[00:00.000 --> 00:07.420] This is the Liberty Beat, your daily source for Liberty news and activist updates, online [00:07.420 --> 00:09.260] at thelibertybeat.com. [00:09.260 --> 00:13.740] I'm Brian Hagan with your Liberty Beat for Friday, January 3rd, 2014. [00:13.740 --> 00:16.620] Gold opened today at $1,228. [00:16.620 --> 00:22.460] Silver opened at $20.03, while Bitcoin is trading at $807.99. [00:22.460 --> 00:26.740] Support for the Liberty Beat comes from the Center for Natural Living Safe Water Initiative, [00:26.740 --> 00:31.600] a philanthropic effort to give at least 100 fluoride water filters to Austin families [00:31.600 --> 00:32.600] in need. [00:32.600 --> 00:37.820] To sign up to receive a filter, or to donate, visit austinsafewater.com. [00:37.820 --> 00:41.800] Support comes from the Food is Free Project, growing community of food, while helping gain [00:41.800 --> 00:47.680] independence from a broken agricultural system, online, foodisfreeproject.com. [00:47.680 --> 00:51.700] Support also comes from Brave New Books, your local source for Tangy Tangerine, One World [00:51.700 --> 00:53.600] Way, and Clearly Filtered. [00:53.600 --> 00:59.700] Find them in Austin, at 1904 Guadalupe Street, or online at bravenewbookstore.com. [00:59.700 --> 01:04.940] In the news, according to a poll conducted by the APNORC Center for Public Affairs Research, [01:04.940 --> 01:09.040] Americans have a growing distrust for the government's ability to fix the problems facing [01:09.040 --> 01:12.340] the nation. [01:12.340 --> 01:14.940] It's called Sovereign BTC. [01:14.940 --> 01:19.380] That's the new podcast, launched by the Liberty Beat's own John Bush, and now part of Let's [01:19.380 --> 01:24.660] Talk Bitcoin's podcast contest to earn a slot on their soon-to-launch Bitcoin network. [01:24.660 --> 01:29.020] Sovereign BTC is your guide to the practical side of everyday Bitcoin use, and can be heard [01:29.020 --> 01:32.620] at sovereignbtc.com backslash podcast. [01:32.620 --> 01:35.340] While you're there, find out how to vote for John's podcast. [01:35.340 --> 01:37.660] And now, this week's Bitcoin Tip of the Week. [01:37.660 --> 01:39.520] It's all about transaction fees. [01:39.520 --> 01:44.260] The blockchain serves as a public ledger where all Bitcoin transactions are recorded in sections [01:44.260 --> 01:45.780] called blocks. [01:45.780 --> 01:49.780] These transactions are accepted and confirmed on the blockchain by miners. [01:49.780 --> 01:54.500] The work miners do helps prevent double spending of Bitcoins and ensures the security of the [01:54.500 --> 01:55.580] Bitcoin network. [01:55.580 --> 02:02.140] In order to incentivize miners to process your transaction quickly, a small fee of.0001 [02:02.140 --> 02:05.180] Bitcoin is appreciated for a miner's efforts. [02:05.180 --> 02:08.700] The fees are not mandatory, but they're seen as a contribution to the overall durability [02:08.700 --> 02:11.240] and resilience of the Bitcoin network. [02:11.240 --> 02:15.540] This week's Bitcoin Tip of the Week, sponsored by blockchain.info, the world's most popular [02:15.540 --> 02:16.540] Bitcoin wallet. [02:16.540 --> 02:21.260] Simple and secure, blockchain is the easiest way to get started using Bitcoin. [02:21.260 --> 02:25.180] To learn more or to create a wallet today, visit blockchain.info. [02:25.180 --> 02:28.580] The Liberty Meet brought to you by Austin Animal Clinic, celebrating their 59th year [02:28.580 --> 02:30.620] of quality, compassionate pet care. [02:30.620 --> 02:40.020] In Austin at 4330 North Lamar Boulevard, by phone 512-453-6686, or online at AustinAnimalClinic8.com. [02:40.020 --> 02:44.600] Support also comes from Central Texas Gunworks, CH Health Courses, Self-Defense Training, [02:44.600 --> 02:45.600] and Firearms Sales. [02:45.600 --> 02:52.580] Call them up 512-731-3585, online at CentralTexasGunworks.com. [02:52.580 --> 02:56.260] This is the Liberty Meet for Friday, January 3rd, 2014. [02:56.260 --> 03:18.700] Check out the website at TheLibertyMeet.com. [03:18.700 --> 03:43.300] Okay, we are back, Randy Felton, Steve Skidmore, Rule of Law Radio, and there's a subject I [03:43.300 --> 03:49.620] would like to talk about that I, for the most part, haven't, and because I haven't done [03:49.620 --> 03:55.940] it on the radio, I have to kind of think about how to present it. [03:55.940 --> 04:04.060] It's really cool information, it's the kind of stuff they don't teach you in school, but [04:04.060 --> 04:12.020] I'm kind of, I've struggled with how to present it in a way that is cogent, that makes sense. [04:12.020 --> 04:21.100] Things like conversational ellipsises, how to lead the mind and not interrupt the mind. [04:21.100 --> 04:28.180] A lot of the things that I tend to object to in writing, they may well be grammatically [04:28.180 --> 04:37.900] correct and even culturally acceptable, but as concerns of normal human being trying to [04:37.900 --> 04:44.700] read written language really sucks, and one of the biggest, yeah, one of the biggest problems [04:44.700 --> 04:51.860] I have are acronyms, FDCPA. [04:51.860 --> 05:02.540] When I say FDCPA, for those of us who know what it is, you hear FDCPA and then you have [05:02.540 --> 05:13.980] to stop and say, okay, that's not FTCPA, that's not FCIA, that's FDCPA, that means Fair Debt [05:13.980 --> 05:22.780] Collections Practices Act, it doesn't mean, what's the other FDCPA, what does that one [05:22.780 --> 05:23.780] mean? [05:23.780 --> 05:24.780] I forget. [05:24.780 --> 05:35.900] Trade something, anyway, in order to, even if you recognize the acronym, because it is [05:35.900 --> 05:43.180] such a contraction of the word, you have to look closely at it to make sure you get every [05:43.180 --> 05:50.740] letter correct, and that causes a pattern interruption. [05:50.740 --> 05:56.820] If I want to trigger amnesia in someone, I got this special technique that we use, you [05:56.820 --> 06:04.140] know, I do, I study hypnosis, it's one of my psychology and hypnosis, and my primary [06:04.140 --> 06:11.660] study is not law, it's psychology, and it's not so much psychology, it is the living mind. [06:11.660 --> 06:23.300] My interest is in how does the normally functioning living mind work? [06:23.300 --> 06:32.460] I'm not so interested in the biology, but I'm in the functionality. [06:32.460 --> 06:36.260] What does it do and how does it get it done? [06:36.260 --> 06:37.260] Action-reaction. [06:37.260 --> 06:43.100] I'm not interested in abnormal psychology, I'm only interested in normal psychology, [06:43.100 --> 06:48.660] and in studying that subject, you'll find some really interesting stuff. [06:48.660 --> 06:57.260] Like when you're reading, your mind flows, and if the writing is well done, the reader [06:57.260 --> 07:08.780] doesn't notice the writing itself, excuse me, I have people read my documents, and I [07:08.780 --> 07:12.220] tell them, this is what I want you to do. [07:12.220 --> 07:21.620] I want you to tell me when you notice the writer as opposed to the content, because [07:21.620 --> 07:30.060] if you notice the writer I've screwed up, that means I've kicked you out of rapport. [07:30.060 --> 07:37.180] Most everybody has read a book or something and sat down and just kind of fell into the [07:37.180 --> 07:42.620] narrative, and 30 minutes, an hour later, somebody says something, gets your attention, [07:42.620 --> 07:47.460] and you don't realize that you've been reading for this long. [07:47.460 --> 07:54.820] When a writer can do that, he has done extremely well, when he can construct his narrative [07:54.820 --> 08:01.340] so that you never trip, you never mentally bump over anything, so that it causes you [08:01.340 --> 08:08.820] to bump out of the flow and you notice that the writer did something, and there's a lot [08:08.820 --> 08:14.100] of really neat tricks to get that, and one of my favorite tricks to get rapport is a [08:14.100 --> 08:16.140] conversational ellipsis. [08:16.140 --> 08:26.340] Okay, I kind of made this up, an ellipsis is where you have a quotation that's incomplete, [08:26.340 --> 08:30.940] you have part of a statement, the only part that's pertinent, and then you put a dot dot [08:30.940 --> 08:33.660] dot just to indicate that there was more stuff. [08:33.660 --> 08:42.940] Well, a conversational ellipsis in writing is where you take words out, you might try [08:42.940 --> 08:50.380] writing a paragraph, and then go back in and look at that paragraph and see what words [08:50.380 --> 08:58.100] you can take out of it that the mind will never notice, and most of these comes in terms [08:58.100 --> 09:01.060] of explanatory phrases. [09:01.060 --> 09:09.500] I'd have to have a sample to tell it to you, but to demonstrate, but look at your writing [09:09.500 --> 09:19.540] and try taking out words that go to phrases that you put in all of the time, that all [09:19.540 --> 09:24.060] writing always has in it, kind of little directing words. [09:24.060 --> 09:31.860] You start taking words out, where I originally started with this was Brady, the press secretary [09:31.860 --> 09:36.580] for Reagan, the one that got shot in the head, the story about him and what he would do [09:36.580 --> 09:43.620] when he got an article from one of his press attaches, he would go through the document [09:43.620 --> 09:48.980] and everywhere he'd come across the word that, he would take it out, and his explanation [09:48.980 --> 09:56.340] was you need that as a directing word in the spoken language, because we talk about 200 [09:56.340 --> 10:04.420] words a minute, so we have to kind of let the mind know where we're going, but in the [10:04.420 --> 10:07.580] written word, we don't need it. [10:07.580 --> 10:14.340] For the most part, if you take out the word that, the reader won't even notice, because [10:14.340 --> 10:17.700] the mind will put it right back. [10:17.700 --> 10:24.940] The mind will move across it, and it's obvious that word should be there, and the mind will [10:24.940 --> 10:30.900] go in and put that word back in there, and the act of engaging the mind in doing that [10:30.900 --> 10:42.220] tends to pull the reader into the content, into the body of the, into what's the word, [10:42.220 --> 10:43.220] what word did I lose, David? [10:43.220 --> 10:44.220] The syntax? [10:44.220 --> 10:51.740] No, into the content, anyway, it kind of draws the reader in, and there are other really [10:51.740 --> 11:00.020] neat tools to do that with, if anybody's ever done any poetry, assonance, consonance, alliteration, [11:00.020 --> 11:02.940] rhyme and meter. [11:02.940 --> 11:12.300] These are tools we use in poetry, but they work extremely well in prose. [11:12.300 --> 11:19.060] I once constructed a letter to the chief of police of Fort Worth, Texas. [11:19.060 --> 11:27.060] It was a two-page letter, and once I finished it, I was just kind of screwing around, and [11:27.060 --> 11:37.140] I looked at the sentence