logosradionetwork.com. [01:52:08.440 --> 01:52:19.400] The Bill of Rights contains the first 10 amendments of our Constitution. They guarantee the specific [01:52:19.400 --> 01:52:24.600] freedoms Americans should know and protect. Our liberty depends on it. I'm Dr. Catherine Albrecht, [01:52:24.600 --> 01:52:28.840] and I'll be right back with an unforgettable way to remember your First Amendment rights. [01:52:28.840 --> 01:52:34.280] Privacy is under attack. When you give up data about yourself, you'll never get it back again. [01:52:34.280 --> 01:52:39.800] And once your privacy is gone, you'll find your freedoms will start to vanish, too. So protect [01:52:39.800 --> 01:52:45.800] your rights. Say no to surveillance and keep your information to yourself. Privacy, it's worth [01:52:45.800 --> 01:52:51.080] hanging on to. This public service announcement is brought to you by Startpage.com, the private [01:52:51.080 --> 01:52:56.440] search engine alternative to Google, Yahoo, and Bing. Start over with Startpage. [01:52:58.040 --> 01:53:02.840] Spar, it's what fighters do. It's also how I remember the five guarantees of the First [01:53:02.840 --> 01:53:08.360] Amendment. If you plan to take away my rights, I'm going to spar with you. Spar with an extra [01:53:08.360 --> 01:53:15.160] P, S for speech, P for press, another P for petition, A for assembly, and R for religion. [01:53:15.160 --> 01:53:19.320] Most Americans are familiar with the First Amendment guarantees of free speech, press, [01:53:19.320 --> 01:53:24.280] assembly, and religion. But petition for redress is another matter. We have the right to petition [01:53:24.280 --> 01:53:29.000] the government for a redress of grievances. It means that if we're unhappy with what's going on [01:53:29.000 --> 01:53:33.000] in our government, we can spell out the reasons without fear of being thrown into jail. [01:53:33.560 --> 01:53:37.880] I'm Dr. Catherine Albrecht. More news and information at CatherineAlbrecht.com. [01:53:43.320 --> 01:53:47.640] The Bill of Rights contains the first 10 amendments of our Constitution. They guarantee [01:53:47.640 --> 01:53:52.520] the specific freedoms Americans should know and protect. Our liberty depends on it. I'm Dr. [01:53:52.520 --> 01:53:56.520] Catherine Albrecht, and I'll be right back with an unforgettable way to remember one of your [01:53:56.520 --> 01:54:02.680] constitutional rights. Privacy is under attack. When you give up data about yourself, you'll [01:54:02.680 --> 01:54:07.880] never get it back again. And once your privacy is gone, you'll find your freedoms will start to [01:54:07.880 --> 01:54:13.320] vanish too. So protect your rights, say no to surveillance, and keep your information to [01:54:13.320 --> 01:54:18.840] yourself. Privacy, it's worth hanging on to. This public service announcement is brought to you by [01:54:18.840 --> 01:54:25.480] startpage.com, the private search engine alternative to Google, Yahoo, and Bing. Start over with [01:54:25.480 --> 01:54:32.280] startpage. When I think of the Second Amendment, I visualize myself wrapping my two arms around [01:54:32.280 --> 01:54:37.080] the Bill of Rights in a big old bear hug. It's how I remember that the Second Amendment guarantees [01:54:37.080 --> 01:54:41.880] us the right to bear arms, arms that embrace our freedoms and won't let anyone take them away [01:54:41.880 --> 01:54:48.040] without a fight. Get it? Two arms, bear hug, bear arms? The late Senator Hubert Humphrey captured [01:54:48.040 --> 01:54:53.160] the spirit of the Second Amendment so well when he said, the right of the citizens to bear arms is [01:54:53.160 --> 01:54:58.040] just one guarantee against arbitrary government, one more safeguard against the tyranny, which [01:54:58.040 --> 01:55:03.320] now appears remote in America, but which historically has proved to always be possible. [01:55:03.320 --> 01:55:07.320] I'm Dr. Catherine Albrecht. More news and information at CatherineAlbrecht.com. [01:55:23.160 --> 01:55:40.280] Well, I received my remedy today. Game in the box, just like they say. I accept it for value right away. [01:55:40.280 --> 01:55:50.360] If not sooner, not later. We are originators and the pathway seems to get straighter every day. [01:55:50.920 --> 01:55:57.640] And I can take anything that belongs to me and put it too good of you. [01:55:57.640 --> 01:56:09.640] Okay, we are back. We're at Fountain River Radio on this Friday, the 17th day of October 2025, [01:56:09.640 --> 01:56:18.040] and we're talking to Eric in Massachusetts. Okay, Eric, this is disturbing. [01:56:18.840 --> 01:56:25.960] You have an apartment that you're renting out, someone moves in it, and they don't pay the rent. [01:56:27.240 --> 01:56:33.560] And they complain about minor issues, won't let you fix the issues. [01:56:34.760 --> 01:56:41.000] And then the city and other agencies hold you responsible for not fixing the issues, [01:56:41.000 --> 01:56:45.800] but that the client won't, the defendant won't let you fix. [01:56:47.480 --> 01:56:52.120] And then they move out and now the city has all of these clubs they want to beat you up with. [01:56:54.200 --> 01:57:00.280] Why on earth would anybody buy rental property in Massachusetts? [01:57:00.280 --> 01:57:11.960] Well, I mean, this is clearly a Fifth Amendment takings issue. This is no different [01:57:12.600 --> 01:57:22.120] than the Third Amendment, really. This is where it happened. This is where the Third Amendment [01:57:22.120 --> 01:57:31.960] came from Massachusetts. And obviously, the Third and the Fifth are sort of the same issues. [01:57:33.720 --> 01:57:39.640] This judge is no different than King George 250 years ago. I've been telling my friends, [01:57:39.640 --> 01:57:48.920] I've been telling my family, I say, look, my family fought this battle 250 years ago. [01:57:49.640 --> 01:57:55.560] I go, my dad, my four uncles, they were in World War II. They didn't fight for my freedom. [01:57:55.560 --> 01:57:58.760] They didn't fight for their freedom. They didn't fight for their countrymen's freedom. [01:57:58.760 --> 01:58:05.400] They fought freedom for some other country. I'm fighting for my freedom in my country. [01:58:06.040 --> 01:58:10.840] This is no different than 250 years ago, as far as I'm concerned. [01:58:12.280 --> 01:58:18.600] You are absolutely right. This goes to the nature of the human condition. [01:58:18.920 --> 01:58:27.640] You and I and our children and our grandchildren will have to keep fighting this issue [01:58:29.320 --> 01:58:36.440] because it is the nature of the human condition. H. G. Wells spoke to this in his outline of history [01:58:37.720 --> 01:58:45.320] on speaking to the corruption of the popes during the Dark Ages, where he very aptly observed [01:58:45.320 --> 01:58:52.680] that the giver of the law most owes the law allegiance. He, of all beings, [01:58:52.680 --> 01:58:59.320] should behave as though the law compels him. But it is the universal failing of mankind [01:59:00.360 --> 01:59:08.040] that what we are given to administer, we promptly presume we own. And that sounds like [01:59:08.920 --> 01:59:17.400] exactly what this judge did. And he knew how to box you in, so at the end of the day, [01:59:18.280 --> 01:59:27.320] there was no way you could win this case. And in saying that, I'm thinking back on what I was saying [01:59:27.960 --> 01:59:35.560] at the beginning of this show. Isn't this exactly what we're doing [01:59:36.520 --> 01:59:43.000] to judges and prosecutors? Using the law to set them up and box them in. [01:59:44.680 --> 01:59:48.920] And then we complain when judges use the law to set us up and box us in. [01:59:51.720 --> 01:59:53.320] It is the nature of things. [01:59:56.760 --> 02:00:04.520] We're setting them up to show how they're violating the law. They're using the laws against us [02:00:05.560 --> 02:00:16.040] and not adjudicating cases. Those are distinctions that you're making from your perspective. [02:00:17.320 --> 02:00:23.320] These guys have a different perspective. I'm a professional. This is what I do. [02:00:24.520 --> 02:00:31.560] These are the realities of the world that I live in. And I know you guys out there who are not [02:00:31.560 --> 02:00:40.040] involved in this have all these high-minded ideals. But this is the real world we live in, so [02:00:40.600 --> 02:00:48.040] I'm doing what works best, so don't complain about me. I get the rationalizations. [02:00:49.640 --> 02:00:56.520] In order to understand what I'm dealing with, I have to step into their shoes and figure out [02:00:56.520 --> 02:01:02.040] what they're thinking. This judge has been through case after case after case after case [02:01:02.760 --> 02:01:10.840] where he had people that did not know squat, who had lawyers that were beholden to him and would [02:01:10.840 --> 02:01:19.400] not do anything he didn't like because they'll do what a lawyer told me they will do. If I do [02:01:19.400 --> 02:01:26.360] what you're asking me to, and I annoy this judge, he's going to screw my next client to get back [02:01:26.360 --> 02:01:33.080] at me, and that would be irresponsible of me to set up my next client to have this problem because [02:01:33.080 --> 02:01:45.160] of you. This is what we're dealing with. Absolutely, but he's violated the rules of evidence, [02:01:45.800 --> 02:01:56.200] the rules of civil procedure, etc. So yeah, he's using the laws that exist against me, [02:01:57.720 --> 02:02:02.360] but he's not following the rule. He never had jurisdiction in the case. [02:02:04.200 --> 02:02:11.880] That's the way it's always been. So how do we fix that? How do we get at it? I'm doing it because [02:02:11.960 --> 02:02:19.240] I kind of figured out what they're doing, and I'm going in and trying to lay plants for them. [02:02:19.800 --> 02:02:27.320] I want to give them opportunity to do what they've been doing. In your case, you got this judge, [02:02:27.320 --> 02:02:32.760] he's like all the other judges. He's doing what all the other judges have been doing. [02:02:32.760 --> 02:02:37.080] And when I'm talking to this, I'm thinking about my son-in-law. My son-in-law is a JP. [02:02:37.480 --> 02:02:45.880] He gets elected, and before he gets into office, I set him down and walked him through statutory [02:02:45.880 --> 02:02:57.400] due process. Here is the law clear as day. He goes down to training, and they say, well, [02:02:57.400 --> 02:03:02.680] that may be the way the law is clear as day, but here's how we actually do things. [02:03:02.680 --> 02:03:09.480] So what does he do? Does he do what the law specifically commands him to do, [02:03:10.920 --> 02:03:16.760] or does he do what everybody else is doing? From the perspective that if I'm doing what everybody [02:03:16.760 --> 02:03:23.800] else is doing, they're going to cover my behind. If I don't, they're going to gang up and get me [02:03:23.800 --> 02:03:31.640] thrown out. So how do we fix the underlying problem? And I think you're right on it. [02:03:32.920 --> 02:03:39.080] You sue that judge personally in his individual capacity. He had no subject matter jurisdiction, [02:03:40.200 --> 02:03:45.720] and once your case is gone and once they sign off on it, they can't go back to it. [02:03:47.080 --> 02:03:52.600] You still have your claims against him. Now you can go in and pick the fight against the judge, [02:03:52.600 --> 02:03:59.800] and that puts him in a whole different perspective situation. I'm going in, [02:03:59.880 --> 02:04:06.600] deliberately asking judges to do what I know for certain they will not do, [02:04:07.880 --> 02:04:14.680] but the law specifically commands them to do it. So when they don't do it, I get to sue them [02:04:14.680 --> 02:04:21.640] in their individual capacity. But I had to carefully set that up, and listening to you earlier, [02:04:22.680 --> 02:04:28.920] they set you up. And he knew exactly how to do it, because he's been through this a thousand [02:04:29.880 --> 02:04:37.320] times, and you're just doing it once. You absolutely need to wind his clock. [02:04:41.800 --> 02:04:45.960] I don't think all the judges are as bad as him. [02:04:48.600 --> 02:04:55.160] That's it. My son-in-law is really a nice guy, and he really wants to do things right. [02:04:55.720 --> 02:05:03.080] So, in my perspective, it doesn't matter if they're nice guys or not. It doesn't matter how [02:05:03.080 --> 02:05:11.880] good or bad they are. They're stuck in a system they did not create, but they're stuck inside it. [02:05:11.880 --> 02:05:17.960] This judge may be really a nice guy, and he may really want to do things right, [02:05:18.520 --> 02:05:22.760] but he's inside this system he didn't create. [02:05:25.000 --> 02:05:32.440] And the only way we're going to get it fixed is hold them responsible. Now, I can't go pick on [02:05:32.440 --> 02:05:38.200] the county I live in because my son-in-law's there. But I can go to every other county, [02:05:39.240 --> 02:05:44.120] and I talk to these magistrates, and for the most part, they are really nice guys. [02:05:44.120 --> 02:05:48.120] And they really want to do it right. [02:05:50.520 --> 02:05:54.840] And when I tell them, this is what the law says, the first one I told was Mark Autry, [02:05:55.720 --> 02:06:02.600] and it was my opinion that Mark Autry would do what he believed was right if it hairlipped the pope. [02:06:04.440 --> 02:06:07.320] Well, he was a Baptist, and he wasn't too crazy about the pope anyway, [02:06:07.320 --> 02:06:12.680] but he would do what he thought was right. And I sat down in front of him and laid out the code, [02:06:13.640 --> 02:06:20.200] and he said to me, Mr. Kelton, are you telling me that what I did for 20 years as a sheriff's [02:06:20.200 --> 02:06:26.840] deputy, and what everybody else did, and what I did as a justice of the peace for 12 