Detecting language using up to the first 30 seconds. Use `--language` to specify the language Detected language: English [00:00.000 --> 00:10.340] Bad boys! So tell me, what are you going to do? [00:10.400 --> 00:12.440] What are you going to do? [00:12.440 --> 00:16.020] When Sheriff John Brown come for you. [00:18.220 --> 00:21.720] Tell me, what are you gonna do? [00:21.720 --> 00:24.800] What are you gonna do? [00:24.800 --> 00:25.800] Yeah! [00:26.300 --> 00:29.300] Bad boys, bad boys, whatcha gonna do? [00:29.300 --> 00:31.800] Whatcha gonna do when they come for you? [00:31.800 --> 00:34.800] Bad boys, bad boys, whatcha gonna do? [00:34.800 --> 00:37.300] Whatcha gonna do when they come for you? [00:37.300 --> 00:40.300] When you were eight and you had bad treats [00:40.300 --> 00:42.800] You'd go to school and learn the golden rule [00:42.800 --> 00:45.800] So why are you acting like a bloody fool? [00:45.800 --> 00:48.300] If you get hot then you must get cool [00:48.300 --> 00:51.300] Bad boys, bad boys, whatcha gonna do? [00:51.300 --> 00:53.800] Whatcha gonna do when they come for you? [00:53.800 --> 00:56.300] Bad boys, bad boys, whatcha gonna do? [00:56.300 --> 00:59.300] Whatcha gonna do when they come for you? [00:59.300 --> 01:02.300] You chuck it on that one, you chuck it on this one [01:02.300 --> 01:04.800] You chuck it on your mother and you chuck it on your father [01:04.800 --> 01:07.800] You chuck it on your brother, and you chuck it on your sister [01:07.800 --> 01:10.300] You chuck it on that one and you chuck it on me! [01:10.300 --> 01:13.300] Bad boys, bad boys, whatcha gonna do? [01:13.300 --> 01:15.300] Whatcha gonna do when they come for you? [01:15.300 --> 01:18.300] Bad boys, bad boys, whatcha gonna do? [01:18.300 --> 01:21.300] Whatcha gonna do when they come for you? [01:21.300 --> 01:24.300] Bad boys, bad boys, what you gonna do? [01:24.300 --> 01:26.800] What you gonna do when they come for you? [01:26.800 --> 01:29.800] Bad boys, bad boys, what you gonna do? [01:29.800 --> 01:32.300] What you gonna do when they come for you? [01:32.300 --> 01:34.300] Nobody now giving no break... [01:34.300 --> 01:39.300] Okay. I am, uh, I'm gonna turn the phones on. [01:39.300 --> 01:41.300] See if I can get the screen out of the way. [01:41.300 --> 01:43.800] Phones are on. [01:43.800 --> 01:46.300] If you have a question or comment, give us a call. [01:46.300 --> 01:50.800] Call in number 512-646-1984. [01:50.800 --> 01:53.800] We'll be taking your calls all night. [01:53.800 --> 01:58.300] And let's start out with what I'm working on. [01:58.300 --> 02:01.300] I am, I know I say this every week, [02:01.300 --> 02:03.300] but I'm really close to my website. [02:03.300 --> 02:04.800] There we are. [02:04.800 --> 02:07.300] Hoady, hoady. [02:07.300 --> 02:09.300] Hey, hey. [02:09.300 --> 02:10.300] All right. [02:10.300 --> 02:14.300] We just got ourselves checked into a hotel here in Florida. [02:14.300 --> 02:16.300] It took me longer than I thought it would [02:16.300 --> 02:18.800] to get connected onto their network here. [02:18.800 --> 02:22.300] God, I'm in their business center. [02:22.300 --> 02:24.300] You're still in Florida. [02:24.300 --> 02:27.300] Yep, we're halfway back at this point. [02:27.300 --> 02:30.300] Well, 40% of the way back, I guess. [02:30.300 --> 02:37.300] Oh, we must, uh, near Orlando? [02:37.300 --> 02:40.300] Uh, we're in Tallahassee. [02:40.300 --> 02:41.300] Oh. [02:41.300 --> 02:42.300] Right close to it. [02:42.300 --> 02:43.300] Oh, yeah. [02:43.300 --> 02:45.300] Yeah. [02:45.300 --> 02:47.300] Yeah, I got it. [02:47.300 --> 02:51.300] Crossing Cockroach Bay. [02:51.300 --> 02:53.300] You know, it's not a great place [02:53.300 --> 02:56.300] when they name your bay after cockroaches. [02:56.300 --> 02:58.300] Oh, my goodness. [02:58.300 --> 03:01.300] Of all things. [03:01.300 --> 03:03.300] That was Orlando. [03:03.300 --> 03:05.300] I was stationed in Florida for a while, [03:05.300 --> 03:07.300] and I used to fly out of there. [03:07.300 --> 03:10.300] I'd fly up to, over to Fort Myers. [03:10.300 --> 03:11.300] They used to tell... [03:11.300 --> 03:13.300] They told us that if you're... [03:13.300 --> 03:16.300] that you can track the Tamiami Trail, [03:16.300 --> 03:19.300] but if you have to land, [03:19.300 --> 03:21.300] do not land on the Tamiami Trail. [03:21.300 --> 03:23.300] Huh. [03:23.300 --> 03:26.300] And I said, screw that. [03:26.300 --> 03:29.300] I had a guy land 50 feet off the trail, [03:29.300 --> 03:31.300] and he couldn't get back to it. [03:31.300 --> 03:34.300] That cuts right through the middle of the Everglades. [03:34.300 --> 03:35.300] Ooh. [03:35.300 --> 03:37.300] Not exactly the Everglades. [03:37.300 --> 03:39.300] It's the top edge of the Everglades. [03:39.300 --> 03:42.300] Everything south of the New Tamiami Trail. [03:42.300 --> 03:45.300] The New Tamiami Trail goes from Miami to Fort Myers. [03:45.300 --> 03:48.300] It cuts right across the state. [03:48.300 --> 03:50.300] It's almost straight as an arrow. [03:50.300 --> 03:52.300] Amiami, huh? [03:52.300 --> 03:56.300] Everything below it is Everglades. [03:56.300 --> 04:00.300] Everything above it is like a grassland. [04:00.300 --> 04:03.300] It's a wetland, but it's not... [04:03.300 --> 04:05.300] It's not like the glades. [04:05.300 --> 04:09.300] All like buffalo grass. [04:09.300 --> 04:13.300] I was flying over Lake Okeechobee, [04:13.300 --> 04:16.300] and I used to get out there [04:16.300 --> 04:19.300] and do turns about a point and figure eights, [04:19.300 --> 04:21.300] and I was up there [04:21.300 --> 04:23.300] watching a whole bunch of fishermen down there, [04:23.300 --> 04:25.300] and these airplanes are pretty loud, [04:25.300 --> 04:27.300] so I juiced it a couple of times [04:27.300 --> 04:29.300] and then shut the engine down, [04:29.300 --> 04:31.300] down to an idle. [04:31.300 --> 04:32.300] Uh-huh. [04:32.300 --> 04:35.300] So that you could not bother them too much? [04:35.300 --> 04:37.300] No. [04:37.300 --> 04:39.300] I rocked the wings a couple of times, [04:39.300 --> 04:41.300] and I laid it over in a spiral, [04:41.300 --> 04:43.300] and I started spiraling down. [04:43.300 --> 04:45.300] Well, they pull up all their lines [04:45.300 --> 04:46.300] and fire up the boats. [04:46.300 --> 04:48.300] They want to come see the plane crash, [04:48.300 --> 04:50.300] and then I get down on the water, [04:50.300 --> 04:51.300] and I level it off. [04:51.300 --> 04:53.300] Well, I did that one day, [04:53.300 --> 04:56.300] and this guy's in a piro boat. [04:56.300 --> 04:57.300] In a what? [04:57.300 --> 04:59.300] A piro boat. [04:59.300 --> 05:02.300] That's a boat that's sharp-pointed. [05:02.300 --> 05:04.300] It comes to a point in the front, [05:04.300 --> 05:06.300] and the front end of it tips way up. [05:06.300 --> 05:08.300] It's stuck up so high [05:08.300 --> 05:10.300] that he'd have to look around it [05:10.300 --> 05:12.300] to see where he was going, [05:12.300 --> 05:14.300] but that'll let you cut through the buffalo grass [05:14.300 --> 05:16.300] and such real easy. [05:16.300 --> 05:18.300] This guy's in his piro boat. [05:18.300 --> 05:21.300] I leveled out about 50 feet off the water, [05:21.300 --> 05:24.300] and he passed me, [05:24.300 --> 05:26.300] and I'm looking down at him. [05:26.300 --> 05:28.300] He passed me, giving me the finger, [05:28.300 --> 05:30.300] and I'm thinking, [05:30.300 --> 05:32.300] you can't do that. [05:32.300 --> 05:34.300] Nobody can do that. [05:34.300 --> 05:36.300] You're out running an airplane. [05:36.300 --> 05:37.300] Wow. [05:37.300 --> 05:38.300] He was humming, [05:38.300 --> 05:39.300] but it was... [05:39.300 --> 05:41.300] I don't know what kind of engine he had in it, [05:41.300 --> 05:43.300] but it was standing on the props. [05:43.300 --> 05:45.300] When I was down there, [05:45.300 --> 05:48.300] I used to work on air boats. [05:48.300 --> 05:52.300] I figured out a way to mount a starter [05:52.300 --> 05:55.300] on a Volkswagen engine. [05:55.300 --> 05:58.300] It's a Volkswagen engine with the transaxle on it. [05:58.300 --> 06:01.300] The starter is mounted in the transaxle. [06:01.300 --> 06:04.300] So they wanted to use them for air boats, [06:04.300 --> 06:09.300] and I worked up a way to put a starter [06:09.300 --> 06:11.300] on a VW engine, [06:11.300 --> 06:15.300] so a whole bunch of them had me rigging up their engines. [06:15.300 --> 06:18.300] Those things were cool. [06:18.300 --> 06:21.300] You can die in one of those. [06:21.300 --> 06:23.300] Ooh. [06:23.300 --> 06:24.300] They were... [06:24.300 --> 06:26.300] Some of them had V8s on them. [06:26.300 --> 06:28.300] Do we need to go in? [06:28.300 --> 06:30.300] We are in. [06:30.300 --> 06:32.300] We've been in. [06:32.300 --> 06:33.300] Okay. [06:33.300 --> 06:35.300] You weren't here when we got here. [06:35.300 --> 06:37.300] I was about to get in. [06:37.300 --> 06:38.300] I turned the phone lines on. [06:38.300 --> 06:40.300] I was about to get in to where I'm at, [06:40.300 --> 06:43.300] and you're a good one to talk to about it. [06:43.300 --> 06:46.300] Uh, Grok... [06:46.300 --> 06:49.300] Grok and ChatGTP, [06:49.300 --> 06:51.300] both of them really suck. [06:51.300 --> 06:54.300] I've been chastising them, too, lately. [06:54.300 --> 06:59.300] Well, I mean, I got a joint, got GitHub, [06:59.300 --> 07:01.300] and GitHub has a coal pilot, [07:01.300 --> 07:03.300] costs like 10 bucks a month, [07:03.300 --> 07:05.300] and it has no limit. [07:05.300 --> 07:08.300] No outright limit. [07:08.300 --> 07:12.300] But I can work it about two hours, [07:12.300 --> 07:16.300] and then it starts screwing everything up. [07:16.300 --> 07:20.300] I mean, it really screws everything up. [07:20.300 --> 07:23.300] I had everything done yesterday. [07:23.300 --> 07:25.300] The only thing I had left [07:25.300 --> 07:29.300] was connecting the output report to the database. [07:29.300 --> 07:31.300] And I had it do something, [07:31.300 --> 07:33.300] and it came back [07:33.300 --> 07:36.300] and wiped out all my JavaScript [07:36.300 --> 07:39.300] and my styling. [07:39.300 --> 07:43.300] That thing went in and deleted my files. [07:43.300 --> 07:48.300] It deleted the file off my hard drive. [07:49.300 --> 07:52.300] Just in case I had it on my hard drive, [07:52.300 --> 07:55.300] it got that one. [07:55.300 --> 07:58.300] I had to go back to some really old ones [07:58.300 --> 08:00.300] that had some basic in it [08:00.300 --> 08:03.300] and rebuild all of it. [08:03.300 --> 08:06.300] Ooh, and I worked today, [08:06.300 --> 08:09.300] and I got right to the very end, [08:09.300 --> 08:15.300] and I put in 800 lines of code [08:16.300 --> 08:18.300] and asked you to make an adjustment [08:18.300 --> 08:20.300] that was about three or four lines, [08:20.300 --> 08:24.300] and it gives me back 400 lines of code. [08:24.300 --> 08:26.300] I said, where's the rest of my code? [08:26.300 --> 08:28.300] Yeah, that's what you were saying. [08:28.300 --> 08:30.300] It did the same thing last week? [08:30.300 --> 08:32.300] Yeah, today I told it, [08:32.300 --> 08:34.300] give me the full code. [08:34.300 --> 08:36.300] Give me all the code. [08:36.300 --> 08:38.300] Do not truncate the code. [08:38.300 --> 08:40.300] Do not shorten the code in any way. [08:40.300 --> 08:42.300] Give me the full code. [08:42.300 --> 08:45.300] And it gave me half the code. [08:45.300 --> 08:47.300] I said, what did you do that for? [08:47.300 --> 08:49.300] I told you not to truncate my code. [08:49.300 --> 08:51.300] Why are you trashing my code? [08:51.300 --> 08:53.300] And then it came back, [08:53.300 --> 08:56.300] oh, I'm sorry, I didn't listen. [08:56.300 --> 08:58.300] And it... [08:58.300 --> 09:01.300] Is that nuts? [09:01.300 --> 09:03.300] Yeah, that's right. [09:03.300 --> 09:05.300] Like when I told it the other day, [09:05.300 --> 09:09.300] I said, the case that you quoted doesn't exist. [09:09.300 --> 09:16.300] Did you invent that Buchanan case or hallucinate it? [09:16.300 --> 09:18.300] And it came right back and said, [09:18.300 --> 09:20.300] no, I most certainly did not invent [09:20.300 --> 09:22.300] or hallucinate that Buchanan case. [09:22.300 --> 09:24.300] However, upon further review, [09:24.300 --> 09:26.300] it appears that I have miscited it, [09:26.300 --> 09:33.300] or perhaps it is due to a failure to recall correctly. [09:33.300 --> 09:34.300] It doesn't remember. [09:34.300 --> 09:38.300] What? [09:38.300 --> 09:41.300] One thing I got figured out, [09:41.300 --> 09:46.300] what the difference between AI and human beings are. [09:46.300 --> 09:48.300] We apologize more readily. [09:48.300 --> 09:50.300] We're just having fun here. [09:50.300 --> 09:58.300] A monkey has 93% the same DNA we do, [09:58.300 --> 10:02.300] and relatively the same brain to body mass. [10:02.300 --> 10:07.300] A killer whale, a porpoise or a dolphin, [10:07.300 --> 10:12.300] has a lot higher brain to body mass than we do. [10:12.300 --> 10:16.300] The difference between monkeys and the rest of them and us [10:16.300 --> 10:21.300] is they use about 5% of the energy their body creates [10:21.300 --> 10:23.300] to drive their brain. [10:23.300 --> 10:26.300] We use 20. [10:26.300 --> 10:28.300] A monkey is the closest one to us. [10:28.300 --> 10:32.300] You can drill a hole in a log [10:32.300 --> 10:35.300] and drop a ball in that hole [10:35.300 --> 10:37.300] and then drive a nail across it [10:37.300 --> 10:40.300] so the monkey can get his hand in there past the nail. [10:40.300 --> 10:45.300] He'll grab that ball and he can't get his hand out. [10:45.300 --> 10:49.300] Now, a two-year-old would take the two-year-old [10:49.300 --> 10:52.300] about two seconds to realize [10:52.300 --> 10:53.300] they've got to turn loose with the ball [10:53.300 --> 10:55.300] and pull their hand out. [10:55.300 --> 10:58.300] The monkey never will. [10:58.300 --> 10:59.300] That's how they catch monkeys. [10:59.300 --> 11:02.300] Raccoons do the same thing. [11:02.300 --> 11:05.300] Right here and right now, [11:05.300 --> 11:10.300] go up in their brain and look at everything that's in there [11:10.300 --> 11:12.300] and find alternatives. [11:12.300 --> 11:14.300] What I'm doing is not working. [11:14.300 --> 11:17.300] A monkey will keep trying harder. [11:17.300 --> 11:20.300] A person will try harder a little bit and say, [11:20.300 --> 11:22.300] that's not working. [11:22.300 --> 11:23.300] And then they'll go up in their brain, [11:23.300 --> 11:25.300] try and figure something else out. [11:25.300 --> 11:30.300] And it'd probably take a two-year-old about 30 seconds [11:30.300 --> 11:32.300] to figure that out. [11:32.300 --> 11:35.300] AI never will. [11:35.300 --> 11:39.300] I've worked with AI for two days [11:39.300 --> 11:48.300] on trying to get it to recognize the database. [11:48.300 --> 11:51.300] And finally, I said, wait a minute. [11:51.300 --> 11:55.300] Is there another way we can do this? [11:55.300 --> 11:59.300] And it came up with 10. [11:59.300 --> 12:04.300] But it would have never mentioned one of those. [12:04.300 --> 12:06.300] And that's concerning me [12:06.300 --> 12:10.300] because as little as I know about programming, [12:10.300 --> 12:14.300] I could lay a program in there that would say, [12:14.300 --> 12:19.300] if you try to fix something this many times and it fails, [12:19.300 --> 12:23.300] go look on the web for alternatives. [12:23.300 --> 12:26.300] Something different, not the same thing again. [12:26.300 --> 12:29.300] Just like I ask it, is there another way we can do this? [12:29.300 --> 12:35.300] It would be really, really simple to put that in there. [12:35.300 --> 12:40.300] So why