[00:00.000 --> 00:10.400] A jury in Austin, Texas convicted former House Majority Leader Tom DeLay of money laundering [00:10.400 --> 00:11.400] Wednesday. [00:11.400 --> 00:16.760] DeLay is facing life in prison for funneling illegal corporate money to Texas legislative [00:16.760 --> 00:19.200] candidates in 2002. [00:19.200 --> 00:24.180] The funds helped Republicans take control of the Texas House, enabling the Republican [00:24.180 --> 00:29.520] majority to push through a DeLay-engineered congressional redistricting plan that sent [00:29.520 --> 00:33.200] more Texas Republicans to Congress in 2004. [00:33.200 --> 00:39.040] A UN conference on trade and development said in a report Thursday the number of people [00:39.040 --> 00:45.520] in extreme poverty had increased by three million a year during the 2002-2007 world [00:45.520 --> 00:54.280] economic boom, reaching 421 million in 2007, twice as many as in 1980. [00:54.280 --> 00:59.880] WikiLeaks is planning to release files that show Turkey has helped al-Qaeda in Iraq. [00:59.880 --> 01:06.440] Daily Al-Hayat also reported the U.S. helped the PKK, a Kurdish rebel organization. [01:06.440 --> 01:11.280] One of the documents, a U.S. military report, charges Turkey with failing to control its [01:11.280 --> 01:17.120] borders because Iraqi citizens residing in Turkey provided al-Qaeda with supplies to [01:17.120 --> 01:20.920] build bombs, guns and ammunition. [01:20.920 --> 01:26.120] A classified document obtained by the German news magazine Der Spiegel reveals notes from [01:26.120 --> 01:30.480] a meeting between a top German diplomat and former U.S. Secretary of State Condoleezza [01:30.480 --> 01:33.640] Rice weeks before the Iraq invasion. [01:33.640 --> 01:38.700] It shows steps were taken by the German government to prevent the war and contradicts claims [01:38.700 --> 01:44.280] in George Bush's memoir Decision Points that German Chancellor Gerhard Schröder indicated [01:44.280 --> 01:47.520] he would support Bush should the U.S. go to war. [01:47.520 --> 01:52.800] Spiegel says Bush wouldn't allow anyone to change his mind and was dead set on launching [01:52.800 --> 01:57.760] a war against Saddam Hussein in order to bring, quote, freedom to the Middle East, which he [01:57.760 --> 02:02.720] called, quote, God's gift to mankind. [02:02.720 --> 02:07.560] Iraq has run out of money to pay for widows' benefits, farm crops and other programs for [02:07.560 --> 02:08.560] the poor. [02:08.560 --> 02:13.160] In only its fourth session since being elected in March, Parliament demanded to know what [02:13.160 --> 02:18.920] happened to the estimated $1 billion allocated for welfare funding by the Finance Ministry [02:18.920 --> 02:19.920] for 2010. [02:19.920 --> 02:25.880] Maha Adori, one of the women who make up a quarter of the Parliament's 325 members, said, [02:25.880 --> 02:30.800] quote, there are thousands of widows who have not received financial aid for months. [02:30.800 --> 02:36.040] Another MP said farmers have not been paid for wheat and other crops for five months. [02:36.040 --> 02:41.260] Speaker Osama al-Nujafi promised that Parliament would push the Iraqi government for answers [02:41.260 --> 02:42.960] to where the money went. [02:42.960 --> 02:47.240] The MP's eagerness to take up an issue dear to their constituents may have been aimed [02:47.240 --> 02:51.720] in part to reverse public scorn for their own lavish pay. [02:51.720 --> 03:12.520] MP's salaries and allowances total $20,000 a month. [03:51.720 --> 04:04.040] Okay, this is Randy Kelton, Eddie Craig, Debra Stevens has the night off. [04:04.040 --> 04:08.400] The boss is away, now we get to play. [04:08.400 --> 04:13.080] This is November 26, 2010. [04:13.080 --> 04:16.800] And this is our four-hour marathon. [04:16.800 --> 04:19.800] And we weren't sure if we were going to do the show tonight, so we may be a little short [04:19.800 --> 04:20.800] on topics. [04:20.800 --> 04:26.200] But there is something I wanted to talk about, doesn't have anything to do with law, has [04:26.200 --> 04:29.840] to do with a health issue I've been dealing with. [04:29.840 --> 04:33.560] And it annoyed me that I didn't know better. [04:33.560 --> 04:45.960] I got a Brown recluse spider bite recently, and I knew what it was when I saw it. [04:45.960 --> 04:52.160] But I was surprised at how ignorant I was of how to deal with it. [04:52.160 --> 04:57.880] So I'm going to try to put out a little information for anybody who gets bit by a Brown recluse [04:57.880 --> 05:02.080] or a spider of any kind. [05:02.080 --> 05:06.440] A black widow, when they bite you, they sting you, and you feel it. [05:06.440 --> 05:09.120] A Brown recluse, you tend not to. [05:09.120 --> 05:15.760] And before I go into all of this, everybody that's within the range of Brown recluses [05:15.760 --> 05:17.600] tend to have Brown recluses. [05:17.600 --> 05:20.240] They're very common. [05:20.240 --> 05:27.360] There's lots of them around, but people almost never get bit by one. [05:27.360 --> 05:30.400] You have to just take some special circumstance. [05:30.400 --> 05:35.440] They're not at all aggressive, and they won't bite you unless you crush one of them. [05:35.440 --> 05:40.720] If you roll over on it or something, you could actually play with one, he won't bite you. [05:40.720 --> 05:42.720] So they're not an aggressive spider at all. [05:42.720 --> 05:45.600] They're not really very dangerous. [05:45.600 --> 05:52.720] And in reading the literature, most people who get bit by a Brown recluse have very few [05:52.720 --> 05:54.960] symptoms. [05:54.960 --> 06:02.320] So with that said, some people have some pretty serious symptoms. [06:02.320 --> 06:11.600] But if you suspect that you have been bitten by a spider, initially you won't see anything. [06:11.600 --> 06:16.000] This one took a good 12 to 20 hours to manifest. [06:16.000 --> 06:22.080] But there was a spot in the middle, a little red spot, and then a circle will develop around [06:22.080 --> 06:23.080] it. [06:23.080 --> 06:27.600] Brown recluses generally develop about a three-quarter inch diameter circle. [06:27.600 --> 06:32.640] It'll be slightly red around the outside of the circle and a little discoloration inside [06:32.640 --> 06:34.800] the circle. [06:34.800 --> 06:46.400] If you see that, get something on there to draw the poison immediately. [06:46.400 --> 06:50.000] If you can't find anything else, baking soda, a little baking soda and water, get it on [06:50.000 --> 06:52.800] there immediately. [06:52.800 --> 06:58.200] Red charcoal or bentonite clay. [06:58.200 --> 07:02.920] They really looked at me strange when I went to the beauty salon and asked for some face [07:02.920 --> 07:05.720] mask. [07:05.720 --> 07:10.960] And they looked at me like, I don't think we have any face mask that would do that any [07:10.960 --> 07:13.640] good. [07:13.640 --> 07:18.520] But generally these blue and gray face masks are bentonite clay. [07:18.520 --> 07:20.120] And they're a very good drawing agent. [07:20.120 --> 07:26.480] I wound up not using the ones from the beauty salon because the list of chemicals in there [07:26.480 --> 07:29.560] look like a chemical factory. [07:29.560 --> 07:38.760] It had Dethylene Glycol and Dethylene Glycol is essentially antifreeze. [07:38.760 --> 07:39.760] Very poison. [07:39.760 --> 07:45.640] They use it on in soaps a lot, but I'm familiar with soap formulary and I don't use it in [07:45.640 --> 07:46.640] soap. [07:46.640 --> 07:54.400] So I went to Whole Foods and got bentonite clay. [07:54.400 --> 08:03.920] I mixed it with aloe and the aloe was one of my standbys for any kind of topical injury. [08:03.920 --> 08:10.280] Take an aloe leaf, cut a section out, skin the flat side off, set it against the wound [08:10.280 --> 08:13.320] and put a sock or something over it to hold it in place. [08:13.320 --> 08:14.320] It does magic. [08:14.320 --> 08:20.520] But in this case we needed a drawing agent and get something on it that will draw the [08:20.520 --> 08:21.520] poison out. [08:21.520 --> 08:29.600] Those are the three things that are the best, baking soda, bentonite clay and activated [08:29.600 --> 08:30.600] charcoal. [08:30.600 --> 08:34.280] You also, if you can find them, activated charcoal pellets, one of the pellets. [08:34.280 --> 08:39.640] The pellets will help draw the poison out of your system. [08:39.640 --> 08:45.320] And in reading the literature it seems that with a brown recluse it's best to use some [08:45.320 --> 08:52.400] type of vasodilator that will open the blood vessels and let the poison distribute. [08:52.400 --> 08:56.600] You want to get it out of your system, you don't want it to stay in one place because [08:56.600 --> 09:01.420] what it will tend to do is damage a blood vessel. [09:01.420 --> 09:06.040] Open up the blood vessel and then pass all the poison in one direction through one vessel [09:06.040 --> 09:08.680] and it will wind up erupting somewhere else. [09:08.680 --> 09:14.080] If you take a vasodilator that opens up the blood vessels, you'll absorb it generally [09:14.080 --> 09:17.880] through the capillaries and spread it through your system where it's so diluted it does [09:17.880 --> 09:23.360] no harm so it makes you feel a little funky and then your system will get rid of it with [09:23.360 --> 09:24.360] no real harm. [09:24.360 --> 09:30.520] I don't know how many people are familiar with spiders but if you happen to be allergic [09:30.520 --> 09:39.960] to them and also taking antihistamine, a lot of the problem from a spider bite is that [09:39.960 --> 09:44.160] people tend to be allergic to them. [09:44.160 --> 09:49.560] For instance a black widow can bite me and I get what looks like a mosquito bite that [09:49.560 --> 09:50.560] lasts six months. [09:50.560 --> 09:55.160] It gets a little pus ball in the middle after a couple of weeks and it takes you about six [09:55.160 --> 09:56.160] months to heal. [09:56.160 --> 10:04.160] But apparently the brown recluse is a little different because I'm certainly not immune [10:04.160 --> 10:11.680] to those things and you take an antihistamine when you get a cold. [10:11.680 --> 10:17.740] The symptoms you get from the cold are not what the cold itself does to you. [10:17.740 --> 10:22.120] Those symptoms are caused by the histamines that your body produces to get rid of the [10:22.120 --> 10:23.120] cold. [10:23.120 --> 10:28.080] So it's the histamine cells that cause the symptoms, not the cold itself. [10:28.080 --> 10:33.560] So if you get bit by something and you tend to be somewhat allergic anyway, take an antihistamine [10:33.560 --> 10:38.920] or get some Benadryl and that will knock down any allergic reaction which would exacerbate [10:38.920 --> 10:39.920] the problem. [10:39.920 --> 10:50.520] And that's about it, if you get bit by brown recluse, best to get to a doctor quickly. [10:50.520 --> 10:56.880] If I didn't and in retrospect I probably should have. [10:56.880 --> 11:01.120] They probably give you some really good dope because these things really hurt. [11:01.120 --> 11:03.560] Anyway that's the medical lesson for today. [11:03.560 --> 11:13.560] If you get bit by a spider, get baking soda, bentonite clay or activated charcoal and mix [11:13.560 --> 11:16.240] it with something to give it a creamy structure. [11:16.240 --> 11:21.680] What I did, what worked best was I mixed them with aloe juice to give it liquid, put it [11:21.680 --> 11:26.480] on and then took a piece of Saran wrap and this was Deborah's idea and I poked a hole [11:26.480 --> 11:30.440] in it, stuck it on my thumb and then wrapped it around my, it got me on the back of the [11:30.440 --> 11:34.720] hand, wrapped it around my hand, stuck another hole on my thumb and poked it on. [11:34.720 --> 11:41.280] So the Saran wrap kept it from drying out, that worked really well. [11:41.280 --> 11:44.360] Anyway enough talk about spider bites. [11:44.360 --> 11:48.000] Eddie, do you have something you want to address this evening? [11:48.000 --> 11:53.200] Yeah, if you want to avoid them, get a pet iguana that will eat them, that would help. [11:53.200 --> 12:03.040] But what do you do with the iguana poop things all over the house, iguana guano? [12:03.040 --> 12:07.360] You make him a cat door, okay? [12:07.360 --> 12:10.960] That way he can scare the neighbors and enjoy himself at the same time. [12:10.960 --> 12:15.600] I have had a couple of people asking about the due process issue. [12:15.600 --> 12:23.560] I talked to someone today for quite a while about what I was doing in the foreclosure [12:23.560 --> 12:30.200] issues and they were concerned that we were dealing with symptoms and not problems. [12:30.200 --> 12:38.200] A lot of times people want to get somewhat esoteric about the problems and this person [12:38.200 --> 12:43.160] wanted to go to the problems of the Federal Reserve and the banks. [12:43.160 --> 12:48.960] Well they may be the problems but we are not going to solve this problem with the Federal [12:48.960 --> 12:49.960] Reserve and the bank. [12:49.960 --> 12:57.920] We are going to solve this problem here at home and the best solution I can find are [12:57.920 --> 13:00.920] grand juries. [13:00.920 --> 13:06.280] That is the one thing everybody is most afraid of and that is the one thing that will give [13:06.280 --> 13:14.400] the individual the least trouble when they utilize that as a remedy. [13:14.400 --> 13:20.440] Because when you are going straight to grand juries, for the most part nobody wants to [13:20.440 --> 13:26.000] mess with you because they don't want you going to the grand jury with complaints against [13:26.000 --> 13:34.200] them because it makes it very clear that you are going to be hard for anybody to protect [13:34.200 --> 13:38.480] them from because you know where the weakness is. [13:38.480 --> 13:43.720] And I know we go over this a lot and I seem like I pound on it but of all of the things [13:43.720 --> 13:58.320] we do, on the surface this seems to be somewhat radical but it absolutely should not. [13:58.320 --> 14:04.240] We all should go to grand juries as a matter of course. [14:04.240 --> 14:07.560] At the first crack out of the hat we should be running down to the grand jury. [14:07.560 --> 14:12.860] The first time one of our public officials steps across the legal line we should be running [14:12.860 --> 14:17.800] down to the grand jury waving criminal charges at them. [14:17.800 --> 14:24.800] It wouldn't take long to get this stuff fixed especially if we get grand juries with a fit [14:24.800 --> 14:29.760] with people, ordinary people coming to them all the time with complaints against public [14:29.760 --> 14:34.600] officials they will get more accustomed to hearing the complaints, they will get more [14:34.600 --> 14:41.640] accustomed to accepting that the complaints are being filed and they are valid. [14:41.640 --> 14:45.000] Right now it is so unusual. [14:45.000 --> 14:48.840] They go down dealing with public officials and they get to know them and they feel like [14:48.840 --> 14:57.640] a part of the group so it is hard to get the grand juries to take a step away from these [14:57.640 --> 15:02.840] public officials and this is one thing Eddie was working on, the idea of a separate grand [15:02.840 --> 15:10.040] jury specifically to hear complaints against public officials. [15:10.040 --> 15:16.960] And I think that is absolutely valid and appropriate that a grand jury who spends their time working [15:16.960 --> 15:21.880] with public officials should not be asked to indict them. [15:21.880 --> 15:27.880] We should have a separate grand jury and I have actually tried to get a judge once to [15:27.880 --> 15:33.280] disband the grand jury and have a second grand jury appointed so I could file charges with [15:33.280 --> 15:37.400] that grand jury against the first one. [15:37.400 --> 15:42.960] I didn't get that done but I did wind up getting the district attorney to the grand jury as [15:42.960 --> 15:47.400] a consolation prize. [15:47.400 --> 15:55.040] Anyway think about grand juries, do you want to be treated like you are really important [15:55.040 --> 15:56.040] at the courthouse? [15:56.040 --> 16:01.640] Take a couple of shots at the grand jury, all of a sudden they will be laying out red [16:01.640 --> 16:08.760] carpet for you, yes sir Mr. Kelton what can I do for you Mr. Kelton. [16:08.760 --> 16:15.560] They go way out of their way not to get me upset at it, I don't particularly care about [16:15.560 --> 16:24.040] that but it does give a good indication that what we are doing is working and we have other [16:24.040 --> 16:30.280] people beginning to do this, the more people we get to do it the more likely we are to [16:30.280 --> 16:39.040] get an indictment eventually and we start getting indictments, everything is going to [16:39.040 --> 16:40.040] change. [16:40.040 --> 16:46.240] Ok we have one caller on the board, this is our info marathon