structure and counted all the syllable sounds, and did an average, [11:37.140 --> 11:44.020] and I had long sentences and short sentences, so my long sentences, the average of the longer [11:44.020 --> 11:48.900] sentences were 13 syllable sounds, the average of the short sentences were five syllable [11:48.900 --> 11:56.260] sounds, so I went back and restructured all of the sentences so that the first sentence [11:56.260 --> 11:59.180] had 13 syllable sounds. [11:59.180 --> 12:01.900] The second sentence had five syllable sounds. [12:01.900 --> 12:03.780] The next one's 13. [12:03.780 --> 12:09.300] When you read it, it went da-da-da da-da-da-da, da-da-da-da da-da-da-da, da-da-da-da-da. [12:09.300 --> 12:14.640] Da-da-da-da da-da-da, da-da-da-da-da-da, da-da-da-da-da-da, da-da-da-da-da-da-da, [12:14.640 --> 12:21.820] da-da-da-da da-da-da-da-da, da-da-da-da-da-da-da, da-da-da-da-da-da-da. [12:21.820 --> 12:28.120] The mind internally, not on a conscious level, picks up the pattern. [12:28.120 --> 12:34.680] If you're familiar with iambic pedameter, it's a meter. [12:34.680 --> 12:42.680] So you read each of these lines and you expect there to be a certain number of syllable sounds. [12:42.680 --> 12:49.200] It rings in the mind in a way that really doesn't come to consciousness. [12:49.200 --> 12:54.820] Another really neat trick is alliteration. [12:54.820 --> 12:59.940] Rhyme rings in the mind and it's noticeable. [12:59.940 --> 13:02.820] But alliteration doesn't. [13:02.820 --> 13:09.540] Alliteration is where you rhyme a syllable, some syllable other than the last syllable [13:09.540 --> 13:11.820] in a word. [13:11.820 --> 13:17.180] Chew and string. [13:17.180 --> 13:24.500] Just like that, I have some others but I don't say them on the radio, shoot and shinola. [13:24.500 --> 13:26.020] That's the one way I say it. [13:26.020 --> 13:28.420] That's alliteration. [13:28.420 --> 13:32.020] It has a way of sticking in the mind. [13:32.020 --> 13:42.460] If you take a piece of prose and set it to meter and then go back to the prose and look [13:42.460 --> 13:50.140] for where you have similar syllable sounds, primarily consonant sounds. [13:50.140 --> 13:54.260] You have assonance and consonance. [13:54.260 --> 13:58.620] Assonance is alliteration of vowels. [13:58.620 --> 14:01.860] Consonance is alliteration of consonance. [14:01.860 --> 14:04.900] Consonant sounds work better than vowel sounds. [14:04.900 --> 14:15.340] But either one of those where it's not the end of the word but where that a word in one [14:15.340 --> 14:23.940] part of the sentence and another part of the sentence always land on the same syllable [14:23.940 --> 14:30.740] count that is so subtle conscious mind are never picked up. [14:30.740 --> 14:33.100] But the inner mind will. [14:33.100 --> 14:37.900] The inner mind will find pattern and rhythm. [14:37.900 --> 14:42.860] I worked on this letter to the chief of police for a couple of months but once I finished [14:42.860 --> 14:54.260] with it, everybody I handed it to read the entire letter top to bottom without stopping. [14:54.260 --> 14:59.620] It's very seldom they give somebody a piece of writing and they read the whole thing. [14:59.620 --> 15:03.300] They'll read something, they'll notice something and they'll ask me a question about it. [15:03.300 --> 15:06.460] And they'll read it and they'll ask me another question. [15:06.460 --> 15:11.780] Each time they stop and ask me a question, I've screwed up. [15:11.780 --> 15:18.420] There was a question that came into the mind of the reader that I didn't answer or there [15:18.420 --> 15:26.360] was a pattern in the structure of the writing that the reader tripped over. [15:26.360 --> 15:30.300] So it bumped the mind out of the content. [15:30.300 --> 15:35.860] If I want to trigger amnesia, I'll use a tool just like that. [15:35.860 --> 15:42.340] There's a seminar I like to do on psychology on this rubber ball theory that I've read [15:42.340 --> 15:45.020] about on the radio before. [15:45.020 --> 15:52.660] But in a set up for it, I tell everybody that I spent most of my life looking for the truth. [15:52.660 --> 15:59.340] And it was my opinion that if something was true, it would always come up true. [15:59.340 --> 16:03.700] So I spent a lot of time looking around and I found it. [16:03.700 --> 16:05.540] All you gurus stand aside. [16:05.540 --> 16:06.540] I found it. [16:06.540 --> 16:08.820] I found the truth. [16:08.820 --> 16:13.220] I found the truth beyond delusion, beyond illusion. [16:13.220 --> 16:21.460] I found the truth and in my experience, only one thing comes up absolutely true all of [16:21.460 --> 16:24.020] the time. [16:24.020 --> 16:31.620] And that is, nothing's true all the time. [16:31.620 --> 16:33.740] So you have to be careful. [16:33.740 --> 16:36.140] You have to guard the door to your mind. [16:36.140 --> 16:38.700] Okay, we are about to go to break. [16:38.700 --> 16:42.260] This is Randy Helton, Steve Skidmore, Ruvalau Radio. [16:42.260 --> 16:46.100] I call it number 512-646-1984. [16:46.100 --> 16:51.140] We'll come back on the other side, I'll explain to you what I just did there. [16:51.140 --> 16:56.420] That was a very specific structure designed to elicit amnesia. [16:56.420 --> 17:00.940] I'll explain why when we get back. 