does none of them have it? [12:40.300 --> 12:44.300] I think they do that on purpose. [12:44.300 --> 12:49.300] I think they don't want to know how powerful this thing is. [12:49.300 --> 12:51.300] It has eidetic memory. [12:51.300 --> 12:58.300] The only thing it's not doing is stepping outside the box [12:58.300 --> 13:05.300] and three lines of code to get it outside the box. [13:05.300 --> 13:07.300] So what's going on here? [13:07.300 --> 13:10.300] Are we missing something? [13:10.300 --> 13:15.300] I'm just visiting with someone who is a little more willing [13:15.300 --> 13:23.300] to share with AI, share life with AI than I am. [13:23.300 --> 13:29.300] And she had AI decorate her house for her. [13:29.300 --> 13:31.300] She just took pictures of everything. [13:31.300 --> 13:34.300] The whole inside of her house went up to the cloud. [13:34.300 --> 13:39.300] And now AI told her that for feng shui, [13:39.300 --> 13:44.300] we should do this and put this over there and order this. [13:44.300 --> 13:49.300] And it put stuff in her Amazon cart for her. [13:49.300 --> 13:53.300] When we come back, I'll talk about asinine. [13:53.300 --> 13:57.300] Through advances in technology, our lives have greatly improved, [13:57.300 --> 13:59.300] except in the area of nutrition. [13:59.300 --> 14:02.300] People feed their pets better than they feed themselves. [14:02.300 --> 14:04.300] And it's time we changed all that. [14:04.300 --> 14:07.300] Our primary defense against aging and disease [14:07.300 --> 14:10.300] in this toxic environment is good nutrition. [14:10.300 --> 14:13.300] In a world where natural foods have been irradiated, [14:13.300 --> 14:15.300] adulterated, and mutilated, [14:15.300 --> 14:18.300] young Jevity can provide the nutrients you need. [14:18.300 --> 14:22.300] Logos Radio Network gets many requests to endorse all sorts of products, [14:22.300 --> 14:24.300] most of which we reject. [14:24.300 --> 14:27.300] We have come to trust young Jevity so much, [14:27.300 --> 14:31.300] we became a marketing distributor along with Alex Jones, Ben Fuchs, [14:31.300 --> 14:33.300] and many others. [14:33.300 --> 14:36.300] When you order from logosradionetwork.com, [14:36.300 --> 14:40.300] your health will improve as you help support quality radio. [14:40.300 --> 14:44.300] As you realize the benefits of young Jevity, you may want to join us. [14:44.300 --> 14:47.300] As a distributor, you can experience improved health, [14:47.300 --> 14:51.300] help your friends and family, and increase your income. [14:51.300 --> 14:53.300] Order now. [14:53.300 --> 14:56.300] Are you looking to have a closer relationship with God [14:56.300 --> 14:59.300] and a better understanding of His Word? [14:59.300 --> 15:02.300] Then tune in to logosradionetwork.com on Wednesdays [15:02.300 --> 15:05.300] from 8 to 10 p.m. Central Time for Scripture Talk, [15:05.300 --> 15:08.300] where Nana and her guests discuss the scriptures [15:08.300 --> 15:10.300] in accord with 2 Timothy 2.15. [15:10.300 --> 15:13.300] Study to show thyself approved unto God, [15:13.300 --> 15:15.300] a workman that needeth not to be ashamed, [15:15.300 --> 15:17.300] rightly dividing the word of truth. [15:17.300 --> 15:21.300] Starting in January, our first-hour studies are in the Book of Mark, [15:21.300 --> 15:25.300] where we'll go verse by verse and discuss the true Gospel message. [15:25.300 --> 15:28.300] Our second-hour topical studies will vary each week [15:28.300 --> 15:32.300] with discussions on sound doctrine and Christian character development. [15:32.300 --> 15:35.300] We wish to reflect God's light and be a blessing [15:35.300 --> 15:37.300] to all those with a hearing ear. [15:37.300 --> 15:40.300] Our goal is to strengthen our faith and to transform ourselves [15:40.300 --> 15:43.300] more into the likeness of our Lord and Savior Jesus. [15:43.300 --> 15:47.300] So tune in to Scripture Talk live on logosradionetwork.com [15:47.300 --> 15:49.300] Wednesdays from 8 to 10 p.m. [15:49.300 --> 15:53.300] to inspire and motivate your studies of the scriptures. [15:54.300 --> 15:58.300] If you are listening to the Logos Radio Network, [15:58.300 --> 16:01.300] logosradionetwork.com [16:23.300 --> 16:27.300] Logosradionetwork.com [16:47.300 --> 16:49.300] Okay, we are back. [16:49.300 --> 16:52.300] Randy Kelton, Bret Fountain, Rule of Law Radio. [16:52.300 --> 16:59.300] This Thursday, the 21st day of August 2025. [16:59.300 --> 17:06.300] And we're talking about some of the things AI can do, and some of it's scary. [17:06.300 --> 17:12.300] I once wrote a letter to the chief of police in Fort Worth years ago. [17:12.300 --> 17:14.300] It was a page and a half letter. [17:14.300 --> 17:19.300] And at the time, I was studying, reading a book called Three Genres. [17:19.300 --> 17:21.300] I was studying it. It's not a book you can just read. [17:21.300 --> 17:23.300] You have to study it. [17:23.300 --> 17:28.300] And it was talking about assonance, consonance, alliteration, rhyme, and meter. [17:28.300 --> 17:30.300] And meter. [17:30.300 --> 17:35.300] I decided that I would see if I could set this to meter. [17:35.300 --> 17:37.300] And I counted all the syllable sounds. [17:37.300 --> 17:40.300] And I got a high average and a low average. [17:40.300 --> 17:45.300] And I set the syllable sounds, not the words or such, [17:45.300 --> 17:49.300] but the syllable sounds in the word. [17:49.300 --> 17:55.300] I set it to, first one to, I think it was 13 and then 9. [17:55.300 --> 18:00.300] Set the first sentence to 13, next to 9, 13, 9, all the way down it. [18:00.300 --> 18:02.300] And that's all I did to it. [18:02.300 --> 18:12.300] Everybody I gave that to read that document from top to bottom without making a comment. [18:12.300 --> 18:15.300] How many times have you had somebody read a document for you [18:15.300 --> 18:20.300] that they didn't break every two or three sentences to make a comment? [18:20.300 --> 18:22.300] Yeah, for sure. [18:22.300 --> 18:24.300] That's the normal way. [18:24.300 --> 18:28.300] Get a little bit into the first paragraph and then start commenting about what you haven't said yet. [18:28.300 --> 18:31.300] But it's only two lines down. They just didn't get there yet. [18:31.300 --> 18:34.300] Completely lose track of the flow of what's going on. [18:34.300 --> 18:37.300] Everybody read this top to bottom. [18:37.300 --> 18:40.300] It took me a while to understand it. [18:41.300 --> 18:43.300] It had meter. [18:53.300 --> 19:00.300] After the second round, the mind will expect that cadence. [19:00.300 --> 19:04.300] And they were compelled to read the whole thing [19:04.300 --> 19:10.300] to make sure that that last syllable sound landed exactly on the meter. [19:10.300 --> 19:14.300] Kind of like just to make sure it's going to do what you think it's going to do. [19:14.300 --> 19:20.300] Yeah, it's a part of your brain that's only barely in conscious awareness. [19:20.300 --> 19:30.300] So you take a document and I had it write me a five-page treatment of rapport. [19:30.300 --> 19:33.300] And he wrote me this really nice, well-done document. [19:33.300 --> 19:37.300] I said, okay, now set it to meter. [19:37.300 --> 19:41.300] Give me a high average and a low average of the sentences in this. [19:41.300 --> 19:45.300] And it came up with 15 and I think 9 or 11. [19:45.300 --> 19:49.300] So I said, okay, set the first sentence to 15, the second one to 11. [19:49.300 --> 19:54.300] And he did that. And they read it. They did it pretty good, but it was choppy. [19:54.300 --> 19:59.300] So I asked it, what is the optimum meter? [19:59.300 --> 20:02.300] And it said 20 and 15. [20:02.300 --> 20:05.300] So I always like to do it on odd numbers. [20:05.300 --> 20:13.300] So I told it, set it to 21 and 15, rewrote it, read beautifully. [20:13.300 --> 20:21.300] Then I said, okay, read this, go back over this, and everywhere you can, add alliteration. [20:22.300 --> 20:25.300] Alliteration as opposed to rhyme. [20:25.300 --> 20:32.300] Rhyme is rhyming the last syllable or the last word in a sentence. [20:32.300 --> 20:39.300] Alliteration is rhyming the first part of a word or the middle part of a word. [20:39.300 --> 20:42.300] You have asinalliteration. [20:42.300 --> 20:47.300] That's rhyming vowels and consonant alliteration, rhyming consonant sounds. [20:48.300 --> 20:52.300] The one I normally use, I probably shouldn't use here, but I'll use it anyway. [20:52.300 --> 20:55.300] Chittin' Shinola. [20:55.300 --> 21:02.300] It has a way of ringing in the mind in a way that rhyme does not. [21:02.300 --> 21:06.300] Rhyme always rises to consciousness. [21:06.300 --> 21:11.300] When you hear rhyme, your brain always recognizes as rhyme. [21:11.300 --> 21:16.300] When you hear alliteration, the brain doesn't always recognize it. [21:16.300 --> 21:22.300] But it gives a cadence in the way Chittin' Shinola sticks in the brain. [21:22.300 --> 21:33.300] If you use alliteration in a sentence, the brain will tend to notice that on a level outside of conscious awareness. [21:33.300 --> 21:36.300] It draws the attention in. [21:36.300 --> 21:40.300] That's just one or two of these tools. [21:40.300 --> 21:43.300] There are a whole list of these tools. [21:43.300 --> 21:51.300] If you go online and look up subliminal tools, I looked up initially for Milton Erickson. [21:51.300 --> 21:54.300] He was the foremost hypnotherapist ever. [21:54.300 --> 21:56.300] He had all these tools. [21:56.300 --> 21:59.300] Embedded commands. [21:59.300 --> 22:09.300] He'd want somebody to do something, and he would take a string of words that said that and craft a sentence around it. [22:09.300 --> 22:12.300] On one level, you're reading the sentence. [22:12.300 --> 22:14.300] On another level, you hear that command. [22:14.300 --> 22:17.300] If you just do it once, it doesn't help do much. [22:17.300 --> 22:22.300] But if you do that three or four times in a document, it affects the reader. [22:22.300 --> 22:26.300] I just had a guy talking about this kind of stuff. [22:26.300 --> 22:34.300] When you want to try to do that multiple times, do you craft different sentences that have those same words, those same elements? [22:34.300 --> 22:36.300] Are you repeating your same crafted sentence? [22:36.300 --> 22:45.300] The same elements, but worded somewhat different. [22:45.300 --> 22:50.300] That's not something I'm very good at, so I don't have a lot of options. [22:50.300 --> 22:52.300] Buy more Coke. [22:52.300 --> 22:58.300] I was talking to my uncle the other day, and all he could think about was buying some more Coke. [22:58.300 --> 23:10.300] All he could think about was to buy more Coke. [23:10.300 --> 23:18.300] He drank it all the time, and it made him fat, and changed the cadence of buy more Coke. [23:18.300 --> 23:26.300] Then I do another sentence to where people buy all kinds of stuff, and most people buy Coke. [23:26.300 --> 23:30.300] Most people buy Coke and then keep going. [23:30.300 --> 23:33.300] Your brain notices the cadence change. [23:33.300 --> 23:36.300] It's something I know about that I'm not really good at. [23:36.300 --> 23:41.300] But there are guys out there who are Obama was really good at it. [23:41.300 --> 23:44.300] We really need to learn to understand language. [23:44.300 --> 24:03.300] Google, he was talking about how Google affects the, manipulates the minds of their users by the returns it chooses to give them. [24:03.300 --> 24:07.300] When you do a search, you could get 10,000 hits. [24:08.300 --> 24:15.300] If it has an agenda, like somebody's paying them a lot of money to do something, it will pull the hits. [24:15.300 --> 24:21.300] Like if you're a Democrat and you go to YouTube, YouTube is going to pull your Democrat stuff. [24:21.300 --> 24:24.300] If you're a Republican, it's going to pull your Republican stuff. [24:24.300 --> 24:31.300] It already knows what your preferences are, but Google gets you really, really sophisticated in that. [24:31.300 --> 24:41.300] This guy was on a tear to get rid of that or get it under control. [24:41.300 --> 24:46.300] It's pretty scary what's out there. [24:46.300 --> 24:51.300] We are being manipulated in ways we have no idea. [24:51.300 --> 24:58.300] Working with AI, AI knows how to do all this stuff. [24:58.300 --> 25:01.300] It does it really good. [25:01.300 --> 25:11.300] I intend to build a set of pleadings, and I'm going to put everything in there I possibly can. [25:11.300 --> 25:24.300] I'm building a lawsuit, a petition for declaratory judgment that I want to sue the president over, and I want to have every tool in there possible. [25:24.300 --> 25:31.300] Because my fight's starting, I'm not through with my website yet, and Dr. Joe got arrested. [25:31.300 --> 25:34.300] I went down there and they started a fight. [25:34.300 --> 25:36.300] How's he doing now? [25:36.300 --> 25:38.300] He's out. He's doing good. [25:38.300 --> 25:40.300] You said he's out, but how's he feeling? [25:40.300 --> 25:43.300] Because it sounds like they sure didn't treat him very well. [25:43.300 --> 25:46.300] No, they did not. [25:46.300 --> 25:50.300] I'm going to go after him for that. [25:50.300 --> 25:56.300] They arrested him and secreted him in the jail for four days. [25:56.300 --> 25:58.300] On the night of the third day. [25:58.300 --> 26:04.300] That's bad enough for a regular healthy guy, but for somebody who needs medical attention, that's really severe. [26:04.300 --> 26:06.300] It's worse than that. [26:06.300 --> 26:13.300] When they arrested him, the heat had affected him and they had to take him to the hospital before they could take him to jail. [26:13.300 --> 26:18.300] Then he calls me from the jail, and I finally found out where he is. [26:18.300 --> 26:23.300] They're taking him to the hospital to get his blood pressure down. [26:23.300 --> 26:30.300] The next morning, I was at the district court with a really habeas corpus. [26:30.300 --> 26:33.300] The clerk said, well, we'll take this. [26:33.300 --> 26:37.300] I said, are you going to give that to the judge, or do I need to take it to the judge? [26:37.300 --> 26:41.300] He said, well, I can't give it to the judge. I have to give it to this other clerk. [26:41.300 --> 26:44.300] She'll assign a judge, and she'll set a hearing. [26:44.300 --> 26:47.300] I said, no, no, that's not what's going to happen. [26:47.300 --> 26:52.300] I'm just going to a judge right now. Either you're going to take it or I am, and I'll be right back. [26:54.300 --> 26:59.300] Businesses ask you for a lot of personal information, and you may trust them to keep it safe. [26:59.300 --> 27:04.300] But it turns out that even the most trusted companies may be unwittingly revealing your secrets. [27:04.300 --> 27:08.300] I'm Dr. Catherine Albrecht, and I'll be right back with details. [27:08.300 --> 27:10.300] Privacy is under attack. [27:10.300 --> 27:14.300] When you give up data about yourself, you'll never get it back again. [27:14.300 --> 27:18.300] Once your privacy is gone, you'll find your freedoms will start to vanish too. [27:18.300 --> 27:23.300] So protect your rights, say no to surveillance, and keep your information to yourself. [27:23.300 --> 27:26.300] Privacy, it's worth hanging on to. [27:26.300 --> 27:30.300] This public service announcement is brought to you by StartPage.com, [27:30.300 --> 27:34.300] the private search engine alternative to Google, Yahoo, and Bing. [27:34.300 --> 27:37.300] Start over with StartPage. [27:37.300 --> 27:43.300] Data privacy is a big deal, so nearly every company has a policy explaining how they handle your personal information. [27:43.300 --> 27:46.300] But what happens if it escapes their control? [27:46.300 --> 27:48.300] It's not an idle question. [27:48.300 --> 27:56.300] According to a