so if you have some questions [16:46.240 --> 16:55.000] or comments give us a call at 512-646-1984, this is Randy Kelton, Eddie Craig, we will [16:55.000 --> 17:02.440] be right back. [17:02.440 --> 17:07.480] Capital coin and bullion is your local source for rare coins, precious metals and coin supplies [17:07.480 --> 17:09.480] in the Austin metro area. [17:09.480 --> 17:14.560] We also ship worldwide, we are a family owned and operated business that offers competitive [17:14.560 --> 17:17.080] prices on your coin and metals purchases. [17:17.080 --> 17:22.240] We buy, sell, trade and consign rare coins, gold and silver coin collections, precious [17:22.240 --> 17:27.760] metals and scrap gold, we will purchase and sell gold and jewelry items as well. [17:27.760 --> 17:34.680] We offer daily specials on coins and bullion, we are located at 5448 Burnet Road Suite 3 [17:34.680 --> 17:40.320] and we are open Monday through Friday 10am to 6pm, Saturdays 10am to 5pm. [17:40.320 --> 17:47.720] You are welcome to stop in our shop during regular business hours or call 512-646-6440 [17:47.720 --> 17:48.720] with any questions. [17:48.720 --> 17:54.200] Ask for Chad and say you heard about us on Rule of Law Radio or 90.1 FM, that's Capital [17:54.200 --> 18:00.800] Coin and Bullion 512-646-6440. [18:00.800 --> 18:06.080] Are you being harassed by debt collectors with phone calls, letters or even losses? [18:06.080 --> 18:09.600] Stop debt collectors now with the Michael Mears Proven Method. [18:09.600 --> 18:13.880] Michael Mears has won six cases in federal court against debt collectors and now you [18:13.880 --> 18:14.880] can win too. [18:14.880 --> 18:19.280] You will get step by step instructions in plain English on how to win in court using [18:19.280 --> 18:25.040] federal civil rights statutes, what to do when contacted by phone, mail or court summons, [18:25.040 --> 18:28.920] how to answer letters and phone calls, how to get debt collectors out of your credit [18:28.920 --> 18:34.320] reports, how to turn the financial tables on them and make them pay you to go away. [18:34.320 --> 18:39.440] The Michael Mears Proven Method is the solution for how to stop debt collectors. [18:39.440 --> 18:41.560] Personal consultation is available as well. [18:41.560 --> 18:47.120] For more information, please visit ruleoflawradio.com and click on the blue Michael Mears banner [18:47.120 --> 18:50.120] or email michaelmears at yahoo.com. [18:50.120 --> 18:59.120] That's ruleoflawradio.com or email m-i-c-h-a-e-l-m-i-r-r-a-s at yahoo.com to learn how to stop debt [18:59.120 --> 19:12.640] collectors now. [19:12.640 --> 19:42.560] All right, folks, we are back, this is Rule of Law Radio, Randy Kelton, Debra Stevenson, [19:42.560 --> 19:43.560] Eddie Craig. [19:43.560 --> 19:48.520] And before we went to break, Randy was talking for a minute about what I'm working on with [19:48.520 --> 19:49.520] the grand juries. [19:49.520 --> 19:52.960] And Nolan, we do see you on the board, so please hang in there for just a few minutes [19:52.960 --> 19:54.840] more and I'll get done with this. [19:54.840 --> 20:00.320] I am in the process of trying to develop a statutory enactment to be sponsored in the [20:00.320 --> 20:09.640] legislature that will create and institute a grand jury whose sole specific duty is to [20:09.640 --> 20:15.240] take and investigate complaints against public officials of all kinds. [20:15.240 --> 20:21.960] I'm trying to figure out the best way for this grand jury to be created and managed [20:21.960 --> 20:28.320] without actually putting it under the control of someone that may wind up in front of it. [20:28.320 --> 20:34.120] So it's an endeavor to say the very least, but yes, I am trying to facilitate a way to [20:34.120 --> 20:40.360] make that happen that would be functional, plausible, inexpensive, and do the job that [20:40.360 --> 20:46.120] it's being designed for, which is take back control of our lives from those that think [20:46.120 --> 20:52.880] they have the right to run it and then violate the law in the process of doing so. [20:52.880 --> 20:58.200] And heaven knows we've got plenty of those out there in La La Land who think they have [20:58.200 --> 21:02.100] the right to tell everybody else what to do all the time. [21:02.100 --> 21:03.420] It's going to be up to us, folks. [21:03.420 --> 21:05.160] We've got to fix this. [21:05.160 --> 21:09.840] This is my contribution to how to do that. [21:09.840 --> 21:15.440] I'm not against going out and running up and down the roads or marching or anything else, [21:15.440 --> 21:17.900] whatever your forte is for getting it done. [21:17.900 --> 21:21.800] We just need to come together, work together, and make this happen. [21:21.800 --> 21:28.320] Right now, this was the best thing I could see that we needed, and I am trying to make [21:28.320 --> 21:33.320] it a reality, but I'm still going to need your help and your support making the legislature [21:33.320 --> 21:35.600] support it and enact it. [21:35.600 --> 21:41.480] So once I get it done, I will be posting it on my website that I am currently in the process [21:41.480 --> 21:43.080] of building. [21:43.080 --> 21:48.360] That website will be called capital-lies.com. [21:48.360 --> 21:54.240] I do have a starter page up on it, but there's nothing really beyond that at the moment. [21:54.240 --> 21:59.240] But once I get all these ideas and implementations in, I will be posting them there for comment [21:59.240 --> 22:05.160] and review and suggestions and things like that so that we can see what kind of support [22:05.160 --> 22:12.400] we're garnering, what people believe might be better, so on and so forth. [22:12.400 --> 22:19.320] This is not a one individual job by any means, but I think our biggest problem in the Patriot [22:19.320 --> 22:25.760] community is we treat everything as if we're the only ones doing it and we don't cooperate [22:25.760 --> 22:32.200] and work together the way we could and should to give a united front. [22:32.200 --> 22:39.800] This is the time in our lives and in our nation, folks, when that united we stand, divided [22:39.800 --> 22:47.920] we fall scenario is going to be most put to the test, and we need to be ready and willing [22:47.920 --> 22:50.360] to do something about that. [22:50.360 --> 22:55.160] Okay, now, Randy, you do have the call page up. [22:55.160 --> 22:58.240] Would you mind bringing Nolan in, unless there's something else you want to comment on before [22:58.240 --> 22:59.240] we start? [22:59.240 --> 23:00.240] I'll bring in Nolan. [23:00.240 --> 23:01.240] Okay. [23:01.240 --> 23:02.240] Nolan, are you there? [23:02.240 --> 23:03.240] Hey, how you doing? [23:03.240 --> 23:04.240] What's on your mind tonight? [23:04.240 --> 23:05.240] Two things. [23:05.240 --> 23:16.240] One, on Real Estate Remedies and Real Estate website, once you put your information into [23:16.240 --> 23:30.240] the part about calculating the fraud, is that going to require you to actually pay for the [23:30.240 --> 23:31.240] project? [23:31.240 --> 23:32.240] No, no, no, no, no. [23:32.240 --> 23:37.560] That, we'll just run the numbers and make sure that you have enough fraud to make it [23:37.560 --> 23:38.560] worth your time. [23:38.560 --> 23:41.440] So, no, that's absolutely free. [23:41.440 --> 23:48.560] You put in the numbers, you put in the information, we run the numbers, and give you back an amount [23:48.560 --> 23:50.560] of fraud you can claim against the lender. [23:50.560 --> 23:53.440] I think you'll be surprised in how much we find. [23:53.440 --> 23:54.440] Okay, cool. [23:54.440 --> 23:55.440] Damn. [23:55.440 --> 23:56.440] One more thing. [23:56.440 --> 24:04.720] The students that I was working with, Rusty, do you expect them to? [24:04.720 --> 24:06.760] Ooh, hold on, hold on, hold on. [24:06.760 --> 24:08.680] Let's not do that on this show. [24:08.680 --> 24:09.680] Okay. [24:09.680 --> 24:12.160] Call me back off the show for that information. [24:12.160 --> 24:13.160] Okay. [24:13.160 --> 24:14.160] Okay. [24:14.160 --> 24:16.160] Do you have any other questions, comments? [24:16.160 --> 24:17.160] No, that's it. [24:17.160 --> 24:18.160] Thank you. [24:18.160 --> 24:19.160] Okay, thank you. [24:19.160 --> 24:22.040] Yeah, just, do you have our contact information? [24:22.040 --> 24:25.960] I thought it was on the site. [24:25.960 --> 24:30.280] Yeah, just email me, Randy at Remedies and Real Estate. [24:30.280 --> 24:31.280] Okay. [24:31.280 --> 24:32.280] And we'll address that. [24:32.280 --> 24:33.280] Okay, got it. [24:33.280 --> 24:38.280] Yeah, we're trying not to do too much shameless self-promotion on the air. [24:38.280 --> 24:39.280] Yeah, yeah. [24:39.280 --> 24:40.280] Okay, thanks a lot. [24:40.280 --> 24:41.280] Okay. [24:41.280 --> 24:45.960] Well, brought up the real estate issue. [24:45.960 --> 24:49.920] Things are really moving well in this area. [24:49.920 --> 25:00.560] We have one fellow here who's a person we all know well, and he filed a suit back in [25:00.560 --> 25:06.600] November of last year and just filed a motion in the state court. [25:06.600 --> 25:14.160] For the most part, the state courts have just been jerking everybody around and paying absolutely [25:14.160 --> 25:18.960] no attention, especially if you come in pro se to what you're bringing before the court. [25:18.960 --> 25:28.400] But he brought in a motion objecting to the affidavit that the lender for that, the attorney [25:28.400 --> 25:36.640] doing the foreclosure filed with the court, and generally, you know, it's been on the [25:36.640 --> 25:41.480] news and stuff about these foreclosure mills that just put this stuff out and the guy signing [25:41.480 --> 25:47.320] these documents have no clue as to whether they're accurate or not. [25:47.320 --> 25:48.600] So he had three motions. [25:48.600 --> 25:57.080] The first two were denied out of hand, but this one on the affidavit, Steve put up a [25:57.080 --> 26:03.920] good argument in court and the judge told the attorney that he had 60 days to get in [26:03.920 --> 26:06.920] a proper affidavit. [26:06.920 --> 26:14.400] She said she wanted to be sure that what is happening in other states is not happening [26:14.400 --> 26:17.520] here in Texas. [26:17.520 --> 26:23.060] And frankly, I took that as a very big deal. [26:23.060 --> 26:31.200] This means we have the judge's attention that even the state judges are beginning to look [26:31.200 --> 26:35.560] around and recognize something is terribly wrong here. [26:35.560 --> 26:41.920] So if you have a mortgage, if you're behind on your mortgage, go after them, fight them. [26:41.920 --> 26:49.400] Don't just let them take your property because you do have a good chance at keeping your [26:49.400 --> 26:50.800] property at this point. [26:50.800 --> 26:54.160] We're beginning to get some pretty serious wins. [26:54.160 --> 27:00.040] We've got one in New York, a million dollar loan. [27:00.040 --> 27:03.640] He's got an original and a refinance. [27:03.640 --> 27:08.520] The bank just came to him and said if he'll drop his eight million dollar suit, they'll [27:08.520 --> 27:11.640] forgive the two loans. [27:11.640 --> 27:15.900] The banks are beginning to see the writing on the wall. [27:15.900 --> 27:22.360] So things are moving along in our direction. [27:22.360 --> 27:24.160] So the call board's empty. [27:24.160 --> 27:32.280] If anybody's out there, call us if you've got any questions or comments at 512-646-1984. [27:32.280 --> 27:37.160] Eddie, did you have anything you wanted to address today? [27:37.160 --> 27:38.880] Actually, yes. [27:38.880 --> 27:44.440] Don't forget, folks, tomorrow at Brave New Books from 3 to 6, we will be giving another [27:44.440 --> 27:46.160] three-hour seminar. [27:46.160 --> 27:51.440] It's a $20 door charge, but what we're going to be going over is due process and courtroom [27:51.440 --> 27:52.440] procedure. [27:52.440 --> 28:00.560] We'll be talking about cross-examination, direct examination, types of questions, basically [28:00.560 --> 28:04.880] how to lay your foundation and so on and so forth so that you can introduce the things [28:04.880 --> 28:10.640] that you need to introduce in court, make your arguments, and should the judge actually [28:10.640 --> 28:16.920] decide to abide by the law, win your case, dealing with the traffic tickets and so on [28:16.920 --> 28:17.920] and so forth. [28:17.920 --> 28:25.240] Now, one of the things you need to keep in mind is no matter how correct you do things, [28:25.240 --> 28:30.800] these lower courts, their job is to railroad you, not abide by the law. [28:30.800 --> 28:37.600] So the only way you're going to definitely win is to convince them that if we continue, [28:37.600 --> 28:42.400] he's going to expose what we're doing, and then where are we going to be if anybody else [28:42.400 --> 28:43.400] is listening? [28:43.400 --> 28:47.240] Well, I'm going to give them that opportunity real soon. [28:47.240 --> 28:51.320] I've gone in and laid the foundation with the city and a couple of meetings with the [28:51.320 --> 28:56.280] city manager's office for a couple of other cases. [28:56.280 --> 29:01.480] This will go very well to setting them up for the one that's coming, and we should be [29:01.480 --> 29:04.600] able to make a really good case that's coming. [29:04.600 --> 29:11.320] But anyway, Brave New Books, tomorrow, 3 to 6, we'll be talking about due process courtroom [29:11.320 --> 29:12.640] procedure. [29:12.640 --> 29:14.000] Please come out and see us. [29:14.000 --> 29:18.720] Yes, and we're beginning to put together the litigation engine. [29:18.720 --> 29:24.240] I've been talking about this for a long time, and finally, I've gotten the resources to [29:24.240 --> 29:27.760] where we can begin to put it together. [29:27.760 --> 29:33.240] Within a week or two, I should have one up and working for the foreclosure issue, but [29:33.240 --> 29:38.840] what I'm looking at is putting one together for traffic. [29:38.840 --> 29:44.560] So when you go in, it'll essentially tell you every step you need to take, create all [29:44.560 --> 29:50.720] your documents, including your bar grievances, judicial conduct complaint, and lawsuit. [29:50.720 --> 29:52.520] We'll talk about that more on the other side. [29:52.520 --> 29:56.640] This is Eddie Craig, Randy Kelton, Rule of Law Radio. [29:56.640 --> 29:57.640] We'll be right back. [29:57.640 --> 30:06.040] Christ fed them multitudes with only one loaf of bread, poor people, there's something for [30:06.040 --> 30:07.040] you. [30:07.040 --> 30:12.080] Austin's Own Caribbean, One Love Kitchen, on the banks of Colorado River, at 3109 East [30:12.080 --> 30:17.240] First Street, is where you'll find One Love Kitchen, jerk chicken, vegetarian restaurant, [30:17.240 --> 30:22.040] Monday through Wednesday, lunch and dinner, $5.00, Friday and Saturday, we got late night [30:22.040 --> 30:27.400] with Emperor's Hound Crew, still $5.00 plates, jerk chicken and vegetarian place, to beat [30:27.400 --> 30:29.840] One Love Kitchen, Austin, Texas. [30:29.840 --> 30:32.480] Think you have the right to fly? [30:32.480 --> 30:33.480] Think again. [30:33.480 --> 30:36.760] U.S. citizens must now get government permission to board a plane. [30:36.760 --> 30:40.680] I'm Dr. Catherine Albrecht, and I'll be back in a moment with more on the government's [30:40.680 --> 30:42.600] new Mother May I program. [30:42.600 --> 30:44.600] Or is that Big Brother May I? [30:44.600 --> 30:49.920] Your search engine is watching you, recording all your searches and creating a massive database [30:49.920 --> 30:51.640] of your personal information. [30:51.640 --> 30:52.900] That's creepy. [30:52.900 --> 30:55.000] But it doesn't have to be that way. [30:55.000 --> 30:58.120] Startpage.com is the world's most private search engine. [30:58.120 --> 31:02.240] Startpage doesn't store your IP address, make a record of your searches or use tracking [31:02.240 --> 31:04.520] cookies and they're third party certified. [31:04.520 --> 31:09.000] If you don't like Big Brother spying on you, start over with Startpage. [31:09.000 --> 31:11.880] Great search results and total privacy. [31:11.880 --> 31:14.880] Startpage.com, the world's most private search engine. [31:14.880 --> 31:19.300] We used to have the right to fly until someone said otherwise, but a little known change [31:19.300 --> 31:22.000] in the law means we must now ask permission. [31:22.000 --> 31:26.240] The government's new secure flight program requires passengers to register their names, [31:26.240 --> 31:31.360] gender and date of birth 72 hours before boarding a plane, and only those approved by the government [31:31.360 --> 31:32.360] can take off. [31:32.360 --> 31:36.800] Requiring a permit to travel is a big switch from simply keeping known terrorists on the [31:36.800 --> 31:37.800] ground. [31:37.800 --> 31:39.400] That subtle change is a big one. [31:39.400 --> 