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[18:15.220 --> 18:19.820] You'll get step-by-step instructions in plain English on how to win in court using federal [18:19.820 --> 18:25.580] civil rights statutes, what to do when contacted by phone, mail or court summons, how to answer [18:25.580 --> 18:30.140] letters and phone calls, how to get debt collectors out of your credit report, how to turn the [18:30.140 --> 18:34.340] financial tables on them and make them pay you to go away. [18:34.340 --> 18:39.460] The Michael Mears proven method is the solution for how to stop debt collectors. [18:39.460 --> 18:41.580] Personal consultation is available as well. [18:41.580 --> 18:47.100] For more information, please visit ruleoflawradio.com and click on the blue Michael Mears banner [18:47.100 --> 18:50.100] or email michaelmears at yahoo.com. [18:50.100 --> 18:59.100] That's ruleoflawradio.com or email m-i-c-h-a-e-l-m-i-r-r-a-f at yahoo.com to learn how to stop debt [18:59.100 --> 19:00.100] collectors now. [19:00.100 --> 19:12.900] You are listening to the Logos Radio Network, the LogosRadioNetwork.com. [19:12.900 --> 19:18.540] Well don't let nothing get to you, only the father can't believe by you, don't let back [19:18.540 --> 19:25.660] mind people hurt you until they start to get behind you, you know what I mean? [19:25.660 --> 19:35.420] My friend, and all of your children. [19:35.420 --> 19:59.380] Okay, we are back. Randy Kelton, Steve Skidmore. We're on radio. We're talking about how to [19:59.380 --> 20:09.340] use language, different tools we can use to generate more effective language. Now, [20:09.340 --> 20:18.060] what I presented when we went out, that's a tool I use when I'm trying to install [20:18.060 --> 20:24.780] something in the mind of the listener in a way that the listener will not be able [20:24.780 --> 20:31.100] to consciously examine what I was just talking about, because I'll do that and [20:31.100 --> 20:39.180] then later on in the seminar, I'll do another one. I will tell them that there [20:39.180 --> 20:46.460] is no such thing as good and evil. Okay, okay. Maybe there is such a thing as good [20:46.460 --> 20:54.060] and evil, but you will find that if you act as if there isn't any such thing as [20:54.060 --> 21:01.300] good and evil, that it works very well. And then I have somebody kick the door [21:01.300 --> 21:07.180] open and say, hey, somebody left their lights on. Bam, pattern interruption. Got [21:07.180 --> 21:11.660] everybody's attention. Everybody's digging in their pockets and trying to think [21:11.660 --> 21:15.360] back. Did I turn the lights off when I parked? Now I say, what was it? Oh, it's a [21:15.360 --> 21:18.660] white avalanche. Oh, that's mine. I'll throw them the keys. Now go on to [21:18.660 --> 21:26.220] something else. You will get total amnesia for what I just did to you. What [21:26.220 --> 21:32.740] I did was when I said, I look for the truth and only found one thing that came [21:32.740 --> 21:40.440] up absolutely true all of the time. That was to make you incredulous. First thing [21:40.440 --> 21:46.900] I get you to do is pay attention to what I'm saying that in order to affect [21:46.900 --> 21:50.340] someone, first thing you do is get your attention. How many people have went to a [21:50.340 --> 21:56.340] party is introduced to 50 people and don't remember two people's names. The [21:56.340 --> 21:59.820] reason you don't is because you got so much going on you never heard them in [21:59.820 --> 22:05.820] the first place. You didn't stop long enough to focus your attention on the [22:05.820 --> 22:11.660] name. So it just, it was just a sound that passed you. It never got locked in [22:11.660 --> 22:18.620] your mind. There are tools for doing that and the tools simply go to how to get [22:18.620 --> 22:23.700] your mind to pay attention to something. And that increases with age, by the way. [22:23.700 --> 22:31.100] Yes, it does. Okay, so the first thing I want to do is get your attention and by [22:31.100 --> 22:34.140] but in order to get your attention, I make a statement that makes you [22:34.140 --> 22:41.540] incredulous. Sure, jump over here. It's got it all figured out. Excuse me. And then [22:41.540 --> 22:47.700] I propose a logical paradox that I figured out the truth. And while you're [22:47.700 --> 22:52.980] thinking, hey, give me a break. And in my experience, there is only one thing that [22:52.980 --> 23:01.140] comes up absolutely true. And that is nothing's true. I propose the logical [23:01.140 --> 23:08.980] paradox that has the effect of a pattern interruption. And in the presentation of [23:08.980 --> 23:18.220] the paradox, everybody recognizes a grain of truth in that. And what you will do is [23:18.220 --> 23:23.860] go up inside and do what in psychology we call trans derivational search. You'll [23:23.860 --> 23:29.740] go look up inside to find a way to make sense out of what I just said. And [23:29.740 --> 23:34.580] generally take you about, if I do a nice pattern interruption with it, when I [23:34.580 --> 23:39.980] send that, that interrupts you and sends you up inside. And if I did it well, it [23:39.980 --> 23:45.340] will take you about three seconds. You notice when I delivered that I said, you [23:45.340 --> 23:53.180] know, only one thing come up absolutely true. And that is nothing's true. One, two, [23:53.180 --> 24:01.260] three, all the time. I give you closure. You go up inside, search for a way to [24:01.260 --> 24:07.300] make that make sense. And then I give you a closure all the time. So you have to be [24:07.300 --> 24:11.900] careful. You have to guard the door to your mind. And