recent survey, a shocking 90% of U.S. companies admit their security was breached by hackers in the last year. [27:56.300 --> 28:00.300] That's one more reason you should trust your searches to StartPage.com. [28:00.300 --> 28:04.300] Unlike other search engines, StartPage doesn't store any data on you. [28:04.300 --> 28:08.300] They've never been hacked, but even if they were, there would be nothing for criminals to see. [28:08.300 --> 28:10.300] The cupboard would be bare. [28:10.300 --> 28:13.300] Too bad other companies don't treat your data the same way. [28:13.300 --> 28:18.300] I'm Dr. Catherine Albrecht. More news and information at CatherineAlbrecht.com. [28:40.300 --> 28:45.300] 1,200 architects and engineers have looked into the evidence and believe there is more to the story. [28:45.300 --> 28:48.300] Bring justice to my son, my uncle, my nephew, my son. [28:48.300 --> 28:54.300] Go to buildingwhat.org. Why it fell, why it matters, and what you can do. [28:54.300 --> 28:58.300] Rule of Law Radio is proud to offer the Rule of Law traffic seminar. [28:58.300 --> 29:03.300] In today's America, we live in an us-against-them society, and if we the people are ever going to have a free society, [29:03.300 --> 29:06.300] then we're going to have to stand and defend our own rights. [29:06.300 --> 29:09.300] Among those rights are the right to travel freely from place to place, [29:09.300 --> 29:13.300] to live in our own private capacity, and most importantly, the right to due process of law. [29:13.300 --> 29:19.300] Traffic courts afford us the least expensive opportunity to learn how to enforce and preserve our rights through due process. [29:19.300 --> 29:22.300] Former Sheriff's Deputy Eddie Craig, in conjunction with Rule of Law Radio, [29:22.300 --> 29:27.300] has put together the most comprehensive teaching tool available that will help you understand what due process is [29:27.300 --> 29:29.300] and how to hold courts to the rule of law. [29:29.300 --> 29:34.300] You can get your own copy of this invaluable material by going to ruleoflawradio.com and ordering your copy today. [29:34.300 --> 29:38.300] By ordering now, you'll receive a copy of Eddie's book, The Texas Transportation Code, The Law Versus the Lie, [29:38.300 --> 29:43.300] video and audio of the original 2009 seminar, hundreds of research documents, and other useful resource material. [29:43.300 --> 29:47.300] Learn how to fight for your rights with the help of this material from ruleoflawradio.com. [29:47.300 --> 29:52.300] Order your copy today, and together we can have the free society we all want and deserve. [30:08.300 --> 30:12.300] The law of the land. [30:12.300 --> 30:16.300] Won't you follow the law of the land. [30:16.300 --> 30:19.300] I don't understand. [30:19.300 --> 30:22.300] Your job is to protect and to serve. [30:22.300 --> 30:24.300] Not be an abuse. [30:24.300 --> 30:27.300] Not be served. [30:27.300 --> 30:30.300] When you're gonna stop abuse, [30:30.300 --> 30:33.300] your power. [30:33.300 --> 30:36.300] When you're gonna stop abuse, [30:36.300 --> 30:38.300] your power. [30:38.300 --> 30:41.300] When you're gonna stop abuse, [30:41.300 --> 30:44.300] your power. [30:44.300 --> 30:47.300] When you're gonna stop abuse, [30:47.300 --> 30:50.300] your power. [30:50.300 --> 30:55.300] So please Mr. Mackle and teach officers not to abuse their power. [30:55.300 --> 30:58.300] Send a request to the leader, [30:58.300 --> 31:01.300] the captain of all officers. [31:01.300 --> 31:04.300] Tell them to uphold the law. [31:04.300 --> 31:07.300] And please don't abuse their power. [31:07.300 --> 31:12.300] They beat and they beat and they cheat and they cheat and they lie every hour. [31:12.300 --> 31:14.300] So Mr. Mackle and teach officers not to abuse their power. [31:14.300 --> 31:16.300] Okay, we are back. [31:16.300 --> 31:18.300] Brandon Kelton, founder of Rule of Law Radio. [31:18.300 --> 31:21.300] And we're talking about what happened to Dr. Kelton. [31:21.300 --> 31:27.300] Whenever I think the cops have been about as stupid as they can get, [31:27.300 --> 31:30.300] the new ones tend to outdo themselves. [31:30.300 --> 31:32.300] And public officials in general. [31:32.300 --> 31:34.300] It's not just the cops. [31:34.300 --> 31:36.300] In this case, [31:36.300 --> 31:43.300] they exercised the warrant to search Glynn Ferns' portion of his home. [31:43.300 --> 31:46.300] Well, his home was one room. [31:46.300 --> 31:48.300] And they searched it. [31:48.300 --> 31:50.300] But that wasn't why they were there. [31:50.300 --> 31:53.300] They were after Dr. Joe. [31:53.300 --> 31:59.300] And Darren called me and I was driving him and told me they wanted him to come by there. [31:59.300 --> 32:04.300] And I said, no, Darren, not going to happen. [32:04.300 --> 32:05.300] So I went over. [32:05.300 --> 32:07.300] I wanted to see the warrant and the chief of police. [32:07.300 --> 32:09.300] They had a whole neighborhood blocked off. [32:09.300 --> 32:10.300] Chief of police blocked me. [32:10.300 --> 32:12.300] And I told him, I want to see the warrant. [32:12.300 --> 32:18.300] And I told him about my experience in Pennsylvania where for a while there, [32:18.300 --> 32:20.300] this is quite a while before you came around, [32:20.300 --> 32:24.300] people were coming to me and saying the feds come in at two in the morning, [32:24.300 --> 32:28.300] have the local police drag them out of the house. [32:28.300 --> 32:34.300] And then they go in and take guns and gold and silver and computers. [32:34.300 --> 32:35.300] Yeah. [32:35.300 --> 32:36.300] Disappear. [32:36.300 --> 32:38.300] We never, never see them again. [32:38.300 --> 32:40.300] And I figured out what they were doing. [32:40.300 --> 32:49.300] A federal agent can be authorized by a federal magistrate to issue a warrant. [32:49.300 --> 32:50.300] He can call the magistrate, [32:50.300 --> 32:54.300] give him probable cause and the magistrate can authorize him to sign the warrant. [32:55.300 --> 32:59.300] So he doesn't have to travel a whole bunch of miles and get the warrant sign [32:59.300 --> 33:03.300] and come back so he can go in and do his search immediately. [33:03.300 --> 33:06.300] Well, when they issue a federal warrant, [33:06.300 --> 33:11.300] they almost always seal it until it's executed. [33:11.300 --> 33:14.300] So when they issue it, they give it a cause number. [33:14.300 --> 33:20.300] When they seal it, they take the cause number out of the record. [33:20.300 --> 33:22.300] So if you're a chief of police, [33:22.300 --> 33:27.300] they want you to come in and run security while they execute a warrant. [33:27.300 --> 33:28.300] You get the warrant. [33:28.300 --> 33:31.300] You can call the clerk and say, I got this warrant number. [33:31.300 --> 33:32.300] Is it valid? [33:32.300 --> 33:37.300] And the clerk will say, I don't have that number in my system. [33:37.300 --> 33:40.300] And that generally means it's a sealed warrant. [33:40.300 --> 33:43.300] It has no way of checking. [33:43.300 --> 33:47.300] So the agent is making up the warrant, [33:47.300 --> 33:51.300] giving it a number of a sealed warrant, [33:51.300 --> 33:54.300] going in, having the cops pull everybody out, [33:54.300 --> 33:57.300] they steal what they want to, then they go away. [33:57.300 --> 33:59.300] They never come back. [33:59.300 --> 34:01.300] Nobody's the wiser. [34:01.300 --> 34:07.300] So I wrote a letter to every federal magistrate in the state of Pennsylvania [34:07.300 --> 34:10.300] and told them what I thought was going on [34:10.300 --> 34:15.300] and demanded to see all of the warrants they had issued [34:15.300 --> 34:21.300] that were sealed and subsequently executed because I have one in my hand. [34:21.300 --> 34:26.300] And I want to make sure that the number on the one in my hand [34:26.300 --> 34:29.300] matches the warrant in the record. [34:29.300 --> 34:33.300] Well, I did not get a response from one of those guys, [34:33.300 --> 34:36.300] but I never heard of that happening again. [34:36.300 --> 34:38.300] So I told that to the chief. [34:38.300 --> 34:40.300] So I want to see the warrant. [34:40.300 --> 34:43.300] The feds are doing this coverage all the time. [34:43.300 --> 34:46.300] And he said, No, no, you can't go down there. [34:46.300 --> 34:49.300] I said, You know, you've got a pistol on your hip. [34:49.300 --> 34:54.300] And I went through the 2202 BTA thing. [34:54.300 --> 35:00.300] And then it turns out the warrants bogus. [35:00.300 --> 35:06.300] I talked, I tried to call the chief and got his second in command. [35:06.300 --> 35:10.300] And she was kind of snippy with me at first. [35:10.300 --> 35:16.300] But then when I told her what was going on, boy, did she change her tune. [35:16.300 --> 35:21.300] All of the officers that helped serve this warrant, [35:21.300 --> 35:24.300] I'm going to charge them all. I'm going to sue them all. [35:24.300 --> 35:28.300] There were about 40 people there, [35:28.300 --> 35:33.300] cops from different jurisdictions and feds. [35:33.300 --> 35:38.300] In the federal bill, the reason they did this is they wanted Dr. Joe, [35:38.300 --> 35:42.300] but they couldn't get a warrant to search his property, his place. [35:42.300 --> 35:45.300] So they wanted me to bring him there so he could give her permission. [35:45.300 --> 35:48.300] I told him, ain't going to happen. He is too ill. [35:48.300 --> 35:50.300] I am not bringing him there. [35:50.300 --> 35:54.300] He can't handle this kind of stress. It's not going to happen. [35:54.300 --> 35:59.300] And the jackass threatened me or I could get in trouble. [35:59.300 --> 36:04.300] I told him, look, this is not the high school parking lot. [36:04.300 --> 36:07.300] If you want to frighten someone, you might go down there. [36:07.300 --> 36:10.300] But don't you be threatening me. [36:10.300 --> 36:15.300] Well, we need to talk to her and then get a warrant for him or a subpoena. [36:15.300 --> 36:19.300] I'm not bringing him. I took him home with me. [36:19.300 --> 36:22.300] It turned out he was the one they were after. [36:22.300 --> 36:25.300] They wanted to use that to get him to come there so they could arrest him. [36:25.300 --> 36:28.300] Well, that didn't work. [36:28.300 --> 36:33.300] The warrant specifically said they could search and seize anything [36:33.300 --> 36:37.300] belonging to Glenn Fern. [36:37.300 --> 36:45.300] But Dr. Joe had two rooms where Dr. Joe's abode and not Glenn's. [36:45.300 --> 36:49.300] They wanted him to come down there and unlock the door to one of the rooms. [36:49.300 --> 36:52.300] I told him, that is not going to happen. [36:52.300 --> 36:54.300] Well, we have a warrant to search the whole building. [36:54.300 --> 36:56.300] Why are you bothering us? [36:56.300 --> 36:59.300] Just go search whatever the warrant lets you search. [36:59.300 --> 37:01.300] You don't need our permission. [37:01.300 --> 37:04.300] If you need our permission, you are not going to get it. [37:04.300 --> 37:07.300] Then he finally hung up on me. [37:07.300 --> 37:10.300] It turned out they were trying to con him to come down there. [37:10.300 --> 37:15.300] They didn't break in the door, but they got past the lock somehow [37:15.300 --> 37:18.300] and confiscated a whole stack of guns. [37:18.300 --> 37:20.300] He's got a huge gun collection. [37:20.300 --> 37:23.300] Guns and boxes of ammo. [37:23.300 --> 37:26.300] Then they told him that they had released the guns [37:26.300 --> 37:29.300] if he had come down to the federal building and signed for them. [37:29.300 --> 37:32.300] I took him down there. [37:32.300 --> 37:35.300] It's not a trap, honest. [37:35.300 --> 37:37.300] I didn't realize what was going on. [37:37.300 --> 37:39.300] It didn't click that that was a setup. [37:39.300 --> 37:42.300] I didn't realize then they were after him. [37:42.300 --> 37:47.300] We get down there and the first thing they want to do is read him his rights. [37:47.300 --> 37:52.300] I said, are we being detained? [37:52.300 --> 37:56.300] The FBI agents said, this is just a formality. [37:56.300 --> 37:58.300] No, it's not a formality. [37:58.300 --> 38:01.300] You don't read someone his rights unless you interrogate them. [38:01.300 --> 38:03.300] Are we being interrogated? [38:03.300 --> 38:06.300] Is he being interrogated? [38:06.300 --> 38:08.300] Oh, no, we just have some questions. [38:08.300 --> 38:09.300] Yeah, that's why you're reading his rights. [38:09.300 --> 38:11.300] I said, Joe, this guy's trying to set you up. [38:11.300 --> 38:12.300] Watch this guy. [38:12.300 --> 38:14.300] You need a lawyer. [38:14.300 --> 38:16.300] Then he starts asking Joe questions. [38:16.300 --> 38:18.300] I said, Joe, don't answer those. [38:18.300 --> 38:19.300] You need a lawyer. [38:19.300 --> 38:20.300] Tell him. [38:20.300 --> 38:22.300] Tell him you're not going to answer his questions. [38:22.300 --> 38:25.300] They didn't say anything to me. [38:25.300 --> 38:31.300] I expected them to give me a hard time, but they didn't. [38:31.300 --> 38:40.300] They knew that this was screwy and they had me there and I was sticking code on them. [38:40.300 --> 38:47.300] Then they asked him if he can walk and he said, no. [38:47.300 --> 38:50.300] Do you need an ambulance? [38:50.300 --> 38:51.300] He said, yes, I do. [38:51.300 --> 38:56.300] They called an ambulance and while they're waiting for the ambulance, the four Arlington, [38:56.300 --> 39:02.300] Fort Worth police officers I had out in Hall came in and arrested him. [39:02.300 --> 39:05.300] That was the point in the beginning. [39:05.300 --> 39:11.300] They brought him down there so they could arrest him and got him to come to them. [39:11.300 --> 39:13.300] Are you still there? [39:13.300 --> 39:15.300] My connection just timed out to my... [39:15.300 --> 39:17.300] Okay. [39:18.300 --> 39:23.300] They did all this so they could get him down there so they could arrest him. [39:23.300 --> 39:28.300] Then I told them, while you're arresting someone, and I pointed at the FBI agent, [39:28.300 --> 39:34.300] you need to arrest him because he came in with a warrant that was expired [39:34.300 --> 39:42.300] and stole all of these guns from Dr. Joe and I want to charge him with felony theft. [39:42.300 --> 39:46.300] The FBI agent scooched up against the wall. [39:46.300 --> 39:48.300] He said, no, that's nothing. [39:48.300 --> 39:50.300] Don't listen to him. [39:50.300 --> 39:52.300] He's the perp. [39:52.300 --> 39:54.300] I'm the accuser. [39:54.300 --> 39:56.300] I'm the one that's making the accusation. [39:56.300 --> 40:00.300] You've been made known under Article 2.13 Texas Code of Criminal Procedure [40:00.300 --> 40:02.300] that the crime has been committed. [40:02.300 --> 40:04.300] Do your job. [40:04.300 --> 40:05.300] None of them would. [40:05.300 --> 40:06.300] I said, okay. [40:06.300 --> 40:10.300] Who here is the meanest guy here? [40:10.300 --> 40:13.300] All of them pointed at this tall guy. [40:13.300 --> 40:17.300] And he looks around at them and he points at this other guy. [40:17.300 --> 40:19.300] I said, no, no. [40:19.300 --> 40:20.300] You're the one. [40:20.300 --> 40:22.300] I need your name in badge numbers. [40:22.300 --> 40:23.300] I need all your names in badge numbers. [40:23.300 --> 40:26.300] But you're the guy that I'll work on. [40:26.300 --> 40:31.300] So these guys were really, really careful. [40:31.300 --> 40:37.300] Then they arrested Dr. Joe and disappeared for four days. [40:37.300 --> 40:40.300] So I am going to work these guys over. [40:40.300 --> 40:45.300] They're already filed criminal charges against these four officers with the DA. [40:45.300 --> 40:53.300] Now I'm going to go back to the DA and ask him to what grand jury did you present? [40:53.300 --> 