years, [02:06:27.800 --> 02:06:33.320] all of that was wrong. What everybody else in Texas is doing and has been doing for the [02:06:33.320 --> 02:06:40.040] last 20 years is wrong, and you're right. So consider their perspective. [02:06:41.560 --> 02:06:48.280] And I do consider their perspective, but only so that I can use it against them. [02:06:49.400 --> 02:06:54.360] Mark Autry really wanted to be a good guy. He really wanted to do the right thing, [02:06:55.000 --> 02:06:58.440] but he was trapped inside a system he didn't create. You have a judge here [02:06:59.400 --> 02:07:04.840] that came into a system he did not create. He learned how to function inside that system. [02:07:05.480 --> 02:07:10.600] He learned how to set up his litigants so that he could get them to do what he wanted them to, [02:07:12.680 --> 02:07:19.560] whether they wanted to or not, because he was working on a level above where you were working. [02:07:21.640 --> 02:07:24.360] You're trying to figure out the law and apply the law to the facts. [02:07:25.320 --> 02:07:28.920] He's got a whole other level he's working from. How do I manipulate my [02:07:30.040 --> 02:07:35.000] litigants so I can give and create the outcome I want to create? [02:07:37.480 --> 02:07:39.400] So how do we tear him down from that, Eric? [02:07:42.360 --> 02:07:46.360] I mean, again, I have my federal lawsuit that I've been working on. [02:07:47.320 --> 02:07:52.120] And it's really my lawsuit is a declaratory judgment. The last time I called, we talked [02:07:52.120 --> 02:07:58.360] about this. And what I'm trying to do is get rid of some of these laws. This is a bad judge. [02:07:58.360 --> 02:08:06.680] He's not a good judge, meaning he's an advocate. He has said many times in court, [02:08:07.560 --> 02:08:16.920] I can't bring myself to put this person out on the street. When he says that, he's saying, [02:08:16.920 --> 02:08:21.160] I can't adjudicate the law. I can only adjudicate my emotions. [02:08:25.480 --> 02:08:32.280] And there's not one person, all these lawyers and all these people who represent [02:08:33.240 --> 02:08:40.200] the indigent people or whatever, they've all heard him say this. I could bring in [02:08:41.000 --> 02:08:44.440] 10, 20, 30 people who've heard him say this on a regular basis. [02:08:44.440 --> 02:08:49.640] Well, then that's 10, 20, 30 people who, as attorneys, have sworn that they would follow [02:08:49.640 --> 02:08:56.680] rule 8.3 and report his unethical conduct, violating canons of the Code of Judicial [02:08:56.680 --> 02:09:03.320] Conduct, and they swore they would report him. And if they don't report him, that's a violation of [02:09:03.320 --> 02:09:08.680] their own ethical rules there, rules of professional conduct. That's rule 8.3. [02:09:10.200 --> 02:09:17.560] Are you being harassed by debt collectors with phone calls, letters, or even lawsuits? [02:09:17.560 --> 02:09:22.440] Stop debt collectors now with the Michael Mears proven method. Michael Mears has won [02:09:22.440 --> 02:09:27.000] six cases in federal court against debt collectors, and now you can win too. You'll [02:09:27.000 --> 02:09:32.280] get step-by-step instructions in plain English on how to win in court using federal civil rights [02:09:32.280 --> 02:09:37.800] statutes, what to do when contacted by phone, mail, or court summons, how to answer letters [02:09:37.800 --> 02:09:41.880] and phone calls, how to get debt collectors out of your credit report, how to turn the [02:09:41.880 --> 02:09:47.960] financial tables on them and make them pay you to go away. The Michael Mears proven method is [02:09:47.960 --> 02:09:53.240] the solution for how to stop debt collectors. Personal consultation is available as well. [02:09:53.240 --> 02:09:59.080] For more information, please visit ruleoflawradio.com and click on the blue Michael Mears banner or [02:09:59.080 --> 02:10:08.280] email michaelmears at yahoo.com. That's ruleoflawradio.com or email m-i-c-h-a-e-l-m-i-r-r-a-s [02:10:08.280 --> 02:10:15.960] at yahoo.com to learn how to stop debt collectors now. Rule of Law Radio is proud to offer the rule [02:10:15.960 --> 02:10:19.960] of law traffic seminar. In today's America, we live in an us-against-them society, and if we the [02:10:19.960 --> 02:10:24.040] people are ever going to have a free society, then we're going to have to stand and defend our own [02:10:24.040 --> 02:10:28.120] rights. Among those rights are the right to travel freely from place to place, the right to act in [02:10:28.120 --> 02:10:32.360] our own private capacity, and most importantly, the right to due process of law. Traffic courts [02:10:32.360 --> 02:10:36.760] afford us the least expensive opportunity to learn how to enforce and preserve our rights through due [02:10:36.760 --> 02:10:41.160] process. Former Sheriff's Deputy Eddie Craig, in conjunction with Rule of Law Radio, has put together [02:10:41.160 --> 02:10:45.320] the most comprehensive teaching tool available that will help you understand what due process is [02:10:45.320 --> 02:10:49.400] and how to hold the courts to the rule of law. You can get your own copy of this invaluable material [02:10:49.400 --> 02:10:54.040] by going to ruleoflawradio.com and ordering your copy today. By ordering now, you'll receive a copy [02:10:54.040 --> 02:10:58.120] of Eddie's book, The Texas Transportation Code, The Law Versus the Lie, video and audio of the [02:10:58.120 --> 02:11:02.600] original 2009 seminar, hundreds of research documents, and other useful resource material. [02:11:02.600 --> 02:11:06.520] Learn how to fight for your rights with the help of this material from ruleoflawradio.com. [02:11:06.520 --> 02:11:10.600] Order your copy today, and together we can have the free society we all want and deserve. [02:11:24.920 --> 02:11:29.160] Well, don't let nothing get to you. Only the Father can deliver you. [02:11:29.960 --> 02:11:35.080] So don't let bad-minded people hurt you. And trust it and get behind you. [02:11:36.440 --> 02:11:40.600] Know what I mean, my friend? And all of your children. [02:11:54.040 --> 02:12:01.000] God, my friend, tell him your problem is, problem is he once again. [02:12:05.000 --> 02:12:10.200] He is my king, man, he is everything. He is everything to me, that's why I call him. [02:12:10.920 --> 02:12:16.120] I tap my knee and I pray to him, because he is the only one who could answer him. [02:12:16.840 --> 02:12:22.440] There is no business what wicked man say in. Mankind, you know, is this leading, eternal. [02:12:22.440 --> 02:12:30.040] Trust him, God, my friend. Tell him your problem is, problem is he once again. [02:12:34.040 --> 02:12:41.640] Trust him, God, my friend. Tell him your problem is, problem is he once again. [02:12:46.520 --> 02:12:55.240] Okay, we are back. And Eric, we were talking on the break about, you're in a good position. [02:12:57.400 --> 02:13:07.240] Lawyers, I had a lawyer tell me once, I can't do that. If I do what you're asking me to, [02:13:08.040 --> 02:13:13.800] the judge will screw my next client to get back at me, and that would be unethical. [02:13:16.360 --> 02:13:24.360] That's where they live. The lawyers, you know, I doubt that in law school they told them [02:13:25.240 --> 02:13:31.240] that when you get out of law school, you're going to spend the rest of your professional career [02:13:31.240 --> 02:13:38.920] kissing some arrogant judges behind to keep him from ruining your practice. [02:13:39.880 --> 02:13:48.200] But that's the case. So we want to jump on the lawyers and beat up the lawyers and demonize them. [02:13:50.600 --> 02:13:57.240] Wait a minute. Step out of your shoes and step in his shoes a little bit. He's got $140,000, [02:13:57.240 --> 02:14:04.120] $180,000 student loan to pay off. He can't go out and market himself directly. [02:14:05.000 --> 02:14:11.480] He's got to work from word of mouth or referral, and then he's got to go before this judge. And [02:14:11.480 --> 02:14:20.200] if he does anything these judges don't like, the judge can screw him royal and nobody will challenge [02:14:20.200 --> 02:14:26.200] it. Eric, would you like to be a lawyer in that kind of circumstance? [02:14:26.600 --> 02:14:29.560] No. [02:14:29.560 --> 02:14:37.560] These guys got to be gluttons for punishment. So, and while I'm not saying cut the lawyer any slack, [02:14:37.560 --> 02:14:45.320] I'm saying understand where they live so you can better sting them good. [02:14:47.160 --> 02:14:53.960] Because as far as I'm concerned, I don't care if that lawyer has $140,000 to $180,000 student loan [02:14:53.960 --> 02:15:06.120] to pay off. His problem, not my problem. How do I use what is actually there to my benefit? [02:15:06.840 --> 02:15:12.680] And Eric, you're in a really good place because now you can go after this judge in his personal [02:15:12.680 --> 02:15:21.080] capacity. And from my experience, that's the only way to get their attention. [02:15:21.800 --> 02:15:29.880] And understand what they're going to do. It's been my experience that when I sue a public official [02:15:29.880 --> 02:15:40.440] in his individual capacity, he's going to go to a government attorney and get the government [02:15:40.440 --> 02:15:46.200] attorney to file his response from him. If you sue that judge in his personal capacity, [02:15:46.200 --> 02:15:53.560] you can be pretty well certain he's going to get, depending on what the level is, [02:15:53.560 --> 02:15:59.560] like when I sued all the judges in Texas, they got the attorney general to respond for him. [02:16:01.000 --> 02:16:06.520] He's going to do the same thing or something similar. And then when he does, [02:16:07.320 --> 02:16:13.160] you lay there and wait for him to do that. Then you file a motion to strike the pleading [02:16:13.320 --> 02:16:20.440] then you file a motion to strike the pleading by the lawyer who filed it claiming that he has [02:16:20.440 --> 02:16:27.080] no standing in the case and move to strike his pleading and move for default judgment. [02:16:29.160 --> 02:16:31.080] Well, you got to know they're going to rule against you. [02:16:32.040 --> 02:16:39.240] Who cares? You're just laying the facts and law before the court. [02:16:40.040 --> 02:16:43.880] They're going to rule against you and they're going to let this pleading stand, but you're going to [02:16:43.880 --> 02:16:50.520] file a motion for findings of fact and conclusions at law and then you're going to file a notice of [02:16:50.520 --> 02:16:55.960] intent to appeal. Well, you don't get to appeal it until the case is over, but you got this judge [02:16:55.960 --> 02:17:03.000] sitting here and somebody sued him in his personal capacity and he ran out and got a lawyer he didn't [02:17:03.480 --> 02:17:11.480] have to pay to file a response for him. The first thing you do is move to strike that response. [02:17:13.320 --> 02:17:25.800] What if on appeal the courts rule in your favor? Oh boy, I'm screwed. So you've laid the groundwork [02:17:25.800 --> 02:17:31.000] for a potential appeal that no matter how corrupt they are in the trial court, [02:17:31.960 --> 02:17:40.440] this judge has to depend on the appellate court being as corrupt as the trial court was. [02:17:42.040 --> 02:17:47.800] Good luck with that. Who wants to play Russian roulette with their career? [02:17:48.360 --> 02:18:00.680] And Eric, do you think that this judge trusts the district judges or the circuit judges to have his [02:18:00.680 --> 02:18:13.400] back? Or will those judges do what's politically expedient? And right now, you're in a blue state [02:18:13.400 --> 02:18:16.440] and you're in a blue state with a red president. [02:18:18.920 --> 02:18:27.000] If you can formulate your claim in a way that would tend to appeal to this [02:18:28.120 --> 02:18:34.840] red president's ability to beat up the Democrats and big up the Republicans. [02:18:34.840 --> 02:18:45.560] Okay, okay, that's wrong. We're purists here. We only deal in law. Yeah, good luck with that. [02:18:47.400 --> 02:18:52.440] Now, I'm the statutory guy. I deal in statute. That's what I told Winston [02:18:52.440 --> 02:18:58.040] Shroud that I'm a creature of statute. Well, that's all well in good and I can bring all the law I [02:18:58.040 --> 02:19:07.720] want to. But at the end of the day, it's all politics. Eric, what are the politics in Massachusetts [02:19:07.720 --> 02:19:14.520] right now at these appellate and supreme levels in your courts? [02:19:17.000 --> 02:19:24.440] Well, Randy, I've already proven that they have his back. So I filed two interlocutory appeals [02:19:24.440 --> 02:19:30.520] to the district court appeals. So it's an interlocutory within the district court, [02:19:30.520 --> 02:19:36.600] which is kind of unusual. I'm probably the only person who's done it in a while because nobody [02:19:36.600 --> 02:19:47.880] knew what it was. In the very first one, that's where I got my criminal complaint against [02:19:47.880 --> 02:19:56.840] the judge because they forged, they backdated the docket. So I filed it basically preemptive [02:19:56.840 --> 02:20:03.880] because they never docketed what had happened. I'm not allowed to file the interlocutory until [02:20:03.880 --> 02:20:10.280] it's docketed, right? I said, I can't wait anymore. Here's a copy of the docket. Well, [02:20:10.360 --> 02:20:17.640] as soon as the judge got it, the docket got backdated without any notes in it. [02:20:23.640 --> 02:20:27.880] So then the appellate judge, the interlocutory appellate judge, [02:20:28.920 --> 02:20:36.440] dismissed it for a late filing. So then I made a motion for reconsideration providing all the [02:20:36.440 --> 02:20:46.200] evidence showing that it was backdated, but the original filing had a copy of the docket the day [02:20:46.200 --> 02:20:51.400] that I filed it. Here's what the docket looks like, judge. I have to