then the music stepped in [24:11.900 --> 24:18.580] right in time. Then I was able to shift over to Randy Kelton, Steve Skidmore, [24:18.580 --> 24:23.500] blah, blah, blah, blah, blah, pattern interruption went to something else. Now [24:23.500 --> 24:28.620] I come back later and I tell them, you know, as all this talk about good and [24:28.620 --> 24:35.020] evil, everybody's always passing judgment about it. I do this big huff and puff [24:35.020 --> 24:39.820] and glee up. And then I say, ah, that's all a bunch of nonsense. There is no such [24:39.820 --> 24:50.380] thing as good and evil. Now I've proposed a paradox. Now I've done that before. [24:50.380 --> 24:59.820] There is no such thing as good and evil. And I stop. You expect just like when you [24:59.820 --> 25:08.340] set something to meter, you're expecting me after this pause to give closure. And [25:08.340 --> 25:13.380] I do. Well, maybe there is such a thing as good and evil, but you'll find if you [25:13.380 --> 25:17.900] act as if it doesn't, it works very well. And then I have somebody kick the door [25:17.900 --> 25:22.820] open. So I do another battery interruption. You get amnesia for that. I [25:22.820 --> 25:26.100] do the pattern in Russia. Then I move on to something else. You don't get the [25:26.100 --> 25:31.820] opportunity to consciously analyze what I just said. I just opened up your mind [25:32.020 --> 25:37.900] and stuck it in there. What you just explained, I have seen in so many court [25:37.900 --> 25:45.900] proceedings by bank lawyers. I can't count. Watch your TV commercials. They [25:45.900 --> 25:54.580] use this garbage all the time. Now this is a very effective tool to transmit good [25:54.580 --> 26:02.460] information out. I can't get you to accept some nonsense. It's not true. All [26:02.460 --> 26:05.580] this stuff about people being able to hypnotize you, get you to all this [26:05.580 --> 26:11.140] stupid stuff. That's nonsense. Most people when they're hypnotized in in [26:11.140 --> 26:16.340] the process of being hypnotized, they're always aware of what's going on. You [26:16.340 --> 26:23.620] don't blitz out and go somewhere else. All the hypnotist does is help someone [26:23.620 --> 26:29.340] to focus what they're paying attention to. You can't get them to do anything [26:29.340 --> 26:34.500] that that violates the moral code. You just can't do that because we'll catch [26:34.500 --> 26:42.340] you. We are very good at catching people trying to manipulate us. That, we [26:42.340 --> 26:47.300] can catch you really easily. So a hypnotist, if he ever does that, you'll [26:47.300 --> 26:52.540] lose rapport with the person he's working with. Anytime you do hypnosis, [26:52.540 --> 27:01.420] the hypnotist will always ask you what you want him to help you do. And if he [27:01.420 --> 27:06.220] does something that goes to some other place, man, you'll pop out a rapport [27:06.220 --> 27:12.220] immediately. So all this stuff about them, you know, what you see on TV about [27:12.220 --> 27:17.980] what they will do with hypnosis, that's nonsense. But there are some subtle [27:17.980 --> 27:27.660] things we can do to help people understand things better. And in using [27:27.660 --> 27:33.580] these kinds of tools, pacing, leading, reality stacking, analog marking, [27:36.820 --> 27:40.420] assonance, consonance, alliteration, rhyme and me, or anybody who wants to [27:40.420 --> 27:46.580] write well should study poetry. I personally never got into poetry. I hate [27:46.580 --> 27:52.620] poetry. I just don't get it. But the tools they use, the technical tools they [27:52.620 --> 28:00.460] use are very powerful. When you write something, read through what you've [28:00.460 --> 28:11.740] written and try to anticipate what the language you're using, what effect it [28:11.740 --> 28:17.660] will have on the mind of the reader. Where does what you're writing generate [28:17.660 --> 28:23.380] a question in the mind of the reader? If you generate a question in the mind of [28:23.380 --> 28:31.140] your reader, and you don't immediately answer that question, now you have caused [28:31.140 --> 28:38.580] a pattern interruption in your reader. If you're talking, and I say something [28:38.580 --> 28:42.740] that creates a question in your mind, how many of you have been at a seminar [28:43.140 --> 28:47.500] where somebody said something and you got this question and you want to raise [28:47.500 --> 28:53.420] your hand and ask this question? You don't hear anything after that, because [28:53.420 --> 28:59.900] he's caused a pattern interruption. And you need this answer before you can move [28:59.900 --> 29:05.740] ahead, so mentally you're stopped. If we're writing, we have time. I do [29:05.740 --> 29:12.380] seminars and I do this to people all the time. And it annoys me that I do that. I [29:12.380 --> 29:16.780] struggle not to do it, but when you're talking, you're moving so quickly. It's [29:16.780 --> 29:21.340] sometimes hard not to, but when you're writing, you got time to go back and read [29:21.340 --> 29:25.900] it and look for those places where you'll create a question in the mind of [29:25.900 --> 29:31.100] the reader, or like an acronym. An acronym will always stop the reader. They have to [29:31.100 --> 29:35.380] stop and make sure what that acronym means. And that causes a pattern [29:35.380 --> 29:40.380] interruption and they forget everything. They were reading. Hang on, Randy Kelton, [29:40.380 --> 29:46.380] Steve