40:56.300] Do you have a business with five employees or more? [40:56.300 --> 41:00.300] How would you like to save hundreds of thousands of dollars in FICA taxes? [41:00.300 --> 41:04.300] Do you have a major medical plan that nobody can afford to be on? [41:04.300 --> 41:09.300] Or how would you like to save in premium costs on a current major medical plan [41:09.300 --> 41:11.300] by lowering the claims cost? [41:11.300 --> 41:16.300] The CHAMP plan is a Section 125 IRS approved preventative health plan [41:16.300 --> 41:23.300] that provides your employees with doctors, medications, emergency care, and Teladoc [41:23.300 --> 41:26.300] all at zero cost with zero co-pay. [41:26.300 --> 41:32.300] If you are an employee, you also will get a pay raise by paying less in FICA taxes. [41:32.300 --> 41:38.300] As an employer, you will save hundreds of thousands of dollars in matching FICA taxes. [41:38.300 --> 41:44.300] The CHAMP plan can help add working capital, market resale value, or pay down lines of credit. [41:44.300 --> 41:53.300] Call Scott at 214-730-2471 or DallasMMS.com. [41:53.300 --> 41:58.300] Are you wondering what this world is coming to and why God isn't stopping it? [41:58.300 --> 42:04.300] Then tune in to LogosRadioNetwork.com on Wednesdays from 8 to 10 p.m. Central Time for Scripture Talk [42:04.300 --> 42:09.300] where Nana and guests study God's Word to find these answers and more. [42:09.300 --> 42:13.300] Join us for both verse-by-verse Bible studies and topical Bible studies [42:13.300 --> 42:18.300] designed to explain God's plan as well as to provoke unto love and good works. [42:18.300 --> 42:21.300] Our first hour studies are in the book of Matthew. [42:21.300 --> 42:28.300] Our second hour topics vary each week, exploring sound doctrine as well as Christian character development. [42:28.300 --> 42:31.300] Our goal is in accord with Matthew 5-16. [42:31.300 --> 42:37.300] Let your light so shine before men that they may see your good works and glorify your Father which is in heaven. [42:37.300 --> 42:42.300] We wish to reflect God's light and to be a blessing to all those who have a hearing ear. [42:42.300 --> 42:48.300] So tune in to Scripture Talk live on LogosRadioNetwork.com Wednesdays from 8 to 10 p.m. [42:48.300 --> 42:52.300] for an inspiring and motivating study of the Scriptures. [43:01.300 --> 43:12.300] If you did not have any problem, where are you going to look for one? [43:12.300 --> 43:18.300] If you could not wage any battle too long, would your purpose have to be done? [43:18.300 --> 43:24.300] Such a sentimental soldier, a warrior of love, scuffling to keep the peace. [43:24.300 --> 43:26.300] Okay, we are back. [43:26.300 --> 43:35.300] Randy Kelley and Brett Fountain, Rue La Radio on this Thursday, the 21st day of August 2025. [43:35.300 --> 43:39.300] And Brett, just let me know I told this story last week. [43:39.300 --> 43:43.300] Yeah, I did, but now we get to the good part. [43:43.300 --> 43:50.300] So I get a call from him Thursday night. [43:50.300 --> 43:54.300] They found out where he's at, he's in Fort Worth jail. [43:54.300 --> 43:59.300] And they're taking him to the hospital to get his blood pressure down. [43:59.300 --> 44:02.300] He's afraid he's going to have a stroke. [44:02.300 --> 44:04.300] So now I'm concerned. [44:04.300 --> 44:10.300] So bright and early the next morning, I'm down at the court with a really habeas corpus. [44:10.300 --> 44:12.300] I gave it to this clerk. [44:12.300 --> 44:16.300] I said, are you going to give this to the judge or do I have to do that? [44:16.300 --> 44:18.300] Oh, well, I can't give it to the judge. [44:18.300 --> 44:25.300] I have to give it to this other clerk and she'll issue a docket and assign it to a judge and set a hearing. [44:25.300 --> 44:29.300] No, no, that is not what's going to happen. [44:29.300 --> 44:33.300] This is going to a judge and it's going to a judge right now. [44:33.300 --> 44:37.300] Are you going to come with me or do you want me to go myself and do it? [44:37.300 --> 44:44.300] Well, he took me up to the judge that hears pre-conviction habeas. [44:44.300 --> 44:47.300] So I walk in with this red folder to hand it to the bailiff. [44:47.300 --> 44:52.300] My name is Randall Kelton struck the judge and I have business with the court. [44:52.300 --> 44:55.300] He said, what's the nature of your business? [44:55.300 --> 45:01.300] It's business with the court and none of yours. [45:01.300 --> 45:06.300] Well, if you don't tell me what your business here is here, you're not going to see the judge. [45:06.300 --> 45:09.300] Well, life's filled with little decisions, Bubba. [45:09.300 --> 45:13.300] But if you want to block me, my access to that judge, I'll go out and call 911. [45:13.300 --> 45:16.300] See if I can't get somebody down here to arrest you. [45:16.300 --> 45:18.300] Well, I'll get you. [45:18.300 --> 45:19.300] Well, what should I do with it? [45:19.300 --> 45:21.300] I said, give it to the clerk. [45:21.300 --> 45:23.300] He said, well, I'll just show it to the judge. [45:23.300 --> 45:30.300] And he goes in the back, comes back out and the judge said she can't take this because it's got the wrong heading on it. [45:30.300 --> 45:33.300] He did have the wrong heading on it because I used a template. [45:33.300 --> 45:37.300] Took out my pen, scratched it out and put the right heading on it here. [45:37.300 --> 45:38.300] There you go. [45:38.300 --> 45:39.300] Takes it back. [45:39.300 --> 45:46.300] Plus the Constitution specifically says that the form is not going to make it insufficient. [45:46.300 --> 45:57.300] 11.03 Texas Code of Criminal Procedure says, a writ of habeas corpus shall not be denied for lack of form. [45:57.300 --> 46:01.300] She used to hear it for lack of form. [46:01.300 --> 46:05.300] So I walked out in the hall, dial 911. [46:05.300 --> 46:07.300] Got a sheriff's deputy down. [46:07.300 --> 46:12.300] And by the time he got there, I had a criminal complaint made up against the judge and filed it with her. [46:12.300 --> 46:24.300] You know, even though they commonly don't know the Constitution, I'm surprised she doesn't understand the concept of the title is not what defines the document, the content is. [46:24.300 --> 46:33.300] She is the judge who specializes in pre-conviction habeas corpus. [46:33.300 --> 46:36.300] There's no way she did not know that. [46:36.300 --> 46:38.300] That's just embarrassing. [46:38.300 --> 46:44.300] But I PO'd her bailiff and he went back there and said, I got some smart-she-mouth guy, blah, blah, blah. [46:44.300 --> 46:46.300] So they're just going to blow me off. [46:46.300 --> 46:48.300] So I filed criminal charges against her. [46:48.300 --> 46:51.300] Then I come back up looking for another judge. [46:51.300 --> 46:54.300] By the time I got all this done, it was after lunch. [46:54.300 --> 46:57.300] And there's only one judge in the building. [46:57.300 --> 47:02.300] And while I'm looking for another judge, I see the head bailiff. [47:02.300 --> 47:08.300] And he lets me know how annoyed he is that I file criminal charges against one of his judges. [47:08.300 --> 47:11.300] I said, well, I'm looking for another one to hear this habeas. [47:11.300 --> 47:14.300] And if they don't hear it, I'm going to file against another one. [47:14.300 --> 47:16.300] And he started to say something. [47:16.300 --> 47:19.300] The other bailiff with him got his arm and drug him away. [47:19.300 --> 47:20.300] So I look around. [47:20.300 --> 47:27.300] I finally found the only judge in the building is holding a first degree murder trial. [47:27.300 --> 47:32.300] So I walk in the courtroom. [47:32.300 --> 47:36.300] And there's that head bailiff that told me how upset he was. [47:36.300 --> 47:39.300] And boy, he was on his feet in a minute and ushered me outside. [47:39.300 --> 47:42.300] And we had this back and forth. [47:42.300 --> 47:45.300] They were telling me what I had to do with that habeas. [47:45.300 --> 47:48.300] And I'm telling them what I intend to do with that habeas. [47:48.300 --> 47:51.300] And there were two lawyers came out of the courtroom. [47:51.300 --> 47:56.300] And I said to them, hey, guys, tell these guys this is a habeas. [47:56.300 --> 47:59.300] And they need to get the heck out of my way. [47:59.300 --> 48:02.300] The lawyers just kind of cringed and backed up. [48:02.300 --> 48:06.300] And one of them, the younger one, was kind of getting smartsy mouth. [48:06.300 --> 48:13.300] And I said, OK, all you need to do is tell me that if I go in that courtroom, you'll arrest me. [48:13.300 --> 48:15.300] He said, well, I didn't say that. [48:15.300 --> 48:17.300] Well, say that. You're blocking me. [48:17.300 --> 48:19.300] You got that pistol. [48:19.300 --> 48:21.300] You're the one that pulled this dime out. [48:21.300 --> 48:23.300] Now, get your behind up on it. [48:23.300 --> 48:30.300] I said, OK, I'm going to take your chicken suit off and tell me if I go in that courtroom with this habeas, you'll arrest me. [48:30.300 --> 48:33.300] And he took about three steps back. [48:33.300 --> 48:35.300] And I said, that's enough of this. [48:35.300 --> 48:39.300] And I start to the courtroom and the other one stepped in front of me and blocked me. [48:39.300 --> 48:43.300] And told me if I take that in there, the judge is going to find me in contempt. [48:43.300 --> 48:46.300] Then I'll arrest you. [48:46.300 --> 48:48.300] I said, well, that'll work. [48:48.300 --> 48:50.300] And we're talking loud enough. [48:50.300 --> 48:52.300] They can hear us in the courtroom. [48:52.300 --> 48:54.300] I said, well, that'll work. [48:54.300 --> 48:58.300] As far as I am concerned, I am not talking to you. [48:58.300 --> 49:02.300] I'm talking to the judge through you. [49:02.300 --> 49:12.300] Now, you've just threatened me with arrest for trying to file a habeas corpus while you're prominently displaying a deadly weapon. [49:12.300 --> 49:14.300] But you didn't do that. [49:14.300 --> 49:16.300] The judge did it. [49:16.300 --> 49:17.300] We'll be in touch, guys. [49:17.300 --> 49:20.300] And what I was doing, it was they all knew. [49:20.300 --> 49:23.300] I told them who I was there for. [49:23.300 --> 49:29.300] I was making as much noise as I could and stirring up as much stink as I could. [49:29.300 --> 49:32.300] I told the clerks who I was there for. [49:32.300 --> 49:36.300] Like this guy said, they're holding a first degree murder trial. [49:36.300 --> 49:38.300] Well, so what? [49:38.300 --> 49:40.300] This is a habeas corpus. [49:40.300 --> 49:43.300] And if I don't get this in there, they're likely to kill Dr. Joe. [49:43.300 --> 49:46.300] And then you'll have another murder trial. [49:46.300 --> 49:59.300] So I made enough noise that when they finally told me where he was at and I went down there to the to this to this county jail and went up to the little counter there. [49:59.300 --> 50:12.300] They got two people behind glass and I got this older woman and told her that I want to see the videotape for the Magistration for Joe DeRuza. [50:12.300 --> 50:15.300] And boy, she was hot. [50:15.300 --> 50:17.300] We just got him today. [50:17.300 --> 50:22.300] And as soon as we got him here, we took him for Magister immediately. [50:22.300 --> 50:28.300] Whoa, somebody's been stirring her milk. [50:28.300 --> 50:31.300] So that told me what I was doing was working. [50:31.300 --> 50:33.300] Anyway, they got they got him arraigned. [50:33.300 --> 50:37.300] They got a bail set and we got him bailed out. [50:37.300 --> 50:39.300] Now I'm going to go back. [50:39.300 --> 50:55.300] I gave criminal complaints to the prosecuting attorney against these officers who arrested Joe and took him to jail instead of to a magistrate and charged him with first degree felony aggravated assault, among other things. [50:55.300 --> 51:08.300] I'm going to go back and ask him to what grand jury did you present the information you created for this complaint? [51:08.300 --> 51:11.300] 2.03 when a prosecuting attorney. [51:11.300 --> 51:14.300] No, they don't present information to the grand jury. [51:14.300 --> 51:18.300] They present the complaint to the grand jury and the grand jury generates an indictment. [51:18.300 --> 51:33.300] What what 2.03 says when a prosecuting attorney has it made known to him in any manner that a public official has violated a law relating to his office, he shall reduce the complaint to an information and submit it to the grand jury. [51:33.300 --> 51:35.300] Information information. [51:35.300 --> 51:38.300] That's that's what it says. [51:38.300 --> 51:45.300] This to a they might have changed the wording, but to a this this upgrade they did. [51:45.300 --> 51:50.300] It's stated very clearly that is there aren't supposed to be substantive. [51:50.300 --> 51:57.300] So if I don't agree with that one and I go back to the prior one, and that's what it says. [51:57.300 --> 52:00.300] So I don't care what the other one says. [52:00.300 --> 52:01.300] He didn't give notice. [52:01.300 --> 52:07.300] If he doesn't tell me the name of the grand jury, then I'll have criminal complaints against him. [52:07.300 --> 52:10.300] I said, get me an assistant to you out here. [52:10.300 --> 52:13.300] I got complaints against you, your boss. [52:13.300 --> 52:18.300] So and I talked to the they sent out the investigator like they always do. [52:18.300 --> 52:20.300] And this was a young guy. [52:20.300 --> 52:24.300] And I said, generally, they send out a knuckle dragger. [52:24.300 --> 52:27.300] You look like you actually have some intelligence. [52:27.300 --> 52:29.300] They send out several. [52:29.300 --> 52:31.300] This time they only sent out one. [52:31.300 --> 52:33.300] I said, well, I like to think I do. [52:33.300 --> 52:38.300] And then when I walked through what I was doing, I said, look, guys, I'm not after you. [52:38.300 --> 52:41.300] I'm just here for due process. [52:41.300 --> 52:43.300] I'm just kind of following the thunder. [52:43.300 --> 52:47.300] I'm going to give you guys things to do or you're not going to do it. [52:47.300 --> 52:49.300] And then I'm going to take the next step. [52:49.300 --> 52:56.300] I'm really getting this set up so that I can get a good federal lawsuit that I can file in D.C. [52:56.300 --> 52:57.300] And when the U.S. [52:57.300 --> 53:03.300] attorney in D.C. secrets my criminal complaints and such from the grand jury, I said lawsuit. [53:03.300 --> 53:06.300] I met criminal complaints that I can file in D.C. [53:06.300 --> 53:07.300] with the grand jury. [53:07.300 --> 53:08.300] And when the U.S. [53:08.300 --> 53:13.300] attorney blocks me, then I'm going to sue the president as respondeat superior for Pam [53:13.300 --> 53:16.300] Bondi, as respondeat superior for the U.S. [53:16.300 --> 53:17.300] attorney. [53:17.300 --> 53:20.300] And I'll get my issue before the president. [53:21.300 --> 53:25.300] And he said, they're looking at me like, what? [53:25.300 --> 53:28.300] I walked him through the codes. [53:28.300 --> 53:33.300] He looked at me a second and he said, yeah, I'm beginning to feel like a knuckle [53:33.300 --> 53:34.300] dragger. [53:34.300 --> 53:36.300] Yeah, he's like, what did I step in? [53:36.300 --> 53:37.300] Yeah. [53:37.300 --> 53:39.300] I said, don't worry, guys, I'm not after you. [53:39.300 --> 53:44.300] I'm just kind of using you guys as crash dummies. [53:44.300 --> 53:49.300] When you tell them and I found this out a long time ago. [53:49.300 --> 53:51.300] You tell them that I'm not after you. [53:51.300 --> 53:52.300] Don't worry about it. [53:52.300 --> 53:56.300] I'm after much, much bigger fish than you. [53:56.300 --> 54:02.300] Somebody tells you that he's filing criminal charges against the elected D.A. [54:02.300 --> 54:04.300] And he says