31:44.160] Instead of innocent until proven guilty, now it's guilty until proven innocent. [31:44.160 --> 31:48.560] How long before activists and whistleblowers or simply outspoken government critics find [31:48.560 --> 31:52.080] themselves on no-fly lists, praying for Big Brother clearance? [31:52.080 --> 32:19.800] I'm Dr. Catherine Albrecht, more news and information at CatherineAlbrecht.com. [32:22.080 --> 32:37.640] All right, folks, we are back, Rule of Law Radio. [32:37.640 --> 32:42.320] This is Eddie Craig, Randy Kelton, Denver Stevens has the night off. [32:42.320 --> 32:46.480] The calling number is 512-646-1984. [32:46.480 --> 32:50.080] We're pretty much going to run open mic tonight, so if you're out there listening, you have [32:50.080 --> 32:57.680] any issues or any questions, please give us a call, 512-646-1984. [32:57.680 --> 33:00.800] And Randy, we do seem to have a couple of other gentlemen up on the board. [33:00.800 --> 33:02.520] No, that's Carlos. [33:02.520 --> 33:05.720] He just wants to annoy me with questions I can't answer. [33:05.720 --> 33:06.720] Okay. [33:06.720 --> 33:08.920] Well, give him a shot. [33:08.920 --> 33:13.120] Anyway, let me finish off on litigation engine. [33:13.120 --> 33:20.440] As I get this together, this first one we're putting together is a prototype, and it is [33:20.440 --> 33:24.640] very, very complex. [33:24.640 --> 33:33.000] Once we get the initial structure together, then we can plug any issue into it. [33:33.000 --> 33:41.880] And what I'm going to want you guys for are to find me the issues, because what the engine [33:41.880 --> 33:49.320] will consist of primarily is a very sophisticated questionnaire. [33:49.320 --> 33:57.800] 90% of everything we do in law consists of getting the information. [33:57.800 --> 34:01.720] And for the most part, that's the hardest part. [34:01.720 --> 34:07.240] The attorneys go to law school and they don't learn how to practice law. [34:07.240 --> 34:11.600] They learn how to argue legal issues. [34:11.600 --> 34:14.920] They get out of law school and they start getting clients and they sit down with the [34:14.920 --> 34:21.720] client and they don't realize that your client never tells you everything. [34:21.720 --> 34:26.200] Sometimes you get clients who don't tell you things because there are things they don't [34:26.200 --> 34:29.000] want you to know, but that's not the biggest problem. [34:29.000 --> 34:32.120] That's generally the easiest thing to figure out. [34:32.120 --> 34:39.200] The biggest problem is, is they simply do not know what you need to know. [34:39.200 --> 34:44.280] So they don't know what to tell you and you're sitting there listening to them and you're [34:44.280 --> 34:51.560] listening to all of this stuff you don't need to hear, but you don't know what happened. [34:51.560 --> 34:55.680] So you don't know what specifically to ask them. [34:55.680 --> 35:00.280] So you wind up passing information back and forth and sorting out as much whatever you [35:00.280 --> 35:01.280] can. [35:01.280 --> 35:12.200] Well, what the litigation engine does is we take all of the issues that we come across. [35:12.200 --> 35:19.200] One for instance is the Miranda issue and if I sit down with an attorney, ask an attorney, [35:19.200 --> 35:31.200] if you had a Miranda issue, pretty focused, what questions, if you had a witness who couldn't [35:31.200 --> 35:34.720] give you a dialogue, say your witness is on the stand, he's your witness so you can't [35:34.720 --> 35:41.720] ask leading questions and the witness can only answer the question that you ask. [35:41.720 --> 35:45.320] They can't offer anything extra. [35:45.320 --> 35:51.760] So you have to ask the right questions to develop the information that you need. [35:51.760 --> 35:55.800] What questions would you ask? [35:55.800 --> 36:03.820] I need this on every issue you and I and all of us are coming across. [36:03.820 --> 36:13.320] I need to know what the bad guys are doing, how they're doing it and how to ask a question [36:13.320 --> 36:17.320] that points at a particular thing they're doing. [36:17.320 --> 36:25.400] Then we build this extensive questionnaire and we start asking these questions and if [36:25.400 --> 36:31.200] one of the answers points towards one of our issues, a particular issue, then the system [36:31.200 --> 36:35.640] will jump to a set of questions specifically on that issue to develop the issue and then [36:35.640 --> 36:39.960] it comes back to the regional question line. [36:39.960 --> 36:46.760] In that regional question line, we want every trick and trap, every shenanigan that they [36:46.760 --> 36:49.080] pull represented there. [36:49.080 --> 36:50.080] Did they do this? [36:50.080 --> 36:51.080] Did they do that? [36:51.080 --> 36:52.080] Did they do this? [36:52.080 --> 36:55.520] If you send them, you'll just check no so you won't see most of it. [36:55.520 --> 37:00.040] Oh yeah, they did this and then it'll jump to a set of questions. [37:00.040 --> 37:09.560] This will give, if you have an attorney, this would give your attorney 80 to 90% of what [37:09.560 --> 37:10.560] he needs. [37:10.560 --> 37:16.560] If the attorneys don't know how to talk to people, the attorneys don't know how to talk [37:16.560 --> 37:27.320] to human beings, they don't know how to work communication in a way to draw out good information. [37:27.320 --> 37:32.880] They ask a question and they expect you to know how to answer it, whether you know or [37:32.880 --> 37:35.400] not. [37:35.400 --> 37:44.480] The questionnaire is designed to extract 80% of the information the attorney needs and [37:44.480 --> 37:54.320] that for you as a pro se, it does the things that the pro se's don't know how to do, is [37:54.320 --> 37:57.160] how to develop all of the issues. [37:57.160 --> 38:03.600] The example I use when I'm talking to an attorney about it is a Frank's hearing. [38:03.600 --> 38:07.160] I had someone call in on the air and ask me if I knew what a Frank's hearing was and I [38:07.160 --> 38:11.740] told them, well, I'd heard of it, but I don't remember what it was. [38:11.740 --> 38:17.880] After the show, I went and looked it up and I said, holy mackerel, how could I have ever [38:17.880 --> 38:18.880] forgotten that? [38:18.880 --> 38:24.080] A Frank's hearing is a hearing for the purpose of determining the veracity of an officer [38:24.080 --> 38:27.480] who testified before a magistrate to secure a warrant. [38:27.480 --> 38:29.920] That means you get to subpoena a judge. [38:29.920 --> 38:34.920] Oh man, you subpoena a judge, everybody gets really excited. [38:34.920 --> 38:40.280] That's what got them to throw out my last case, but I forgot about it, so I went into [38:40.280 --> 38:44.640] the questionnaire and I looked and said, right here is the right place to put in a question [38:44.640 --> 38:46.840] about a Frank's hearing. [38:46.840 --> 38:50.040] The attorney doesn't have to think about a Frank's hearing. [38:50.040 --> 38:55.440] He doesn't have to think about a Daubert's hearing or all of these other issues and maneuvers [38:55.440 --> 38:56.440] that come up. [38:56.440 --> 38:57.440] That's what computers are for. [38:57.440 --> 39:02.280] As a pro se who doesn't know what a Frank's hearing was, never heard of it and most attorneys [39:02.280 --> 39:06.720] hadn't either, you don't have to worry about it. [39:06.720 --> 39:13.200] If it's indicated, the system will spit out a motion for a Frank's hearing and it will [39:13.200 --> 39:19.800] spit out points and authorities and brief and support that will give you all the information [39:19.800 --> 39:29.280] you need to understand what it's for and how to litigate it, does all the heavy lifting. [39:29.280 --> 39:35.560] Then you only have to focus on the issues that matter and you don't wind up wasting [39:35.560 --> 39:43.520] your time on a lot of stuff that doesn't count and actually it's more than that because [39:43.520 --> 39:46.680] we will be making this available to attorneys. [39:46.680 --> 39:52.600] I know what you're thinking, don't help those lousy scumbags. [39:52.600 --> 39:56.320] Okay, here's the strategy. [39:56.320 --> 40:05.200] We're going to get attorneys to pay us to help eliminate their careers. [40:05.200 --> 40:11.320] We get them to use our process to automate their practice. [40:11.320 --> 40:15.840] It will save them a tremendous amount of time and they'll love it and then what we want [40:15.840 --> 40:22.880] them to do is give us, I want the attorney to imagine that he has his client on the stand. [40:22.880 --> 40:28.520] What questions would you ask your client and we'll build that into our questionnaire. [40:28.520 --> 40:33.740] 90% of the questions he asks, we're already going to have. [40:33.740 --> 40:37.600] If he has some new ones, we add his new ones in. [40:37.600 --> 40:43.660] Every attorney's got their own tricks and traps, their own special expertise. [40:43.660 --> 40:49.080] This will allow us to capture the expertise of these attorneys. [40:49.080 --> 40:55.920] Once we have four or five attorneys expertise on a given issue, then the pro se take the [40:55.920 --> 41:02.920] litigation engine to court and he's got the accumulated expertise of all these attorneys [41:02.920 --> 41:09.840] and now the attorney has to deal with them. [41:09.840 --> 41:15.280] If this works the way we expect, we will eliminate a good portion of the attorneys that are out [41:15.280 --> 41:16.280] there. [41:16.280 --> 41:19.960] We just won't need them. [41:19.960 --> 41:27.120] The engine can do 90% of it and the pro se is going to wind up coming into court just [41:27.120 --> 41:34.280] about as well off as the learned counsel. [41:34.280 --> 41:42.160] I'm going to want you guys to start isolating what's occurred, experiences that you've had [41:42.160 --> 41:51.760] and start writing them up in just a brief of this is the kind of stuff they pulled and [41:51.760 --> 41:57.760] these are the kind of questions we'd need to isolate those issues and when we start [41:57.760 --> 42:02.480] up with the due process engine, we're going to do the due process engines really pretty [42:02.480 --> 42:03.480] close. [42:03.480 --> 42:06.680] Debra did a lot of work on that, Debra and I a long time ago. [42:06.680 --> 42:10.560] We did a lot of work on it, getting it ready. [42:10.560 --> 42:19.840] We can bring that one up, a traffic issue and I'm looking at a family law, divorce and [42:19.840 --> 42:27.080] a couple others that I'm hoping by the middle of the year we'll have a number of engines [42:27.080 --> 42:28.080] up. [42:28.080 --> 42:37.560] These will not only isolate the issues you need to address in a court proceeding, they'll [42:37.560 --> 42:43.840] also go to the website we're about to get up for filing bar grievances and judicial [42:43.840 --> 42:50.440] conduct complaints and they'll write your lawsuit against the other party as you're [42:50.440 --> 42:52.880] moving through the process. [42:52.880 --> 42:58.040] As they violate laws, as they commit torts, it will just add it to the system and build [42:58.040 --> 42:59.920] a lawsuit as you go along. [42:59.920 --> 43:00.920] It'll have everything. [43:00.920 --> 43:07.560] Okay, I've used up the whole seg about Stephen from Montana, Carlos from California, Pat [43:07.560 --> 43:08.560] from Texas. [43:08.560 --> 43:12.880] When we come back, I'll start taking your calls. [43:12.880 --> 43:21.480] This is Randy Kelton, Eddie Craig with a headache, I ate too much and if you guys got any cures [43:21.480 --> 43:29.160] for too much turkey, I guess you call it TMT, I have TMT today, send it to me, I can use [43:29.160 --> 43:30.160] it. [43:30.160 --> 43:38.920] Okay, Randy Kelton, Eddie Craig, Rue La Radio, we'll be back shortly and we'll start taking [43:38.920 --> 43:43.680] your questions. [43:43.680 --> 44:08.160] More energy, stronger immune power, improved sense of well-being. [44:08.160 --> 44:11.200] How many supplements have you heard boast of these benefits? 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[45:07.000 --> 45:15.000] Aerial spray, chemtrails, the modified atmosphere, heavy metals and pesticides, carcinogens [45:15.000 --> 45:18.920] and chemical fibers all falling from the sky. [45:18.920 --> 45:26.800] You have a choice to keep your body clean, detoxified with micro plant powder from hempusa.org [45:26.800 --> 45:31.640] or call 908-691-2608. [45:31.640 --> 45:36.320] It's odorless and tasteless and used in any liquid or food. [45:36.320 --> 45:39.560] Protect your family now with micro plant powder. [45:39.560 --> 45:46.920] Cleaning out heavy metals, parasites and toxins, order it now for daily intake and stock it [45:46.920 --> 45:49.200] now for long term storage. [45:49.200 --> 46:09.240] Visit hempusa.org or call 908-691-2608 today. [46:19.200 --> 46:34.000] Hi, folks. [46:34.000 --> 46:35.000] We are back. [46:35.000 --> 46:36.000] Rule of Law Radio. [46:36.000 --> 46:38.000] This is Eddie Craig, Randy Kelton. [46:38.000 --> 46:40.480] Debra Stevens has the night off. [46:40.480 --> 46:43.680] We do have some folks up on the call board. [46:43.680 --> 46:46.000] We have Pat, Stephen and Carlos. [46:46.000 --> 46:47.000] Randy? [46:47.000 --> 46:48.000] Okay. [46:48.000 --> 46:51.000] Let's go to Pat first. [46:51.000 --> 46:56.160] If he's out there in West Texas hanging off of that water tower, he's probably a little [46:56.160 --> 46:57.160] chilly today. [46:57.160 --> 47:01.760] How are you doing out there, Pat? [47:01.760 --> 47:02.760] Oh, pretty good, Randy. [47:02.760 --> 47:03.760] You sound like you're having fun. [47:03.760 --> 47:04.760] Leave those spiders alone, will you? [47:04.760 --> 47:05.760] Oh, yeah. [47:05.760 --> 47:10.760] What are you doing killing those little things? [47:10.760 --> 47:13.560] Well, I used to not kill them. [47:13.560 --> 47:17.920] I'm going to have to struggle with that in the future. [47:17.920 --> 47:20.400] Hey, I'm going to be up there. [47:20.400 --> 47:28.040] I want to get in there on that seminar tomorrow, so I'm going to swing in a little nippy, but [47:28.040 --> 47:29.040] I'll get there. [47:29.040 --> 47:30.040] There at the bookstore. [47:30.040 --> 47:35.400] Are you going to be there or is it just Eddie? [47:35.400 --> 47:38.240] I will probably show up just to be annoying. [47:38.240 --> 47:44.560] He needs someone in the back to shoot spitballs at him just to keep him awake. [47:44.560 --> 47:52.440] I've got a question for you, and this goes with the procedures for the municipal court. [47:52.440 --> 47:56.240] Have you ever heard of a municipal court rule 12? [47:56.240 --> 48:01.800] Municipal court rule 12, I've heard of rule 12. [48:01.800 --> 48:06.640] You're thinking of rule 12 fed, but I think they were not talking about rule 12. [48:06.640 --> 48:16.200] They're saying that if you request access to records, they can ask for a written request. [48:16.200 --> 48:17.200] Yeah, basically. [48:17.200 --> 48:21.000] What they're trying to do is keep me from looking in my file. [48:21.000 --> 48:24.440] Okay, here's the deal, and I do this all the time. [48:24.440 --> 48:30.480] I'm in Waco, Texas, I go to the JP, and I ask to see some records. [48:30.480 --> 48:33.880] You don't have to give us a written request, no ma'am. [48:33.880 --> 48:36.040] No written request, no 10 days, no 10 minutes. [48:36.040 --> 48:38.920] I want to see those records, I want to see them right now, and I want no interference [48:38.920 --> 48:39.920] in the process. [48:39.920 --> 48:43.240] Well, you're just going to have to write us a written request. [48:43.240 --> 48:47.240] I say, ma'am, you need to wait right here. [48:47.240 --> 48:50.920] Somebody's going to want to talk to you, and we went out in the hall and went over to where [48:50.920 --> 48:57.640] the little metal detector was, and there's this female sergeant standing there. [48:57.640 --> 48:59.960] I ask her, who's the head of security? [48:59.960 --> 49:01.800] Well, I am right now. [49:01.800 --> 49:02.800] Come with me, I need you. [49:02.800 --> 49:07.760] I spun around and stomped off. [49:07.760 --> 49:12.120] Just as I round the corner, I look back, and she was kind of hesitating, not knowing what [49:12.120 --> 49:14.400] to do, and then she followed me. [49:14.400 --> 49:22.200] We went in the office, and she's in the JP's clerk's office, and the sergeant came in and [49:22.200 --> 49:23.200] said, what seems to be the problem? [49:23.200 --> 49:24.200] I said, arrest her. [49:24.200 --> 49:27.640] Well, why would I arrest her? [49:27.640 --> 49:31.560] For criminal violation 27004 government code. [49:31.560 --> 49:34.000] Well, what is that? [49:34.000 --> 49:42.720] I said, well, 27004 government code specifically addresses municipal and justice courts, and [49:42.720 --> 49:46.840] it says they shall keep their records open for public inspection by all interested parties [49:46.840 --> 49:49.080] at all reasonable