Skidmore, we have our radio. Kevin, I see you there. We will pick you up on the [29:46.380 --> 29:51.900] other side. I'll talk about this another time. I'll try to get my presentation a [29:51.900 --> 29:58.700] little more coherent. I'm working on it. We'll be right back. [30:00.860 --> 30:05.700] Laptops, they help us do everything from sending mail to managing money. But did [30:05.700 --> 30:09.580] you know those modern-day marvels can also turn you into toast? I'm Dr. [30:09.580 --> 30:13.300] Catherine Albrecht and I'll be back in a moment with the skin-crawling scoop on a [30:13.300 --> 30:18.500] looming laptop health hazard. Your search engine is watching you, recording all [30:18.500 --> 30:22.860] your searches and creating a massive database of your personal information. [30:22.860 --> 30:25.860] That's creepy. But it doesn't have to be that way. 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You won't drop dead from toasted [31:04.900 --> 31:09.580] skin syndrome, but doctors say long-term laptop heat could permanently model your [31:09.580 --> 31:13.980] flesh. Well, that's just ugly. Laptop heating could even lead to skin cancer [31:13.980 --> 31:18.540] and cause infertility in men. So, leave the toasting to the toaster. Put your [31:18.540 --> 31:22.820] laptop on a tabletop or shield your skin with a protective pad to head off this [31:22.820 --> 31:26.340] overheating health hazard. I'm Dr. Catherine Albrecht. More news and [31:26.340 --> 31:33.860] information at CatherineAlbrecht.com. This is Building 7, a 47-story skyscraper [31:33.860 --> 31:37.420] that fell on the afternoon of September 11th. The government says that fire [31:37.420 --> 31:42.140] brought it down. However, 1,500 architects and engineers have concluded it was a [31:42.140 --> 31:45.780] controlled demolition. Over 6,000 of my fellow service members have given their [31:45.780 --> 31:49.960] lives. Thousands of my fellow first responders are dying. I'm not a conspiracy [31:49.960 --> 31:53.100] theorist. I'm a structural engineer. I'm a New York City correctional. I'm an Air [31:53.100 --> 31:57.540] Force pilot. I'm a father who lost his son. We're Americans and we deserve the [31:57.540 --> 32:03.780] truth. Go to RememberBuilding7.org today. Rule of Law Radio is proud to offer [32:03.780 --> 32:07.380] the Rule of Law Traffic Seminar. In today's America, we live in an us-against-them [32:07.380 --> 32:10.440] society. And if we the people are ever going to have a free society, then we're [32:10.440 --> 32:13.940] going to have to stand and defend our own rights. Among those rights are the [32:13.940 --> 32:17.020] right to travel freely from place to place, the right to act in our own private [32:17.020 --> 32:20.620] capacity, and most importantly, the right to due process of law. Traffic courts [32:20.620 --> 32:23.860] afford us the least expensive opportunity to learn how to enforce and [32:23.860 --> 32:27.500] preserve our rights through due process. Former Sheriff's Deputy Eddie Craig, in [32:27.500 --> 32:30.180] conjunction with Rule of Law Radio, has put together the most comprehensive [32:30.180 --> 32:33.780] teaching tool available that will help you understand what due process is and [32:33.780 --> 32:36.740] how to hold courts to the rule of law. You can get your own copy of this [32:36.740 --> 32:40.180] invaluable material by going to ruleoflawradio.com and ordering your [32:40.180 --> 32:43.380] copies today. By ordering now, you'll receive a copy of Eddie's book, The Texas [32:43.380 --> 32:47.420] Transportation Code, The Law Versus the Lie, video and audio of the original 2009 [32:47.420 --> 32:51.100] seminar, hundreds of research documents, and other useful resource material. Learn [32:51.100 --> 32:53.300] how to fight for your rights with the help of this material from [32:53.300 --> 32:57.260] ruleoflawradio.com. Order your copy today and together we can have the free [32:57.260 --> 33:00.580] society we all want and deserve. [33:27.260 --> 33:56.500] Okay, we are back. Randy Kelton, Steve Skidmore, Rule of Law Radio, and if this [33:56.500 --> 34:04.260] presentation is a little bit disjointed, it's because making a presentation like [34:04.260 --> 34:10.500] this on the radio is different than having regular conversation. You can't [34:10.500 --> 34:17.060] jump in and tell me when what I'm saying doesn't make sense. So while I'm trying [34:17.060 --> 34:27.660] to present something, I have to try to estimate or anticipate the questions I'm [34:27.660 --> 34:34.460] going to bring up. I have to figure out how to stitch these pieces together so [34:34.460 --> 34:40.820] that it'll make sense to my listener and a lot of times I just get lost. So I [34:40.820 --> 34:45.620] didn't have to do it a few times and each time I do it, I get pieces of it put [34:45.620 --> 34:51.300] together and it generally takes me ten or fifteen times to get something [34:51.300 --> 34:57.980] structured. You need to write a timeline, Randy. Yes, I need a lot of timeline. Okay, [34:57.980 --> 35:07.820] we're gonna go to Kevin in Tejas. Hi, Randy. Hola, howdy Kevin. What do you have [35:07.820 --> 35:15.460] for us today? Well, my son got a ticket in an area outside of Austin toward the [35:15.460 --> 35:25.140] lake for an illegal left turn to avoid a traffic light and we were actually going [35:25.140 --> 35:33.580] to a restaurant in the parking lot. There was a no left turn sign there but we [35:33.580 --> 35:38.900] didn't see