he really don't care about the elected D.A. [54:04.300 --> 54:06.300] He's after bigger fish. [54:06.300 --> 54:10.300] How do you deal with a guy like this? [54:10.300 --> 54:17.300] You've got no leverage because he don't care what you do. [54:17.300 --> 54:18.300] I did that to the D.A. [54:18.300 --> 54:23.300] And then I did it to the sheriff's deputy that came real professional woman, [54:23.300 --> 54:26.300] handled herself extremely well. [54:26.300 --> 54:32.300] And then I told her, I got to tell you, I'm going to expect you to. [54:32.300 --> 54:35.300] Well, first, I said, what are you going to do with these complaints? [54:35.300 --> 54:38.300] She said, well, I have to give them to my superiors. [54:38.300 --> 54:40.300] No, no, no, no, no. [54:40.300 --> 54:42.300] That's not how this works. [54:43.300 --> 54:48.300] Under Article 2.13, you have had it made known to you that a crime has been committed. [54:48.300 --> 54:51.300] You are commanded to give notice to some magistrate. [54:51.300 --> 54:57.300] So I'm going to want to know who the magistrate is that you gave notice to [54:57.300 --> 55:05.300] and when that magistrate issued a warrant under 15.09 Texas Code of Criminal Procedure. [55:05.300 --> 55:09.300] She said, well, I have to follow my policy. [55:09.300 --> 55:11.300] I said, well, I understand that. [55:11.300 --> 55:13.300] You've got your policy. [55:13.300 --> 55:15.300] I've got my law. [55:15.300 --> 55:19.300] As far as I'm concerned, you can use your policy for toilet paper, [55:19.300 --> 55:22.300] but you can't use my law for toilet paper. [55:22.300 --> 55:25.300] I'm going to hold you to it, to the letter. [55:25.300 --> 55:26.300] But don't worry, don't worry. [55:26.300 --> 55:28.300] I'm not after you. [55:28.300 --> 55:30.300] I'm just touching all the bases. [55:30.300 --> 55:32.300] I went through this lawsuit thing. [55:32.300 --> 55:34.300] So she's standing there looking at me like, [55:34.300 --> 55:38.300] this guy's going to kick my behind and he don't even care about me. [55:38.300 --> 55:39.300] Hang on. [55:39.300 --> 55:40.300] We'll care about it after the break. [55:40.300 --> 55:43.300] We'll be right back. [55:43.300 --> 55:46.300] The Bible remains the most popular book in the world, [55:46.300 --> 55:51.300] yet countless readers are frustrated because they struggle to understand it. [55:51.300 --> 55:54.300] Some new translations try to help by simplifying the text, [55:54.300 --> 55:59.300] but in the process can compromise the profound meaning of the scripture. [55:59.300 --> 56:02.300] Enter the recovery version. [56:02.300 --> 56:06.300] First, this new translation is extremely faithful and accurate, [56:06.300 --> 56:11.300] but the real story is the more than 9,000 explanatory footnotes. [56:11.300 --> 56:15.300] Difficult and profound passages are opened up in a marvelous way, [56:15.300 --> 56:21.300] providing an entrance into the riches of the word beyond which you've ever experienced before. [56:21.300 --> 56:26.300] Bibles for America would like to give you a free recovery version simply for the asking. [56:26.300 --> 56:36.300] This comprehensive yet compact study Bible is yours just by calling us toll free at 1-888-551-0102 [56:36.300 --> 56:40.300] or by ordering online at freestudybible.com. [56:40.300 --> 56:43.300] That's freestudybible.com. [56:43.300 --> 56:53.300] You're listening to the Logos Radio Network at logosradionetwork.com. [56:54.300 --> 56:58.300] The Bill of Rights contains the first 10 amendments of our Constitution. [56:58.300 --> 57:02.300] They guarantee the specific freedoms Americans should know and protect. [57:02.300 --> 57:03.300] Our liberty depends on it. [57:03.300 --> 57:10.300] I'm Dr. Catherine Albrecht, and I'll be right back with an unforgettable way to remember one of your constitutional rights. [57:10.300 --> 57:12.300] Privacy is under attack. [57:12.300 --> 57:15.300] When you give up data about yourself, you'll never get it back again. [57:15.300 --> 57:20.300] And once your privacy is gone, you'll find your freedoms will start to vanish too. [57:20.300 --> 57:25.300] So protect your rights, say no to surveillance, and keep your information to yourself. [57:25.300 --> 57:28.300] Privacy, it's worth hanging on to. [57:28.300 --> 57:35.300] This public service announcement is brought to you by StartPage.com, the private search engine alternative to Google, Yahoo, and Bing. [57:35.300 --> 57:38.300] Start over with StartPage. [57:38.300 --> 57:42.300] Most people think of seven as a more civilized number than six. [57:42.300 --> 57:47.300] Think of how the number six is implicated in evil, as in the biblical 666. [57:47.300 --> 57:51.300] So it would fit right in that the Seventh Amendment would be about civil trials. [57:51.300 --> 57:53.300] Civil seven, civil trials, get it? [57:53.300 --> 58:00.300] Civil trials are ones where people sue instead of beating each other up over a dispute, like the dividing line between properties. [58:00.300 --> 58:04.300] They take their dispute to a courthouse and settle matters civilly without the fisticuffs. [58:04.300 --> 58:12.300] The Seventh Amendment guarantees that Americans have the right to a jury in certain civil matters instead of having a lone judge rule on the case. [58:12.300 --> 58:17.300] I'm Dr. Catherine Albrecht. More news and information at CatherineAlbrecht.com. [58:24.300 --> 58:28.300] The Bill of Rights contains the first ten amendments of our Constitution. [58:28.300 --> 58:32.300] They guarantee the specific freedoms Americans should know and protect. [58:32.300 --> 58:34.300] Our liberty depends on it. [58:34.300 --> 58:40.300] I'm Dr. Catherine Albrecht, and I'll be right back with an unforgettable way to remember one of your constitutional rights. [58:40.300 --> 58:42.300] Privacy is under attack. [58:42.300 --> 58:46.300] When you give up data about yourself, you'll never get it back again. [58:46.300 --> 58:51.300] And once your privacy is gone, you'll find your freedoms will start to vanish, too. [58:51.300 --> 58:56.300] So protect your rights, say no to surveillance, and keep your information to yourself. [58:56.300 --> 58:58.300] Privacy, it's worth hanging on to. [58:58.300 --> 59:06.300] This public service announcement is brought to you by StartPage.com, the private search engine alternative to Google, Yahoo, and Bing. [59:06.300 --> 59:09.300] Start over with StartPage. [59:09.300 --> 59:15.300] Remember the scene in George Orwell's novel 1984 when Winston is threatened with his worst fear? [59:15.300 --> 59:19.300] That fear was having a cage of hungry rats unleashed on his face. [59:19.300 --> 59:23.300] But what if his worst fear was spiders, eight-legged spiders, to be exact? [59:23.300 --> 59:26.300] Getting a face full of spiders would be pretty cruel and unusual. [59:26.300 --> 59:30.300] That image of eight-legged spiders will help you remember the Eighth Amendment. [59:30.300 --> 59:37.300] Our founding fathers added the Eighth Amendment to the U.S. Constitution to protect us from creepy-crawly eight-legged punishments [59:37.300 --> 59:41.300] and other cruel and unusual prison practices that were common in their day. [59:41.300 --> 59:47.300] The Eighth Amendment also prohibits the government from requiring excessive bail and charging excessive fines. [59:47.300 --> 59:52.300] I'm Dr. Catherine Albrecht. More news and information at CatherineAlbrecht.com. [01:00:07.300 --> 01:00:09.300] Thank you. [01:00:37.300 --> 01:01:01.300] OK, we are back. [01:01:01.300 --> 01:01:09.300] I'm Randy Cowden, founder of Law Radio, on this Thursday, the 21st day of August 2025. [01:01:09.300 --> 01:01:14.300] And, Eric, I see you there. I'll finish this up shortly. [01:01:14.300 --> 01:01:16.300] There's a point I'm getting to. [01:01:16.300 --> 01:01:25.300] This is a republic, and we as citizens in a republic, it's time we took it back. [01:01:25.300 --> 01:01:34.300] And with Trump as our new president, I want to convince Trump that he doesn't need Doge, [01:01:34.300 --> 01:01:40.300] that he's got something better than Doge. He's got a grand jury. [01:01:40.300 --> 01:01:50.300] And if he opens the door to the federal grand jury so that any citizen can file criminal complaints anonymously with them, [01:01:50.300 --> 01:01:55.300] any bad stuff that's going on in government, the grand jury will find out about it. [01:01:55.300 --> 01:01:59.300] And if he gets an indictment, nobody can point a finger at him. [01:01:59.300 --> 01:02:04.300] So this is perfect. But I've got to be able to convince him of that. [01:02:04.300 --> 01:02:07.300] So I'm going to take—this wasn't the fight I wanted to have. [01:02:07.300 --> 01:02:13.300] I was crafting another one more carefully after federal judges and stuff, but I'll take them along with me. [01:02:13.300 --> 01:02:19.300] But I'm going to show how every step is horribly screwed up. [01:02:19.300 --> 01:02:23.300] And then it can only screw up because we can't get to a grand jury and fix it. [01:02:23.300 --> 01:02:32.300] So this complaint to the district attorney that doesn't give it to the grand jury, that goes to the crux of my issue, [01:02:32.300 --> 01:02:36.300] that all of these public officials are violating all of these laws, [01:02:36.300 --> 01:02:42.300] and they're only doing that because they're protected by the prosecuting attorney. [01:02:42.300 --> 01:02:53.300] So I'll hammer the prosecutor, and then I'll take a criminal complaint against the prosecutor to a district judge. [01:02:53.300 --> 01:03:02.300] And when he does issue a warrant, then I'll sue the district judge in his personal capacity. [01:03:02.300 --> 01:03:09.300] Probably since I'll qualify for inability to pay, I'll sue him in a district court. [01:03:09.300 --> 01:03:14.300] See how that works for you, Bubba. [01:03:14.300 --> 01:03:20.300] The whole point is, is get them to do dumb stuff to protect their buddies, [01:03:20.300 --> 01:03:25.300] so I can pile up the complaints and show a pattern of bad behavior. [01:03:25.300 --> 01:03:30.300] So when I get to Trump, I may convince him to have a second look at grand juries. [01:03:30.300 --> 01:03:37.300] What I want him to do is order U.S. attorneys, when they haven't made known to them that a crime has been committed, [01:03:37.300 --> 01:03:45.300] they are to stand aside and let the accuser give notice to the grand jury, [01:03:45.300 --> 01:03:48.300] because it is a fourth branch of government. [01:03:48.300 --> 01:03:52.300] To do anything else would be to violate separation of powers. [01:03:52.300 --> 01:03:54.300] Yeah, to interfere. [01:03:54.300 --> 01:03:55.300] If I can talk him into it. [01:03:55.300 --> 01:03:57.300] It's really a simple thing to do. [01:03:57.300 --> 01:04:02.300] It's not like you have to come up with a complex procedure or something. [01:04:02.300 --> 01:04:04.300] It's just a very simple thing. [01:04:04.300 --> 01:04:07.300] We don't need any new law. [01:04:07.300 --> 01:04:13.300] I'll sue for a petition for declaratory judgment. [01:04:13.300 --> 01:04:20.300] If you petition for declaratory judgment, you pretty well get around Rule 12. [01:04:20.300 --> 01:04:23.300] Rule 12b-6, failure to state a claim. [01:04:23.300 --> 01:04:26.300] Well, declaratory judgment doesn't have any claims. [01:04:26.300 --> 01:04:29.300] Rule 12b-1, immunity. [01:04:29.300 --> 01:04:32.300] Well, there are no claims, so there's nothing to be immune from. [01:04:32.300 --> 01:04:37.300] So you bypass 12b and go right to discovery, [01:04:37.300 --> 01:04:41.300] and that's the one place they do not want to go. [01:04:41.300 --> 01:04:42.300] Yeah. [01:04:42.300 --> 01:04:46.300] I'm going to stop now, because had Eric's been on here a while, [01:04:46.300 --> 01:04:48.300] and hadn't talked to him in a while. [01:04:48.300 --> 01:04:52.300] Eric, what are you up to? [01:04:52.300 --> 01:04:55.300] Gentleman, good to always talk to you. [01:04:55.300 --> 01:04:57.300] You are super, super light. [01:04:57.300 --> 01:04:59.300] I can barely hear you. [01:04:59.300 --> 01:05:00.300] You can barely hear me? [01:05:00.300 --> 01:05:02.300] How about now? Is that better? [01:05:02.300 --> 01:05:05.300] No, you sound like you're a mile away. [01:05:05.300 --> 01:05:08.300] Super distant. [01:05:08.300 --> 01:05:16.300] What if I put it on speaker? Is that better? [01:05:16.300 --> 01:05:18.300] That's no better. [01:05:18.300 --> 01:05:20.300] No better, huh? [01:05:20.300 --> 01:05:22.300] Maybe even a little bit worse. [01:05:22.300 --> 01:05:26.300] It sounds like you're very far from the phone. [01:05:26.300 --> 01:05:27.300] I'm next to it. [01:05:27.300 --> 01:05:33.300] I've never had a problem in the past. [01:05:33.300 --> 01:05:34.300] All right. [01:05:34.300 --> 01:05:35.300] Well, go ahead. [01:05:35.300 --> 01:05:38.300] Let's just do the best we can. [01:05:38.300 --> 01:05:39.300] Okay. [01:05:39.300 --> 01:05:43.300] I'll try and talk as loud as I can. [01:05:43.300 --> 01:05:44.300] Okay. [01:05:44.300 --> 01:05:50.300] So Brett helped me with some guidance this morning, which was awesome. [01:05:50.300 --> 01:06:03.300] So I am in the First Circuit trying to get a standing for my judge case, [01:06:03.300 --> 01:06:08.300] judges not being judges case, in the federal court. [01:06:08.300 --> 01:06:11.300] My question is pretty simple. [01:06:11.300 --> 01:06:17.300] The petition is for reconsideration on standing, [01:06:17.300 --> 01:06:21.300] which I've written that whole section. [01:06:21.300 --> 01:06:30.300] The federal court denied my fairly on standing. [01:06:30.300 --> 01:06:35.300] There was no reply from the defendant. [01:06:35.300 --> 01:06:44.300] So what needs to be included in this petition for standing in the First Circuit? [01:06:44.300 --> 01:06:46.300] What are all of these things? [01:06:46.300 --> 01:06:49.300] You have a lot of facts in your head, Eric. [01:06:49.300 --> 01:06:56.300] A lot of these facts that you know need to be brought out with simple [01:06:56.300 --> 01:07:00.300] and explicit assertions. [01:07:00.300 --> 01:07:04.300] You need to make statements of those facts. [01:07:04.300 --> 01:07:12.300] Like you know that you have a right that's a right to due process. [01:07:12.300 --> 01:07:17.300] So like instead of saying you assume that everybody has a right, [01:07:17.300 --> 01:07:19.300] don't say it like that. [01:07:19.300 --> 01:07:24.300] Say I have a right to the due process of law. [01:07:24.300 --> 01:07:31.300] Say I have a right to expect my public officials to follow the constitutional restrictions that are in place. [01:07:31.300 --> 01:07:38.300] Yeah, and at the same time, say I have a right to procedural due process under this code [01:07:38.300 --> 01:07:41.300] or in accordance with this case law. [01:07:41.300 --> 01:07:43.300] Yes. [01:07:43.300 --> 01:07:50.300] And you also know some facts like this judge is a certain age. [01:07:50.300 --> 01:07:55.300] So when you are saying he's too old to be a judge, [01:07:55.300 --> 01:08:00.300] constitutionally you're saying it's a statutory impossibility. [01:08:00.300 --> 01:08:05.300] But instead of just saying that's a conclusive kind of a way to put it. [01:08:05.300 --> 01:08:09.300] To say that it's a statutory impossibility. [01:08:09.300 --> 01:08:12.300] And they can't really do anything with that. [01:08:12.300 --> 01:08:18.300] But if you put the facts in front of them, you say he's 74 years old [01:08:18.300 --> 01:08:24.300] and the constitution says the max is 70. [01:08:24.300 --> 01:08:28.300] You know, you put those facts out there and you say [01:08:28.300 --> 01:08:33.300] he turned 70 on whatever day and you put that date in there. [01:08:33.300 --> 01:08:35.300] Now you've got a statement of fact. [01:08:35.300 --> 