times. [49:49.080 --> 49:52.520] Rule 12 does not apply to these courts. [49:52.520 --> 50:00.720] Attorney general opinion JM-124 says, interested parties are any member of the public, reasonable [50:00.720 --> 50:02.120] times, normal business hours. [50:02.120 --> 50:04.680] I requested these records, she refused to give them to me. [50:04.680 --> 50:08.960] She violated the law relating to her office, denied me and my right to a public court, [50:08.960 --> 50:12.880] that's class A misdemeanor, official oppression, arrest her. [50:12.880 --> 50:15.400] And you ought to see the chicken dance I got. [50:15.400 --> 50:18.240] Well, well, I don't have 27004. [50:18.240 --> 50:20.200] Oh, that's no problem. [50:20.200 --> 50:25.600] I take out my case, pull out a copy, here, read and weep. [50:25.600 --> 50:28.800] It's very clear. [50:28.800 --> 50:33.840] A county court or district court can pull that nonsense, but if they try it, I'll file [50:33.840 --> 50:34.840] on them anyway. [50:34.840 --> 50:40.680] Listen, then I'm going to want to see all of the others they've requested, and if they [50:40.680 --> 50:47.080] didn't make everybody else give them a request, then I'm going to charge them with official [50:47.080 --> 50:48.080] oppression anyway. [50:48.080 --> 50:49.080] But they... [50:49.080 --> 50:55.360] Slap official oppression on these boys anyway, but we'll talk more about it tomorrow. [50:55.360 --> 50:59.880] But I was just wondering if I had the same reading on it as you did. [50:59.880 --> 51:10.120] Yeah, it's 27004, 27.004 government code, specifically addresses J.P. courts, and in [51:10.120 --> 51:14.960] the J.P. court law, it says they apply to municipal courts. [51:14.960 --> 51:19.480] So they have a special statute that exempts them from the Rule 12, Crapola. [51:19.480 --> 51:23.160] Yeah, I'll give them the Rule 12. [51:23.160 --> 51:26.440] The Open Records Act request that... [51:26.440 --> 51:34.360] Well, they first told me I had to file a FOIA, which is federal, and I couldn't see, just [51:34.360 --> 51:39.080] could not see the file because I was not an attorney. [51:39.080 --> 51:40.080] That's what they told... [51:40.080 --> 51:45.800] Okay, I went to Cherokee County Wednesday, the day I got bit by this annoying spider, [51:45.800 --> 51:50.600] and went in the courtroom, I had to see my file because the clerk didn't have it, the [51:50.600 --> 51:51.600] judge's coordinator didn't. [51:51.600 --> 51:53.640] He said, are you an attorney? [51:53.640 --> 51:55.120] I am the litigant. [51:55.120 --> 51:59.360] Well, if you're not an attorney, we can only give these to attorneys. [51:59.360 --> 52:00.360] Where's the bailiff? [52:00.360 --> 52:04.000] I go out and jerk the door open, the bailiff stand out of the hall. [52:04.000 --> 52:06.400] He cringes when he sees me, you come here, I need you. [52:06.400 --> 52:08.360] I need you to arrest this clerk. [52:08.360 --> 52:13.560] And we had this argument about him arresting the clerk. [52:13.560 --> 52:19.560] When we got done in court, the bailiff came to me and he said, Mr. Kelton, I have your [52:19.560 --> 52:27.840] file here, the judge has instructed me to hand carry this file up to the clerk's office, [52:27.840 --> 52:30.800] and when I get up there, you can look at it then. [52:30.800 --> 52:35.560] Well, how big of you, that's really nice, but I still need you to arrest the clerk. [52:35.560 --> 52:43.640] Well, I'm not going to arrest the clerk, so come on, take your chicken suit off. [52:43.640 --> 52:52.480] So I've just been through that recently, them saying only an attorney can get it. [52:52.480 --> 52:57.760] So if she tells you that, I should get a 911 call. [52:57.760 --> 53:03.960] And the neat thing about doing a 911 call is, oh, you don't want to arrest it, oh no. [53:03.960 --> 53:06.720] I just need to document this. [53:06.720 --> 53:12.080] I need you to come here and take my criminal accusation so that I have it documented that [53:12.080 --> 53:15.800] on this day, at this time, she did this dirty rotten thing. [53:15.800 --> 53:19.280] And I have a third party witness, which is you, that I can call to court to witness against [53:19.280 --> 53:20.280] her. [53:20.280 --> 53:23.880] Then you really get to see the chicken dance. [53:23.880 --> 53:28.280] Okay, you got any other issues? [53:28.280 --> 53:33.480] Yeah, real quick, Eddie, are you still with Steve? [53:33.480 --> 53:34.480] Yes. [53:34.480 --> 53:39.200] Steve has that other file for me on the land patent. [53:39.200 --> 53:40.200] Yes. [53:40.200 --> 53:42.200] I'll bring that tomorrow. [53:42.200 --> 53:43.920] Yes, sir, will do. [53:43.920 --> 53:48.800] And Randy, we can sit and talk, and I'll show you what I'm talking about, about land patents [53:48.800 --> 53:52.400] versus the land versus the real estate. [53:52.400 --> 53:54.160] Yeah, this is what I want to see. [53:54.160 --> 54:03.240] I want to see how the bank has imputed knowledge of the land patent. [54:03.240 --> 54:12.440] If I can establish imputed knowledge of a pre-existing land patent that preempts a lien, [54:12.440 --> 54:21.240] then we can maintain that the bank went into this endeavor with full knowledge of the pre-existing [54:21.240 --> 54:26.080] condition that made their lien secondary. [54:26.080 --> 54:29.080] That'll be a hoot. [54:29.080 --> 54:37.920] Okay, let me explain, for those who don't know, Pat's brought forward the land patent, [54:37.920 --> 54:44.920] and what he's saying is that when there's a land patent on the property, that it stands [54:44.920 --> 54:53.200] before any lien, and that the patent was always there. [54:53.200 --> 54:59.120] The individual just hadn't brought forward that portion of the patent that applied to [54:59.120 --> 55:04.640] the particular section of property that they owned, because the patents generally were [55:04.640 --> 55:12.600] given on large tracts of land, and then as people sold off portions of that land, each [55:12.600 --> 55:19.320] individual could bring forth a patent on the portion that they owned. [55:19.320 --> 55:26.080] So what he's saying is the patent was always there, and the patent stands before any lien. [55:26.080 --> 55:31.480] Pat, can you explain how the patent preempts the lien? [55:31.480 --> 55:40.840] Well, the patent, as an example here in Comal County, a friend of mine just recently died. [55:40.840 --> 55:45.400] I'm helping his widow settle some of the estate and everything. [55:45.400 --> 55:53.320] They have a patent from 1836 from the Republic of Texas, it's all handwritten and everything. [55:53.320 --> 56:01.760] That was transferred from the Republic to the original patent requestor, the original [56:01.760 --> 56:09.480] person that bought the land or was granted the land from the Republic, and that was transferred [56:09.480 --> 56:15.520] to them, their heirs, and assigned forever, that is in that document. [56:15.520 --> 56:22.560] It cannot be refuted except by one of those three people. [56:22.560 --> 56:31.400] Now to accept that, if you're the heir of the original patent holder, you have to accept [56:31.400 --> 56:36.040] that gift, because it's gifted, and you don't buy it or anything else, it's just transferred [56:36.040 --> 56:38.680] from one to the next automatically. [56:38.680 --> 56:43.080] You have to sign a statement saying, and it's a very simple statement, I have a copy of [56:43.080 --> 56:49.400] it, anybody can get it from the archives in Austin, that you accept that. [56:49.400 --> 56:56.160] You sign it, you get it notarized, you file it, and now they have to request everybody [56:56.160 --> 57:00.780] go to the county records office and file it there for recording. [57:00.780 --> 57:02.360] You keep the original. [57:02.360 --> 57:07.720] The original is evidence of itself, the copy is not evidence of it. [57:07.720 --> 57:14.480] It is just that copy saying that the original exists, but that's it. [57:14.480 --> 57:20.720] Once you have that original, that is true ownership of sovereign land. [57:20.720 --> 57:25.800] I didn't make up the term, the term is used by the general land office in Austin, by the [57:25.800 --> 57:32.320] state of Texas, and prior to that by the Republic of Texas. [57:32.320 --> 57:38.160] Texas never transferred public lands to the federal government when it became a state. [57:38.160 --> 57:44.280] I won't go into the legalities, whether Texas is a state or not a state, through the material. [57:44.280 --> 57:46.520] They never transferred lands. [57:46.520 --> 57:55.040] All the land patents issued by the state of Texas have been signed by the commissioner [57:55.040 --> 58:03.800] of the general land office and by the governor of the state, and I hear the music, and I'll [58:03.800 --> 58:09.840] make this real short, this land patent stands in front of any deed, it is true ownership [58:09.840 --> 58:14.880] and will always prove title over the deed, regardless, it's been adjudicated too many [58:14.880 --> 58:15.880] times. [58:15.880 --> 58:16.880] Okay. [58:16.880 --> 58:22.480] And we can go into further of this after the seminar tomorrow evening if somebody wants [58:22.480 --> 58:23.480] to. [58:23.480 --> 58:32.400] Okay, I may want to do a show on this later, once I get it sorted out. [58:32.400 --> 58:33.400] Okay. [58:33.400 --> 58:34.400] Not a problem. [58:34.400 --> 58:35.400] Thank you very much. [58:35.400 --> 58:41.000] I'm going to throw a shout out to my wife out there, honey, I'm on the phone. [58:41.000 --> 58:42.000] Okay. [58:42.000 --> 58:43.000] Bye. [58:43.000 --> 58:44.000] Okay, bye. [58:44.000 --> 58:49.640] This is Randy Kelcom, Eddie Craig, Real Law Radio, Debra has the night off, she's just [58:49.640 --> 58:52.640] watching us to make sure we do everything right. [58:52.640 --> 59:00.400] We'll be right back on the other side. [59:00.400 --> 59:05.800] The Bible remains the most popular book in the world, yet countless readers are frustrated [59:05.800 --> 59:08.640] because they struggle to understand it. [59:08.640 --> 59:14.000] Some new translations try to help by simplifying the text, but in the process can compromise [59:14.000 --> 59:17.280] the profound meaning of the scripture. [59:17.280 --> 59:19.000] Enter the recovery version. [59:19.000 --> 59:24.960] First, this new translation is extremely faithful and accurate, but the real story is the more [59:24.960 --> 59:28.680] than 9,000 explanatory footnotes. [59:28.680 --> 59:33.680] Difficult and profound passages are opened up in a marvelous way, providing an entrance [59:33.680 --> 59:38.400] into the riches of the word beyond which you've ever experienced before. [59:38.400 --> 59:43.560] Bibles for America would like to give you a free recovery version simply for the asking. [59:43.560 --> 59:54.000] This comprehensive yet compact study Bible is yours just by calling us toll free at 1-888-551-0102 [59:54.000 --> 59:58.080] or by ordering online at freestudybible.com. [59:58.080 --> 59:59.080] That's freestudybible.com. [59:59.080 --> 01:00:04.560] This news brief is brought to you by the International News Network. [01:00:04.560 --> 01:00:09.020] Russia's Parliament Friday declared Stalin responsible for ordering the Katyn massacre [01:00:09.020 --> 01:00:14.480] of thousands of Polish officers in World War II, a crime Moscow spent decades blaming on [01:00:14.480 --> 01:00:15.480] the Nazis. [01:00:15.480 --> 01:00:20.680] The resolution came amid reports that President Dmitry Medvedov was intending to launch a [01:00:20.680 --> 01:00:26.760] major new de-Stalinization drive that reminded Russians of the Soviet dictator's crimes [01:00:26.760 --> 01:00:31.120] and declassified once secret information. [01:00:31.120 --> 01:00:36.920] North Korea says planned U.S. South Korean military exercises could push the Korean Peninsula [01:00:36.920 --> 01:00:38.600] to a state of war. [01:00:38.600 --> 01:00:43.560] The North's official news agency referred to provocation by quote, trigger happy elements [01:00:43.560 --> 01:00:46.760] staging war exercises against the North. [01:00:46.760 --> 01:00:51.440] South Korea's defense minister resigned Thursday following widespread criticism of the government's [01:00:51.440 --> 01:00:56.120] soft response to the North's attack. [01:00:56.120 --> 01:00:59.720] Investigators have found thousands of signals in New York City's subway system were not [01:00:59.720 --> 01:01:03.160] inspected despite official reports saying they were. [01:01:03.160 --> 01:01:07.640] An investigation by Barry Kluger, Inspector General of the Metropolitan Transportation [01:01:07.640 --> 01:01:13.800] Authority found supervisors were forcing their employees to falsely report inspections or [01:01:13.800 --> 01:01:16.640] face punishments. [01:01:16.640 --> 01:01:21.560] The Washington Post reported Friday British spies unwittingly paid several hundred thousand [01:01:21.560 --> 01:01:27.280] dollars to an imposter they believed was the top Taliban commander key to the Afghan peace [01:01:27.280 --> 01:01:28.280] process. [01:01:28.280 --> 01:01:33.200] Britain's foreign intelligence service MI6 believed the man to be Mullah Akhtar Mohammed [01:01:33.200 --> 01:01:39.320] Mansour, a senior Taliban figure authorized to negotiate with U.S. and Afghan officials. [01:01:39.320 --> 01:01:46.240] Agents flew the man on Royal Air Force transport planes from Pakistan to Kabul on several occasions [01:01:46.240 --> 01:01:51.920] but it now appears he was either a low level fighter, a shopkeeper or just a con man. [01:01:51.920 --> 01:01:57.440] Mansour's double is long gone along with the money he was given. [01:01:57.440 --> 01:02:02.080] Thursday was a day of mourning for Native Americans who regard Thanksgiving as a commemoration [01:02:02.080 --> 01:02:07.080] of the genocide perpetrated against their ancestors by European colonizers. [01:02:07.080 --> 01:02:12.200] The town of Plymouth Mass has become the site of Thanksgiving's two opposing narratives. [01:02:12.200 --> 01:02:16.440] Each year families dressed as pilgrims parade through town. [01:02:16.440 --> 01:02:20.480] After the parade Thursday, those in mourning march through Plymouth. [01:02:20.480 --> 01:02:25.200] From the hill above Plymouth Rock, speakers urged people to remember their shared history [01:02:25.200 --> 01:02:27.480] and to fight racism and oppression. [01:02:27.480 --> 01:02:33.480] Minamum James, whose father Frank James initiated the first day of mourning in 1970, told the [01:02:33.480 --> 01:02:39.000] crowd quote, every inch of this land is Indian land, we are here to unite people and to speak [01:02:39.000 --> 01:02:45.680] the truth, adding, we are like the dirt, like the sand, like the tides, we shall endure. [01:02:45.680 --> 01:03:10.480] Thursday's ceremony was dedicated to imprison Native American activist Leonard Peltier. [01:03:16.680 --> 01:03:44.240] Alright folks, we are back, this is Rule of Law Radio, Randy Kelton, Eddie Craig, Deborah [01:03:44.240 --> 01:03:51.160] Stevens, we have a few callers up on the board right now, so we'll be getting to the next [01:03:51.160 --> 01:03:52.160] one here. [01:03:52.160 --> 01:03:55.160] Randy, would you like to bring Steven in please? [01:03:55.160 --> 01:04:06.880] Oh, sorry, I was, Steven from Montana, hello, hello Steven, thanks for hanging in there [01:04:06.880 --> 01:04:09.240] with us, what you got? [01:04:09.240 --> 01:04:13.840] First of all, Randy about your spider bite, just another word of advice. [01:04:13.840 --> 01:04:23.400] A good thing would be plantain, it grows everywhere, all over your yard probably, like on your [01:04:23.400 --> 01:04:26.880] way to the health food store or something, the other stuff you need, or the doctor, grab [01:04:26.880 --> 01:04:31.120] a bunch of plantain out of your yard, crush it up in your mouth to where it gets all the [01:04:31.120 --> 01:04:35.840] juices flowing, and just hold it on there and it will suck all that stuff out. [01:04:35.840 --> 01:04:40.040] That's a new one, I haven't heard that one, plantain has a lot of uses, makes a great [01:04:40.040 --> 01:04:43.000] salad, but I haven't heard of using it for that. [01:04:43.000 --> 01:04:47.640] Yep, it works good for that. [01:04:47.640 --> 01:04:52.320] I come from tobacco country, Tennessee, and there you get a spider bite, the first thing [01:04:52.320 --> 01:04:59.360] they do is get tobacco on it, because it draws well, and actually that's what I did, the [01:04:59.360 --> 01:05:06.440] first thing I did was went into Walgreens and bought a cigar, and cut the end off of [01:05:06.440 --> 01:05:10.760] it and dipped it in water and soaked it and put it on there, and put a bandage over it [01:05:10.760 --> 01:05:13.760] to hold it. [01:05:13.760 --> 01:05:16.760] Yeah I think plantain is one of the best drawers up there. [01:05:16.760 --> 01:05:17.760] Interesting. [01:05:17.760 --> 01:05:18.760] Thank you. [01:05:18.760 --> 01:05:28.720] So what I have, for Eddie I guess, I