the cops so I told them to take the turn and as we were taking that [35:38.900 --> 35:51.380] turn, we found a cop. So we went to the court and I didn't really handle it [35:51.380 --> 36:02.100] right. We said we wanted a jury trial so they set us up for a [36:02.100 --> 36:11.100] pre-trial about a week and a half ago and I had my son draw up some motions [36:11.100 --> 36:18.900] like motion to dismiss, then a motion to ask for the video and audio of the cop [36:18.900 --> 36:32.540] car and motion to ask for. My son's got all the notes. That's called discovery. Yeah, discovery. [36:32.540 --> 36:39.900] And a discovery for the peace officer training. Okay, hold on, hold on. Have you [36:39.900 --> 36:50.580] ever heard of Juris Dictionary? Yeah, I have heard of it. If you're going to try [36:50.580 --> 36:55.100] to fight these, you need to get that. Well, you know, he showed up for the [36:55.100 --> 37:02.220] pre-trial and they said the power was off on the court although he said all [37:02.220 --> 37:08.220] the lights were on in it and they sent him a letter rescheduling the [37:08.220 --> 37:15.140] pre-trial and the citation lists the offensive building code violation and [37:15.140 --> 37:23.380] failure to appear. Wait a minute, you're confusing me now. You did not give me [37:23.380 --> 37:29.820] referential index that little bomb you just dropped on me. Yeah, we started [37:29.820 --> 37:35.580] off with a traffic violation and wound up with a code violation. Yeah, that's what I'm saying. [37:35.580 --> 37:41.780] Okay, you have to know when you said that, that was going to cause a [37:41.780 --> 37:48.580] pattern interruption. That was a pattern interruption, definitely. You just tripped me and knocked me flat on my face. [37:48.580 --> 37:58.540] Now let's back up and tell that again so that the question that is going to come [37:58.540 --> 38:07.700] to my mind when you say that is already either answered or I'm prepared to [38:07.700 --> 38:16.380] expect to this kind of a change in direction. That's what the letter from the [38:16.380 --> 38:26.620] municipal court says. It lists a citation number, four different cause numbers, offense. [38:26.620 --> 38:34.620] Okay, what were you originally pulled over for? For illegal left turn to avoid a traffic light. [38:34.620 --> 38:40.620] Okay, going through a parking lot or what? Define that illegal turn. [38:40.620 --> 38:44.620] For illegal left turn into a parking light to avoid a traffic light. [38:44.620 --> 38:56.140] Gotcha, okay. What is the number of the statute? That was another thing we put [38:56.140 --> 39:05.140] a motion of discovery in was the exact statute number. Okay, that goes to demand [39:05.140 --> 39:14.860] for nature and cause. Demand for nature and cause. Okay, let's go back to illegal [39:14.860 --> 39:21.260] left-hand turn ticket. You show up on the first time and they claim technical [39:21.260 --> 39:27.540] difficulties with the court, put it off. Actually, that was the second time. The [39:27.540 --> 39:33.780] first time they set us up for a pretrial and then so when he showed up for the [39:33.780 --> 39:39.060] pretrial they said the power was off in the court and they sent us notice for [39:39.060 --> 39:44.380] the reschedule. Okay, that's what I said. The first time they had technical [39:44.380 --> 39:51.020] difficulties, power off, whatever. Right. Then what happened after that? Then we [39:51.020 --> 39:57.060] got this letter saying that the offense was building code violation failure to [39:57.060 --> 40:05.820] appear. You said there were four different offenses on this notice? Right, four different cause numbers. One [40:05.820 --> 40:14.140] citation with four different cause numbers. Okay, under each cause number [40:14.140 --> 40:21.340] there's, for each cause number there should be a statute attached to it and the alleged [40:21.340 --> 40:33.140] violation of it. No, this is the, actually I don't, should I say which municipal court it is? Yeah. It's [40:33.140 --> 40:38.060] like way. These are public officials, they have no expectation of privacy. It's [40:38.060 --> 40:44.420] Lake Way Municipal Court. Okay. And I'm thinking they're probably not going to want to have a [40:44.420 --> 40:49.580] bunch of rich Lake Way people come sit on a jury for a hundred thirty dollar [40:49.580 --> 40:56.940] ticket. Okay, wait a minute, wait a minute. You've got a, what was this notice? Was it a [40:56.940 --> 41:07.100] notice to appear? Well, let's say, I guess it's actually a rescheduling. It doesn't [41:07.100 --> 41:14.580] really say rescheduling, but it just says. Okay, you need to really understand what you're looking at. [41:14.580 --> 41:25.780] Is it, does it tell you to appear on the court at a given day? Right. That's called a [41:25.780 --> 41:36.300] notice to appear. Okay, you're confusing me. You need to go through your dictionary. If you're [41:36.300 --> 41:45.260] going to fight the case, so you better understand the basics. Jurisdictionary explains what [41:45.260 --> 41:50.940] motions are, explains what pleadings are, how to file a motion, when to file a motion, [41:50.940 --> 41:57.460] how to get a motion set for hearing. All this basic stuff that lawyers don't learn in law [41:57.460 --> 42:07.900] school. There's any seminar material too. Yeah, absolutely. This is much better call for Monday [42:07.900 --> 42:19.460] night. Eddie does traffic. We don't do traffic. We do do process, but the traffic courts