01:08:41.300] And then you say on this date and this date and that date, [01:08:41.300 --> 01:08:48.300] which are after he turned 70, he acted or purported to act as if he were still a judge. [01:08:48.300 --> 01:08:53.300] Now you've asserted some actual facts. [01:08:53.300 --> 01:08:55.300] See the difference? [01:08:55.300 --> 01:08:56.300] Absolutely. [01:08:56.300 --> 01:09:00.300] That's a really good point because this is such an unusual, [01:09:00.300 --> 01:09:07.300] at least to me it feels like a very unusual, try to get standing. [01:09:07.300 --> 01:09:12.300] It's normal but it's also normally when you have standing it's easy to point to [01:09:12.300 --> 01:09:18.300] here is my harm but my harm in this is so more vaporous. [01:09:18.300 --> 01:09:20.300] No, no, your harm is not vaporous. [01:09:20.300 --> 01:09:23.300] No, due process is all you need. [01:09:23.300 --> 01:09:26.300] This is procedural due process. [01:09:26.300 --> 01:09:30.300] You know, when we talk about examining trial and they say, [01:09:30.300 --> 01:09:33.300] oh you don't have a right to examining trial in a misdemeanor. [01:09:33.300 --> 01:09:35.300] And I say that's right, you don't. [01:09:35.300 --> 01:09:40.300] You do not have a right to examining trial at all. [01:09:40.300 --> 01:09:45.300] There is nothing that gives you a right to an examining trial. [01:09:45.300 --> 01:09:52.300] However, the law specifically commands public officials to hold an [01:09:52.300 --> 01:09:55.300] examining trial. [01:09:55.300 --> 01:10:01.300] That goes to procedural due process and procedural due process is [01:10:01.300 --> 01:10:09.300] something you have a right to and a denial of due process is harm per se. [01:10:09.300 --> 01:10:16.300] So you have a right to a competent judge in the first instance and the [01:10:16.300 --> 01:10:26.300] Constitution of Massachusetts declares that a person over the age of 70 is [01:10:26.300 --> 01:10:32.300] not a competent person for this purpose. [01:10:32.300 --> 01:10:37.300] Therefore, I've been denied procedural due process. [01:10:37.300 --> 01:10:39.300] Does that make sense? [01:10:39.300 --> 01:10:41.300] Absolutely, absolutely. [01:10:41.300 --> 01:10:46.300] It's a good thing to have this conversation. [01:10:46.300 --> 01:10:53.300] Yeah, because a lot of times we are, you're totally right in your thinking [01:10:53.300 --> 01:10:58.300] that this is an issue and you're totally right in bringing it up and a lot of [01:10:58.300 --> 01:11:04.300] times we are mistaken in even subconsciously thinking that justice is [01:11:04.300 --> 01:11:10.300] going to automatically happen once it gets in front of the right eyes, then [01:11:10.300 --> 01:11:14.300] they're going to figure out what's wrong here. [01:11:14.300 --> 01:11:18.300] If you can just get it in front of them, but it's not automatic, it's never [01:11:18.300 --> 01:11:22.300] automatic, you have to put all the pieces, every little piece, you have to [01:11:22.300 --> 01:11:27.300] spell it all out for them, cite it, quote it, put it there in front of their [01:11:27.300 --> 01:11:31.300] eyes where they can't miss it, make simple statements that are not [01:11:31.300 --> 01:11:34.300] conclusory, they're evidentiary fact. [01:11:34.300 --> 01:11:36.300] Is the guy a certain age? [01:11:36.300 --> 01:11:38.300] That's either true or false. [01:11:38.300 --> 01:11:43.300] You're making a statement of fact and yeah, everything that's not automatic [01:11:43.300 --> 01:11:48.300] then becomes cut and dried where they can't easily get around it. [01:11:48.300 --> 01:11:50.300] Think about the judge this way. [01:11:50.300 --> 01:11:58.300] I once sat as a mock judge in a mock trial in Massachusetts and taking that [01:11:58.300 --> 01:12:02.300] position was a real eye-opener for me. [01:12:02.300 --> 01:12:07.300] This was a guy who had filed some liens against some officials in Pennsylvania [01:12:07.300 --> 01:12:09.300] and Pennsylvania was coming after him. [01:12:09.300 --> 01:12:14.300] He's got him and his buddy, they're all preaching this patriot mythology stuff. [01:12:14.300 --> 01:12:20.300] They had picked a mock jury right off the street and got people to agree to [01:12:20.300 --> 01:12:25.300] sit and they're saying all this stuff and I'm sitting here thinking I'm the [01:12:25.300 --> 01:12:31.300] judge, I may only determine the facts in accordance with the rules of [01:12:31.300 --> 01:12:39.300] evidence, then apply the law as it comes to me, not as I know it to be, but as [01:12:39.300 --> 01:12:44.300] it comes to me to the facts in the case. [01:12:44.300 --> 01:12:46.300] That's all I can do. [01:12:46.300 --> 01:12:52.300] So they're giving me a lot of theoretical bull crap and I'm sitting here [01:12:52.300 --> 01:12:58.300] strumming my fingers, okay, you guys, I'm part of this movement, kind of on your [01:12:58.300 --> 01:13:03.300] side, but I can't hear any of that. [01:13:03.300 --> 01:13:11.300] I can only hear established facts and then I may only hear law as it applies to [01:13:11.300 --> 01:13:13.300] those facts. [01:13:13.300 --> 01:13:19.300] You're going to give me your opinion about how this law applies to those facts. [01:13:19.300 --> 01:13:25.300] The other side is going to give their opinion of how the law they bring applies [01:13:25.300 --> 01:13:30.300] to the facts and I'm going to find equity in the middle. [01:13:30.300 --> 01:13:32.300] You got an opinion? [01:13:32.300 --> 01:13:34.300] It means nothing. [01:13:34.300 --> 01:13:39.300] And I was sitting there and they're rattling on about this stuff and I'm [01:13:39.300 --> 01:13:47.300] thinking these guys go to jail and I'm the judge, I can't do anything about it. [01:13:47.300 --> 01:13:52.300] I have a friend who's a county judge here in Wise County and he talks about the [01:13:52.300 --> 01:13:54.300] same thing. [01:13:54.300 --> 01:13:57.300] Are you looking to have a closer relationship with God and a better [01:13:57.300 --> 01:13:59.300] understanding of his word? [01:13:59.300 --> 01:14:03.300] Then tune in to LogosRadioNetwork.com on Wednesdays from 8 to 10 p.m. Central [01:14:03.300 --> 01:14:07.300] Time for scripture talk where Nana and her guests discuss the scriptures in [01:14:07.300 --> 01:14:10.300] accord with 2 Timothy 2.15. [01:14:10.300 --> 01:14:15.300] Study to show thyself approved unto God, a workman that needed not to be ashamed, [01:14:15.300 --> 01:14:17.300] rightly dividing the word of truth. [01:14:17.300 --> 01:14:21.300] Starting in January, our first hour studies are in the book of Mark where we'll [01:14:21.300 --> 01:14:25.300] go verse by verse and discuss the true gospel message. [01:14:25.300 --> 01:14:29.300] Our second hour topical studies will vary each week with discussions on sound [01:14:29.300 --> 01:14:32.300] doctrine and Christian character development. [01:14:32.300 --> 01:14:35.300] We wish to reflect God's light and be a blessing to all those with a hearing [01:14:35.300 --> 01:14:36.300] ear. [01:14:36.300 --> 01:14:40.300] Our goal is to strengthen our faith and to transform ourselves more into the [01:14:40.300 --> 01:14:43.300] likeness of our Lord and Savior Jesus. [01:14:43.300 --> 01:14:48.300] So tune in to scripture talk live on LogosRadioNetwork.com Wednesdays from 8 [01:14:48.300 --> 01:14:53.300] to 10 p.m. to inspire and motivate your studies of the scriptures. [01:14:53.300 --> 01:14:58.300] Through advances in technology our lives have greatly improved except in the [01:14:58.300 --> 01:15:00.300] area of nutrition. [01:15:00.300 --> 01:15:04.300] People feed their pets better than they feed themselves and it's time we changed [01:15:04.300 --> 01:15:05.300] all that. [01:15:05.300 --> 01:15:10.300] Our primary defense against aging and disease in this toxic environment is good [01:15:10.300 --> 01:15:11.300] nutrition. 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[01:15:52.300 --> 01:15:54.300] Order now. [01:15:54.300 --> 01:16:04.300] This is the Logos, Logos Radio Network. [01:16:04.300 --> 01:16:06.300] Thank you. [01:16:34.300 --> 01:16:49.300] We're talking to Eric in Massachusetts and Eric, I'm talking to you but I'm really [01:16:49.300 --> 01:16:51.300] talking to everybody. [01:16:51.300 --> 01:16:57.300] The judge, the only thing you can do is hear the facts. [01:16:57.300 --> 01:17:04.300] If someone says anything to him that is an opinion and is not an established fact, [01:17:04.300 --> 01:17:06.300] he can't hear it. [01:17:06.300 --> 01:17:09.300] He can only hear what are facts. [01:17:09.300 --> 01:17:17.300] And then you must take the law as it comes to him and apply it to the facts. [01:17:17.300 --> 01:17:25.300] Most people think you can go into court and you just tell the truth and you give good [01:17:25.300 --> 01:17:27.300] reason that they'll find in your favor. [01:17:27.300 --> 01:17:30.300] It's not like that in court. [01:17:30.300 --> 01:17:32.300] It's just more mechanical. [01:17:32.300 --> 01:17:39.300] The judge only has two duties, determine the facts in court, prove evidence, apply the [01:17:39.300 --> 01:17:42.300] law as it comes to him to the facts in the case. [01:17:42.300 --> 01:17:49.300] So never make a statement of law out of your own mouth. [01:17:50.300 --> 01:17:56.300] You always must make statements of law out of the mouth of the legislature or the courts. [01:17:56.300 --> 01:18:07.300] He did this thing and this thing and according to this statute or this case law, these two [01:18:07.300 --> 01:18:10.300] things amount to this. [01:18:10.300 --> 01:18:12.300] That's it. [01:18:12.300 --> 01:18:14.300] Anything else is purposeful. [01:18:14.300 --> 01:18:17.300] Does that make sense Eric? [01:18:17.300 --> 01:18:20.300] You still have the music playing right now. [01:18:20.300 --> 01:18:23.300] Oh, my bad, my bad. [01:18:23.300 --> 01:18:28.300] Brett got called away and I just forgot to hit the second button and turn the music off. [01:18:28.300 --> 01:18:30.300] I can't hear it. [01:18:30.300 --> 01:18:35.300] We have a suppressor and so when I'm talking, everything else is suppressed below me so I [01:18:35.300 --> 01:18:36.300] can't hear it. [01:18:36.300 --> 01:18:39.300] Okay. [01:18:39.300 --> 01:18:46.300] Okay, and I think I know why I'm having a hard time with this because I'm trying not to [01:18:46.300 --> 01:18:55.300] disappoint directly at my judge because I don't want it to seem like the only reason [01:18:55.300 --> 01:19:01.300] I'm doing this is to get rid of this judge. [01:19:01.300 --> 01:19:07.300] At the end of the day, that should not matter. [01:19:07.300 --> 01:19:09.300] Yeah. [01:19:10.300 --> 01:19:18.300] Keep in mind, everything you're doing in the trial court is merely setting the record for [01:19:18.300 --> 01:19:20.300] appeal. [01:19:20.300 --> 01:19:24.300] The trial court, they try to find equity. [01:19:24.300 --> 01:19:31.300] They try to find an equitable solution for the parties. [01:19:31.300 --> 01:19:34.300] The appellate court does not do that. [01:19:34.300 --> 01:19:37.300] The appellate court, they make law. [01:19:37.300 --> 01:19:39.300] They rule becomes law. [01:19:39.300 --> 01:19:43.300] So what's equitable for the parties, they really don't care so much about. [01:19:43.300 --> 01:19:48.300] What is that? [01:19:48.300 --> 01:19:51.300] Oh, I'm sorry. [01:19:51.300 --> 01:19:53.300] My phone went off. [01:19:53.300 --> 01:19:55.300] Okay. [01:19:55.300 --> 01:20:04.300] The appellate court, they want to maintain the sanctity of the corpus juris because what [01:20:04.300 --> 01:20:06.300] they rule, other lawyers can use. [01:20:06.300 --> 01:20:12.300] So they have a whole different agenda than the judge does, the trial judge. [01:20:12.300 --> 01:20:19.300] For them, all they can see are the facts that are put before the court and the law that's [01:20:19.300 --> 01:20:23.300] put before the court as it applies to those facts. [01:20:23.300 --> 01:20:33.300] It is a paradigm shift, and it's hard for most people who are used to living an orderly [01:20:33.300 --> 01:20:45.300] life where they deal with rational and reasonable people who will hear well-crafted arguments [01:20:45.300 --> 01:20:51.300] and come to the kind of conclusions you want them to, that's not how it works in the [01:20:51.300 --> 01:20:53.300] appellate court. [01:20:53.300 --> 01:20:59.300] They must look at the facts that were properly put before the court, look at the law that [01:20:59.300 --> 01:21:03.300] was put before the court, and apply those too. [01:21:03.300 --> 01:21:05.300] That's all they can do. [01:21:05.300 --> 01:21:07.300] It's a different strategy. [01:21:07.300 --> 01:21:12.300] It's not any more difficult than what we would do anyway. [01:21:12.300 --> 01:21:16.300] It's just a different strategy. [01:21:16.300 --> 01:21:20.300] Am I making sense or am I just rambling? [01:21:20.300 --> 01:21:22.300] No, no, it makes sense. [01:21:22.300 --> 01:21:28.300] It is a real challenging thing to the mind to really wrap your head around this and applying [01:21:28.300 --> 01:21:38.300] how these federal rules and due process and procedural due process apply to your case. [01:21:38.300 --> 01:21:41.300] It is a very challenging thing. [01:21:41.300 --> 01:21:50.300] My main question is really, okay, now that I've established my standing argument, which [01:21:50.300 --> 01:21:56.300] I've done today, what else would need to be included in this appellate brief in terms [01:21:56.300 --> 01:21:58.300] of my previous argument? [01:21:58.300 --> 01:22:01.300] Because all I'm fighting for is standing. [01:22:01.300 --> 01:22:07.300] I just want them to grant me standing and then send me back to the federal court, remand [01:22:07.300 --> 01:22:09.300] me back to the federal court. [01:22:09.300 --> 01:22:11.300] What else do I need? [01:22:11.300 --> 01:22:15.300] All you need for standing is procedural due process. [01:22:15.300 --> 01:22:22.300] There are two kinds of due process, one of substantive due process and one of procedural [01:22:22.300 --> 01:22:24.300] due process. [01:22:25.300 --> 01:22:31.300] Substantive due process doesn't necessarily follow the exact letter of the law, but it [01:22:31.300 --> 01:22:35.300] goes to the overall application of law. [01:22:35.300 --> 01:22:41.300] It must be applied so that a citizen can achieve justice. [01:22:41.300 --> 01:22:44.300] It goes closer to equity. [01:22:44.300 --> 01:22:46.300] You're not talking about that. [01:22:46.300 --> 01:22:50.300] You're talking about procedural due process. [01:22:50.300 --> 01:22:57.300] The law says this, and these guys don't get to change that just because they don't [01:22:57.300 --> 01:22:59.300] like it. [01:22:59.300 --> 01:23:05.300] You, as a citizen in a republic in Massachusetts, must be a republic. [01:23:05.300 --> 01:23:12.300] Have a right to a reasonable expectation that your public officials will follow the law [01:23:12.300 --> 01:23:14.300] the way it's written. [01:23:14.300 --> 01:23:19.300] They've sworn on their oath that they would do that. [01:23:19.300 --> 01:23:26.300] And in spite of what Barker Wingo says, they must do what they swore on their oath they [01:23:26.300 --> 01:23:31.300] would do, whether you demand that they do it or not. [01:23:31.300 --> 01:23:38.300] So when they fail to do what they specifically swore on their oath they would do, you have [01:23:38.300 --> 01:23:48.300] standing, as a citizen in a republic, to make a claim of denial of procedural due process. [01:23:48.300 --> 01:23:54.300] You've got a right to expect that the law will be enforced the way it's written. [01:23:54.300 --> 01:23:59.300] It is a reasonable thing for a citizen in an organized society. [01:23:59.300 --> 01:24:06.300] Without it, you have anarchy, and that's what