listened to his show the other night on agenda 21, [01:05:28.720 --> 01:05:36.240] and he was talking about ministerial duty and how officers aren't immune, and I was [01:05:36.240 --> 01:05:44.760] doing some research of that, and so an administrative duty would be like anywhere where the statute [01:05:44.760 --> 01:05:45.760] says shall. [01:05:45.760 --> 01:05:52.840] Okay, wait, wait, wait, not administrative, ministerial, let's not mix those two up. [01:05:52.840 --> 01:05:55.960] Right, correct, ministerial. [01:05:55.960 --> 01:06:02.160] Yeah anything that the law specifically creates a mandate for where the officer in question [01:06:02.160 --> 01:06:07.280] has no discernible discretion as to how to perform the act. [01:06:07.280 --> 01:06:12.800] For instance, when an officer is given the authority to arrest or issue a citation, that's [01:06:12.800 --> 01:06:20.960] a discretionary duty, okay, when a judge is sitting for the purpose of presiding over [01:06:20.960 --> 01:06:27.840] a trial and he must make decisions based upon his own ability and knowledge, that's a discretionary [01:06:27.840 --> 01:06:28.840] duty. [01:06:28.840 --> 01:06:29.840] Correct. [01:06:29.840 --> 01:06:38.000] But when his actions are specifically mandated by law, where there is no discretion or discretion [01:06:38.000 --> 01:06:43.200] is severely limited only to the options the law presents, it's ministerial. [01:06:43.200 --> 01:06:49.680] Yeah, shall, exactly what you said, it does not mean may, might, or can if he wants to. [01:06:49.680 --> 01:06:55.760] Yeah, shall, must, will, those are non-discretionary. [01:06:55.760 --> 01:07:02.800] And may is discretionary, when Scott says may do this or may do that. [01:07:02.800 --> 01:07:10.040] Exactly, may is generally used to give them the option of doing something if they deem [01:07:10.040 --> 01:07:17.360] appropriate or it's sometimes used to grant a specific authority. [01:07:17.360 --> 01:07:24.000] Okay, well I got a question for you, what is, I got Scott here, it says duties of sheriff [01:07:24.000 --> 01:07:31.280] and it says the sheriff shall, and then give a list of things, would the sheriff also mean [01:07:31.280 --> 01:07:34.160] a sheriff's deputy or is that just specific to the county sheriff? [01:07:34.160 --> 01:07:37.080] Yes, absolutely deputy, I'm sorry, go ahead Eddie. [01:07:37.080 --> 01:07:38.800] Oh yes, it would. [01:07:38.800 --> 01:07:40.280] Okay, well this. [01:07:40.280 --> 01:07:47.560] The provision applies to any officer of the office unless the context specifically limits [01:07:47.560 --> 01:07:51.280] it to the sheriff only. [01:07:51.280 --> 01:07:57.640] For instance, if it's talking about the sheriff shall oversee the administration of the jail, [01:07:57.640 --> 01:08:01.320] that clearly does not mean a deputy. [01:08:01.320 --> 01:08:07.000] That speaks only to whoever is acting or as the sheriff at that time. [01:08:07.000 --> 01:08:14.840] Now a deputy could be acting in that capacity if the sheriff is unavailable, but for all [01:08:14.840 --> 01:08:20.320] intents and purposes that statute is dealing strictly and directly with the office of sheriff [01:08:20.320 --> 01:08:22.480] not with the deputy. [01:08:22.480 --> 01:08:30.320] And essentially any official acting under the authority of another official is taking [01:08:30.320 --> 01:08:37.360] the place of the official, the official performs the act respondeet superior, so it makes a [01:08:37.360 --> 01:08:42.760] little difference if the sheriff does it himself or if he delegates it to someone else, he [01:08:42.760 --> 01:08:47.640] is as responsible as if he had acted personally himself. [01:08:47.640 --> 01:08:54.480] Okay, I gotcha, so this section here, the duties of sheriff, it lists 12 subsections [01:08:54.480 --> 01:08:59.000] and it says the sheriff shall, of course here's one that probably just applies to the sheriff, [01:08:59.000 --> 01:09:04.080] it says command the aid of as many inhabitants of the county as are necessary in the execution [01:09:04.080 --> 01:09:06.680] of the sheriff's duties. [01:09:06.680 --> 01:09:11.640] But the one that I'm specifically wondering about is it says the sheriff shall subsection [01:09:11.640 --> 01:09:15.840] two arrest and take before the nearest magistrate for examination all persons who attempt to [01:09:15.840 --> 01:09:20.200] commit or have committed a public offense, that wouldn't be a discretionary thing would [01:09:20.200 --> 01:09:21.200] it? [01:09:21.200 --> 01:09:23.400] It wouldn't appear to be, no. [01:09:23.400 --> 01:09:31.800] It's not written discretionary, but the courts have granted them a wide degree of discretion [01:09:31.800 --> 01:09:34.520] over who to arrest and who not to. [01:09:34.520 --> 01:09:41.480] Okay, I was just wondering if there would be a cause of action for taking a sheriff [01:09:41.480 --> 01:09:45.000] to jail and not for the magistrate and him being immune from that. [01:09:45.000 --> 01:09:46.600] Yeah, that's false imprisonment. [01:09:46.600 --> 01:09:49.640] Yeah, the cause of action would be, there'd be one for that. [01:09:49.640 --> 01:09:57.440] Now if he elected not to arrest, that wouldn't be a cause of action because you're not harmed. [01:09:57.440 --> 01:09:59.360] Correct, they'd be arrested. [01:09:59.360 --> 01:10:04.500] There have been cases where a policeman didn't arrest someone they could have arrested. [01:10:04.500 --> 01:10:11.560] The person went on to commit a crime and the victim came back after the policeman and the [01:10:11.560 --> 01:10:18.240] courts have said that they've granted the policeman reasonable discretion. [01:10:18.240 --> 01:10:22.640] So you can't sue the policeman if he decides not to arrest. [01:10:22.640 --> 01:10:30.960] However, once he takes the action of arrest, that take before a magistrate is not discretionary. [01:10:30.960 --> 01:10:36.960] Okay, so that's one cause of action I got for the police officer. [01:10:36.960 --> 01:10:41.760] Here's one for the judge for disqualification. [01:10:41.760 --> 01:10:46.760] It says the judge, whenever a party to any proceeding in any court shall file an affidavit [01:10:46.760 --> 01:10:51.840] alleging facts showing personal bias prejudices of the presiding judge, such judge shall proceed [01:10:51.840 --> 01:10:53.840] no further in the cause. [01:10:53.840 --> 01:10:59.240] And then it says that he must move it to the district court or to appoint a different judge [01:10:59.240 --> 01:11:00.240] to hear the determination. [01:11:00.240 --> 01:11:06.920] In this case, the judge ruled on its own disqualification and has still been presiding for the last [01:11:06.920 --> 01:11:07.920] five months. [01:11:07.920 --> 01:11:13.680] I was wondering the cause of action for that. [01:11:13.680 --> 01:11:16.920] Impersonating a public official. [01:11:16.920 --> 01:11:18.920] That would be a criminal action. [01:11:18.920 --> 01:11:19.920] Exactly. [01:11:19.920 --> 01:11:24.160] I already filed a criminal complaint for that honor, but it didn't matter. [01:11:24.160 --> 01:11:28.920] I'm wondering about a lawsuit cause of action. [01:11:28.920 --> 01:11:31.920] Denial of due process. [01:11:31.920 --> 01:11:32.920] Okay. [01:11:32.920 --> 01:11:38.920] Under a violation of due process, you don't have to show harm, it's harm per se. [01:11:38.920 --> 01:11:41.920] Right, that would be just a constitutional violation. [01:11:41.920 --> 01:11:42.920] Yes, yes. [01:11:42.920 --> 01:11:43.920] Correct. [01:11:43.920 --> 01:11:46.920] Well, it doesn't have to be constitutional. [01:11:46.920 --> 01:11:53.440] Constitutional would get you into the federal court under a 42 years code 1983 suit, but [01:11:53.440 --> 01:11:56.920] you can go in the state with just a due process violation. [01:11:56.920 --> 01:11:57.920] Okay. [01:11:57.920 --> 01:12:05.920] Well, it appears since I found that out from Eddie the other night about... Is that my [01:12:05.920 --> 01:12:06.920] phone? [01:12:06.920 --> 01:12:07.920] Hello? [01:12:07.920 --> 01:12:08.920] Hello. [01:12:08.920 --> 01:12:09.920] You're still here. [01:12:09.920 --> 01:12:10.920] Not our phone. [01:12:10.920 --> 01:12:11.920] Holy cow. [01:12:11.920 --> 01:12:18.920] After hearing that from Eddie last night, it appears like these guys don't have immunity [01:12:18.920 --> 01:12:24.920] from a lot of things because they violate a lot of their ministerial duties all the time. [01:12:24.920 --> 01:12:31.920] Yeah, and the important thing about the suit is you have to make the proper claim. [01:12:31.920 --> 01:12:36.920] So you don't... I'm sorry. [01:12:36.920 --> 01:12:44.080] If you don't claim it, then you can't adjudicate it, and what will hurt them is you're coming [01:12:44.080 --> 01:12:50.420] in with the right claim against them. [01:12:50.420 --> 01:12:51.920] Most people don't know to do that. [01:12:51.920 --> 01:12:52.920] Okay. [01:12:52.920 --> 01:12:55.920] Do you have any more questions or issues? [01:12:55.920 --> 01:12:57.920] Our call board is filling up. [01:12:57.920 --> 01:12:58.920] Nope. [01:12:58.920 --> 01:12:59.920] That'll be pretty good. [01:12:59.920 --> 01:13:00.920] I think that's it. [01:13:00.920 --> 01:13:01.920] Okay. [01:13:01.920 --> 01:13:02.920] Thank you. [01:13:02.920 --> 01:13:05.920] Now we're going to go to Carlos from California. [01:13:05.920 --> 01:13:10.920] Carlos, are you going to come in and play stump the chump today? [01:13:10.920 --> 01:13:11.920] Yes, sir. [01:13:11.920 --> 01:13:12.920] Hi, sir. [01:13:12.920 --> 01:13:13.920] Hi, Eddie. [01:13:13.920 --> 01:13:14.920] Hi, Mr. Sanders. [01:13:14.920 --> 01:13:15.920] All right. [01:13:15.920 --> 01:13:16.920] How are you? [01:13:16.920 --> 01:13:17.920] Thank you. [01:13:17.920 --> 01:13:18.920] Okay. [01:13:18.920 --> 01:13:19.920] I have an easy one for you. [01:13:19.920 --> 01:13:20.920] I'm getting ready to go to my unlawful detention trial. [01:13:20.920 --> 01:13:22.920] I want your opinion. [01:13:22.920 --> 01:13:27.920] What is the right thing to say and what not to say in front of the judge? [01:13:27.920 --> 01:13:34.920] Do you have indication of a connection between the purchaser of the property and the seller [01:13:34.920 --> 01:13:38.920] of the property? [01:13:38.920 --> 01:13:39.920] Are you asking me? [01:13:39.920 --> 01:13:40.920] Yes. [01:13:40.920 --> 01:13:41.920] Okay. [01:13:41.920 --> 01:13:42.920] Can you say that again? [01:13:42.920 --> 01:13:43.920] Do I have an indication of? [01:13:43.920 --> 01:13:49.920] Do you have any information to indicate that there is a connection between the buyer and [01:13:49.920 --> 01:13:50.920] seller? [01:13:50.920 --> 01:13:57.920] That's funny you ask me because I'm trying to find out exactly what happened from when [01:13:57.920 --> 01:14:06.920] I got my loan up to the present and I can't get a hold of the trust number or trust name [01:14:06.920 --> 01:14:11.920] and I have paid more than one person and they can't find it. [01:14:11.920 --> 01:14:13.920] That was going to be my other question. [01:14:13.920 --> 01:14:18.920] How do I find my trust account name or number? [01:14:18.920 --> 01:14:19.920] Edgar. [01:14:19.920 --> 01:14:20.920] Edgar, right. [01:14:20.920 --> 01:14:23.920] You have to look on Edgar. [01:14:23.920 --> 01:14:31.920] They redid Edgar to make it apparently intentionally to make it more difficult to trace this information [01:14:31.920 --> 01:14:32.920] down. [01:14:32.920 --> 01:14:33.920] Okay. [01:14:33.920 --> 01:14:39.920] We've bought into a very large database that we may well be able to find it in. [01:14:39.920 --> 01:14:42.920] If you've talked to Charles, are you familiar with Charles Coppa? [01:14:42.920 --> 01:14:45.920] No, but I think I heard of him. [01:14:45.920 --> 01:14:46.920] Okay. [01:14:46.920 --> 01:14:49.920] He can do that for you, charges quite a bit, but he can do that for you. [01:14:49.920 --> 01:14:50.920] Okay. [01:14:50.920 --> 01:14:52.920] Now let's go back to my basic question. [01:14:52.920 --> 01:14:56.920] What would you say to the judge as soon as you face him at trial? [01:14:56.920 --> 01:14:57.920] Okay. [01:14:57.920 --> 01:15:02.920] If you're going to unlawful detainer, but one other thing to look for, did the buyer [01:15:02.920 --> 01:15:05.920] pay cash to the clerk of the court? [01:15:05.920 --> 01:15:06.920] Okay. [01:15:06.920 --> 01:15:08.920] There was no sale. [01:15:08.920 --> 01:15:16.920] It went back to the beneficiary, to the bank. [01:15:16.920 --> 01:15:19.920] Oh. [01:15:19.920 --> 01:15:22.920] And the bank is moving for the unlawful detainer. [01:15:22.920 --> 01:15:23.920] Yes. [01:15:23.920 --> 01:15:31.920] And they are claiming bona fide sale in clear title, which we know they don't have. [01:15:31.920 --> 01:15:39.920] Okay, one of the things people are using is notice, I would look at claiming criminal [01:15:39.920 --> 01:15:48.920] fraud against the lender and claiming that because there are criminal acts alleged herein, [01:15:48.920 --> 01:15:56.920] you make the criminal complaints to the unlawful detainer court, and that would render the [01:15:56.920 --> 01:16:00.920] unlawful detainer court without subject matter jurisdiction. [01:16:00.920 --> 01:16:05.920] That's where I'm going, and I want to approach that under quiet title, but I have to go past [01:16:05.920 --> 01:16:06.920] my trial. [01:16:06.920 --> 01:16:07.920] Okay. [01:16:07.920 --> 01:16:10.920] Well, the unlawful detainer court can't hear the quiet title. [01:16:10.920 --> 01:16:11.920] I know that. [01:16:11.920 --> 01:16:18.920] Just go to the unlawful detainer court with criminal charges against the lender of fraud [01:16:18.920 --> 01:16:23.920] and conspiracy to commit, and this is not an issue. [01:16:23.920 --> 01:16:30.920] You can maintain that the purchaser is not a bona fide purchaser because the purchase [01:16:30.920 --> 01:16:32.920] was made based on fraud. [01:16:32.920 --> 01:16:33.920] Okay. [01:16:33.920 --> 01:16:35.920] Can I stay over? [01:16:35.920 --> 01:16:36.920] Yes, absolutely. [01:16:36.920 --> 01:16:37.920] Thank you. [01:16:37.920 --> 01:16:42.920] Okay, this is Randy Kelton, Eddie Craig Radio. [01:16:42.920 --> 01:17:01.920] Deborah has an evening off, and we'll be right back on the other side. [01:17:01.920 --> 01:17:04.920] Capital Coin and Bullion is your local source for rare coins, precious metals, and coin [01:17:04.920 --> 01:17:06.920] supplies in the Austin metro area. [01:17:06.920 --> 01:17:08.920] We also shift worldwide. [01:17:08.920 --> 01:17:12.920] We are a family-owned and operated business that offers competitive prices on your coin [01:17:12.920 --> 01:17:13.920] and metal purchases. [01:17:13.920 --> 01:17:18.920] We buy, sell, trade, and consign rare coins, gold and silver coin collections, precious [01:17:18.920 --> 01:17:19.920] metals, and scrap gold. [01:17:19.920 --> 01:17:21.920] We purchase and sell gold and jewelry items. [01:17:21.920 --> 01:17:24.920] We offer daily specials on coins and bullion. [01:17:24.920 --> 01:17:29.920] We are located at 5448 Burnett Road, Suite 3 at the corner of Burnett and Showmark, and [01:17:29.920 --> 01:17:33.920] we're open Mondays and Fridays 10 to 6, Saturdays 10 to 5. [01:17:33.920 --> 01:17:40.920] You are welcome to stop in our shop during regular business hours or call 512-646-6440 [01:17:40.920 --> 01:17:41.920] with any questions. [01:17:41.920 --> 01:17:45.920] Ask for Chad and say you heard about us on Google Law Radio or Texas Liberty Radio. [01:17:45.920 --> 01:17:49.920] That's Capital Coin and Bullion at the corner of Burnett and Showmark, and we're open [01:17:49.920 --> 01:17:52.920] Mondays and Fridays 10 to 6, Saturdays 10 to 5. [01:17:52.920 --> 01:18:00.920] That's Capital Coin and Bullion 512-646-6440. [01:18:00.920 --> 01:18:04.920] It's so enlightening to listen to 90.1 FM, but finding things on the Internet isn't [01:18:04.920 --> 01:18:08.920] so easy, and neither is finding like-minded people to share it with. [01:18:08.920 --> 01:18:11.920] Oh, well, I guess you haven't heard of Brave New Books, then. [01:18:11.920 --> 01:18:12.920] Brave New Books? [01:18:12.920 --> 01:18:13.920] Yes. [01:18:13.920 --> 01:18:17.920] Brave New Books has all the books and DVDs you're looking for by authors like Alex Jones, [01:18:17.920 --> 01:18:19.920] Ron Paul, and G. Edward Griffin. [01:18:19.920 --> 01:18:23.920] They even stock inner food, Berkey products, and Calvin Soaps. [01:18:23.920 --> 01:18:26.920] There's no way a place like that exists. [01:18:26.920 --> 01:18:27.920] Go check it out for yourself. [01:18:27.920 --> 01:18:31.920] It's downtown at 1904 Guadalupe Street just south of UT. [01:18:31.920 --> 01:18:35.920] By UT, there's never anywhere to park down there. [01:18:35.920 --> 01:18:40.920] Actually, they now offer a free hour of parking for paying customers at the 500 MLK parking [01:18:40.920 --> 01:18:43.920] facility just behind the bookstore. [01:18:43.920 --> 