file this. I can't wait [02:20:51.400 --> 02:20:56.120] anymore. It's been, you know, whatever, 20, 30 days and they're not going to enter it. [02:20:57.640 --> 02:21:03.640] This filing is actually preemptive based on the law, but I'm filing it anyway. [02:21:04.600 --> 02:21:07.640] And then they backdated it and he said, you filed it too late. [02:21:10.120 --> 02:21:17.720] So there's evidence even before, you know, before they backdated it, I had already put before [02:21:17.720 --> 02:21:24.200] the court evidence of what the docket looked like, right? So that judge covered for him anyway, [02:21:24.920 --> 02:21:29.480] during the motion, you know, for the motion to reconsider, still denied it. [02:21:29.480 --> 02:21:35.880] Okay. The problem is, at the end of the day, everything's political [02:21:37.240 --> 02:21:45.160] and the politics is changing. Trump just created peace in the Middle East. [02:21:46.840 --> 02:21:53.320] Holy crap. Now all of these blue states that are railing against Trump, [02:21:54.280 --> 02:22:01.320] he's changed the political climate. They're all going to have to go back and reassess. [02:22:02.760 --> 02:22:09.720] So, you know, while we're creatures of statute, we have to understand politics rules. So now you've [02:22:09.720 --> 02:22:17.160] got this judge. Everyone knows that walking is great exercise, but you might not know that the [02:22:17.160 --> 02:22:22.040] way you walk could predict how long you're going to live. I'm Dr. Catherine Albrecht and I'll be [02:22:22.040 --> 02:22:28.760] back to tell you more about walking prognostication in just a moment. Privacy is under attack. When you [02:22:28.760 --> 02:22:33.800] give up data about yourself, you'll never get it back again. And once your privacy is gone, [02:22:33.800 --> 02:22:39.720] you'll find your freedoms will start to vanish too. So protect your rights, say no to surveillance, [02:22:39.720 --> 02:22:45.480] and keep your information to yourself. Privacy, it's worth hanging on to. This public service [02:22:45.480 --> 02:22:50.840] announcement is brought to you by startpage.com, the private search engine alternative to Google, [02:22:50.840 --> 02:22:58.200] Yahoo and Bing. Start over with startpage. New research shows how fast you walk could [02:22:58.200 --> 02:23:02.440] predict how long you're going to live. The Journal of the American Medical Association [02:23:02.440 --> 02:23:07.960] reports that older adults who walk one meter per second or faster live longer than expected. [02:23:07.960 --> 02:23:13.240] In case you're wondering, one meter per second is about two and a quarter miles per hour. A senior's [02:23:13.240 --> 02:23:18.200] age, gender and walking speed were as good at predicting life expectancy as more traditional [02:23:18.200 --> 02:23:23.720] statistical measures. Generally speaking, faster walkers live longer. Measuring walking speed is [02:23:23.720 --> 02:23:29.240] quick and inexpensive. It only takes a stopwatch, some space to walk in a few minutes. Researchers [02:23:29.240 --> 02:23:35.080] say it could help doctors identify older patients who need special care. I'm Dr. Katherine Albrecht. [02:23:35.080 --> 02:23:37.960] More news and information at KatherineAlbrecht.com. [02:23:37.960 --> 02:23:48.600] I lost my son, my nephew, my uncle, my son on September 11th, 2001. Most people don't know that [02:23:48.600 --> 02:23:54.760] a third tower fell on September 11th. World Trade Center 7, a 47-story skyscraper, was not hit by [02:23:54.760 --> 02:24:01.000] a plane. Although the official explanation is that fire brought down Building 7, over 1,200 architects [02:24:01.000 --> 02:24:05.400] and engineers have looked into the evidence and believe there is more to the story. Bring justice [02:24:05.400 --> 02:24:11.640] to my son, my uncle, my nephew, my son. Go to buildingwhat.org. Why it fell, why it matters, [02:24:11.640 --> 02:24:17.320] and what you can do. Are you looking to have a closer relationship with God and a better [02:24:17.320 --> 02:24:22.920] understanding of his word? Then tune in to logosradionetwork.com on Wednesdays from 8 to 10 [02:24:22.920 --> 02:24:28.360] pm central time for scripture talk, where Nana and her guests discuss the scriptures in accord [02:24:28.360 --> 02:24:34.280] with 2nd Timothy 2.15. Study to show thyself approved unto God, a workman that needeth not [02:24:34.280 --> 02:24:40.200] to be ashamed, rightly dividing the word of truth. Starting in January, our first hour studies are [02:24:40.200 --> 02:24:45.080] in the Book of Mark, where we'll go verse by verse and discuss the true gospel message. [02:24:45.080 --> 02:24:50.040] Our second hour topical studies will vary each week with discussions on sound doctrine and [02:24:50.040 --> 02:24:55.480] Christian character development. We wish to reflect God's light and be a blessing to all those with [02:24:55.480 --> 02:25:01.160] a hearing ear. Our goal is to strengthen our faith and to transform ourselves more into the likeness [02:25:01.160 --> 02:25:07.000] of our Lord and Savior Jesus. So tune in to scripture talk live on logosradionetwork.com [02:25:07.000 --> 02:25:12.200] Wednesdays from 8 to 10 pm to inspire and motivate your studies of the scriptures. [02:25:14.840 --> 02:25:19.000] Live free speech radio logosradionetwork.com. [02:25:32.120 --> 02:25:35.000] Yeah [02:25:50.760 --> 02:25:54.760] Okay, we're back, Randy Caldwell and Brett Fountain with Rue de la Radio, [02:25:54.760 --> 02:25:58.520] and we're talking to Eric in Massachusetts. Mary, don't go anywhere, [02:25:58.520 --> 02:26:04.760] we're gonna get to you shortly. But Eric, you're in, from my perspective, I'm thinking [02:26:06.280 --> 02:26:08.760] you're doing to them what they did to you. [02:26:11.080 --> 02:26:17.080] You laid the groundwork so that once you got past them and you had to wait a way to come back at [02:26:17.080 --> 02:26:24.760] them. Yeah, I don't see any problem with your dropping this stuff and you get to take up fresh. [02:26:25.720 --> 02:26:34.360] And with the political climate is in as much turmoil as it is. What is the political climate [02:26:34.360 --> 02:26:41.080] in Massachusetts concerning Democrat Republican? Because from what I've seen everywhere, it seems [02:26:41.080 --> 02:26:50.040] to be in flux right now. Yeah, people are starting to wake up that things are definitely a mess. I [02:26:50.040 --> 02:27:01.640] mean, we have a matriarchal state with a female AG and a female governor and then they stuff [02:27:01.640 --> 02:27:07.080] everybody else that they can to be a female underneath them, female, you know, Boston mayor. [02:27:09.240 --> 02:27:16.040] It's not looking good. You know, people are recognizing all the crime and [02:27:16.040 --> 02:27:21.720] I mean, these are all just criminal women. They're just horrible. You know, so it's not [02:27:21.720 --> 02:27:28.280] like they're good women or anything. They're just horrible women who've just committed lots [02:27:28.280 --> 02:27:35.960] and lots of crimes that are all now starting to come out. Just the mayor of Boston, I mean, [02:27:35.960 --> 02:27:41.800] there's like a scandal almost every day, but people still love her. They don't seem to care. [02:27:42.520 --> 02:27:47.800] Whereas the governor is starting to get more heat because she's been given away like billions of [02:27:47.800 --> 02:27:56.440] dollars and there's money that's, you know, money that's been going to house, you know, illegal [02:27:56.440 --> 02:28:04.040] aliens that has so much corruption oriented to it. The mayor of Boston is not doing that kind of [02:28:04.040 --> 02:28:08.600] stuff. She's not stuffing her pockets or stuff in your friend's pockets, at least that we found out [02:28:08.600 --> 02:28:14.760] yet, but it's other like kind of stupid conspiracies or issues. But the governor [02:28:15.400 --> 02:28:21.560] and probably the attorney general, you know, we have a really good auditor who's an elected [02:28:22.360 --> 02:28:28.760] auditor, another female, but she's a good one. She's doing everything she can to audit the [02:28:28.760 --> 02:28:35.800] legislature and audit the different government agencies and they are just stopping her every [02:28:35.800 --> 02:28:41.800] which way they can and people are getting really upset because they know there's a lot of crime here. [02:28:43.080 --> 02:28:53.320] So now you're in a position of political flux. Everybody's going to feel vulnerable or everybody [02:28:53.320 --> 02:28:59.240] that's entrenched in the system. When the system is becoming unstable, they're all going to be [02:28:59.320 --> 02:29:03.720] terrified. So you're in a really good spot. [02:29:05.480 --> 02:29:09.880] Yeah, so here's really my question why I called because I don't want to go too far without getting [02:29:09.880 --> 02:29:17.160] to my question. So again, my last phone call was about a declaratory judgment to the federal court, [02:29:17.160 --> 02:29:22.760] which I still want to do. I don't want to sue the per the judge personally yet. I want to get my [02:29:23.720 --> 02:29:26.920] federal declaratory judgment because I want to get rid of some of these laws [02:29:27.880 --> 02:29:39.240] or try and limit them as we talked about last time. And then now that the eviction is basically [02:29:39.240 --> 02:29:46.840] over, I was going to file against the two health department people personally and then the tenant. [02:29:48.200 --> 02:29:55.400] What I'm afraid of is that they may try and combine those two in the federal court if I [02:29:55.400 --> 02:30:04.360] filed them. What's the likelihood of that? I think it's very likely if your two claims [02:30:06.680 --> 02:30:16.360] are derived from essentially the same fact set, it would be judicially expedient [02:30:17.240 --> 02:30:24.520] to join them together so that the courts don't have to adjudicate the same fact set twice. [02:30:26.280 --> 02:30:29.640] So the likelihood of a joiner I would say was very high. [02:30:29.640 --> 02:30:38.200] It's very high. One of them, the one that I would do in the state court is really about perjury [02:30:39.080 --> 02:30:48.600] because the whole the whole eviction process started with perjury. Whereas in the federal [02:30:48.600 --> 02:30:55.400] court, I'm doing declaratory judgments on state laws or codes. [02:30:57.000 --> 02:31:08.120] No way they can join those two. If you're claiming perjury in one and petitioning for [02:31:08.120 --> 02:31:14.840] declaratory judgment in the other, those two are so, even if they're based on the same fact set, [02:31:15.800 --> 02:31:26.360] they are so different that joiner would not be judicially efficient. So I would say very little [02:31:26.360 --> 02:31:33.880] chance they'll join them. Okay, because the state one is a tort claim based on perjury and collusion [02:31:33.880 --> 02:31:40.760] and conversion and etc, etc. And the federal is obviously declaratory judgment against [02:31:41.080 --> 02:31:48.280] constitutionality. First, fourth, fifth, sixth, eighth, 14th, 13th, ninth. [02:31:53.720 --> 02:31:56.600] When's the last time somebody claimed the 13th amendment? [02:31:57.400 --> 02:31:59.960] Yeah, I don't recall hearing that one frequently. [02:32:02.920 --> 02:32:06.200] But if you're forcing someone to do work and they're not getting paid, [02:32:07.080 --> 02:32:08.760] that's indentured servitude, isn't it? [02:32:10.360 --> 02:32:17.320] Yeah, it is. And it may be time, you have a lot of politicians here [02:32:18.440 --> 02:32:29.000] trying to change the status quo. So they need something unusual and different. [02:32:29.400 --> 02:32:32.440] So they can try to make their mark. [02:32:35.080 --> 02:32:42.840] Who might you be giving a present to? Who might want to be able to use what you're doing [02:32:42.840 --> 02:32:44.600] to their political advantage? [02:32:48.760 --> 02:32:57.000] With this one, I don't know. With my COVID lawsuit against the mayor of Boston, [02:32:57.960 --> 02:33:04.200] I've given that to so many different federal agencies, begging them to pick this one up [02:33:04.200 --> 02:33:13.560] because it's just so juicy. I did get a letter today from the, you know, an email today from [02:33:13.560 --> 02:33:18.520] the Department of Justice in Washington, but it was just sort of, oh, we have your, [02:33:19.320 --> 02:33:22.680] we got your letter. You know, we got your criminal complaints. Thank you. [02:33:22.680 --> 02:33:31.080] Wait, wait, wait, wait, wait, wait, wait. Hold on. Whoa, wait. You sent a criminal [02:33:31.080 --> 02:33:39.160] complaint to the Department of Justice? Against my COVID case, against the mayor of Boston, [02:33:39.160 --> 02:33:43.800] yes. Did you direct it to the grand jury? [02:33:47.320 --> 02:33:49.320] No, I asked them to give it to the grand jury. [02:33:49.320 --> 02:33:58.440] Okay. Here is the suit that I'm trying to craft the standing to bring. [02:34:00.520 --> 02:34:08.360] I am alleging that the only difference between a democracy and a republic, the only functional [02:34:08.440 --> 02:34:19.400] difference is your and my ability to give notice of crime to a federal grand jury. [02:34:21.720 --> 02:34:30.520] Absent that, we have a democracy. And the constitution guarantees to the states a [02:34:30.520 --> 02:34:38.200] republican form of government. The only difference in a republican and a democracy is that in a [02:34:38.200 --> 02:34:45.560] republican form of government, the individual has the capacity to maintain the governmental [02:34:45.560 --> 02:34:53.640] instruments that he has created. The only way we can do that is with this fourth branch of [02:34:53.640 --> 02:35:02.280] government, the grand jury. So taking Williams v. State and Scalia's very well structured argument, [02:35:03.240 --> 02:35:10.200] we go to the U.S. attorney and since that's