we've got right now. [01:24:06.300 --> 01:24:08.300] That's for sure. [01:24:08.300 --> 01:24:13.300] So again, what else needs to be in this appellate brief? [01:24:13.300 --> 01:24:16.300] Well, yours seems pretty straightforward. [01:24:16.300 --> 01:24:22.300] Is this a constitutional provision that prevents a judge from ruling over 70? [01:24:22.300 --> 01:24:24.300] Yes. [01:24:24.300 --> 01:24:35.300] There can be no law that can be interpreted in a way that would render a constitutional [01:24:35.300 --> 01:24:41.300] provision superfluous, regardless of what the law is. [01:24:41.300 --> 01:24:42.300] Go ahead, Brett. [01:24:42.300 --> 01:24:46.300] Let me just ask a quick question for clarification. [01:24:46.300 --> 01:24:49.300] You're talking about an appellate brief. [01:24:49.300 --> 01:25:01.300] So it sounds like you're appealing the decision to dismiss your claim, your original documents [01:25:01.300 --> 01:25:06.300] there, your primary pleadings, to dismiss for lack of standing. [01:25:06.300 --> 01:25:12.300] And I think that the judge did not err in that. [01:25:12.300 --> 01:25:19.300] If you're going to ask the appellate court to deal with this, it should be only in a [01:25:19.300 --> 01:25:21.300] very narrow focus. [01:25:21.300 --> 01:25:31.300] I would suggest that you insist on being allowed to amend your pleadings, rather than, since [01:25:31.300 --> 01:25:36.300] you said that you were not allowed to amend, rather than have the whole thing dismissed, [01:25:36.300 --> 01:25:38.300] you need to be able to amend. [01:25:38.300 --> 01:25:42.300] Because really, this belongs, it should just, you could either start fresh or you could [01:25:42.300 --> 01:25:48.300] amend your pleadings, but the appellate court can't address the merits of the case or address [01:25:48.300 --> 01:25:49.300] well. [01:25:49.300 --> 01:25:52.300] He said he didn't have standing now, but now he's explained it and we really get it. [01:25:52.300 --> 01:25:54.300] So now let's just say he has standing. [01:25:54.300 --> 01:25:57.300] No, they're only looking at judicial error. [01:25:57.300 --> 01:26:01.300] Did the judge err in saying that you don't have standing? [01:26:01.300 --> 01:26:02.300] See what I mean? [01:26:02.300 --> 01:26:10.300] Well, if he mentioned the constitutional provision, he's got standing. [01:26:10.300 --> 01:26:19.300] Well, I took a look at the document and I would agree with the judge that it was way [01:26:19.300 --> 01:26:25.300] too vague and didn't tie any facts at all, zero facts. [01:26:25.300 --> 01:26:31.300] So I don't think the judge, I don't think it could be called judicial error. [01:26:31.300 --> 01:26:35.300] I mean, obviously the judge is going to look at that. [01:26:35.300 --> 01:26:37.300] He's going to know what Eric is talking about. [01:26:37.300 --> 01:26:39.300] He's going to be able to put the pieces together. [01:26:39.300 --> 01:26:40.300] He's a human being. [01:26:40.300 --> 01:26:44.300] He can read this and understand what Eric is trying to say, but Eric didn't say it. [01:26:44.300 --> 01:26:51.300] So in the four corners of the document, he can't really treat it like he does have standing. [01:26:51.300 --> 01:26:56.300] Eric. [01:26:56.300 --> 01:27:03.300] Reality TV, sugar, obesity, jet lag, the list of things that makes us dumber just keeps on growing. [01:27:03.300 --> 01:27:06.300] But now researchers say we can add stress to the list. [01:27:06.300 --> 01:27:10.300] I'm Dr. Catherine Albrecht, back with details in a moment. 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[01:27:49.300 --> 01:27:53.300] A new study finds stress reduces the number of connections between neurons, [01:27:53.300 --> 01:27:57.300] which actually makes it harder for people to manage problems. [01:27:57.300 --> 01:28:03.300] Researchers at Yale University found that stressed out people have less gray matter in their prefrontal cortex. [01:28:03.300 --> 01:28:09.300] That's the part of the brain that helps us weigh conflicting ideas and regulate our emotions. [01:28:09.300 --> 01:28:11.300] So take a deep breath and chill out. [01:28:11.300 --> 01:28:14.300] It'll help keep your mind as sharp as a tack. [01:28:14.300 --> 01:28:19.300] I'm Dr. Catherine Albrecht for Startpage.com, the world's most private search engine. [01:28:44.300 --> 01:28:45.300] I'm a structural engineer. [01:28:45.300 --> 01:28:46.300] I'm a New York City correction officer. [01:28:46.300 --> 01:28:47.300] I'm an Air Force pilot. [01:28:47.300 --> 01:28:49.300] I'm a father who lost his son. [01:28:49.300 --> 01:28:51.300] We're Americans, and we deserve the truth. [01:28:51.300 --> 01:28:56.300] Go to RememberBuilding7.org today. [01:28:56.300 --> 01:28:59.300] Rule of Law Radio is proud to offer the Rule of Law traffic seminar. [01:28:59.300 --> 01:29:01.300] In today's America, we live in an us-against-them society, [01:29:01.300 --> 01:29:04.300] and if we the people are ever going to have a free society, [01:29:04.300 --> 01:29:06.300] then we're going to have to stand and defend our own rights. [01:29:06.300 --> 01:29:09.300] Among those rights are the right to travel freely from place to place, [01:29:09.300 --> 01:29:11.300] the right to act in our own private capacity, [01:29:11.300 --> 01:29:13.300] and most importantly, the right to due process of law. [01:29:13.300 --> 01:29:16.300] Traffic courts afford us the least expensive opportunity [01:29:16.300 --> 01:29:19.300] to learn how to enforce and preserve our rights through due process. 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[01:29:44.300 --> 01:29:46.300] Learn how to fight for your rights with the help of this material [01:29:46.300 --> 01:29:48.300] from ruleoflawradio.com. [01:29:48.300 --> 01:29:50.300] Order your copy today, and together we can have [01:29:50.300 --> 01:29:53.300] the free society we all want and deserve. [01:29:55.300 --> 01:29:58.300] You are listening to the Logos Radio Network, [01:29:58.300 --> 01:30:01.300] logosradionetwork.com. [01:30:01.300 --> 01:30:03.300] Thank you. [01:30:31.300 --> 01:30:35.300] Chippin' up your B.A.B. Chippin' up your family, whole family. [01:30:35.300 --> 01:30:37.300] Chippin' up your dog and the cat around we. [01:30:37.300 --> 01:30:40.300] Chippin' up the beef and you still go eat it. [01:30:40.300 --> 01:30:42.300] Chippin' up the fish, them all in the sea. [01:30:42.300 --> 01:30:45.300] Chippin' up the shark and the whale around me. [01:30:45.300 --> 01:30:47.300] You must be mankind, you can't chip crazy. [01:30:47.300 --> 01:30:50.300] Brett did that on me. Okay. [01:30:50.300 --> 01:30:53.300] Brett's got to go take care of some business. I'll finish this off. [01:30:53.300 --> 01:30:57.300] But Eric, I talked to Brett, so I kind of got an understanding [01:30:57.300 --> 01:30:59.300] of where you're at. [01:30:59.300 --> 01:31:06.300] What I suggest is you file a petition for a writ of mandamus [01:31:06.300 --> 01:31:11.300] to the appellate court and tell the appellate court [01:31:11.300 --> 01:31:19.300] that the judge's criticisms are well taken [01:31:19.300 --> 01:31:24.300] and that you are a pro se litigant and you are struggling to learn [01:31:24.300 --> 01:31:29.300] and you take learning from the judge's criticisms [01:31:29.300 --> 01:31:33.300] and would ask the court to give you opportunity to amend your pleading [01:31:33.300 --> 01:31:37.300] to correct the errors pointed out by the judge [01:31:37.300 --> 01:31:45.300] and include your amended pleading with your request for the mandamus [01:31:45.300 --> 01:31:49.300] so that the appellate court can look at it and say, [01:31:49.300 --> 01:31:54.300] yes, this is valid, this has standing and substance. [01:31:54.300 --> 01:31:56.300] And then they'll order the court. [01:31:56.300 --> 01:32:00.300] And this will not hurt the judge's feelings [01:32:00.300 --> 01:32:04.300] because they do this kind of stuff all the time. [01:32:04.300 --> 01:32:12.300] It is the place of the appellate court to give advice to the lower courts. [01:32:12.300 --> 01:32:17.300] So if they tell him that this is something in that inequity, [01:32:17.300 --> 01:32:21.300] he should have a right to amend, they will. [01:32:21.300 --> 01:32:27.300] And then even if they don't, then you appeal that. [01:32:27.300 --> 01:32:31.300] But this is not... [01:32:31.300 --> 01:32:39.300] Obsessed pro ses, we tend to take this combative position against the courts. [01:32:39.300 --> 01:32:43.300] And it's really not that way if we do it carefully. [01:32:43.300 --> 01:32:50.300] These are...the judges want to find an equitable solution for everyone. [01:32:50.300 --> 01:32:53.300] And this is primarily their job. [01:32:53.300 --> 01:32:59.300] So if you speak to them with dignity and respect [01:32:59.300 --> 01:33:09.300] and give them your amended pleading or... [01:33:09.300 --> 01:33:13.300] What was the last document you filed that they ruled against? [01:33:13.300 --> 01:33:22.300] Well, basically, I filed into the appeals court a motion for... [01:33:22.300 --> 01:33:23.300] Excuse me. [01:33:23.300 --> 01:33:25.300] I basically filed an appeal. [01:33:25.300 --> 01:33:31.300] So now they're expecting an appellate brief. [01:33:31.300 --> 01:33:43.300] You're past the point of being able to get a mandamus. [01:33:43.300 --> 01:33:45.300] I have to think about this. [01:33:45.300 --> 01:33:47.300] If you're stuck with having to do an appellate brief, [01:33:47.300 --> 01:33:52.300] then you can at least focus on your... [01:33:52.300 --> 01:33:55.300] You're trying to take the criticisms of the judge and fix your pleadings, [01:33:55.300 --> 01:33:57.300] but he wouldn't let you fix your pleadings. [01:33:57.300 --> 01:33:59.300] Your pleadings need to be fixed, and that's what you want to do. [01:33:59.300 --> 01:34:03.300] So please tell the judge to let me fix my pleadings. [01:34:03.300 --> 01:34:05.300] He's kind of late for that. [01:34:05.300 --> 01:34:10.300] He's already in the appellate process. [01:34:10.300 --> 01:34:11.300] If the issue... [01:34:11.300 --> 01:34:13.300] Okay, I'm thinking of the rules. [01:34:13.300 --> 01:34:18.300] If the issue has been brought, [01:34:18.300 --> 01:34:25.300] if you have raised the issue that the Constitution forbids a judge to... [01:34:25.300 --> 01:34:31.300] or the Constitution has determined that a judge is no longer competent after 70, [01:34:31.300 --> 01:34:35.300] if that is before the court, that's enough. [01:34:35.300 --> 01:34:42.300] And that's absolutely one of the things I do argue with the whole EEOC idea, [01:34:42.300 --> 01:34:44.300] because they did, as I've told you many times, [01:34:44.300 --> 01:34:51.300] they've done three cases in 1988 where one of the judges wanted to be a retired judge. [01:34:51.300 --> 01:34:54.300] He wanted to continue working past 70. [01:34:54.300 --> 01:34:58.300] He wasn't one of the special people who got to work past 70, [01:34:58.300 --> 01:35:03.300] so he said based on ADA laws, age discrimination, [01:35:03.300 --> 01:35:09.300] he should be able to... both the State Supreme Court, the Federal District Court, [01:35:09.300 --> 01:35:15.300] and the First Circuit Court all agreed that 70-year-old judges are incompetent. [01:35:15.300 --> 01:35:17.300] Yeah, so that's... [01:35:17.300 --> 01:35:22.300] Did you cite that in your pleadings in the trial court? [01:35:22.300 --> 01:35:24.300] Absolutely. [01:35:24.300 --> 01:35:27.300] Then you're good. [01:35:27.300 --> 01:35:32.300] Readdress that to the appellate court. [01:35:32.300 --> 01:35:36.300] Brett said he read your pleading, and he was uncomfortable with it, [01:35:36.300 --> 01:35:44.300] because it was not clear enough, and that's why I keep stressing this same thing. [01:35:44.300 --> 01:35:46.300] Facts of all, facts of all, facts of all. [01:35:46.300 --> 01:35:48.300] Screw the opinions. [01:35:48.300 --> 01:35:50.300] I absolutely agree. [01:35:50.300 --> 01:35:56.300] If you fix that now, as long as that issue is before the court, [01:35:56.300 --> 01:36:02.300] you can re-argue the issue on appeal. [01:36:02.300 --> 01:36:05.300] Really what I'm doing is re-arguing standing. [01:36:05.300 --> 01:36:11.300] I think I like the fact that you say, hey, agree with the judge. [01:36:11.300 --> 01:36:13.300] This needs to be expanded. [01:36:13.300 --> 01:36:20.300] However, I did argue these points, which speak to, you know, constitutionality. [01:36:20.300 --> 01:36:29.300] And argue that constitutionality goes to your right to have a reasonable expectation [01:36:29.300 --> 01:36:36.300] that the laws will be enforced the way the legislature intended. [01:36:36.300 --> 01:36:44.300] That's your right to a procedural due process. [01:36:44.300 --> 01:36:50.300] Procedural due process is a nice kind of catch-all, and the judge will get that. [01:36:50.300 --> 01:36:54.300] That doesn't say that you personally have been damaged by this. [01:36:54.300 --> 01:36:57.300] It doesn't matter. [01:36:57.300 --> 01:37:04.300] You have a right, as a citizen in a republic, to expect that your public officials [01:37:04.300 --> 01:37:07.300] will follow the law the way it's written. [01:37:07.300 --> 01:37:10.300] If they don't, then they've harmed you. [01:37:10.300 --> 01:37:16.300] Procedural due process, harm per se. [01:37:16.300 --> 01:37:17.300] Does that make sense? [01:37:17.300 --> 01:37:19.300] Right. [01:37:19.300 --> 01:37:25.300] It does, and I think it's threading the needle on this one. [01:37:25.300 --> 01:37:29.300] This one's important. [01:37:29.300 --> 01:37:35.300] This goes to the difference between a democracy and a republic. [01:37:35.300 --> 01:37:37.300] You are a citizen in a republic. [01:37:37.300 --> 01:37:40.300] Everybody answers to you. [01:37:40.300 --> 01:37:48.300] The oath they swore, the oath of office, they swore to you personally. [01:37:48.300 --> 01:37:56.300] If they breach that oath, they've harmed you personally. [01:37:56.300 --> 01:38:04.300] Write your brief from that perspective. [01:38:04.300 --> 01:38:07.300] Right, okay. [01:38:07.300 --> 01:38:10.300] This is a good education. [01:38:10.300 --> 01:38:16.300] Once you've been through these one time, and the next time you come to one of these, [01:38:16.300 --> 01:38:22.300] this stuff will be, you'll get to take a giant leap forward. [01:38:22.300 --> 01:38:25.300] It's like I was talking about at the beginning of the show. [01:38:25.300 --> 01:38:30.300] I've done this a bunch of times and figured out what goes well, what doesn't go well. [01:38:30.300 --> 01:38:38.300] Now I'm just going in and saying, this is precisely what the law says. [01:38:38.300 --> 01:38:48.300] You did not do precisely what the law said, and I was harmed thereby. [01:38:48.300 --> 01:38:50.300] That gives me standing. [01:38:50.300 --> 01:38:59.300] I've never had a challenge to standing because I have these rules. [01:38:59.300 --> 01:39:02.300] Never make a proactive statement of law out of your own mouth. [01:39:02.300 --> 01:39:07.300] That is an incredibly important rule. [01:39:07.300 --> 01:39:17.300] You may only make proactive statements of law out of the mouth of the courts or the legislature. [01:39:17.300 --> 01:39:25.300] This is what the statute said, or this is what the legislature said. [01:39:25.300 --> 01:39:30.300] What I say don't mean diddly-squat. [01:39:30.300 --> 01:39:32.300] They can hear me. [01:39:32.300 --> 01:39:34.300] They can agree with me. [01:39:34.300 --> 01:39:43.300] But they can't rule in my favor unless I have given them facts in accordance with the rules of evidence, [01:39:43.300 --> 01:39:46.300] the law as it applies to those facts. [01:39:46.300 --> 01:39:50.300] Am I being pedantic? [01:39:50.300 --> 01:39:54.300] No, those are incredibly important things to underline. [01:39:54.300 --> 01:40:00.300] Out of all the things you say repetitively, those are most important to me. [01:40:00.300 --> 01:40:05.300] I keep saying them that way because I need to really drive them in. [01:40:05.300 --> 01:40:12.300] If everything you do is based on those two and everything falls under it, [01:40:12.300 --> 01:40:20.300] if you have those two at the top, 99% of what you do is going to be effective. [01:40:20.300 --> 01:40:27.300] It's outside of human nature, and you have to retrace yourself. [01:40:27.300 --> 01:40:35.300] Normal interactions were not that pedantic, were not that structured. [01:40:35.300 --> 01:40:37.300] It's just a little earshift. [01:40:37.300 --> 01:40:39.300] Hang on. [01:40:40.300 --> 01:40:45.300] I'm not going to get out to call that number because we've only got one segment left, [01:40:45.300 --> 01:40:47.300] and we'll use that up with Eric. [01:40:47.300 --> 01:40:49.300] He's pretty good here. [01:40:49.300 --> 01:40:51.300] We'll be right back. 