01:18:46.920] It does exist, but when are they open? [01:18:46.920 --> 01:18:51.920] Monday through Saturday, 11 AM to 9 PM, and 1 to 6 PM on Sundays. [01:18:51.920 --> 01:18:58.920] So get them a call at 512-480-2503, or check out their events page at bravenewbookstore.com. [01:19:21.920 --> 01:19:41.920] Okay, Randy Kelton, Eddie Gray, Wheel of Law Radio. [01:19:41.920 --> 01:19:44.920] We're talking to Carlos from California. [01:19:44.920 --> 01:19:50.920] Okay, Carlos, you had something else you wanted to address. [01:19:50.920 --> 01:19:51.920] Yes. [01:19:51.920 --> 01:19:57.920] What I want to comment, I want to raise the issue of title and not a bona fide sale, [01:19:57.920 --> 01:20:00.920] and also raise the issue of due process. [01:20:00.920 --> 01:20:02.920] Can you guide me on that? [01:20:02.920 --> 01:20:07.920] Well, if you try to bring that up in the unlawful detainer hearing, [01:20:07.920 --> 01:20:10.920] the court will refuse to hear it. [01:20:10.920 --> 01:20:17.920] Well, in their judge's bench guide says that if a defendant raises the issue of due process, [01:20:17.920 --> 01:20:19.920] it must be heard in superior court. [01:20:19.920 --> 01:20:23.920] And if you raise the issue of title, it has to be heard in superior court. [01:20:23.920 --> 01:20:25.920] They have to give you a chance. [01:20:25.920 --> 01:20:30.920] We've raised these issues before, and the judge just walks right over. [01:20:30.920 --> 01:20:41.920] So my suggestion is that if you raise the issue, then clearly the judge lacks subject matter jurisdiction. [01:20:41.920 --> 01:20:47.920] And if the judge attempts to move on, be past them, ask the bailiff to arrest the judge. [01:20:47.920 --> 01:20:49.920] Okay. [01:20:49.920 --> 01:20:52.920] Because it says right on the judge's bench book, [01:20:52.920 --> 01:20:58.920] I even copy and pasted that page from the judge's bench guide [01:20:58.920 --> 01:21:03.920] right on my unlawful detainer First Amendment answer. [01:21:03.920 --> 01:21:06.920] Good. [01:21:06.920 --> 01:21:09.920] You wouldn't happen to have that in electronic format, would you? [01:21:09.920 --> 01:21:11.920] Yes, I do. [01:21:11.920 --> 01:21:12.920] It's from California. [01:21:12.920 --> 01:21:15.920] That would work for me if I could get a copy. [01:21:15.920 --> 01:21:17.920] I'll make sure you get it. [01:21:17.920 --> 01:21:26.920] But I would suggest right in the courtroom, when the judge does that, say, Mr. Bailiff, I need your assistance. [01:21:26.920 --> 01:21:30.920] We're not using the bailiffs for what they're there for. [01:21:30.920 --> 01:21:34.920] Mr. Bailiff, it is your duty to keep the peace in the courtroom. [01:21:34.920 --> 01:21:40.920] And this court has just exerted an authority they do not expressly have. [01:21:40.920 --> 01:21:47.920] In the process, the court has denied me a right, which is a crime in the state of California. [01:21:47.920 --> 01:21:49.920] Arrest that judge. [01:21:49.920 --> 01:21:51.920] So it is a crime, a denial due process? [01:21:51.920 --> 01:21:52.920] Yes. [01:21:52.920 --> 01:21:53.920] Okay. [01:21:53.920 --> 01:21:56.920] The only state I couldn't find it was New Mexico. [01:21:56.920 --> 01:21:57.920] Okay. [01:21:57.920 --> 01:22:05.920] If you have any time left, we would like you to expand on jurisdiction and due process and grand jury. [01:22:05.920 --> 01:22:10.920] And also, before I go, this gentleman talking about land patent. [01:22:10.920 --> 01:22:11.920] Yes. [01:22:11.920 --> 01:22:13.920] The remedy is in the law. [01:22:13.920 --> 01:22:17.920] They have a great bug for 50 bucks, electronic. [01:22:17.920 --> 01:22:20.920] If I was him, I would get it. [01:22:20.920 --> 01:22:26.920] This guy claims he knows how to do it right, so let's give him a chance. [01:22:26.920 --> 01:22:28.920] Do you know who the guy is? [01:22:28.920 --> 01:22:31.920] His name is J.T. [01:22:31.920 --> 01:22:36.920] He claims he does it the same way that Waco Waco did it. [01:22:36.920 --> 01:22:39.920] Remember that crash, I think it was? [01:22:39.920 --> 01:22:40.920] That would crash, yeah. [01:22:40.920 --> 01:22:41.920] Yes. [01:22:41.920 --> 01:22:44.920] Yeah, look how good the land patent served him. [01:22:44.920 --> 01:22:49.920] Well, it wasn't to protect him against the fight. [01:22:49.920 --> 01:22:54.920] They couldn't go into his land unless they declared war. [01:22:54.920 --> 01:22:57.920] That's the point. [01:22:57.920 --> 01:22:59.920] Yeah, and Texas is different. [01:22:59.920 --> 01:23:04.920] Yeah, well, my main point is just if there's something good in there, let's pick it up. [01:23:04.920 --> 01:23:09.920] And I do have someone I can get you in contact with on that issue in California. [01:23:09.920 --> 01:23:10.920] All right. [01:23:10.920 --> 01:23:11.920] Okay. [01:23:11.920 --> 01:23:12.920] All right. [01:23:12.920 --> 01:23:14.920] I'm going to go ahead and email that. [01:23:14.920 --> 01:23:21.920] And I think I can also grab the electronic version of the judges' bench guide from Florida. [01:23:21.920 --> 01:23:23.920] If I do, I'll send it over. [01:23:23.920 --> 01:23:24.920] That would be wonderful. [01:23:24.920 --> 01:23:25.920] Thank you. [01:23:25.920 --> 01:23:26.920] All right, buddy. [01:23:26.920 --> 01:23:27.920] Thank you. [01:23:27.920 --> 01:23:28.920] Thank you, Carlos. [01:23:28.920 --> 01:23:34.920] Okay, now we're going to go to Sid in Indiana. [01:23:34.920 --> 01:23:35.920] Hello, Sid. [01:23:35.920 --> 01:23:36.920] What's on your mind tonight? [01:23:36.920 --> 01:23:37.920] Hey, guys. [01:23:37.920 --> 01:23:43.920] Can I just say that this might be the most pertinent radio show I've ever listened to, [01:23:43.920 --> 01:23:46.920] and I listen to radio all the time. [01:23:46.920 --> 01:23:47.920] Oh, wonderful. [01:23:47.920 --> 01:23:51.920] I just found you tonight, and I'm going to be putting in my favorites, [01:23:51.920 --> 01:23:54.920] because I'm going to be listening to the show every time I have a chance. [01:23:54.920 --> 01:23:55.920] Wonderful. [01:23:55.920 --> 01:23:58.920] Well, we have all our archives up, and they're free to download. [01:23:58.920 --> 01:24:05.920] Well, I'm kind of interested in your time, [01:24:05.920 --> 01:24:13.920] the time it's going to take you to get your modules up that you were talking about earlier. [01:24:13.920 --> 01:24:18.920] Any idea when that, and will that be available as a series for purchase? [01:24:18.920 --> 01:24:26.920] Yes. Well, what we'll do is we're going to set this up as an online service. [01:24:26.920 --> 01:24:27.920] Okay. [01:24:27.920 --> 01:24:29.920] You go online, fill out the questionnaire. [01:24:29.920 --> 01:24:31.920] So almost like a subscription service. [01:24:31.920 --> 01:24:32.920] Yeah. [01:24:32.920 --> 01:24:33.920] Cool. [01:24:33.920 --> 01:24:35.920] Yeah, you can use it, because we can't just sell it, [01:24:35.920 --> 01:24:38.920] because once we get it put together, [01:24:38.920 --> 01:24:43.920] we'll constantly have people coming to us, bringing us new issues. [01:24:43.920 --> 01:24:44.920] Gotcha. [01:24:44.920 --> 01:24:49.920] The reason I do this is I've done this radio show for a little over four years now, [01:24:49.920 --> 01:24:55.920] and I have people calling in from all over the country with all sorts of different issues. [01:24:55.920 --> 01:25:01.920] And since we do a show basically focused on remedy [01:25:01.920 --> 01:25:05.920] and not just, oh, this is what's wrong, look how bad things are, [01:25:05.920 --> 01:25:10.920] there are other folks that do that, and that serves a really good purpose. [01:25:10.920 --> 01:25:12.920] But we don't do that. [01:25:12.920 --> 01:25:14.920] We take the next step. [01:25:14.920 --> 01:25:18.920] Now that this is what's wrong, now let's see what we can do to fix it. [01:25:18.920 --> 01:25:24.920] Well, if I may, I have six lawyers in my family. [01:25:24.920 --> 01:25:27.920] Oh, man, you poor man. [01:25:27.920 --> 01:25:29.920] Yeah, tell me about it. [01:25:29.920 --> 01:25:34.920] I've got three circuit court judges and a state Supreme Court justice in the state of Kentucky. [01:25:34.920 --> 01:25:37.920] He's passed away just recently. [01:25:37.920 --> 01:25:42.920] You even say that openly and in public, I'm impressed. [01:25:42.920 --> 01:25:48.920] I went into medicine, and let me tell you, [01:25:48.920 --> 01:25:54.920] I get a queasy stomach every time I have to deal with attorneys, and nothing against you guys. [01:25:54.920 --> 01:26:01.920] And as I'm sitting here listening for the first time, I'm thinking to myself, oh, my God, oh, my God. [01:26:01.920 --> 01:26:05.920] Every time I'm listening, each one of your callers and each one of their points, [01:26:05.920 --> 01:26:11.920] now I don't have a law background, but I was only around them all my life. [01:26:11.920 --> 01:26:13.920] I'm in my mid-50s. [01:26:13.920 --> 01:26:17.920] And I'm thinking to myself, you know, if I was sitting around a table [01:26:17.920 --> 01:26:22.920] and I ever suggested to one of the judges in my family at a big dinner [01:26:22.920 --> 01:26:29.920] that they could be deposed after they were subpoenaed, [01:26:29.920 --> 01:26:36.920] I could only – I'm sitting here thinking what their faces would look like. [01:26:36.920 --> 01:26:40.920] So this is good stuff, guys. [01:26:40.920 --> 01:26:45.920] And the fact that you're moving from, hey, what's wrong to what's the remedy [01:26:45.920 --> 01:26:49.920] is what's missing in so much of alternative radio today. [01:26:49.920 --> 01:26:54.920] Lots of people have pointed their fingers at things that are probably correct, [01:26:54.920 --> 01:26:59.920] but until you try to remedy them, you don't know if they are or not. [01:26:59.920 --> 01:27:02.920] Yes, and, you know, we pick on attorneys, [01:27:02.920 --> 01:27:09.920] but I kind of feel like I need to step up in their defense somewhat. [01:27:09.920 --> 01:27:16.920] You can't expect an attorney to attempt to adjudicate your rights [01:27:16.920 --> 01:27:22.920] if it's going to annoy the judge and end his career. [01:27:22.920 --> 01:27:27.920] So if we as the litigants annoy the judge, what's he going to do to us? [01:27:27.920 --> 01:27:29.920] Yeah, they can kiss my behind as far as I'm concerned. [01:27:29.920 --> 01:27:32.920] Well, actually, guys, that does pose a question I had. [01:27:32.920 --> 01:27:36.920] As I'm listening to this and I'm saying – and I'm hearing you say, [01:27:36.920 --> 01:27:38.920] Bayless, go arrest that judge. [01:27:38.920 --> 01:27:43.920] I'm thinking to myself in the county that I'm from – [01:27:43.920 --> 01:27:47.920] well, it wouldn't get me in any trouble because I've got county judges in my family, [01:27:47.920 --> 01:27:51.920] but in a county that I'm not from where I'm just another person, [01:27:51.920 --> 01:27:55.920] because that's not a fair advantage that I have. [01:27:55.920 --> 01:27:57.920] Could that not get me put in jail? [01:27:57.920 --> 01:28:03.920] Okay, I have done that a number of times, and I have never – [01:28:03.920 --> 01:28:09.920] not one time has a judge threatened me with contempt or anything else. [01:28:09.920 --> 01:28:12.920] Temple, Texas, I asked the officer, [01:28:12.920 --> 01:28:15.920] when was the last time you swore to an oath of office? [01:28:15.920 --> 01:28:18.920] Objection sustained. [01:28:18.920 --> 01:28:22.920] Your Honor, I have a right to test the credibility of this officer. [01:28:22.920 --> 01:28:25.920] The judge said, Mr. Kelton, this officer is credible. [01:28:25.920 --> 01:28:28.920] And just how did this officer get credible? [01:28:28.920 --> 01:28:32.920] This officer is credible because I say he's credible. [01:28:32.920 --> 01:28:33.920] Bayless. [01:28:33.920 --> 01:28:35.920] Mr. Bayless, did you hear that? [01:28:35.920 --> 01:28:37.920] Yes, Mr. Kelton, I did. [01:28:37.920 --> 01:28:40.920] Drag that judge down off that bench. [01:28:40.920 --> 01:28:42.920] Judge, you get off that bench, you're disqualified. [01:28:42.920 --> 01:28:47.920] And the judge jumped up, clear the jury, clear the jury. [01:28:47.920 --> 01:28:51.920] Well, and you're not an attorney, but you are an attorney. [01:28:51.920 --> 01:28:52.920] No. [01:28:52.920 --> 01:28:58.920] Okay, well, you know, you could be a real help to people out there. [01:28:58.920 --> 01:29:00.920] That's what I'm here for. [01:29:00.920 --> 01:29:01.920] Yeah, yeah, yeah. [01:29:01.920 --> 01:29:04.920] We are on a mission. I'm on a personal mission. [01:29:04.920 --> 01:29:06.920] Well, Guy, you've got my heart already. [01:29:06.920 --> 01:29:09.920] The first time I've listened to you, I'm going to be listening a lot. [01:29:09.920 --> 01:29:11.920] I'll probably call you more than once. [01:29:11.920 --> 01:29:12.920] Good. [01:29:12.920 --> 01:29:16.920] But if I have any information for you from Kentucky or Indiana, [01:29:16.920 --> 01:29:18.920] if there's something I can help with, just put the word out. [01:29:18.920 --> 01:29:20.920] I would greatly appreciate it. [01:29:20.920 --> 01:29:23.920] My father was from Mayfield, Kentucky. [01:29:23.920 --> 01:29:24.920] Okay, okay. [01:29:24.920 --> 01:29:29.920] Well, my family's all from Jefferson County, Kentucky, which is Louisville. [01:29:29.920 --> 01:29:31.920] Man, they're hillbillies back there. [01:29:31.920 --> 01:29:32.920] Oh, yeah, yeah. [01:29:32.920 --> 01:29:34.920] Hey, thank you for your time, Guy. [01:29:34.920 --> 01:29:35.920] You're welcome. [01:29:35.920 --> 01:29:36.920] And we'll be right back on the other side. [01:29:36.920 --> 01:29:37.920] Bye-bye. [01:29:37.920 --> 01:29:42.920] We'll take Claudio and Mr. X when we get back on the other side. [01:29:42.920 --> 01:29:47.920] Mr. Andy Kelton, David Stevens, Eddie Craig, Rule of Law Radio. [01:29:47.920 --> 01:29:59.920] We'll be right back. [01:29:59.920 --> 01:30:03.920] Top ten reasons to question the official story of the Oklahoma City bombing. [01:30:03.920 --> 01:30:05.920] Number nine, the extra leg. [01:30:05.920 --> 01:30:08.920] Former Oklahoma State medical examiner Dr. Fred Jordan had stated, [01:30:08.920 --> 01:30:12.920] we had eight people with amputated left legs and nine left legs to account for. [01:30:12.920 --> 01:30:14.920] T pathologist for Northern Ireland, T.K. Marshall, [01:30:14.920 --> 01:30:17.920] who performed over 2,500 autopsies in his time, stated, [01:30:17.920 --> 01:30:19.920] there's never been an unknown victim. [01:30:19.920 --> 01:30:22.920] This leg belonged to a perpetrator close enough to the bomb [01:30:22.920 --> 01:30:25.920] for his body to be damaged, leaving only a left leg behind. [01:30:25.920 --> 01:30:26.920] Who was this person? [01:30:26.920 --> 01:30:31.920] Please go to okcbombingtruth.com. [01:30:31.920 --> 01:30:35.920] Bill Gates is infamous for the bugs in his Microsoft products. [01:30:35.920 --> 01:30:38.920] Now he's associated with a different kind of bug, [01:30:38.920 --> 01:30:41.920] genetically modified mosquitoes with killer properties. [01:30:41.920 --> 01:30:42.920] I'm Dr. Catherine Albrecht, [01:30:42.920 --> 01:30:45.920] and I'll be back with a buzz on this story in just a moment. [01:30:45.920 --> 01:30:47.920] Privacy is under attack. [01:30:47.920 --> 01:30:51.920] When you give up data about yourself, you'll never get it back again. [01:30:51.920 --> 01:30:56.920] And once your privacy is gone, you'll find your freedoms will start to vanish too. [01:30:56.920 --> 01:30:57.920] So protect your rights. [01:30:57.920 --> 01:31:01.920] Say no to surveillance and keep your information to yourself. [01:31:01.920 --> 01:31:03.920] Privacy, it's worth hanging on to. [01:31:03.920 --> 01:31:07.920] This public service announcement is brought to you by Startpage.com, [01:31:07.920 --> 01:31:11.920] the private search engine alternative to Google, Yahoo, and Bing. [01:31:11.920 --> 01:31:14.920] Start over with Startpage. [01:31:14.920 --> 01:31:17.920] Genetically modified food is bad enough, [01:31:17.920 --> 01:31:20.920] but now we may have to contend with genetically modified insects. [01:31:20.920 --> 01:31:24.920] The Bill Gates Foundation is helping fund a United Nations plan [01:31:24.920 --> 01:31:27.920] to eradicate dengue fever and other tropical diseases [01:31:27.920 --> 01:31:29.920] using genetically modified mosquitoes. [01:31:29.920 --> 01:31:33.920] The insects would contain an inserted bacterium or genetic alteration [01:31:33.920 --> 01:31:36.920] to make them sterile or unable to transmit disease. [01:31:36.920 --> 01:31:40.920] Critics worry these mosquitoes could multiply and escape control of their handlers, [01:31:40.920 --> 01:31:44.920] much like killer bees, but the UN calls these concerns alarmist. [01:31:44.920 --> 01:31:48.920] Given the mosquitoes transmit germs directly to the human bloodstream, [01:31:48.920 --> 01:31:53.920] do we really want clouds of Frankenbugs full of genetically modified bacteria on the