the only address we have for the grand jury, [02:35:11.640 --> 02:35:21.720] you send a communication addressed to the grand federal grand jury to the U.S. attorney's office [02:35:21.720 --> 02:35:25.160] because that's the only address we have. [02:35:26.920 --> 02:35:36.200] And if the U.S. attorney does not give that to the grand jury, then he's tampered with the U.S. mail. [02:35:38.360 --> 02:35:46.680] And in order to determine that, inside the document, I generally use an envelope in an [02:35:46.680 --> 02:35:52.440] envelope. I've got an envelope for the grand jury and it goes inside a mailing envelope. [02:35:52.440 --> 02:35:58.200] And in that mailing envelope, there's a cover letter with another envelope stamped self-addressed [02:35:59.480 --> 02:36:05.480] wherein I ask the foreman to initial this document and return it to me. [02:36:06.360 --> 02:36:10.040] With the admonition, please do not run off the cliff. We'll be right back. [02:36:10.040 --> 02:36:17.560] Do you have a business with five employees or more? How would you like to save hundreds of [02:36:17.560 --> 02:36:23.640] thousands of dollars in FICA taxes? Do you have a major medical plan that nobody can afford to be on? [02:36:23.640 --> 02:36:29.720] Or how would you like to save in premium costs on a current major medical plan by lowering the [02:36:29.720 --> 02:36:37.400] claims cost? The CHAMP plan is a section 125 IRS approved preventative health plan that provides [02:36:37.480 --> 02:36:45.720] your employees with doctors, medications, emergency care, and Teladoc all at zero cost with zero copay. [02:36:45.720 --> 02:36:53.080] If you are an employee, you also will get a pay raise by paying less in FICA taxes. As an employer, [02:36:53.080 --> 02:36:59.640] you will save hundreds of thousands of dollars in matching FICA taxes. The CHAMP plan can help add [02:36:59.640 --> 02:37:10.120] working capital, market resale value, or pay down lines of credit. Call Scott at 214730 2471 or [02:37:10.120 --> 02:37:18.120] dallasmms.com. Are you the plaintiff or defendant in a lawsuit? Win your case without an attorney [02:37:18.120 --> 02:37:24.520] with Jurisdictionary, the affordable, easy to understand, 4-CD course that will show you how [02:37:24.600 --> 02:37:31.720] in 24 hours, step-by-step. If you have a lawyer, know what your lawyer should be doing. If you [02:37:31.720 --> 02:37:37.640] don't have a lawyer, know what you should do for yourself. Thousands have won with our step-by-step [02:37:37.640 --> 02:37:44.680] course, and now you can too. Jurisdictionary was created by a licensed attorney with 22 years of [02:37:44.680 --> 02:37:50.520] case-winning experience. Even if you're not in a lawsuit, you can learn what everyone should [02:37:50.520 --> 02:37:56.200] understand about the principles and practices that control our American courts. You'll receive [02:37:56.200 --> 02:38:03.880] our audio classroom, video seminar, tutorials, forms for civil cases, pro se tactics, and much [02:38:03.880 --> 02:38:13.240] more. Please visit ruleoflawradio.com and click on the banner or call toll-free 866-LAW-EZ. [02:38:34.600 --> 02:38:35.640] Oh, yeah. [02:38:37.000 --> 02:38:46.120] Always, I must be careful what I'm wishing for. When I'm hungry, I like to know just what I'm [02:38:46.120 --> 02:38:55.480] fishing for. I ain't asking for much, I ain't trying to be no glutton. I'm just here making my [02:38:55.480 --> 02:39:05.800] living pushing buttons. I get my message out to anyone who's shouting distance. I vote for [02:39:05.800 --> 02:39:14.520] bravery and against slavery, showing resistance. First I'm crawling, then I'm walking, then I start [02:39:14.520 --> 02:39:19.640] strutting. I'm just so glad to make my living pushing buttons. [02:39:25.480 --> 02:39:39.480] Oh, oh, yeah. We sat down to play Monopoly. We all wanted to win the game. We gave some guy [02:39:39.480 --> 02:39:45.800] endless money supply. We must have not been thinking with brains. After some time, the worth [02:39:45.800 --> 02:39:52.040] of my dime got beat down to damn near nothing. I might have been doing all right. Still, I make [02:39:52.040 --> 02:39:56.200] my living pushing buttons. Oh, oh, yeah. [02:40:05.160 --> 02:40:11.080] Okay, we are back. Randy Kelton, Fountain Rueflaw Radio, and we're talking to Eric in Massachusetts, [02:40:11.080 --> 02:40:16.920] and Eric, I'm trying to craft something. I'm building this up, but I got so much other stuff [02:40:17.480 --> 02:40:22.360] that I keep getting pulled away from it, but you're further down this road than I am. [02:40:24.760 --> 02:40:28.520] You may actually be able to do this. What I'm trying to do [02:40:29.640 --> 02:40:36.120] is use a petition for declaratory judgment to give me in front of the president. [02:40:37.880 --> 02:40:41.080] All I want to do is get his attention. I don't care if I get his attention. [02:40:41.080 --> 02:40:45.000] If I can get Pam Bondi's attention and say to them, look, guys, [02:40:45.640 --> 02:40:52.280] you do this right, you don't need doge. If you re-empower the grand jury, [02:40:53.560 --> 02:41:00.200] so what I'm saying is, is we file a petition for declaratory judgment. We sue the president [02:41:00.200 --> 02:41:08.120] as respondeat superior for Pam Bondi, attorney general, as respondeat superior for the U.S. [02:41:08.120 --> 02:41:13.880] attorney. The only address you have for the grand jury is the U.S. attorney's office. [02:41:15.720 --> 02:41:24.200] So you send a mailing to the foreman of the grand jury at the address of the U.S. attorney's office, [02:41:24.200 --> 02:41:31.720] and you include in there in the folder a stamp self-addressed envelope wherein you ask the [02:41:32.360 --> 02:41:36.040] foreman of the grand jury to initial this document and return it to you. [02:41:36.200 --> 02:41:46.520] You ask the foreman, do not sign it, as the U.S. attorney has a rubber stamp with your name on it [02:41:47.880 --> 02:41:54.120] that when he has someone he's trying to prosecute, he will find anything no matter how minor or [02:41:54.120 --> 02:42:02.600] insignificant on which he can get an indictment. If he can get an initial indictment, then that [02:42:02.600 --> 02:42:11.560] establishes that he has a case and now he can contribute, can include enough funding [02:42:12.280 --> 02:42:20.680] to do a more serious investigation, and all of the subsequent indictments he will rubber stamp [02:42:20.680 --> 02:42:27.080] with the stamp he has with your name on it, all of the superseding indictments. That's what they [02:42:27.080 --> 02:42:34.520] call it. They get the original indictment and then based on their investigation they bring more, [02:42:34.520 --> 02:42:40.760] they call those superseding and he rubber stamps them. When you put that cover letter in there, [02:42:41.960 --> 02:42:47.480] noticing the foreman that the U.S. attorney has a rubber stamp with his name on it, [02:42:48.680 --> 02:42:53.640] the likelihood that the U.S. attorney will allow that to get in front of the grand jury [02:42:53.640 --> 02:43:02.360] somewhere between little and none. So by putting it in there, you make sure that you will never [02:43:02.360 --> 02:43:12.040] get that back and by not getting it back. I got one back one time. Oh, was it initial? [02:43:13.480 --> 02:43:19.720] I got the postcard because I don't do the self-addressed stamped envelopes. I did the [02:43:19.720 --> 02:43:26.760] postcards. They get a little bit cheaper on the stamps. I got one back one time. [02:43:28.920 --> 02:43:34.520] It had a little thing scribbled on there that said that we declined to inquire into the matter. [02:43:38.760 --> 02:43:45.240] That's the one where I turned around and filed criminal charges against the foreman of that [02:43:45.240 --> 02:43:58.840] grand jury. That's what I'm getting to. You open the door so you can pry yourself through it. [02:44:01.480 --> 02:44:07.800] He got the postcard back but he has no idea if the foreman actually scribbled that on there [02:44:07.960 --> 02:44:16.520] somebody else did. At the end of the day, you don't care. You can be absolutely certain [02:44:17.080 --> 02:44:21.080] that the U.S. attorney will never let the foreman of the grand jury see this cover letter. [02:44:22.520 --> 02:44:30.760] The whole point is you want to get in front of the attorney general. You want to say, [02:44:31.720 --> 02:44:39.640] your U.S. attorney intercepted my communication to the foreman of the grand jury. [02:44:41.240 --> 02:44:48.680] That violates the separation of powers. You don't want to sue them for anything serious. [02:44:48.680 --> 02:44:57.640] What you want to do is get their attention and say to Pam Bondi, look, if you do what Scalia said [02:44:58.520 --> 02:45:03.080] and treat the grand jury as a fourth branch of government, you don't need Doge. [02:45:05.240 --> 02:45:15.720] Because if you stand aside as the executive branch and treat the grand jury as the fourth [02:45:15.720 --> 02:45:22.760] branch of government and don't interfere with them, now if somebody is in government and they [02:45:22.760 --> 02:45:30.120] see bad things going on, if they can approach a federal grand jury anonymously and without [02:45:30.120 --> 02:45:42.440] interference, then anything the grand jury brings back to you, you don't have any political [02:45:42.440 --> 02:45:54.920] liability in that. They can't accuse you of weaponizing the executive branch. [02:45:55.480 --> 02:46:00.120] Right, because those are darn grand jurors. You never know what they're going to do. [02:46:00.120 --> 02:46:07.080] Exactly. Now you have plausible deniability. If anything bad is going on, somebody is going to [02:46:07.080 --> 02:46:15.480] snitch. So you open the door to get these, and it is the exact door you absolutely have to open [02:46:17.080 --> 02:46:24.520] in order to afford the citizens a Republican form of government. I've never heard anybody argue that [02:46:24.520 --> 02:46:32.760] before. So Eric, argue. Otherwise, Eric, what is the difference between a democracy, the functional [02:46:32.760 --> 02:46:44.520] difference between a democracy and a republic? I can only find one, and that's the ability of a [02:46:44.520 --> 02:46:54.120] citizen in a republic to petition a grand jury, give notice of crime to a grand jury for the [02:46:54.120 --> 02:47:01.560] purpose of maintaining the governmental instruments we have created. And in my opinion, [02:47:01.560 --> 02:47:10.760] that was absolutely the genius of our founders. They figured out how to stabilize a democracy. [02:47:10.760 --> 02:47:20.120] If you read the Federalist papers, our founders hated democracies. I think it was Washington that [02:47:20.120 --> 02:47:26.600] said that democracies are as violent in their demise as they are in their creation, and that [02:47:26.600 --> 02:47:32.600] democracies historically last 200 years, and then they implode in on themselves. [02:47:34.280 --> 02:47:43.000] The only difference was grand juries. That's what made us a republic. [02:47:44.440 --> 02:47:52.280] You're missing an important component on this. Two important components. Pam Blondie is useless. [02:47:53.160 --> 02:47:59.880] No, she doesn't. We don't care about that. What we want to do is give them the idea [02:48:00.840 --> 02:48:07.320] that they've got a tool they can use to beat up the Democrats with, for which they don't have to [02:48:07.320 --> 02:48:18.040] accept responsibility. But you didn't hear my other part. Somebody who's extremely useful, [02:48:18.680 --> 02:48:26.440] extremely good, extremely talented, is is Harmeet Dhillon in the Civil Rights Division. [02:48:28.280 --> 02:48:32.200] Okay, I'm having trouble hearing you, but who is this Harmeet Dhillon? [02:48:32.760 --> 02:48:43.240] Harmeet Dhillon. She's extremely good, extremely smart, extremely constitutional. [02:48:43.240 --> 02:48:49.400] Okay, she's in the Civil Rights Division. [02:48:54.280 --> 02:49:05.240] Okay, how do we craft a pleading that will draw her division into it? The reason I'm asking the [02:49:05.240 --> 02:49:13.480] question this way is how do we craft these pleadings and give the people we're going to [02:49:14.520 --> 02:49:24.280] plausible deniability? So you go to Harley Dhillon and you invoke her response to her duty [02:49:25.400 --> 02:49:34.120] in a way that she can say, hey, don't blame me. I didn't do this. I'm just doing my job. How do we [02:49:34.120 --> 02:49:39.160] give her cover so she can go after these guys? Because at the end of the day, it's all politics. [02:49:41.160 --> 02:49:49.240] You have it right. Your original plan is what you do. You set up Pam Blondie and then when she [02:49:49.240 --> 02:49:56.920] doesn't respond, you take a civil rights issue to Harmeet Dhillon and she will love that idea [02:49:57.000 --> 02:50:03.640] that we do have access, we should have access to the grand juries. She'll love that idea. [02:50:04.680 --> 02:50:06.440] Great. And she'll prosecute Pam Blondie. [02:50:08.760 --> 02:50:17.240] Blondie, I like that. Pam Blondie is a very political creature whether she wants to be or not. [02:50:19.400 --> 02:50:23.720] I don't consider any of them bad guys. They're all good guys trying to do the best they can with [02:50:24.280 --> 02:50:29.800] the conditions they're stuck inside. So how do we manipulate them for our best interest? [02:50:29.800 --> 02:50:35.320] And I am definitely going to look into the Harley Dhillon. She may be easier to get to [02:50:36.360 --> 02:50:43.000] and then you give her a tool so she can give a positive tool to the administration and [02:50:43.000 --> 02:50:48.920] advance everybody's interest. I really like this. Hang on. Randy Kelton, Wet Fountain, [02:50:48.920 --> 02:50:58.680] Rule of Law Radio or call in number 512-646-1984 and Mary, if you wake up call back in. We'll