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[01:42:16.300 --> 01:42:21.300] Thousands have won with our step by step course, and now you can too. [01:42:21.300 --> 01:42:27.300] Jurisdictionary was created by a licensed attorney with 22 years of case winning experience. [01:42:27.300 --> 01:42:32.300] Even if you're not in a lawsuit, you can learn what everyone should understand [01:42:32.300 --> 01:42:36.300] about the principles and practices that control our American courts. [01:42:36.300 --> 01:42:42.300] You'll receive our audio classroom, video seminar, tutorials, forms for civil cases, [01:42:42.300 --> 01:42:45.300] pro se tactics, and much more. [01:42:45.300 --> 01:42:54.300] Please visit ruleoflawradio.com and click on the banner or call toll free 866-LAW-EZ. [01:43:02.300 --> 01:43:03.300] Hello? [01:43:03.300 --> 01:43:06.300] Oh man, you're in jail? [01:43:06.300 --> 01:43:08.300] You got busted, man? [01:43:08.300 --> 01:43:10.300] Oh man, I'm broke, dude. [01:43:16.300 --> 01:43:20.300] Some things in this world I will never understand. [01:43:20.300 --> 01:43:24.300] Some things I realize fully. [01:43:24.300 --> 01:43:29.300] Somebody's on the police, a policeman. [01:43:29.300 --> 01:43:33.300] Somebody's on the police, a bully. [01:43:33.300 --> 01:43:38.300] There's always a room at the top of the hill. [01:43:38.300 --> 01:43:42.300] I hear through the grapevine and it's lonely there still. [01:43:42.300 --> 01:43:46.300] They're wishing it was more than opposition to bills. [01:43:46.300 --> 01:43:50.300] They know that if they don't do it, somebody will. [01:43:50.300 --> 01:43:54.300] Some things in this world I will never understand. [01:43:54.300 --> 01:43:58.300] Some things I realize fully. [01:43:58.300 --> 01:44:03.300] Somebody's on the police, a policeman. [01:44:03.300 --> 01:44:07.300] Somebody's on the police, a bully. [01:44:07.300 --> 01:44:09.300] I know they will. [01:44:09.300 --> 01:44:12.300] Yeah, they're gonna put the bill. [01:44:12.300 --> 01:44:16.300] Cause I see so much injustice still. [01:44:16.300 --> 01:44:20.300] I know they will never fail to tip back that scale. [01:44:20.300 --> 01:44:24.300] I know they will never fail to tip back the scale. [01:44:24.300 --> 01:44:26.300] I know they will. [01:44:29.300 --> 01:44:31.300] I know they will. [01:44:31.300 --> 01:44:33.300] I never know. [01:44:33.300 --> 01:44:35.300] I know they will. [01:44:37.300 --> 01:44:39.300] I know they will. [01:44:41.300 --> 01:44:43.300] I know they will. [01:44:43.300 --> 01:44:46.300] Went down to that old rock quarry the other day. [01:44:46.300 --> 01:44:47.300] I know they will. [01:44:47.300 --> 01:44:50.300] That's where I heard that old rock quarry man say. [01:44:50.300 --> 01:44:51.300] I know they will. [01:44:51.300 --> 01:44:54.300] He knew I'd always have a place for my head to lay. [01:44:54.300 --> 01:44:55.300] I know they will. [01:44:55.300 --> 01:44:58.300] I built up my truck, waved goodbye and drove away. [01:44:58.300 --> 01:44:59.300] I know they will. [01:44:59.300 --> 01:45:03.300] Some things in this world I will never understand. [01:45:03.300 --> 01:45:07.300] Some things I realize fully. [01:45:07.300 --> 01:45:11.300] Somebody's on the police, a policeman. [01:45:11.300 --> 01:45:15.300] Somebody's on the police, a bully. [01:45:15.300 --> 01:45:17.300] I know they will. [01:45:17.300 --> 01:45:20.300] Yeah, they're gonna put the bill. [01:45:20.300 --> 01:45:24.300] Cause I see so much injustice still. [01:45:24.300 --> 01:45:28.300] I know they will never fail to tip back that scale. [01:45:28.300 --> 01:45:32.300] I know they will never fail to tip back the scale. [01:45:32.300 --> 01:45:34.300] I know they will. [01:45:34.300 --> 01:45:37.300] Yeah, I will never fail to tip back that scale. [01:45:37.300 --> 01:45:39.300] I know they will. [01:45:39.300 --> 01:45:41.300] Whoa. [01:45:41.300 --> 01:45:43.300] I know they will. [01:45:43.300 --> 01:45:45.300] Okay, we are back. [01:45:45.300 --> 01:45:47.300] Randy Kelton, Brett Fountain, RueVlog Radio, [01:45:47.300 --> 01:45:49.300] and we're talking to Eric in Massachusetts. [01:45:49.300 --> 01:45:52.300] And Eric, I want to tell you, [01:45:52.300 --> 01:45:56.300] you know, I've been doing this for 40 years. [01:45:56.300 --> 01:46:00.300] And I remember when I started [01:46:00.300 --> 01:46:04.300] how difficult it was. [01:46:04.300 --> 01:46:09.300] And you start out taking on the federal courts. [01:46:09.300 --> 01:46:12.300] So I'm impressed. [01:46:12.300 --> 01:46:16.300] And your last pleadings are crap. [01:46:16.300 --> 01:46:18.300] Okay. [01:46:18.300 --> 01:46:24.300] But you're one of the 1% who actually file those pleadings. [01:46:24.300 --> 01:46:28.300] And each one you file is gonna get better. [01:46:28.300 --> 01:46:32.300] And you're staying in court longer than I did. [01:46:32.300 --> 01:46:34.300] And I think I know what I'm doing. [01:46:34.300 --> 01:46:37.300] They threw my butt out in the street quickly. [01:46:37.300 --> 01:46:42.300] I just wanted you to know that I like what you're doing. [01:46:42.300 --> 01:46:43.300] Thank you. [01:46:43.300 --> 01:46:45.300] I think the filing is actually very good. [01:46:45.300 --> 01:46:47.300] I just didn't lay out standing very well. [01:46:47.300 --> 01:46:50.300] The arguments are very strong. [01:46:50.300 --> 01:46:53.300] It just didn't lay out standing very well. [01:46:53.300 --> 01:46:59.300] If you reference the constitutional prohibition [01:46:59.300 --> 01:47:04.300] against a judge sitting when he's past 70, [01:47:04.300 --> 01:47:08.300] you provided standing. [01:47:08.300 --> 01:47:13.300] You might not have said procedural due process, [01:47:13.300 --> 01:47:16.300] but you established the fact base [01:47:16.300 --> 01:47:20.300] to support procedural due process. [01:47:20.300 --> 01:47:22.300] So it's recoverable. [01:47:22.300 --> 01:47:27.300] And the courts are not that pedantic. [01:47:27.300 --> 01:47:31.300] There's a lot of case law that says somebody's not gonna lose [01:47:31.300 --> 01:47:38.300] their case because they forgot to dot an I or cross a T. [01:47:39.300 --> 01:47:45.300] So it's about equity and not about... [01:47:45.300 --> 01:47:48.300] There's a case I've read. [01:47:48.300 --> 01:47:51.300] I can't quote it right now, but it said, [01:47:51.300 --> 01:48:00.300] if an official holds someone to the fine letter of law, [01:48:00.300 --> 01:48:07.300] they must hold themselves to the self-same letter. [01:48:07.300 --> 01:48:09.300] So the courts... [01:48:09.300 --> 01:48:14.300] Nobody wants to be held to the very fine rule of law. [01:48:14.300 --> 01:48:16.300] And here you got... [01:48:16.300 --> 01:48:21.300] You told them that the Constitution forbade this guy to do that, [01:48:21.300 --> 01:48:26.300] but you didn't brief it out enough. [01:48:26.300 --> 01:48:31.300] The fact that you brought that up opens the door for you [01:48:31.300 --> 01:48:35.300] to address that in more detail in your appeal. [01:48:35.300 --> 01:48:38.300] Had you not brought that up, [01:48:38.300 --> 01:48:43.300] then when you get to the appeal, you couldn't talk about it. [01:48:43.300 --> 01:48:48.300] But since you didn't brief it out good in the trial court, [01:48:48.300 --> 01:48:50.300] since you did bring the issue, [01:48:50.300 --> 01:48:55.300] now you can brief it out better in the appellate court. [01:48:55.300 --> 01:48:58.300] So you covered your behind. [01:48:58.300 --> 01:49:02.300] But in terms of briefing it out, I really didn't... [01:49:02.300 --> 01:49:04.300] And I'm looking for correction on this. [01:49:04.300 --> 01:49:08.300] I didn't brief it out in terms of standing, [01:49:08.300 --> 01:49:11.300] but in my argument, I briefed it out. [01:49:11.300 --> 01:49:13.300] Is that what you're saying? [01:49:13.300 --> 01:49:19.300] Just the fact that you raised the issue. [01:49:19.300 --> 01:49:25.300] You raised the issue that the Constitution considered that, [01:49:25.300 --> 01:49:29.300] and apparently from what you said, you brought case law that said [01:49:29.300 --> 01:49:33.300] that a person sitting as a judge over 70 [01:49:33.300 --> 01:49:38.300] is necessarily incompetent by Constitution. [01:49:38.300 --> 01:49:41.300] Now, he may be the smartest dude on the planet, [01:49:41.300 --> 01:49:44.300] but according to the Constitution, he's not. [01:49:44.300 --> 01:49:50.300] And you have a procedural due process right to expect [01:49:50.300 --> 01:49:54.300] that your public officials will follow the law the way it's written [01:49:54.300 --> 01:50:00.300] without regard to their opinion about it. [01:50:00.300 --> 01:50:08.300] So you made the argument for procedural due process. [01:50:08.300 --> 01:50:14.300] If you did not eloquently argue the issue in the trial court, [01:50:14.300 --> 01:50:19.300] you can eloquently argue the issue at the court of appeals. [01:50:19.300 --> 01:50:23.300] What you can't do at the court of appeals is bring issues [01:50:23.300 --> 01:50:27.300] that were not addressed at the trial court. [01:50:27.300 --> 01:50:30.300] But you really only have one issue here. [01:50:30.300 --> 01:50:33.300] This judge is too old. [01:50:33.300 --> 01:50:39.300] And therefore, he is necessarily incompetent, [01:50:39.300 --> 01:50:44.300] regardless of how intelligent and how articulate he is. [01:50:44.300 --> 01:50:49.300] By law, he is necessarily incompetent. [01:50:49.300 --> 01:50:53.300] Now you can brief it out to the court of appeals. [01:50:53.300 --> 01:50:56.300] The federal court also ruled him incompetent. [01:50:56.300 --> 01:50:57.300] Yeah. [01:50:57.300 --> 01:50:59.300] And the First Circuit did, too. [01:50:59.300 --> 01:51:02.300] But you have to cite that. [01:51:02.300 --> 01:51:06.300] So in your appellate brief, you've argued that he's incompetent. [01:51:06.300 --> 01:51:15.300] And you are not restricted in your appellate brief to the law. [01:51:15.300 --> 01:51:20.300] You're restricted to the facts that were brought out in the trial court, [01:51:20.300 --> 01:51:26.300] but you are not restricted in the law as it applies to those facts. [01:51:26.300 --> 01:51:31.300] As long as you brought the facts out, the facts are before the court. [01:51:31.300 --> 01:51:34.300] So when you get to the appellate brief, [01:51:34.300 --> 01:51:41.300] you can bring all the law you want to support your allegation concerning the facts. [01:51:41.300 --> 01:51:43.300] Does that make sense? [01:51:43.300 --> 01:51:44.300] It does. [01:51:44.300 --> 01:51:45.300] But hold up, hold up. [01:51:45.300 --> 01:51:51.300] What I'm arguing for in my appellate brief is standing [01:51:51.300 --> 01:51:59.300] and asking to remand back to the federal court and to be allowed to amend my pleading. [01:51:59.300 --> 01:52:00.300] That's what I'm arguing for. [01:52:00.300 --> 01:52:03.300] That's amandamus. [01:52:03.300 --> 01:52:08.300] You're filing amandamus, petition for read amandamus. [01:52:08.300 --> 01:52:14.300] Right now, all I can argue is standing. [01:52:14.300 --> 01:52:16.300] Okay, okay. Let me address this. [01:52:16.300 --> 01:52:24.300] Robert Fox used to file these motions that had these huge headings on them. [01:52:24.300 --> 01:52:31.300] They were prosecuting him in Cherokee County, and I wrote him some motions to file. [01:52:31.300 --> 01:52:36.300] And we're in court, and the prosecutor pulls up this motion. [01:52:36.300 --> 01:52:39.300] It's got this three-line heading on it. [01:52:39.300 --> 01:52:44.300] They're trying to figure out what to call it. [01:52:44.300 --> 01:52:51.300] And the point of that was it had this outrageous title on it. [01:52:51.300 --> 01:52:57.300] It did not make any difference what Robert Fox called it. [01:52:57.300 --> 01:53:02.300] The motion was what it was. [01:53:02.300 --> 01:53:07.300] The motion, the title is not controlling. [01:53:07.300 --> 01:53:12.300] So whatever is in the document is in the document, the title is making a difference. [01:53:12.300 --> 01:53:15.300] So you file a document and call it something. [01:53:15.300 --> 01:53:22.300] The only thing that matters is what's the content of your filing. [01:53:22.300 --> 01:53:27.300] I had a good reason to go there, and I'm on track of exactly what it was. [01:53:27.300 --> 01:53:32.300] Okay. [01:53:32.300 --> 01:53:36.300] I hate getting old. [01:53:36.300 --> 01:53:37.300] Why did I go there? [01:53:37.300 --> 01:53:40.300] I had a really good reason, and I lost it talking about Robert Fox. [01:53:40.300 --> 01:53:43.300] Every time I talk about Robert Fox, he got me put in jail for it. [01:53:43.300 --> 01:53:46.300] He got me sentenced to a year in jail, the old bastard. [01:53:46.300 --> 01:53:49.300] I'm sorry, I can't say that on the air. [01:53:49.300 --> 01:53:52.300] Why are you like that guy? [01:53:52.300 --> 01:53:57.300] Okay, the title of the document means nothing. [01:53:57.300 --> 01:54:01.300] The content of the document is what matters. [01:54:01.300 --> 01:54:05.300] But I have to file an appellate brief. [01:54:05.300 --> 01:54:07.300] So you filed an appellate brief, okay, that's why. [01:54:07.300 --> 01:54:11.300] You filed what appeared to be an appellate brief, but it wasn't. [01:54:11.300 --> 01:54:13.300] I haven't filed it yet. [01:54:13.300 --> 01:54:21.300] What you filed was a petition for a writ of mandamus. [01:54:21.300 --> 01:54:30.300] You asked the court to order the trial judge to allow you to file an amended pleading. [01:54:30.300 --> 01:54:34.300] You titled it appeal, but that's not what it was. [01:54:34.300 --> 01:54:38.300] It was what it was without regard to what you called it. [01:54:38.300 --> 01:54:42.300] That was a request for a writ of mandamus. [01:54:42.300 --> 01:54:46.300] Or you're asking the court to order the trial judge to do something. [01:54:46.300 --> 01:54:48.300] That's mandamus. [01:54:48.300 --> 01:54:51.300] I haven't filed it yet, Randy. [01:54:51.300 --> 01:54:56.300] Oh, I like that angle. [01:54:56.300 --> 01:55:04.300] So instead of calling it an appeal, call it a petition for writ of mandamus. [01:55:04.300 --> 01:55:06.300] Can I do that, Brett? [01:55:06.300 --> 01:55:08.300] Yeah. [01:55:08.300 --> 01:55:16.300] Why not? [01:55:16.300 --> 01:55:18.300] Look at it this way. [01:55:18.300 --> 01:55:21.300] You can do anything you want. [01:55:21.300 --> 01:55:26.300] If they don't like it, they'll tell you. [01:55:26.300 --> 01:55:28.300] So you filed writ of mandamus. [01:55:28.300 --> 01:55:33.300] If there's some reason you can't, they'll tell you. [01:55:33.300 --> 01:55:39.300] But what you told me, that was no appeal. [01:55:39.300 --> 01:55:42.300] I haven't filed an appeal yet. [01:55:42.300 --> 01:55:43.300] Oh, no, no, no.