loose? [01:31:53.920 --> 01:31:54.920] I'm Dr. Catherine Albrecht. [01:31:54.920 --> 01:31:59.920] More news and information at CatherineAlbrecht.com. [01:32:25.920 --> 01:32:31.920] The wicked come with temptations [01:32:31.920 --> 01:32:36.920] They're trying to buy the whole place [01:32:36.920 --> 01:32:42.920] They want to poison the nation [01:32:42.920 --> 01:32:47.920] Because they've fallen from grace [01:32:47.920 --> 01:32:53.920] I will not drink that cup [01:32:53.920 --> 01:32:58.920] I just can't act out of way [01:32:58.920 --> 01:33:03.920] They got this problem they're dreaming of [01:33:03.920 --> 01:33:08.920] And I won't be the slave come what may [01:33:08.920 --> 01:33:23.920] Cause I'm going to touch and fall [01:33:23.920 --> 01:33:27.920] Cause I'm going to save myself cause we all might be one [01:33:27.920 --> 01:33:30.920] You know travel in time is what I want [01:33:30.920 --> 01:33:33.920] Love me with all my heart and feet to the beat man [01:33:33.920 --> 01:33:36.920] Love me with all my heart and feet to the beat man [01:33:36.920 --> 01:33:41.920] And I won't be the slave come what may [01:33:41.920 --> 01:33:46.920] Cause I'm going to touch and fall [01:33:46.920 --> 01:33:51.920] Cause I'm going to save myself cause we all might be one [01:33:51.920 --> 01:33:56.920] You know travel in time is what I want [01:33:56.920 --> 01:34:04.920] Love me with all my heart and feet to the beat man [01:34:04.920 --> 01:34:16.200] Well, wait, wait, hold on, um, if you've had the trustee sale and you can expect a, did [01:34:16.200 --> 01:34:18.240] the bank buy it or did a third party buy it? [01:34:18.240 --> 01:34:20.280] The third party bought it, Dan. [01:34:20.280 --> 01:34:22.680] Ooh, that is not good. [01:34:22.680 --> 01:34:27.160] You need to go look, have you done, taken any action against the lender up to this point? [01:34:27.160 --> 01:34:29.040] No, I haven't done nothing. [01:34:29.040 --> 01:34:30.040] Okay. [01:34:30.040 --> 01:34:36.880] You need to get a lawsuit in fast, uh, if, since it's a third party, if you can't make [01:34:36.880 --> 01:34:43.000] a connection between the buyer and the seller, there may not be any way to stop them from [01:34:43.000 --> 01:34:44.000] forcing an eviction. [01:34:44.000 --> 01:34:45.000] Uh, yeah, there's, there's a connection. [01:34:45.000 --> 01:34:46.000] Well, no, no, there's no connection. [01:34:46.000 --> 01:34:47.000] You mean that's a conspiracy? [01:34:47.000 --> 01:34:48.000] Yes. [01:34:48.000 --> 01:34:49.000] No, there's no connection. [01:34:49.000 --> 01:34:50.000] It's a, it's a private party, uh, innocent party. [01:34:50.000 --> 01:34:51.000] I was up to sale. [01:34:51.000 --> 01:34:52.000] Did it make sense? [01:34:52.000 --> 01:34:53.000] Yes. [01:34:53.000 --> 01:35:09.360] It's not always as innocent as it appears, you might want to look at the court records [01:35:09.360 --> 01:35:13.640] and see how many properties this supposed innocent party has purchased. [01:35:13.640 --> 01:35:14.640] Okay. [01:35:14.640 --> 01:35:19.040] Uh, but once a third party's purchased, it's difficult. [01:35:19.040 --> 01:35:20.040] Okay. [01:35:20.040 --> 01:35:26.400] So you can, you can certainly sue the lender, but as far as stopping them from forcing you [01:35:26.400 --> 01:35:29.040] out of the property, that's going to be a, that's what you're saying? [01:35:29.040 --> 01:35:32.840] No, no, I'm not interested in that because, uh, you already took possession of it. [01:35:32.840 --> 01:35:36.280] Um, I'm not interested in that, I'm, I'm, I'm going up to the lender. [01:35:36.280 --> 01:35:37.280] Oh, okay. [01:35:37.280 --> 01:35:41.240] Then, then you're not really in a time constraint in that case. [01:35:41.240 --> 01:35:42.240] Okay. [01:35:42.240 --> 01:35:44.960] No, but always the sooner the better. [01:35:44.960 --> 01:35:50.440] Well, then my question is, does it make a sense to do a quiet title at this time? [01:35:50.440 --> 01:35:52.960] What is the nature of your claim for quiet title? [01:35:52.960 --> 01:35:57.920] Uh, no, I actually, you know, it just, it just popped into my mind. [01:35:57.920 --> 01:36:02.440] I just, I just want, uh, my main objective, I want to sue, I want to sue the lender because [01:36:02.440 --> 01:36:05.360] they were submerged and they didn't have the authorization to sell it. [01:36:05.360 --> 01:36:06.360] Okay. [01:36:06.360 --> 01:36:13.640] You can, you can sue the lender and you can, you can ask for quiet title as, as part of [01:36:13.640 --> 01:36:20.560] the suit, but, uh, just to go in and ask for quiet title, you have to have cause and it's [01:36:20.560 --> 01:36:24.720] almost certainly going to take a lawsuit to show cause as to why you should have quiet [01:36:24.720 --> 01:36:27.720] title. [01:36:27.720 --> 01:36:31.560] So I need to know what your claims are to, to be able to evaluate it. [01:36:31.560 --> 01:36:32.560] Okay. [01:36:32.560 --> 01:36:33.560] Yeah, I know. [01:36:33.560 --> 01:36:35.880] I see, I see, I see what you mean. [01:36:35.880 --> 01:36:41.000] Well, my case, my case right now are, are, uh, the damages I created, uh, when they sold [01:36:41.000 --> 01:36:42.000] my property. [01:36:42.000 --> 01:36:47.960] That's, uh, my, my claim basically, there's a whole lot more than that. [01:36:47.960 --> 01:36:48.960] Okay. [01:36:48.960 --> 01:36:54.440] There's a lot of claims you'll have against them when they wrote the loan. [01:36:54.440 --> 01:36:56.000] How old is the note? [01:36:56.000 --> 01:36:59.800] Uh, five years old, five years old. [01:36:59.800 --> 01:37:00.800] Yes. [01:37:00.800 --> 01:37:09.360] That would put it, uh, oh six, it's not five, actually, five that puts you in the frenzied [01:37:09.360 --> 01:37:15.920] part of the boom, uh, we have a, a program where we run your note, you know, someone [01:37:15.920 --> 01:37:24.320] called and asked about it, about running the numbers early on a average $300,000 note. [01:37:24.320 --> 01:37:33.600] We can generally find between one and 1.2 million in fraud claim against the lender. [01:37:33.600 --> 01:37:35.680] Much nicer to go into court with that. [01:37:35.680 --> 01:37:36.680] Yes. [01:37:36.680 --> 01:37:37.680] Yeah. [01:37:37.680 --> 01:37:43.920] Because of some of the things they consistently do on these loans that are criminal, a lot [01:37:43.920 --> 01:37:47.520] of the fees they charge you on the HUD one settlement statement are not allowed to be [01:37:47.520 --> 01:37:48.520] charged. [01:37:48.520 --> 01:37:49.520] Okay. [01:37:49.520 --> 01:37:51.560] That is theft. [01:37:51.560 --> 01:37:58.040] That is absolute outright stealing from you and you can go after them for that. [01:37:58.040 --> 01:38:03.280] I'm trying to get people to start going to grand juries with criminal charges against [01:38:03.280 --> 01:38:05.520] these lenders. [01:38:05.520 --> 01:38:11.680] They're in, uh, politicians are after them at the moment, you know, they're not in a [01:38:11.680 --> 01:38:13.360] good light right now. [01:38:13.360 --> 01:38:17.560] So it's a good time to knock them to their knees. [01:38:17.560 --> 01:38:23.040] We start shaking grand juries at them and we'll start shaking deals out of them. [01:38:23.040 --> 01:38:24.040] Okay. [01:38:24.040 --> 01:38:25.040] Yeah. [01:38:25.040 --> 01:38:35.680] Now that you mention it, they shouldn't be able to sell a mortgage note if it was of [01:38:35.680 --> 01:38:36.680] variable interest. [01:38:36.680 --> 01:38:39.680] Is that something that you heard about? [01:38:39.680 --> 01:38:41.160] If it was variable interest? [01:38:41.160 --> 01:38:42.160] Yeah. [01:38:42.160 --> 01:38:45.320] Well, that won't have anything to, oh, that doesn't have anything to do with selling the [01:38:45.320 --> 01:38:46.320] note. [01:38:46.320 --> 01:38:47.320] Okay. [01:38:47.320 --> 01:38:53.040] I've heard arguments about that, but they're pretty arcane arguments. [01:38:53.040 --> 01:38:54.040] Okay. [01:38:54.040 --> 01:38:57.280] There are some really direct things you can do, especially if you want to take a good [01:38:57.280 --> 01:39:04.400] look at that arm at the adjustable rate mortgage, because they do all kinds of cheating with [01:39:04.400 --> 01:39:05.400] the mortgage itself. [01:39:05.400 --> 01:39:06.400] Yeah. [01:39:06.400 --> 01:39:07.400] That's a HUD one? [01:39:07.400 --> 01:39:09.240] Well, you won't find it on the HUD one. [01:39:09.240 --> 01:39:11.560] The HUD one is the settlement statement. [01:39:11.560 --> 01:39:13.320] That's where you see all the fees they charge. [01:39:13.320 --> 01:39:14.320] No, no. [01:39:14.320 --> 01:39:18.600] My question is, what are you talking about, what particular document are you talking about? [01:39:18.600 --> 01:39:22.160] You want to look at the note that establishes the arm. [01:39:22.160 --> 01:39:23.160] Okay. [01:39:23.160 --> 01:39:30.440] You want to look at the index they use, and look at each change. [01:39:30.440 --> 01:39:37.520] The adjustable rate will have a flat rate period, then after that period, the note is [01:39:37.520 --> 01:39:42.320] allowed to change based on whatever index they're using, the library index, the securities [01:39:42.320 --> 01:39:43.320] index. [01:39:43.320 --> 01:39:51.200] Generally in California, they use the treasurer's index, and X number of points above whatever [01:39:51.200 --> 01:39:53.360] the treasury index is. [01:39:53.360 --> 01:39:56.000] Well, they almost never get it right. [01:39:56.000 --> 01:39:59.440] They always charge you more, because they figure you don't know anyway. [01:39:59.440 --> 01:40:03.920] It's a real easy way to cheat. [01:40:03.920 --> 01:40:05.180] You need to examine the note. [01:40:05.180 --> 01:40:10.160] You might want to go to remediesandrealestate.com, and look at that. [01:40:10.160 --> 01:40:15.640] That's one of my other websites where we do mortgage issues. [01:40:15.640 --> 01:40:16.640] It's my show. [01:40:16.640 --> 01:40:18.640] I get to do a little shameless self-promotion. [01:40:18.640 --> 01:40:29.040] You might want to go on that site, and read the part that says about how it works. [01:40:29.040 --> 01:40:34.640] We explain the kinds of things they're doing in the mortgage industry, so it'll make sense [01:40:34.640 --> 01:40:36.560] the kinds of fraud to look for. [01:40:36.560 --> 01:40:37.560] Okay. [01:40:37.560 --> 01:40:38.560] Go ahead. [01:40:38.560 --> 01:40:39.560] You had another question? [01:40:39.560 --> 01:40:40.560] Yes. [01:40:40.560 --> 01:40:49.400] As far as a friend of mine, it's kind of clear, but trust me, it's going to come pretty soon. [01:40:49.400 --> 01:40:54.760] Would it be wise to do a lawsuit of claiming a lawful foreclosure, or claiming a quiet [01:40:54.760 --> 01:41:01.600] title, or what would be the best way besides TRO? [01:41:01.600 --> 01:41:03.600] TRO, okay. [01:41:03.600 --> 01:41:06.120] Temporary restraining order. [01:41:06.120 --> 01:41:10.800] You're a little too late for a temporary restraining order. [01:41:10.800 --> 01:41:11.800] No, no, no. [01:41:11.800 --> 01:41:12.800] I'm talking about another issue. [01:41:12.800 --> 01:41:15.800] It's coming up. [01:41:15.800 --> 01:41:18.520] It depends on the nature of the suit. [01:41:18.520 --> 01:41:19.520] Okay. [01:41:19.520 --> 01:41:22.120] Is the other issue a foreclosure? [01:41:22.120 --> 01:41:23.120] Yeah. [01:41:23.120 --> 01:41:24.120] It's the same deal. [01:41:24.120 --> 01:41:25.120] The same deal. [01:41:25.120 --> 01:41:26.120] It's just coming up in 20 days. [01:41:26.120 --> 01:41:27.120] Oh. [01:41:27.120 --> 01:41:28.120] The foreclosure sale? [01:41:28.120 --> 01:41:29.120] Yeah. [01:41:29.120 --> 01:41:31.320] The trustee sale will be coming up December 20th. [01:41:31.320 --> 01:41:32.320] Okay. [01:41:32.320 --> 01:41:39.400] You need to file suit quickly, and if you get the suit in before 15 days, if you have [01:41:39.400 --> 01:41:44.720] 15 days before the sale, then you can ask for a preliminary injunction. [01:41:44.720 --> 01:41:45.720] Yes. [01:41:45.720 --> 01:41:50.960] If you don't have 15 days, then you have to ask for an emergency restraining order. [01:41:50.960 --> 01:41:56.560] That just buys you 15 days, so you have time to have a hearing for a preliminary injunction. [01:41:56.560 --> 01:42:02.280] My suggestion is, if you haven't done it, is ask for a loan modification. [01:42:02.280 --> 01:42:05.000] Ask for a loan modification and sue them at the same time. [01:42:05.000 --> 01:42:06.000] Okay. [01:42:06.000 --> 01:42:07.000] Yeah. [01:42:07.000 --> 01:42:08.000] I thought of that. [01:42:08.000 --> 01:42:09.000] Yeah. [01:42:09.000 --> 01:42:12.600] Then you use the loan modification and go to the court and say, these lenders are using [01:42:12.600 --> 01:42:15.880] the loan modification as a scam. [01:42:15.880 --> 01:42:21.760] They pretend to do the loan modification while they lead you up to foreclosure, so we ask [01:42:21.760 --> 01:42:28.120] the court for a preliminary injunction to give us time to do a proper loan modification. [01:42:28.120 --> 01:42:32.440] If the loan modification works out, the lawsuit could become moot. [01:42:32.440 --> 01:42:34.640] You won't even have to adjudicate it. [01:42:34.640 --> 01:42:35.640] Okay. [01:42:35.640 --> 01:42:39.720] Give the judge reason to give you the preliminary injunction. [01:42:39.720 --> 01:42:43.400] Would you have to qualify for a preliminary injunction? [01:42:43.400 --> 01:42:44.400] No. [01:42:44.400 --> 01:42:45.680] Well, yes. [01:42:45.680 --> 01:42:48.600] You have to give the court good reason. [01:42:48.600 --> 01:42:49.600] Yeah. [01:42:49.600 --> 01:42:55.360] Just that they're going to throw me out is not good enough reason. [01:42:55.360 --> 01:43:01.360] We've done a number of these and we've looked at the responses the courts have given, and [01:43:01.360 --> 01:43:07.200] primarily what the court doesn't want to do is they don't want to interfere with a state [01:43:07.200 --> 01:43:08.200] jurisdiction. [01:43:08.200 --> 01:43:16.600] In a non-judicial state, prior to foreclosure, there is no state jurisdiction to interfere [01:43:16.600 --> 01:43:21.760] with, so it's always good if you get in before foreclosure. [01:43:21.760 --> 01:43:22.760] Okay. [01:43:22.760 --> 01:43:28.720] Then you can stop the foreclosure process easier because now you can make the argument [01:43:28.720 --> 01:43:33.120] that there is no jurisdiction to interfere with, that this is strictly in the hands of [01:43:33.120 --> 01:43:34.120] the federal court. [01:43:34.120 --> 01:43:35.120] Do you have any other questions? [01:43:35.120 --> 01:43:36.120] We're about to go to break. [01:43:36.120 --> 01:43:37.120] I'll come back. [01:43:37.120 --> 01:43:40.120] I'll be in the way for you when you come back. [01:43:40.120 --> 01:43:41.120] Okay. [01:43:41.120 --> 01:43:46.680] This is Randy Kelton, Eddie Craig, Debra Stevens has the night off. [01:43:46.680 --> 01:43:50.040] We have Mr. X on the other side. [01:43:50.040 --> 01:43:58.600] We've got a lot of lines open, call in, 512-646-1984, we'll be right back. [01:43:58.600 --> 01:44:07.960] More energy, stronger immune power, improved sense of well-being. [01:44:07.960 --> 01:44:11.000] How many supplements have you heard boast of these benefits? [01:44:11.000 --> 01:44:17.440] The team behind Centrition believes that supplements should over-deliver on their promises, and [01:44:17.440 --> 01:44:21.400] Centrition does just that. 