be [02:50:58.680 --> 02:51:07.720] right back. Would you like to make more definite progress in your walk with God? Bibles for America [02:51:07.720 --> 02:51:13.080] is offering a free study Bible and a set of free Christian books that can really help. [02:51:13.080 --> 02:51:18.280] The New Testament recovery version is one of the most comprehensive study Bibles available today. [02:51:18.280 --> 02:51:22.840] It's an accurate translation and it contains thousands of footnotes that will help you to [02:51:22.840 --> 02:51:28.760] know God and to know the meaning of life. The free books are a three-volume set called Basic [02:51:28.760 --> 02:51:33.640] Elements of the Christian Life. Chapter by chapter Basic Elements of the Christian Life [02:51:33.640 --> 02:51:40.520] clearly presents God's plan of salvation, growing in Christ and how to build up the church. To order [02:51:40.520 --> 02:51:46.920] your free New Testament recovery version and Basic Elements of the Christian Life call Bibles [02:51:46.920 --> 02:52:01.320] for America toll free at 888-551-0102. That's 888-551-0102 or visit us online at bfa.org. [02:52:04.440 --> 02:52:10.600] You're listening to the Logos Radio Network at logosradionetwork.com. [02:52:11.400 --> 02:52:19.320] The Bill of Rights contains the first 10 amendments of our constitution. They guarantee the specific [02:52:19.320 --> 02:52:24.360] freedoms Americans should know and protect. Our liberty depends on it. I'm Dr. Katherine Albrecht [02:52:24.360 --> 02:52:28.840] and I'll be right back with an unforgettable way to remember one of your constitutional rights. [02:52:29.400 --> 02:52:34.920] Privacy is under attack. When you give up data about yourself, you'll never get it back again. [02:52:34.920 --> 02:52:39.720] And once your privacy is gone, you'll find your freedoms will start to vanish too. [02:52:39.720 --> 02:52:45.800] So protect your rights. Say no to surveillance and keep your information to yourself. Privacy, [02:52:45.800 --> 02:52:51.000] it's worth hanging on to. This public service announcement is brought to you by startpage.com, [02:52:51.000 --> 02:52:57.000] the private search engine alternative to Google, Yahoo and Bing. Start over with Startpage. [02:52:58.440 --> 02:53:02.840] Imagine your mom and dad are getting ready for bed. They pull back the covers and find [02:53:02.840 --> 02:53:07.320] a third party there. He announces, I'm with the military and I'm sleeping here tonight. [02:53:07.320 --> 02:53:11.640] That shocking image of a third party in my parents' bed reminds me what the Third Amendment [02:53:11.640 --> 02:53:16.440] was designed to prevent. It protects us from being forced to share our homes with soldiers, [02:53:16.440 --> 02:53:21.640] a common demand in the days of our founding fathers. Third party, Third Amendment? Get it? [02:53:21.640 --> 02:53:25.400] So if you answer a knock at your door and guys in fatigues demand lodging, [02:53:25.400 --> 02:53:29.640] tell them to dust off their copy of the Bill of Rights and reread the Third Amendment. [02:53:29.640 --> 02:53:33.800] I'm Dr. Catherine Albrecht. More news and information at CatherineAlbrecht.com. [02:53:44.200 --> 02:53:48.520] The Bill of Rights contains the first 10 amendments of our Constitution. They guarantee [02:53:48.520 --> 02:53:53.400] the specific freedoms Americans should know and protect. Our liberty depends on it. I'm Dr. [02:53:53.400 --> 02:53:57.400] Catherine Albrecht and I'll be right back with an unforgettable way to remember one of your [02:53:57.400 --> 02:54:03.720] constitutional rights. Privacy is under attack. When you give up data about yourself, you'll never [02:54:03.720 --> 02:54:09.640] get it back again. And once your privacy is gone, you'll find your freedoms will start to vanish too. [02:54:09.640 --> 02:54:15.800] So protect your rights. Say no to surveillance and keep your information to yourself. Privacy, [02:54:15.800 --> 02:54:21.000] it's worth hanging on to. This public service announcement is brought to you by Startpage.com, [02:54:21.000 --> 02:54:27.000] the private search engine alternative to Google, Yahoo and Bing. Start over with Startpage. [02:54:28.200 --> 02:54:34.200] Imagine four eyes staring at you through binoculars, a magnifying glass or a pair of x-ray goggles. [02:54:34.200 --> 02:54:39.000] That imagery reminds me that the Fourth Amendment guarantees Americans freedom from unreasonable [02:54:39.000 --> 02:54:44.600] search and seizure. Fourth Amendment? Four eyes staring at you? Get it? Unfortunately, the government [02:54:44.600 --> 02:54:49.960] is trampling our Fourth Amendment rights in the name of security. Case in point, TSA airport [02:54:49.960 --> 02:54:54.280] scanners that peer under your clothing. When government employees demand a peep at your [02:54:54.280 --> 02:54:59.240] privates without probable cause, I say it's time to sound the constitutional alarm bells. [02:54:59.240 --> 02:55:03.960] Join me in asking our representatives to dust off the Bill of Rights and use their googly eyes [02:55:03.960 --> 02:55:10.360] to take a gander at the Fourth. I'm Dr. Catherine Albrecht. More news and information at CatherineAlbrecht.com. [02:55:24.280 --> 02:55:28.360] Yeah, it's a story. [02:55:35.160 --> 02:55:39.160] I will occupy my father's house [02:55:39.160 --> 02:55:45.160] I will occupy my father's house [02:55:45.160 --> 02:55:49.160] He has led me with the strength and wisdom [02:55:49.160 --> 02:55:53.160] I will occupy my father's house [02:55:54.040 --> 02:55:58.040] I will occupy my father's house [02:55:58.040 --> 02:56:02.040] Yeah, I will occupy my father's house [02:56:02.040 --> 02:56:04.040] Till I see his face [02:56:04.040 --> 02:56:08.040] I will occupy my father's house [02:56:08.040 --> 02:56:10.040] I will guard these walls [02:56:10.040 --> 02:56:14.040] You know, okay, we are back to Brandon Kelton, Brett Fountain, and we move our radio [02:56:14.040 --> 02:56:20.040] and we're talking to Eric in Massachusetts. And Eric, thank you. [02:56:20.920 --> 02:56:26.920] This is a tool I needed. I was going to go to Pam Bondi because it's too hard to get to the president. [02:56:26.920 --> 02:56:32.920] He's too focused and distracted. But then Pam Bondi is too. [02:56:32.920 --> 02:56:40.920] You gave me the place where I can maybe create some leverage or get one of her aides [02:56:40.920 --> 02:56:46.920] who has her ear and she's going to have the ear of the rest of them. [02:56:47.800 --> 02:56:51.800] So this is even better. [02:56:51.800 --> 02:56:55.800] So how do we reach Dylan? [02:56:55.800 --> 02:56:59.800] Harmeet Dylan. [02:57:01.800 --> 02:57:05.800] How do we reach her, Eric? [02:57:05.800 --> 02:57:09.800] Same, you just send her a letter, just like you do, you know, Pam Bondi. [02:57:09.800 --> 02:57:13.800] They have an address, a Washington DC address. [02:57:14.680 --> 02:57:20.680] What I wanted to do, Pam Bondi, is I wanted to do a petition for declaratory judgment. [02:57:20.680 --> 02:57:24.680] But if I do that, she won't necessarily see it. [02:57:24.680 --> 02:57:28.680] What she's likely to have is her underlings handle it. [02:57:28.680 --> 02:57:32.680] So, okay, now you've given me the next level down. [02:57:32.680 --> 02:57:36.680] She's this Harmeet Dylan-ness of rights. [02:57:36.680 --> 02:57:40.680] So this is the one is more likely to go to. [02:57:41.560 --> 02:57:49.560] So the argument I want to bring, the first one I have to convince [02:57:49.560 --> 02:57:57.560] of our position and how it will serve their agenda is this Harmeet Dylan. [02:57:57.560 --> 02:58:01.560] Is there anybody below her who would have her ear? [02:58:01.640 --> 02:58:07.640] So I sent a letter to somebody who was [02:58:07.640 --> 02:58:14.760] recently hired, I think in July, and he may have picked up my, you know, criminal [02:58:14.760 --> 02:58:19.960] complaint or letter, but his name is Jesus A. Ossette. [02:58:19.960 --> 02:58:28.200] And he, much like Pam Bondi, had done a COVID case recently. [02:58:28.280 --> 02:58:34.600] So she did a pretty famous one in 2021, and he did one in maybe 2022. [02:58:35.480 --> 02:58:40.520] And he was picked up this July by the department, and he's young. [02:58:44.200 --> 02:58:44.840] Jesus? [02:58:46.680 --> 02:58:53.880] Jesus, Jesus, Jesus A. Ossette, O-S-E-T-E. [02:58:53.880 --> 02:58:56.760] He's a principal deputy assistant attorney general. [02:58:57.480 --> 02:58:58.360] Okay, wait a minute. [02:58:58.360 --> 02:58:59.960] I couldn't, Brett, can you repeat that? [02:58:59.960 --> 02:59:00.920] I couldn't hear it well. [02:59:02.440 --> 02:59:04.760] Principal assistant deputy general. [02:59:05.560 --> 02:59:06.600] What was his last name? [02:59:08.920 --> 02:59:09.560] Ossette? [02:59:12.280 --> 02:59:12.520] Yeah. [02:59:13.640 --> 02:59:15.080] Ossette, okay. [02:59:15.080 --> 02:59:16.920] Jesus Ossette. [02:59:16.920 --> 02:59:21.400] Okay, I like to call Jesus Jesus because it makes the Baptist preachers crazy. [02:59:21.400 --> 02:59:27.160] Okay, Jesus Ossette, that might be the guy to go to. [02:59:27.960 --> 02:59:35.160] You want somebody down, lower down, that you can give a plum to that he can take [02:59:36.760 --> 02:59:40.280] and work its way up so that he gets to take credit for it. [02:59:40.280 --> 02:59:45.560] We're just chump citizens, and we're not going to, even if we got credit for us, [02:59:45.560 --> 02:59:50.040] it wouldn't do anything, you know, credit for what was happening. [02:59:50.040 --> 02:59:53.480] But if we can give that credit to someone else who could use it to [02:59:53.480 --> 02:59:56.680] advance their career, then we get someone in our corner. [03:00:00.760 --> 03:00:02.920] Do I sound like a conniving politician? [03:00:05.720 --> 03:00:06.280] Devious. [03:00:07.000 --> 03:00:10.280] At the end of the day, it's all politics. [03:00:10.280 --> 03:00:13.560] Okay, Eric, you have been of great value. [03:00:13.960 --> 03:00:18.680] So, how do we talk to Jesus Ossette? [03:00:22.360 --> 03:00:23.160] Send him a letter. [03:00:26.680 --> 03:00:32.840] Speaking of which, why don't you see if Mary is available so that I can go back to sleep? [03:00:37.000 --> 03:00:42.680] I just looked him up and he came up under the Federalist Society. [03:00:43.560 --> 03:00:49.560] Oh, that is such a good sign. [03:00:52.680 --> 03:00:59.880] Jesus Ossette, O-S-E-T-E, previously served as General Counsel to the Honorable John H. [03:00:59.880 --> 03:01:02.040] Escroft, Secretary of State of Missouri. [03:01:02.600 --> 03:01:07.240] Mr. Ossette previously served as Deputy Solicitor General of Missouri, [03:01:08.360 --> 03:01:11.160] Deputy Attorney General for Special Litigation. [03:01:11.960 --> 03:01:18.200] He has presented oral argument to the U.S. Supreme Court before joining Missouri Attorney General's [03:01:18.200 --> 03:01:25.400] Office. Mr. Ossette worked as Brian Cave-Layton, whatever, the Appellate and Superior Court Group. [03:01:25.400 --> 03:01:27.240] Okay, I need to look at this guy. [03:01:28.600 --> 03:01:29.960] He may be the key. [03:01:31.160 --> 03:01:34.040] We give him a gem that he can take up the line. [03:01:36.120 --> 03:01:37.960] We actually get somebody on our side. [03:01:37.960 --> 03:01:40.760] Oh, thank you, Eric. [03:01:41.160 --> 03:01:46.280] You're not one of those worthless Yankees. [03:01:52.440 --> 03:01:54.680] Hey, no free rides around here. [03:01:56.760 --> 03:02:03.400] But yeah, very much. This will adjust my trajectory. [03:02:05.480 --> 03:02:07.880] This is probably somebody I can reach. [03:02:08.840 --> 03:02:14.520] And again, Hermi Dillon is right in shoulder to shoulder with a lot of us on this stuff. [03:02:14.520 --> 03:02:20.120] She's really good. So between those two, and hopefully everybody else they surround themselves [03:02:20.120 --> 03:02:24.200] with, the Civil Rights Division might be a really good division right now. [03:02:27.000 --> 03:02:34.200] If we can convince them that opening the grand jury, the argument on what to make is, [03:02:34.760 --> 03:02:47.800] is that for a U.S. attorney to intercept a criminal accusation directed to the grand jury [03:02:48.520 --> 03:02:50.840] is a violation of the separation of powers. [03:02:52.840 --> 03:02:57.160] That according to Scalia, that the grand jury is a fourth branch of government, therefore... [03:02:57.160 --> 03:02:58.440] Not to mention mail fraud. [03:02:59.640 --> 03:03:00.520] Yeah, mail fraud. [03:03:01.960 --> 03:03:02.760] Mail tampering. [03:03:03.400 --> 03:03:04.360] That's what I'm going to charge. [03:03:05.160 --> 03:03:06.680] Get into somebody else's mail. [03:03:07.560 --> 03:03:10.760] Yeah, I'm going to charge some federal judges with that. [03:03:12.120 --> 03:03:16.200] I sent criminal complaints to the grand jury in Fort Worth, [03:03:17.560 --> 03:03:20.520] directly to the grand jury, and they have an office in the same building. [03:03:21.560 --> 03:03:26.040] And the court intercepted that communication to the grand jury [03:03:27.240 --> 03:03:30.680] and treated it like a civil filing and dismissed it because I didn't pay [03:03:31.240 --> 03:03:33.160] a several hundred dollar filing fee. [03:03:35.000 --> 03:03:36.520] Is that a fact? Check. [03:03:37.160 --> 03:03:40.200] So now I'm filing criminally against this judge. [03:03:42.360 --> 03:03:46.840] And federal judges are not held in high esteem at the moment. [03:03:48.440 --> 03:04:00.040] So I send it to this Jesus of City and address it as the most basic civil rights violation. [03:04:01.640 --> 03:04:09.720] Denying citizens in a republic access to a grand jury, we argue that as if it has the effect [03:04:09.720 --> 03:04:15.560] of denying us in a republican form of government, which is guaranteed by constitution. [03:04:15.560 --> 03:04:17.000] What is the Sixth Amendment, Brett? [03:04:19.240 --> 03:04:22.840] Where it's guaranteed to be a republic? [03:04:22.840 --> 03:04:28.200] That the state shall provide, that all of the states shall provide a [03:04:29.080 --> 03:04:30.360] republican form of government. [03:04:30.760 --> 03:04:32.920] All right. [03:04:32.920 --> 03:04:39.000] And I've never heard any other argument as to what a republican form of government is. [03:04:39.000 --> 03:04:44.760] Eric, what is a republican form of government? How is it different from a democracy? [03:04:46.200 --> 03:04:50.680] Well, democracy is when two wolves and a sheep decide what's for dinner. [03:04:50.680 --> 03:04:51.640] That's what I've been told. [03:04:53.240 --> 03:04:55.800] Okay. How is that different from a republic? [03:04:57.480 --> 03:04:59.320] The republic is... [03:04:59.320 --> 03:05:01.640] The sheep has a M16. [03:05:03.480 --> 03:05:06.920] A republic is when you have a lot of people voting, but their votes don't matter. [03:05:07.720 --> 03:05:13.240] And they get these other people who decide what their votes are going to be for in terms of a [03:05:13.240 --> 03:05:13.720] president. [03:05:15.560 --> 03:05:28.760] Well, in looking at specifically what the difference is, the only difference I can find [03:05:29.320 --> 03:05:38.440] is the ability of the citizen in a republic to maintain the governmental instruments they have [03:05:38.440 --> 03:05:50.360] created. Whereas in a democracy, the public decides what is right and what is wrong. [03:05:51.480 --> 03:05:58.440] In a republic, the individual citizen gets to decide what's right and what's wrong. [03:05:59.000 --> 03:06:05.880] And the individual citizen has the ability and the duty to maintain the governmental [03:06:05.880 --> 03:06:13.320] instruments they have created. The preamble to the Texas Open Government Act speaks to this [03:06:13.320 --> 03:06:19.400] extremely well. That in order for the citizen to maintain the governmental instruments they [03:06:19.400 --> 03:06:24.600] have created, we do not... Let's see. How does it go? Do you have that memorized, Brad? [03:06:26.120 --> 03:06:28.120] No, not memorized. I do like it. [03:06:29.080 --> 03:06:31.080] 552.001. [03:06:32.200 --> 03:06:35.320] Very well done. Look that up for me, will you? [03:06:37.400 --> 03:06:45.160] When I first read that, I thought I would that I could have created this paragraph. [03:06:46.440 --> 03:06:53.800] In order for the citizens to maintain the republican form of government, [03:06:53.800 --> 03:07:01.000] we do not grant to the government the ability to determine what we can know and what we cannot [03:07:01.000 --> 03:07:06.200] know. This is paraphrased. It's not exact. They did it much better than me. Do you have it, Brett? [03:07:06.920 --> 03:07:12.040] Yeah. Under the fundamental philosophy of the American constitutional form of [03:07:12.040 --> 03:07:18.120] representative government that adheres to the principle that government is the servant and [03:07:18.120 --> 03:07:24.360] not the master of the people. It is the policy of this state that each person is entitled, [03:07:24.920 --> 03:07:31.400] unless otherwise expressly provided by law, at all times to complete information about [03:07:31.400 --> 03:07:36.840] the affairs of government and the official acts of public officials and employees. [03:07:38.360 --> 03:07:44.920] The people in delegating authority do not give their public servants the right to decide what [03:07:44.920 --> 03:07:48.840] is good for the people to know and what is not good for the people to know. [03:07:49.960 --> 03:07:56.680] The people insist on remaining informed so that they may retain control over the instruments they [03:07:56.680 --> 03:08:09.640] have created. That defines a republic. That we can control the instruments we have created. [03:08:10.280 --> 03:08:18.120] For all my study in how to write well, I am not even close to that. [03:08:21.240 --> 03:08:25.880] Yeah, that's even before they had any AI to help them craft a sentence. [03:08:26.520 --> 03:08:32.760] Exactly. An actual human being had to do that. But that, Eric, that's my position. [03:08:33.240 --> 03:08:40.360] What else defines the difference between a democracy and a republic other than our access [03:08:40.360 --> 03:08:44.760] to a grand jury to hold our public officials responsible for their behavior? [03:08:47.320 --> 03:08:54.200] What's great about that is that they memorialize who is the master and who is the servant, [03:08:54.200 --> 03:08:56.840] and you just don't hear that enough. You really don't. [03:08:56.840 --> 03:09:04.600] And that's what I want to push. That is the kind of language [03:09:05.560 --> 03:09:09.960] that will ring in the mind of guys like Jesus. [03:09:26.840 --> 03:09:31.640] You'll get step-by-step instructions in plain English on how to win in court using federal [03:09:31.640 --> 03:09:37.400] civil rights statutes, what to do when contacted by phone, mail, or court summons, how to answer [03:09:37.400 --> 03:09:41.960] letters and phone calls, how to get debt collectors out of your credit report, how to turn the [03:09:41.960 --> 03:09:47.960] financial tables on them and make them pay you to go away. The Michael Mears proven method is [03:09:47.960 --> 03:09:53.240] the solution for how to stop debt collectors. Personal consultation is available as well. [03:09:53.240 --> 03:09:58.440] For more information, please visit ruleoflawradio.com and click on the blue Michael Mears [03:09:58.440 --> 03:10:08.360] banner or email michaelmears at yahoo.com. That's ruleoflawradio.com or email m-i-c-h-a-e-l-m-i-r-r-a-s [03:10:08.360 --> 03:10:11.880] at yahoo.com to learn how to stop debt collectors now. [03:10:12.520 --> 03:10:17.400] I love logos. Without the shows on this network, I'd be almost as ignorant as my friends. I'm so [03:10:17.400 --> 03:10:22.040] addicted to the truth now that there's no going back. I need my truth fixed. I'd be lost without [03:10:22.040 --> 03:10:26.680] logos, and I really want to help keep this network on the air. I'd love to volunteer as a [03:10:26.680 --> 03:10:31.080] show producer, but I'm a bit of a Luddite, and I really don't have any money to give because I [03:10:31.080 --> 03:10:36.920] spend it all on supplements. How can I help logos? Well, I'm glad you asked. Whenever you order [03:10:36.920 --> 03:10:41.640] anything from Amazon, you can help logos. You can order them your supplies or holiday gifts. [03:10:41.640 --> 03:10:48.200] First thing you do is clear your cookies. Now, go to logosradio.network.com. Click on the Amazon [03:10:48.200 --> 03:10:53.560] logo and bookmark it. Now, when you order anything from Amazon, you use that link, [03:10:53.560 --> 03:10:59.560] and Logos gets a few pesos. Do I pay extra? No. Do you have to do anything different when I order? [03:10:59.560 --> 03:11:06.040] No. Can I use my Amazon Prime? No. I mean, yes. Wow, giving without doing anything or spending [03:11:06.040 --> 03:11:12.440] any money. This is perfect. Thank you so much. We are welcome. Happy holidays, Logos. [03:11:18.200 --> 03:11:26.440] Oh, come on. [03:11:48.200 --> 03:11:56.440] If I can't get everything I want, do I need to get a rain check? [03:11:59.400 --> 03:12:06.440] If I can't get everything I need, do I need to get a rain check? [03:12:07.320 --> 03:12:17.160] Hey, if the people of the world can get happiness and peace, do I need to get a rain check? [03:12:19.720 --> 03:12:26.440] Okay. We are back. Randy Kelton, Brett Fountain, Radio 4 Radio. We do have calling lines open. If [03:12:26.440 --> 03:12:33.240] you have a question or comment, give us a call. I call at number 512-646-1984, and we're talking [03:12:33.240 --> 03:12:43.720] to Eric. Okay. Based on this, Eric, what is your next move? What do you believe would be the most [03:12:44.760 --> 03:12:46.760] effective next move you can make? [03:12:49.160 --> 03:12:51.960] For my issues or for what we've just talked about? [03:12:52.840 --> 03:13:05.320] For how to use your issue to open the, my whole purpose is, how do we open the door to the grand jury? [03:13:06.440 --> 03:13:11.000] And I agree with that. I absolutely agree with that. I have to think about that some more, [03:13:12.040 --> 03:13:20.440] but I definitely would like to see that happen because things are not right. Things are really [03:13:20.440 --> 03:13:26.360] a mess right now. Yeah. Once the door is open, we don't have to walk through it. [03:13:27.560 --> 03:13:35.320] And that's like, if you know the minefield is out there, you don't have to walk through it. You can [03:13:36.200 --> 03:13:45.480] do things to avoid it. And that's the whole purpose of the grand jury is you don't want to go there. [03:13:45.800 --> 03:13:52.360] I hope that I would never have to use a grand jury, just knowing it's there. [03:13:54.280 --> 03:14:01.400] I've been using that anyway, even though, and that's what I'm doing. I'm in Tarrant County, [03:14:01.400 --> 03:14:09.640] Texas is where I'm working. And the prosecuting attorney has gone to great lengths [03:14:10.360 --> 03:14:19.960] to disenfranchise the public from the grand jury. That's what I'm going after. [03:14:25.240 --> 03:14:30.280] Tomorrow or Monday, I'm going to go to a justice of the peace in South Fort Worth, [03:14:30.280 --> 03:14:38.440] justice of the peace too. And I'm going to sue a municipal court judge and a justice of the peace [03:14:39.400 --> 03:14:42.600] for not issuing warrants on complaints that I've given them. [03:14:45.000 --> 03:14:50.360] And I'm going to go to this justice there. And the first complaint I'm going to give him [03:14:51.080 --> 03:14:59.640] is a complaint against an assistant district attorney in Tarrant County named Carter, C-U-T-R-E-R. [03:15:01.880 --> 03:15:07.080] He was the guy who dealt with the grand jury. I don't know what his title was, [03:15:07.080 --> 03:15:13.240] but I went to the grand juries. They've got a room there and they have two bailiffs. And [03:15:13.240 --> 03:15:17.480] I went to the bailiffs and gave him this red folder. And I said, give this to the form of [03:15:17.480 --> 03:15:22.600] the grand jury. So he takes it in the back and then this guy in a suit comes out with it. [03:15:24.040 --> 03:15:29.400] And he said, you can't file these. They're not verified. I said, well, they're not [03:15:30.200 --> 03:15:35.720] intended as criminal complaints. They're contended as notice to the grand jury of crime. [03:15:36.440 --> 03:15:42.680] If the grand jury wants me to notarize them, I will do that. So who are you? And he said, well, [03:15:44.120 --> 03:15:48.040] he handles the grand jury. Are you an attorney? He said, yes, I am. [03:15:49.640 --> 03:15:54.920] Are you an assistant district attorney? He said, yes, I am. Here's the deal. [03:15:55.080 --> 03:16:03.320] The U.S. and the district attorneys in Texas have gone to great lengths [03:16:04.840 --> 03:16:12.360] to shield the public from grand juries. That was not the intent of law. [03:16:12.360 --> 03:16:26.920] It used to be 20.13 or 18 under duties of grand juries. It shall be the duty of the grand jury [03:16:26.920 --> 03:16:33.080] to examine into all crimes that come to their knowledge by way of the district attorney or [03:16:33.080 --> 03:16:40.120] prosecuting attorney. I'm sorry. It shall be the duty of the grand jury to investigate into all [03:16:40.120 --> 03:16:47.000] crimes that come to their knowledge by way of any member of the grand jury, the prosecuting attorney [03:16:47.880 --> 03:16:58.120] or any credible person. I am by definition a credible person as I am over the age of [03:16:58.920 --> 03:17:05.640] majority and have never been convicted of a felony. So by definition, I'm a credible person. [03:17:06.440 --> 03:17:17.640] But the district attorneys have gone to great lengths to block my ability to give notice to the [03:17:17.640 --> 03:17:26.040] grand jury. So that's what I was telling this ADA. I am here to give notice to the grand jury, [03:17:26.040 --> 03:17:33.720] not to file a criminal affidavit. Therefore, it does not have to be verified. And he just insisted. [03:17:34.680 --> 03:17:39.720] So I wasn't going to get in a fight with him there. And besides, I wanted to bushwhack him. [03:17:41.240 --> 03:17:48.680] Never give bear warning. So now I'm going to file a criminal charge against him [03:17:50.520 --> 03:18:00.600] for blocking my access to a grand jury. Now, he's going to say there is no law granting me [03:18:00.680 --> 03:18:07.720] access to a grand jury. And I'm going to say, so what? What does that have to do with anything? [03:18:09.400 --> 03:18:16.440] That presumes this is a democracy. It presumes I only have the rights [03:18:18.120 --> 03:18:28.600] that are specified in some law rule or policy. Nah, screw policy. Some law. [03:18:29.000 --> 03:18:37.720] But there is no law that says I cannot approach a grand jury member when he's sitting on the toilet. [03:18:40.120 --> 03:18:52.680] Now, that might not be polite, but it's not illegal. It's not illegal for me to approach a grand jury [03:18:52.680 --> 03:19:04.040] member in church or on the street or anywhere else. The only thing that is illegal is what has [03:19:04.040 --> 03:19:13.800] been specified by a statute issued by legislature. And what these prosecutors miss and misinterpret, [03:19:13.800 --> 03:19:19.480] or even if they don't, what they want us to believe is that you and I may only do [03:19:19.480 --> 03:19:26.680] what we are specifically authorized to do. That is not the case. Another way around. [03:19:27.240 --> 03:19:36.680] Yeah. They may only do what the laws specifically authorizes them to do. I, on the other hand, [03:19:37.960 --> 03:19:45.320] and you as a citizen in a Republic and even the prosecutor, when he's not acting in the [03:19:45.320 --> 03:19:55.320] capacity of a prosecutor, all of us may do anything that the law does not specifically [03:19:55.320 --> 03:20:06.600] forbid us to do. And that is absolutely a critical understanding, a realization we need to hold. [03:20:07.480 --> 03:20:12.920] I go into courts and I want to do something. You can't do that. No, you can't do that. I can't. [03:20:13.320 --> 03:20:22.680] It's important to understand that. So there is nothing in law that in any way directs me [03:20:23.640 --> 03:20:32.920] in how I can approach a grand jury, except while they're in session. While they're in session, [03:20:32.920 --> 03:20:36.760] I cannot approach a grand jury. Yeah. You're supposed to leave them alone, [03:20:36.760 --> 03:20:42.520] let them do their business in secret. But that's it. There are no other ways. [03:20:42.920 --> 03:20:47.480] There are no other restrictions. And you and I are citizens in the Republic. We are not public [03:20:47.480 --> 03:20:53.880] officials. We are not subject to public policy or any of that other garbage. This is not a [03:20:53.880 --> 03:21:01.880] democracy. It is a Republic. And in a Republic, all rights flow from the individual citizen. [03:21:01.880 --> 03:21:10.360] And I can do anything I want to, unless a law specifically forbids me from doing it. [03:21:10.360 --> 03:21:18.040] So I get this policy stuff from them all the time. And I very regularly tell them that as far as I'm [03:21:18.040 --> 03:21:26.040] concerned, to the degree that your policy is in conflict with my rights as a citizen in the [03:21:26.040 --> 03:21:33.240] Republic, you can use your policy for toilet paper. I just told this to a sheriff sergeant [03:21:33.240 --> 03:21:39.320] recently when I was filing criminal charges against a district judge for refusing to hear [03:21:39.320 --> 03:21:47.960] a petition for real habeas corpus. And she was not happy, did not want to hear that. But this is [03:21:47.960 --> 03:21:53.640] how it works. Get this in our brains. It changes how we deal with them. [03:21:55.320 --> 03:22:04.600] For the better, Randy Kelton, Brett Fountain, Rule of Law Radio, I call it number 512-646-1984. [03:22:04.840 --> 03:22:07.480] We'll be right back. [03:22:13.800 --> 03:22:19.640] A top cybersecurity expert has a warning for America. If you build an electrical smart grid, [03:22:19.640 --> 03:22:23.880] the hackers will come and they could cause a catastrophic blackout. [03:22:23.880 --> 03:22:27.560] I'm Dr. Catherine Albrecht, back with the shocking details in a moment. [03:22:28.200 --> 03:22:33.880] Privacy is under attack. When you give up data about yourself, you'll never get it back again. [03:22:33.880 --> 03:22:38.200] And once your privacy is gone, you'll find your freedoms will start to vanish too. [03:22:38.840 --> 03:22:45.080] So protect your rights. Say no to surveillance and keep your information to yourself. Privacy, [03:22:45.080 --> 03:22:49.720] it's worth hanging on to. This message is brought to you by Startpage.com, [03:22:49.720 --> 03:22:55.720] the private search engine alternative to Google, Yahoo, and Bing. Start over with Startpage. [03:22:57.720 --> 03:23:02.840] Governments love power, so it's only natural they'd want to control the power going into your home [03:23:03.160 --> 03:23:08.040] with a smart grid. So they're installing a national network of smart meters to remotely [03:23:08.040 --> 03:23:13.720] monitor electric use for efficiency and avoid grid failure. But cybersecurity expert David [03:23:13.720 --> 03:23:18.760] Chalk says not so fast. If we make the national power grid controllable through the web, [03:23:18.760 --> 03:23:24.840] hackers will have a field day. Working remotely, they could tap in and black out the entire nation, [03:23:24.840 --> 03:23:30.440] leaving us vulnerable to our enemies. I've long opposed smart meters for privacy and health [03:23:30.440 --> 03:23:35.560] reasons. The catastrophic failures caused by hackers? There's nothing smart about that. [03:23:36.120 --> 03:23:40.920] I'm Dr. Catherine Albrecht for Startpage.com, the world's most private search engine. [03:23:43.640 --> 03:23:49.160] This is Building 7, a 47-story skyscraper that fell on the afternoon of September 11. [03:23:49.160 --> 03:23:54.600] The government says that fire brought it down. However, 1,500 architects and engineers concluded [03:23:54.600 --> 03:23:58.920] it was a controlled demolition. Over 6,000 of my fellow service members have given their lives. [03:23:59.080 --> 03:24:03.800] Thousands of my fellow first responders are dying. I'm not a conspiracy theorist. I'm a structural [03:24:03.800 --> 03:24:07.880] engineer. I'm a New York City correction officer. I'm an Air Force pilot. I'm a father who lost his [03:24:07.880 --> 03:24:13.480] son. We're Americans, and we deserve the truth. Go to RememberBuilding7.org today. [03:24:15.240 --> 03:24:19.240] Rule of Law Radio is proud to offer the Rule of Law traffic seminar. In today's America, [03:24:19.240 --> 03:24:23.000] we live in an us-against-them society. And if we, the people, are ever going to have a free society, [03:24:23.000 --> 03:24:27.160] then we're going to have to stand and defend our own rights. Among those rights are the right to [03:24:27.160 --> 03:24:31.160] travel freely from place to place, the right to act in our own private capacity, and most importantly, [03:24:31.160 --> 03:24:35.560] the right to due process of law. Traffic courts afford us the least expensive opportunity to [03:24:35.560 --> 03:24:39.720] learn how to enforce and preserve our rights through due process. Former Sheriff's Deputy [03:24:39.720 --> 03:24:43.320] Eddie Craig, in conjunction with Rule of Law Radio, has put together the most comprehensive [03:24:43.320 --> 03:24:47.240] teaching tool available that will help you understand what due process is and how to hold [03:24:47.240 --> 03:24:51.080] courts to the rule of law. You can get your own copy of this invaluable material by going to [03:24:51.080 --> 03:24:55.640] ruleoflawradio.com and ordering your copy today. By ordering now, you'll receive a copy of Eddie's [03:24:55.640 --> 03:24:59.720] book, The Texas Transportation Code, The Law Versus the Lie, video and audio of the original [03:24:59.720 --> 03:25:04.440] 2009 seminar, hundreds of research documents, and other useful resource material. Learn how to fight [03:25:04.440 --> 03:25:08.760] for your rights with the help of this material from ruleoflawradio.com. Order your copy today [03:25:08.760 --> 03:25:16.600] and together we can have the free society we all want and deserve. You are listening to the Logos [03:25:16.600 --> 03:25:19.560] Radio Network, logosradionetwork.com. [03:25:46.600 --> 03:26:11.640] I've been talking too much, Eric. Eric, how can you use your case [03:26:12.120 --> 03:26:17.080] to open the door to good injuries for you and everybody else? [03:26:19.480 --> 03:26:22.840] I don't know. I mean, just kind of like what we were talking about in terms of, [03:26:23.480 --> 03:26:28.520] you know, maybe Harmeet Dhillon or whatever. And I think what really needs to be underlined here, [03:26:28.520 --> 03:26:37.320] at least in my mind, in my viewpoint, is at least my judge here, he feels no constraint [03:26:37.320 --> 03:26:45.800] by his oath to either of the constitutions he took an oath to. And that just angers me. [03:26:46.360 --> 03:26:53.640] Yeah, that's pretty shocking. I know we shouldn't be shocked at this point. We see it so often, [03:26:53.640 --> 03:26:56.680] but wow, it just, it still is. [03:26:59.400 --> 03:27:05.480] Right, because they're just lying. They're just making a giant lie. [03:27:06.440 --> 03:27:18.840] And again, this judge is appointed or reinvigorated, as I like to say, by the top justice [03:27:18.840 --> 03:27:29.880] of the whole state. He's no longer a judge, but yet somehow the top justice of the state [03:27:30.040 --> 03:27:37.960] can magically reinvigorate him. And they won't even consider a writ of carenso [03:27:39.000 --> 03:27:40.440] that maybe he's not a judge. [03:27:43.080 --> 03:27:46.520] Have you considered going after the top judge of the state? [03:27:48.520 --> 03:27:51.160] Yeah, I have, I have a federal filing on that. [03:27:52.360 --> 03:27:59.400] Good. Okay, so how do we, how do we store them up? How do we [03:28:00.840 --> 03:28:07.800] sick the specter of Trump on them? [03:28:12.760 --> 03:28:15.640] Trump's our talisman. He's our hammer. [03:28:18.600 --> 03:28:21.000] What does Trump think of Massachusetts? [03:28:23.560 --> 03:28:29.240] What's the likelihood that if he came in and did some stuff, he could turn Massachusetts red? [03:28:30.840 --> 03:28:37.240] That ain't going to happen. But they're happy with Massachusetts. So, [03:28:39.240 --> 03:28:45.560] because ICE is running crazy through this state and they're giving them a great deal of pushback. [03:28:46.440 --> 03:28:49.560] And then I think, you know, I don't know if you know, tomorrow [03:28:50.840 --> 03:28:53.240] across the country, they're having a no kings day. [03:28:54.200 --> 03:28:55.080] Yes. [03:28:55.080 --> 03:28:56.440] Who knows what's going to come of that? [03:28:56.440 --> 03:29:04.040] Yeah, they're trying to do that in Texas, but they have to be careful. Antifa, a few years ago, [03:29:05.880 --> 03:29:10.520] was they were trying to, they were doing these demonstrations all over and they came to the [03:29:10.520 --> 03:29:18.600] county I live in and they were going to do a march through the, around the city hall. [03:29:18.920 --> 03:29:27.800] And the day before someone came in and set bricks around the curves, all the way around the square, [03:29:30.440 --> 03:29:33.720] they really thought we were that stupid [03:29:36.360 --> 03:29:43.880] that these redneck hillbillies would walk out and look at those bricks and not know what they were [03:29:43.880 --> 03:29:52.760] for. Well, we picked them up and this march gathered outside the square and they were going [03:29:52.760 --> 03:29:59.560] to march into the square. Well, they sent a guy first to check things out and they found the square [03:29:59.560 --> 03:30:07.400] lined with rednecks with cowboy hats and shotguns and rifles and pistols hanging off their hips and [03:30:07.480 --> 03:30:15.400] bandolieros full of bullets in the square were a bunch of [03:30:18.520 --> 03:30:23.720] county sheriff's deputies. And he went over to them and said, we need security. [03:30:25.160 --> 03:30:28.280] And they said, what are you talking about? You've got lots of security. [03:30:30.040 --> 03:30:36.920] See all these people around here, there are deputies and they will make sure that peace [03:30:36.920 --> 03:30:40.760] is maintained during your march. You don't have to worry about anything. [03:30:43.240 --> 03:30:51.480] They decided not to march. Funny how that happens. There was a break short of a load. [03:30:53.720 --> 03:31:00.200] There was this excellent video of this woman that starts out with this big black guy with a hoodie [03:31:00.200 --> 03:31:06.600] and gold teeth and you can see his gold teeth in the mouth opening in the hoodie. What would you [03:31:06.600 --> 03:31:16.360] do if I come down and broke into your house? And this middle-aged woman says, oh honey, [03:31:16.360 --> 03:31:22.360] just come on down. So we down here in the south, we take our lives real serious and we get up in [03:31:22.360 --> 03:31:29.560] the morning and we work all day and we're real sensitive about what we own and we'll protect it. [03:31:29.560 --> 03:31:33.720] So if you feel like coming down here, will you just come on down? We'll make you welcome. [03:31:34.520 --> 03:31:40.520] But if you want to break into one of our houses, before you do, you might want to make your peace [03:31:40.520 --> 03:31:51.400] with Jesus because we're going to send you to meet him. Sweetie. It was really well done. They [03:31:51.400 --> 03:31:59.240] didn't march in Decatur, Texas. And most of the rural communities they didn't march in, [03:31:59.240 --> 03:32:09.240] not because they didn't want to, because they didn't dare. And the basic backbone of this nation [03:32:09.240 --> 03:32:26.520] is still bright. I'm not religious and Brett will attest to that, but the Bible is a prescription [03:32:26.520 --> 03:32:42.040] for, what's the term, Brett? It's 6,000 years of accumulated human wisdom. [03:32:44.280 --> 03:32:51.240] We should pay attention to that. Look at the Bible, look at the Necronomicon, not the Necronomicon, [03:32:51.240 --> 03:32:59.480] that's the Kabbalah, the Koran, all of these ancient texts, all of them have a set of [03:32:59.480 --> 03:33:07.640] prescriptions for life that are almost exactly the same. And all of this stuff the Democrats [03:33:07.640 --> 03:33:17.880] are promoting right now about diversity, equity and inclusion, you will not find in one of those [03:33:17.880 --> 03:33:28.360] ancient texts. And why the heck is that? It's because without regard to religion, [03:33:29.240 --> 03:33:35.400] functionally with human beings, it does not work. [03:33:38.760 --> 03:33:45.400] What works is a republic. We have one of the oldest republics in history, [03:33:45.880 --> 03:33:53.960] are the oldest democracy-like republics in history. Democracies tend to last 200 years. [03:33:55.400 --> 03:34:01.160] George Washington said democracies are as violent in their creation, in their demise as they are in [03:34:01.160 --> 03:34:13.400] their creation, and they generally only last 200 years. We made 250. And if you and I and Eric [03:34:14.200 --> 03:34:20.360] and the rest of us can focus on re-establishing, [03:34:23.240 --> 03:34:28.600] I don't care about religion, that's not my issue, but social wisdom, [03:34:31.320 --> 03:34:33.560] we can keep this republic going. [03:34:34.520 --> 03:34:45.640] Hey, Randy. Oh my gosh, that is the gospel according