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[01:45:04.360 --> 01:45:11.120] Win your case without an attorney with Jurisdictionary, the affordable, easy to understand, 4-CD course [01:45:11.120 --> 01:45:14.160] that will show you how in 24 hours, step-by-step. [01:45:14.160 --> 01:45:18.840] If you have a lawyer, know what your lawyer should be doing. [01:45:18.840 --> 01:45:23.080] If you don't have a lawyer, know what you should do for yourself. [01:45:23.080 --> 01:45:28.840] Thousands have won with our step-by-step course, and now you can too. [01:45:28.840 --> 01:45:34.760] Jurisdictionary was created by a licensed attorney with 22 years of case-winning experience. [01:45:34.760 --> 01:45:39.360] Even if you're not in a lawsuit, you can learn what everyone should understand about the [01:45:39.360 --> 01:45:43.560] principles and practices that control our American courts. [01:45:43.560 --> 01:45:49.760] You'll receive our audio classroom, video seminar, tutorials, forms for civil cases, [01:45:49.760 --> 01:45:52.240] pro se tactics, and much more. [01:45:52.240 --> 01:46:20.400] Please visit RuleOfLawRadio.com and click on the banner or call toll-free 866-LAW-EZ. [01:46:23.240 --> 01:46:29.240] Okay, come on, let's work around the court. [01:46:29.240 --> 01:46:31.240] Sing Jerry, come on. [01:46:31.240 --> 01:46:37.240] As we so so shall we read [01:46:37.240 --> 01:46:39.240] The words of victory she was promised [01:46:39.240 --> 01:46:42.240] So many fruits, so many words she put on [01:46:42.240 --> 01:46:45.240] Oh, what a beauty [01:46:45.240 --> 01:46:51.240] Try as we will, start small steps to the giant [01:46:51.240 --> 01:46:58.240] As we so so shall we read [01:46:58.240 --> 01:47:00.240] All right, folks, we are back. [01:47:00.240 --> 01:47:03.240] This is Eddie Craig, Randy Kelton, Denver Stevens has the night off. [01:47:03.240 --> 01:47:05.240] This is Rule of Law Radio. [01:47:05.240 --> 01:47:07.240] We are taking your calls right now. [01:47:07.240 --> 01:47:10.240] If you have an issue, please give us a call. [01:47:10.240 --> 01:47:14.240] 512-646-1984 is the call-in number. [01:47:14.240 --> 01:47:18.240] And right now we have Mr. X in Texas. [01:47:18.240 --> 01:47:20.240] Randy? [01:47:20.240 --> 01:47:24.240] Oh, lost my mouse. [01:47:24.240 --> 01:47:26.240] Hello, Mr. X. [01:47:26.240 --> 01:47:28.240] Let's see what's on your mind tonight. [01:47:28.240 --> 01:47:30.240] Hey, how are you guys doing tonight? [01:47:30.240 --> 01:47:35.240] Yeah, I was going to call you Mr. T. [01:47:35.240 --> 01:47:37.240] Yeah, I'd prefer that a little better. [01:47:37.240 --> 01:47:38.240] I don't know why. [01:47:38.240 --> 01:47:40.240] That's interesting. [01:47:40.240 --> 01:47:45.240] Well, actually, well, it's a little, I don't know if it's kind of on topic. [01:47:45.240 --> 01:47:47.240] It's kind of legal, though. [01:47:47.240 --> 01:47:50.240] Basically, I've joined the Navy, I've signed all the paperwork. [01:47:50.240 --> 01:47:52.240] I'm an enlisted man, I'm not an officer. [01:47:52.240 --> 01:48:01.240] And I was contemplating if some situations were possibly to arise kind of in my life [01:48:01.240 --> 01:48:05.240] and in my family that I might reconsider. [01:48:05.240 --> 01:48:07.240] So my question is kind of twofold. [01:48:07.240 --> 01:48:12.240] One, what options do I have after enlisted to, you know, be, [01:48:12.240 --> 01:48:17.240] would it be considered a discharge at this point? [01:48:17.240 --> 01:48:20.240] I don't think you will get a discharge at this point. [01:48:20.240 --> 01:48:22.240] Okay. [01:48:22.240 --> 01:48:26.240] How long have you, how long since you have enlisted? [01:48:26.240 --> 01:48:30.240] Only about going on maybe two months. [01:48:30.240 --> 01:48:31.240] Okay. [01:48:31.240 --> 01:48:34.240] Are you still at home or have you went through basic? [01:48:34.240 --> 01:48:35.240] I have not gone through basic. [01:48:35.240 --> 01:48:39.240] I'm in what's called the delayed entry program. [01:48:39.240 --> 01:48:43.240] No, you are, once you've stood and raised your hand. [01:48:43.240 --> 01:48:44.240] I did. [01:48:44.240 --> 01:48:45.240] You're in. [01:48:45.240 --> 01:48:46.240] Yeah. [01:48:46.240 --> 01:48:49.240] So, you know, you're committed. [01:48:49.240 --> 01:48:56.240] About the only way you can get a relatively easy way out is if they violate your contract. [01:48:56.240 --> 01:48:58.240] Yeah, they haven't done so at all at this point. [01:48:58.240 --> 01:49:01.240] They've actually been very good at that. [01:49:01.240 --> 01:49:04.240] Well, you haven't been through basic yet. [01:49:04.240 --> 01:49:08.240] Give them time. [01:49:08.240 --> 01:49:14.240] When I was going into the service, I was sitting at the selective service office. [01:49:14.240 --> 01:49:16.240] I had joined. [01:49:16.240 --> 01:49:17.240] There was a whole bunch of us sitting here. [01:49:17.240 --> 01:49:20.240] Most of these guys were drafted. [01:49:20.240 --> 01:49:22.240] And this big Marine, I joined the Air Force. [01:49:22.240 --> 01:49:25.240] This Marine walked in. [01:49:25.240 --> 01:49:29.240] He walked in and he looked at this bench we were sitting on and he said, [01:49:29.240 --> 01:49:32.240] I need six Marines. [01:49:32.240 --> 01:49:33.240] You, you, you. [01:49:33.240 --> 01:49:37.240] He pointed at me and I gave him the finger. [01:49:37.240 --> 01:49:38.240] That's right, man. [01:49:38.240 --> 01:49:41.240] He said, enlisted? [01:49:41.240 --> 01:49:42.240] Yes. [01:49:42.240 --> 01:49:46.240] You, you, you, and you. [01:49:46.240 --> 01:49:48.240] That's kind of how it works. [01:49:48.240 --> 01:49:51.240] When I first went to the recruiting office, the Marines came outside. [01:49:51.240 --> 01:49:56.240] I'm 28 and that's the only reason why I didn't join the Air Force is because I was over the age limit. [01:49:56.240 --> 01:49:58.240] But anyways, I'm proud to serve in the Navy. [01:49:58.240 --> 01:49:59.240] I'm going to do something I love. [01:49:59.240 --> 01:50:04.240] But I met a Marine and they were trying to get me and I was just like... [01:50:04.240 --> 01:50:07.240] Well, now be aware, the Air Force doesn't really have an age limit. [01:50:07.240 --> 01:50:10.240] It's an IQ limit. [01:50:10.240 --> 01:50:11.240] Really? [01:50:11.240 --> 01:50:14.240] 28. [01:50:14.240 --> 01:50:15.240] Is that... [01:50:15.240 --> 01:50:16.240] Oh, okay. [01:50:16.240 --> 01:50:28.240] I see what you're saying because that's what I don't understand is because that's the only thing I'm actually even concerned about is, you know, I'm 28 years old. [01:50:28.240 --> 01:50:33.240] You know, I know how to think for myself and I know how to read. [01:50:33.240 --> 01:50:37.240] And why in the world did you sign a military contract? [01:50:37.240 --> 01:50:38.240] I'm sorry? [01:50:38.240 --> 01:50:40.240] I said why in the world did you sign a military contract? [01:50:40.240 --> 01:50:42.240] Randy and I are both veterans. [01:50:42.240 --> 01:50:47.240] And in the current climate today, that would be the last thing we're recommending somebody do. [01:50:47.240 --> 01:50:48.240] Yeah. [01:50:48.240 --> 01:51:00.240] And that's what I'm trying to understand is because I know, I mean, we're definitely going to get involved with probably, you know, North Korea because we're going on that training drill this week over in those waters. [01:51:00.240 --> 01:51:10.240] And if we don't think that's going to provoke something from, I mean, North Korea's news association stated, you know, they keep pressing, you know, bring it. [01:51:10.240 --> 01:51:12.240] And so we keep doing it. [01:51:12.240 --> 01:51:17.240] So I'm like, I don't know if this is a good idea to be joining the Navy right now. [01:51:17.240 --> 01:51:23.240] I don't know if it's not a good idea to join the military at any time that I can think of. [01:51:23.240 --> 01:51:33.240] The question here, though, is going to become what makes you think that it's not other issues that are getting them to fire on each other to begin with? [01:51:33.240 --> 01:51:44.240] Is there anyone out there that really thinks North Korea would be firing on South Korea if they weren't getting compelled to do so or promises from China? [01:51:44.240 --> 01:51:45.240] Yes. [01:51:45.240 --> 01:51:46.240] Yes. [01:51:46.240 --> 01:51:48.240] Yeah. [01:51:48.240 --> 01:51:53.240] I wouldn't be surprised because of the financial situation we're in right now. [01:51:53.240 --> 01:52:00.240] And I'm kind of concerned about my choice because after I enlisted, I started, you know, I don't know what it was. [01:52:00.240 --> 01:52:09.240] I worked nights and I had an opportunity to listen to the radio and I just happened to listen to, you know, privately syndicated radio. [01:52:09.240 --> 01:52:13.240] And I was listening to kind of what was going on and I wasn't aware of a lot. [01:52:13.240 --> 01:52:24.240] And I was just thinking to myself, I was just like, man, I could see better use of myself outside of the military at this point for my family and just everyone [01:52:24.240 --> 01:52:30.240] because I'm wondering, you know, in the next several years, you know, if they do, you know, well, it will happen. [01:52:30.240 --> 01:52:33.240] I mean, our dollar will be worth nothing. [01:52:33.240 --> 01:52:38.240] I mean, as a soldier, what are they going to pay me with, you know, like just American food? [01:52:38.240 --> 01:52:41.240] I mean, how am I going to pay my bills, you know? [01:52:41.240 --> 01:52:43.240] It's going to get very difficult. [01:52:43.240 --> 01:52:47.240] China and Russia just pulled out of the dollar, so the sky is... [01:52:47.240 --> 01:52:48.240] Yeah, I heard about that. [01:52:48.240 --> 01:52:52.240] They quit the dollar and I was just like... [01:52:52.240 --> 01:53:01.240] I did talk to my recruiter and I asked him, I said, you know, if there was something that came up and I was, you know, could I get out of the Navy? [01:53:01.240 --> 01:53:03.240] And he was just like, there could. [01:53:03.240 --> 01:53:04.240] There's a lot of paperwork. [01:53:04.240 --> 01:53:09.240] And I was just like, he seemed very positive about it, but he's a very new recruiter. [01:53:09.240 --> 01:53:10.240] He was a recruiter. [01:53:10.240 --> 01:53:12.240] That's number one here, Mr. X. [01:53:12.240 --> 01:53:19.240] The only person on the planet that will lie to your face more than an attorney is a military recruiter. [01:53:19.240 --> 01:53:20.240] Yeah. [01:53:20.240 --> 01:53:26.240] If his lips are moving, that's when you know. [01:53:26.240 --> 01:53:31.240] They came and talked to my son and they were next to the house and I went out and talked to them. [01:53:31.240 --> 01:53:33.240] Oh, recruiters, huh? [01:53:33.240 --> 01:53:39.240] And I explained to my son and the guy they were talking to, you know, if their lips are moving, they're lying to you. [01:53:39.240 --> 01:53:40.240] Wow. [01:53:40.240 --> 01:53:42.240] They're trained, accomplished liars. [01:53:42.240 --> 01:53:50.240] These two big Marines are standing there looking at me like I wish you'd go find a hole to crawl into. [01:53:50.240 --> 01:53:51.240] But they knew. [01:53:51.240 --> 01:53:54.240] They knew I'd been there. [01:53:54.240 --> 01:53:59.240] But once you're in, you're in, especially in these times. [01:53:59.240 --> 01:54:03.240] So there's nothing I can do, huh? [01:54:03.240 --> 01:54:05.240] There's lots you can do. [01:54:05.240 --> 01:54:09.240] The question is whether or not you want to keep running your whole life to do it. [01:54:09.240 --> 01:54:10.240] Yeah. [01:54:10.240 --> 01:54:11.240] Really? [01:54:11.240 --> 01:54:12.240] Yeah. [01:54:12.240 --> 01:54:21.240] If you've already signed up, unless they violate a contract and in this political climate, that probably won't make any difference. [01:54:21.240 --> 01:54:24.240] They're having trouble recruiting people. [01:54:24.240 --> 01:54:26.240] They're not going to let you out of it. [01:54:26.240 --> 01:54:34.240] Well, that's the thing I don't understand is that, you know, they even put like on the, well, that's because if they were at the end of their fiscal year, [01:54:34.240 --> 01:54:36.240] they couldn't take a lot of appointments as recruiters. [01:54:36.240 --> 01:54:41.240] They were telling people, you know, buy appointment only because we have no jobs we can guarantee or anything. [01:54:41.240 --> 01:54:47.240] So that makes a little bit more sense than we've got too many people joining right now. [01:54:47.240 --> 01:54:51.240] Probably the fact is is that they were at the end of their fiscal year and they didn't want any recruits, [01:54:51.240 --> 01:54:55.240] but they wanted to spin it to me as if they had a lot of people coming under the door. [01:54:55.240 --> 01:54:56.240] Yeah. [01:54:56.240 --> 01:54:58.240] Well, that's exactly how they do it. [01:54:58.240 --> 01:55:02.240] The one thing about the military you'll find out is you spend time in it. [01:55:02.240 --> 01:55:08.240] At the end of every fiscal year, you're wondering whether or not the next paycheck will show up. [01:55:08.240 --> 01:55:15.240] And that's a given fact because at the end of every fiscal year, they're up for renewal on whether or not they get financed. [01:55:15.240 --> 01:55:19.240] If they don't get financed, you just spent the last few months working for nothing. [01:55:19.240 --> 01:55:20.240] Yeah. [01:55:20.240 --> 01:55:26.240] Yeah, my grandfather, he was in the Navy and then he did four years in the Navy and then 20-plus years in the Air Force. [01:55:26.240 --> 01:55:33.240] And there was at one point nothing against the Air Force at the time, but he worked for months and they didn't pay him. [01:55:33.240 --> 01:55:40.240] And, you know, bless his heart, an officer came up to him and said, hey, Mac, you know, why aren't you wrenching? [01:55:40.240 --> 01:55:44.240] And he was just like, look, man, you want to find out why? [01:55:44.240 --> 01:55:49.240] I talked to my wife and my kids, you know, why I'm not, you know, lifting the tool until I get paid. [01:55:49.240 --> 01:55:53.240] And he wrote him a personal check and, you know, that's what carried him through. [01:55:53.240 --> 01:55:58.240] And so there was nothing that the administrator did, but he found out the checks were just sitting in someone's desk. [01:55:58.240 --> 01:56:06.240] And anyways, I'm finding out a lot that, you know, it's not run very well, it's not very dependable. [01:56:06.240 --> 01:56:12.240] And I'm just trying to figure out, I'm just like, well, God, what have I done if I can't get out? [01:56:12.240 --> 01:56:14.240] You know, what have I done to my family? [01:56:14.240 --> 01:56:23.240] And, you know, I'm not too worried about my situation, but I'm all worried about the financial climate that we're in [01:56:23.240 --> 01:56:32.240] and how I've placed myself and my family very much still away from them, you know? [01:56:32.240 --> 01:56:40.240] Well, you're going to wind up being stuck with the same funding money they used to use in the Korean War and all the other places. [01:56:40.240 --> 01:56:46.240] You're going to get paid one of these days in nothing but military script like the rest of us are right now. [01:56:46.240 --> 01:56:48.240] Yeah. [01:56:48.240 --> 01:56:53.240] It's going to be redeemable for nothing because there's not going to be anybody that wants it. [01:56:53.240 --> 01:56:55.240] Yeah. [01:56:55.240 --> 01:56:58.240] Well, that's the part that I was thinking. [01:56:58.240 --> 01:57:01.240] I was trying to take another step, and I won't stay on the phone too much longer. [01:57:01.240 --> 01:57:07.240] I know you guys got to do other calls or whatnot, but I was thinking to myself, I was just like, okay, [01:57:07.240 --> 01:57:11.240] so the dollar's not going to be worth squatting awhile. [01:57:11.240 --> 01:57:19.240] We're left with all these companies even within the United States that we owe money to, which that's my scenario. [01:57:19.240 --> 01:57:33.240] And they're going to somehow change the currency based upon whatever, whether it's the euro or some type of other financial resource. [01:57:33.240 --> 01:57:45.240] How am I going to – how are they going to sell this new currency to debtors because their consumers can't pay them with a currency that's worth squat? [01:57:45.240 --> 01:57:51.240] So there's going to have to be a huge shift. [01:57:51.240 --> 01:57:54.240] Yeah, things are beginning to happen. [01:57:54.240 --> 01:57:56.240] They're going to happen quickly now. [01:57:56.240 --> 01:57:57.240] Yeah. [01:57:57.240 --> 01:58:01.240] With Russia and China pulling out of the dollar, the dollar's going to deteriorate quickly. [01:58:01.240 --> 01:58:04.240] We're starting on a serious down slope. [01:58:04.240 --> 01:58:09.240] Yeah, the other thing you'll need to consider is where do you want to be when it does hit the fan? [01:58:09.240 --> 01:58:14.240] Do you want to be where you can protect your family or at least have a better chance of it? [01:58:14.240 --> 01:58:23.240] Or do you want to be on some foreign shore wondering what is happening to them when these people come marching into America to take up what they believe is owed them? [01:58:23.240 --> 01:58:29.240] Yeah, because they're going to – I believe it. It's coming home, and it's long due, unfortunately. [01:58:29.240 --> 01:58:32.240] Okay, we're about to go to break. [01:58:32.240 --> 01:58:35.240] We'll be back with Bill on the other side. [01:58:35.240 --> 01:58:40.240] This is Randy Kelton, Debbie Stevens, Eddie Craig, Rule of Law Radio. [01:58:40.240 --> 01:58:46.240] And our call-in number is 512-646-1984. [01:58:46.240 --> 01:58:50.240] This is our Friday info marathon. [01:58:50.240 --> 01:58:54.240] We're going to the top of the hour break. [01:58:54.240 --> 01:59:00.240] We'll be back in a few minutes. [01:59:00.240 --> 01:59:08.240] The Bible remains the most popular book in the world, yet countless readers are frustrated because they struggle to understand it. [01:59:08.240 --> 01:59:16.240] Some new translations try to help by simplifying the text, but in the process can compromise the profound meaning of the Scripture. [01:59:16.240 --> 01:59:19.240] Enter the recovery version. [01:59:19.240 --> 01:59:28.240] First, this new translation is extremely faithful and accurate, but the real story is the more than 9,000 explanatory footnotes. 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