to Randy. But I'm old, [03:34:46.920 --> 03:34:56.280] and I've researched and studied for 70 years. And these truths that are in the Bible and [03:34:57.240 --> 03:35:01.400] all of the ancient texts, they just keep coming up, they work. [03:35:03.400 --> 03:35:11.880] And at the end of the day, I think our founders were absolute geniuses, and they decided that [03:35:13.720 --> 03:35:18.360] control should not land in the hands of singular individuals, but in the hands [03:35:18.440 --> 03:35:26.840] of the public in general as they carry the cultural wisdom. And our cultural wisdom now [03:35:28.600 --> 03:35:36.760] requires us to do what needs to be done and correct our governmental instruments that [03:35:36.760 --> 03:35:43.960] have gone astray. And Eric is really doing that job. And it's most often guys like Eric [03:35:44.760 --> 03:35:53.400] that rise up out of obscurity, make things change, drop back down to obscurity, and nobody knows they [03:35:53.400 --> 03:35:59.640] did it. Therefore, when thou doest thine alms, be not like the scribes and the Pharisees, [03:35:59.640 --> 03:36:04.760] and praise the truths of synagogue and synagogues. They have the glory of men, [03:36:04.760 --> 03:36:09.640] and we have the glory of going to our sponsors. We'll be right back. [03:36:10.120 --> 03:36:15.240] Do you have a business with five employees or more? How would you like to save hundreds of [03:36:15.240 --> 03:36:21.320] thousands of dollars in FICA taxes? Do you have a major medical plan that nobody can afford to be on? [03:36:21.320 --> 03:36:27.960] Or how would you like to save in premium costs on a current major medical plan by lowering the claims [03:36:27.960 --> 03:36:35.480] cost? The CHAMP plan is a section 125 IRS approved preventative health plan that provides your [03:36:35.480 --> 03:36:42.200] employees with doctors, medications, emergency care, and Teladoc all at zero cost with zero [03:36:42.200 --> 03:36:49.160] copay. If you are an employee, you also will get a pay raise by paying less than FICA taxes. As [03:36:49.160 --> 03:36:55.800] an employer, you will save hundreds of thousands of dollars in matching FICA taxes. The CHAMP plan [03:36:55.800 --> 03:37:02.360] can help add working capital, market resale value, or pay down lines of credit. Call Scott [03:37:02.360 --> 03:37:05.000] at 214-730-2471 or dallasmms.com. [03:37:32.360 --> 03:37:37.160] What should a lawyer be doing? If you don't have a lawyer, know what you should do for yourself. [03:37:37.880 --> 03:37:44.360] Thousands have won with our step-by-step course and now you can too. Jurisdictionary was created [03:37:44.360 --> 03:37:51.240] by a licensed attorney with 22 years of case winning experience. Even if you're not in a lawsuit, [03:37:51.240 --> 03:37:56.520] you can learn what everyone should understand about the principles and practices that control [03:37:56.520 --> 03:38:02.680] our American courts. You'll receive our audio classroom, video seminar, tutorials, [03:38:02.680 --> 03:38:09.880] forms for civil cases, pro se tactics, and much more. Please visit ruleoflawradio.com [03:38:09.880 --> 03:38:15.240] and click on the banner or call toll free 866-LAW-EZ. [03:38:39.880 --> 03:39:06.280] One of the good things that Brett and I get to do in the English radio show, [03:39:06.440 --> 03:39:14.440] is we get to examine way presentations and ways of presenting ideas. [03:39:15.240 --> 03:39:25.960] And that last segment, I'm uncomfortable with it. There's something I'm trying to [03:39:27.240 --> 03:39:33.320] to an understanding that I'm trying to transmit, but I don't think that one went well. Eric, [03:39:33.320 --> 03:39:41.800] you know, when I look at what you're doing, you are way more sophisticated than we tended to give [03:39:41.800 --> 03:39:52.200] you credit for. You pretty well know what you're doing. Will you explain to us what your philosophy [03:39:52.200 --> 03:40:02.360] and perspective is? Well, Randy, I will actually contradict your last segment. See, our country [03:40:03.320 --> 03:40:10.920] is based on Christianity, equality. And there's three Abrahamic religions, [03:40:11.880 --> 03:40:18.360] and only one of them believes in equality in the scriptures, in the scriptures. Okay. [03:40:19.240 --> 03:40:27.720] So I actually have a concern that people who maybe aren't of that mindset, [03:40:28.680 --> 03:40:38.600] you know, may not be qualified to be judges. So if you have a judge who is a supremacist, [03:40:40.840 --> 03:40:49.640] you probably don't want him as a judge, would you? Whether he's, you know, a supremacist because of [03:40:49.640 --> 03:40:56.280] his religion or a supremacist because of his, just the way he believes it, or maybe whatever, [03:40:57.720 --> 03:41:08.760] you wouldn't want that. And we Europeans are kind of childish. We're kind of blind to this. [03:41:10.200 --> 03:41:16.600] And people are starting to see like, oh, the whole world is not like this. We're the only country [03:41:17.800 --> 03:41:25.160] with our system of government successfully working. Yeah, Libya took our constitution, [03:41:25.160 --> 03:41:33.160] but it's not working that way, is it? They did? Libya took our constitution? Yeah. [03:41:34.840 --> 03:41:42.520] Huh. Because they were basically Africans or Americans, Africans, Americans, whatever, [03:41:42.520 --> 03:41:46.760] that moved back there and set up a country and it didn't quite work so well. [03:41:46.760 --> 03:41:59.560] So, you know, I see it on a daily basis. And with the study of the law and understanding [03:42:00.280 --> 03:42:08.680] sort of Christian basics, and now I see people just, they've been sort of propagandized. [03:42:09.320 --> 03:42:16.680] To be honest, like you have, Brandy, all these other religions are not as peaceful as you believe [03:42:16.680 --> 03:42:24.920] they're not as genuine as you believe. I could speak towards these two other Abrahamic religions, [03:42:24.920 --> 03:42:33.880] but they're definitively supremacist in the scriptures. They don't see it everyone is equal, [03:42:35.320 --> 03:42:42.600] whereas the Christians do. And that's what our system is based on, good, bad, or indifferent. [03:42:43.080 --> 03:42:52.440] And as I like to say, and this is my quote, not anybody else's, you can't fight evil with atheism. [03:42:54.040 --> 03:43:05.560] I'm sorry. So, you know, we have to look at who we are, what we are, and what our system is based on, [03:43:06.120 --> 03:43:11.400] and what the founding fathers were working with, because they didn't really know about other [03:43:12.360 --> 03:43:19.960] religions as much. I mean, they were fighting, you know, the Muslim pirates, [03:43:21.640 --> 03:43:27.240] what have you. But I don't know that they really understood, they had a good understanding of all [03:43:27.240 --> 03:43:37.080] these different religions and different viewpoints. Oh, wait, wait, wait. That's a problem that I have [03:43:37.080 --> 03:43:44.360] is we seem to think that our founders, because they lived such a long time ago, [03:43:45.480 --> 03:43:51.720] didn't understand the human condition. Did you know that the first president of the United States [03:43:51.720 --> 03:43:57.720] was not George Washington? He was a Muslim. I did know something about the previous, [03:43:58.920 --> 03:44:04.520] I don't know, presidents, and there were a whole different sort of segment. I didn't really. [03:44:05.160 --> 03:44:11.400] There were two. And the first one, I forget his name, it was a real common sounding name, [03:44:11.400 --> 03:44:18.520] but he was a black Muslim. He was a Moor. In the article under the Articles of the Confederation, [03:44:18.520 --> 03:44:25.960] our first president was a black Muslim. Is that wild or what? And we think that our founders [03:44:25.960 --> 03:44:37.960] didn't understand all this. I personally spoke to a man that related to me his personal experience [03:44:37.960 --> 03:44:48.600] of the civil war. That person could have actually known people who fought in the revolution. [03:44:48.600 --> 03:44:55.560] And that's two people away. Our founders were not ancient history. [03:44:57.400 --> 03:45:03.720] They fully understood other cultures. They understood other religions and they fully [03:45:03.720 --> 03:45:12.440] understood government. It has not changed so much in 250 years. They knew exactly what they were [03:45:12.440 --> 03:45:18.360] talking about. They were extremely well-read, much more so than we tend to be today. [03:45:19.800 --> 03:45:29.320] Read the Federalist Papers. By no means did I say cultures, Randy. They knew 5,000 to 6,000 years [03:45:29.320 --> 03:45:38.040] of history that we don't know now. That I will absolutely believe. But there weren't translations [03:45:38.040 --> 03:45:43.720] of the Talmud and there weren't translations of the Koran back then. Maybe there was the Koran, [03:45:43.720 --> 03:45:53.720] but I'm not sure. When you look into those religions, it's a little bit different. [03:45:54.840 --> 03:45:59.160] But by all means, they were very worldly people, more so than we are now, I think. [03:46:00.840 --> 03:46:05.320] And they did understand society and they understood how people work and humanity, [03:46:05.320 --> 03:46:11.800] which hasn't changed in whatever, 5,000 to 10,000 years. I agree with that. [03:46:13.960 --> 03:46:16.920] But it's still based on Christianity. [03:46:21.240 --> 03:46:29.960] Basically, but if you take all of these religions who have attempted to govern large numbers of [03:46:29.960 --> 03:46:37.160] people, the vast majority of all of their rules, regulations, practices, [03:46:40.440 --> 03:46:49.160] they're all the same. The law of Hanarabi. Not really. It's not dramatically different. [03:46:51.000 --> 03:46:53.960] If you take out the religious part, there are some similarities. [03:46:54.760 --> 03:46:59.560] How people deal with people. It's pretty much the same. People have been the same [03:46:59.560 --> 03:47:08.280] always. We haven't changed. We're hypocritical. We tend to seek toward our own personal [03:47:09.800 --> 03:47:15.480] advantage. Everybody does everything they do for what they believe is in their personal [03:47:15.480 --> 03:47:22.760] self-interest. Some believe that the culture and the group is more important in their self-interest [03:47:22.760 --> 03:47:26.920] than others, but basically we're all the same. They always have been the same. [03:47:28.360 --> 03:47:35.400] We get minor cultural differences over the top, but theft is theft. Murder is murder. Adultery [03:47:35.400 --> 03:47:43.480] is adultery. No matter how far back you go, the way that human beings have to function in order to [03:47:44.440 --> 03:47:53.560] exist in an agglomeration of human beings is basically the same. We have to tell truth to [03:47:53.560 --> 03:48:02.600] one another. We have to abide by our agreements. All this is the same. Culture has not dramatically [03:48:02.600 --> 03:48:10.520] changed. What I'm speaking to is the wisdom of our founders. Our founders understood. [03:48:11.480 --> 03:48:19.160] What you've just said, all those things, the two other Abrahamic religions don't promote that. [03:48:22.360 --> 03:48:26.120] It's okay to lie to a coffer. Do you understand that? [03:48:28.280 --> 03:48:34.840] The Middle East cultures lying was a bet of honor, but those are mostly the most [03:48:34.840 --> 03:48:39.800] merchant cultures. The Apache culture here in the United States, [03:48:40.520 --> 03:48:47.000] if you could lie and steal from your enemies, that was a great deal, but they didn't do that [03:48:47.000 --> 03:48:55.000] to each other. That was not accepted in their family. If someone's outside your family, [03:48:55.000 --> 03:48:58.440] you could pretty much do what you want to, but within the family, within the group, [03:48:59.400 --> 03:49:06.200] you couldn't. The Apaches didn't steal from each other. They stole from non-Apaches. [03:49:07.720 --> 03:49:13.880] Right. That's supremacy. That's one group looking down on others. [03:49:14.760 --> 03:49:20.760] You cannot have that in our American law system. Do you understand? [03:49:20.760 --> 03:49:28.040] Exactly. I was talking to someone about manufacturing a piece of equipment in Pakistan [03:49:28.120 --> 03:49:33.880] and this Pakistani guy was there. He said, oh, no, no, don't deal with those Pakistanis. They'll [03:49:33.880 --> 03:49:44.680] roll a bunch of damn liars. I said, but you're Pakistani. No, I know, but it was a culture on [03:49:44.680 --> 03:49:53.480] the Silk Road and they were all about marketing, about selling to one another. If you could do [03:49:53.480 --> 03:49:59.320] better in a transaction than somebody else, it was a great thing. In the Middle East, [03:49:59.320 --> 03:50:04.680] telling the truth is not such a big deal, but you still don't get to kill each other and you don't [03:50:04.680 --> 03:50:11.720] get to steal your neighbor's wife and all this basic stuff that's basic humanity. Within their [03:50:11.720 --> 03:50:18.600] culture, it's all pretty much the same because the human genome is pretty much the same no matter [03:50:18.600 --> 03:50:26.360] where you come across it. We understand how human beings work and I don't know how it got off on [03:50:26.360 --> 03:50:34.360] this direction. I lost track of where I wanted to be. Okay, we're out of time anyway. Thank you, [03:50:34.360 --> 03:50:41.960] Eric. You have given me some stuff to study over the weekend and a different direction to go. [03:50:42.040 --> 03:50:47.880] I am definitely going to look up Jesus of Seti. Thank you very much. Thank you all for listening. [03:50:49.000 --> 03:50:51.400] We'll be back next week at our normal time. [03:50:54.600 --> 03:50:56.600] Brett, I ran out of something to say. [03:50:58.680 --> 03:50:59.320] Thanks, everyone.