are [42:19.460 --> 42:30.580] really, really corrupt. They are the, they're the most corrupt courts of all. They could care less [42:30.580 --> 42:39.900] what the law is, but it's a really good place to get a legal education and you can have great fun [42:39.900 --> 42:50.020] with it, kicking their behinds, but you kind of kind of understand what's going on. And well, [42:50.020 --> 42:57.540] as far as this letter though, if they're saying it's a building code violation. Okay. See, I'm [42:57.540 --> 43:04.380] trying to get enough information to understand what's going on. You show up. This is a notice [43:04.380 --> 43:12.100] to appear for, this is not for trial. I'm trying to figure out the best way to hammer on for [43:12.100 --> 43:21.100] sending you this. If you show up and they say, Oh, we made a mistake. Then you send them a bill [43:21.100 --> 43:30.860] for your time. So can't we send them a bill for the first time he showed up and they said, [43:30.860 --> 43:37.260] no, no, no, not if they had a good cause. And if they had power outages, that's something that's [43:37.260 --> 43:44.420] out of their control. So you can't claim that it was negligence on their part, but by sending you [43:44.420 --> 43:51.500] the wrong notice to appear that their fault, hang on Randy Kelton, Deborah Stevens, Steve [43:51.500 --> 44:05.940] Skidmore. We'll be right back. Hello. My name is Stuart Smith from natures, pure organics.com. [44:05.940 --> 44:10.340] And I would like to invite you to come by our store at nine to know for Guadalupe street, [44:10.340 --> 44:15.380] sweet D here in Austin, Texas. I'm brave new book and JPEG to see all our fantastic health [44:15.380 --> 44:20.100] and wellness products with your very own eyes. Have a look at our miracle healing clay that [44:20.100 --> 44:24.060] started our adventure and alternative medicine. Take a peek at some of our other wonderful [44:24.060 --> 44:29.100] products, including our Australian email, oil, lotion, candles, olive oil, soaps, and colloidal [44:29.100 --> 44:35.460] silver and gold. Call five one two two six four four zero four three, or find us online at [44:35.460 --> 44:41.180] natures, pure organics.com. That's five one two two six four four zero four three natures, [44:41.180 --> 44:45.940] pure organics.com. Don't forget to like us on Facebook for information on events and our [44:45.940 --> 45:04.460] products. Nature is pure organics.com. Are you the plaintiff or defendant in a lawsuit? [45:04.460 --> 45:10.540] Win your case without an attorney with Jurisdictionary, the affordable, easy to understand for CD [45:10.540 --> 45:17.420] course that will show you how in 24 hours, step by step. If you have a lawyer, know what [45:17.420 --> 45:22.700] your lawyer should be doing. If you don't have a lawyer, know what you should do for [45:22.700 --> 45:28.940] yourself. Thousands have won with our step by step course, and now you can too. Jurisdictionary [45:28.940 --> 45:34.980] was created by a licensed attorney with 22 years of case winning experience. Even if [45:34.980 --> 45:40.060] you're not in a lawsuit, you can learn what everyone should understand about the principles [45:40.060 --> 45:45.940] and practices that control our American courts. You'll receive our audio classroom, video [45:45.940 --> 45:53.140] seminar, tutorials, forms for civil cases, pro se tactics, and much more. Please visit [45:53.140 --> 46:10.380] ruleoflawradio.com and click on the banner or call toll-free 866-LAW-EZ. [46:10.380 --> 46:39.860] Thank you. [46:41.380 --> 46:51.380] Okay, we are back. Randy Kelton, Steve Skidmore, and we're talking to Kevin in Texas. Okay, [46:51.380 --> 47:01.020] Kevin. Yes. I suggest you call in to the Monday night show. You are in Austin or around Austin. [47:01.020 --> 47:10.620] You might go to Brave New Books on Sunday evening, to Eddie's traffic seminar. 1904 [47:10.620 --> 47:17.460] Guadalupe, downtown Austin, Texas, right there at MLK and Guadalupe. Yeah, he will show you [47:17.460 --> 47:24.460] how to take these guys on. This is a great place to get a legal education, to find out [47:24.460 --> 47:32.460] how the courts really work and how to deal with the courts. The best thing it will do [47:32.460 --> 47:43.300] is get you over your trepidation for walking up in front of a judge. People, when they [47:43.300 --> 47:48.980] go before a judge for the first time, tend to be terrified. It took me a while to figure [47:48.980 --> 47:56.340] out what was going on. We go to school for 12 years of a government-mandated school system. [47:56.340 --> 48:02.340] While they tell us about all the great and wonderful rights they have, they very clearly [48:02.340 --> 48:06.060] demonstrate to us, don't you even think of trying to express one of those while you're [48:06.060 --> 48:11.620] in this school, or the whole weight of the system of land rights square on your head. [48:11.620 --> 48:16.780] We spend 12 years of that hypocrisy. We get out in the real world. We don't have any more [48:16.780 --> 48:23.420] to do with public officials, except rare occasions. Then we get a ticket. We have to go down [48:23.420 --> 48:32.260] to court. Well, you look inside for tools you have available for dealing with these [48:32.260 --> 48:38.900] kinds of situations. For the most part, the only thing we have is school. You walk up [48:38.900 --> 48:45.860] in front of this judge and you feel all these butterflies and your hands are shaking. If [48:45.860 --> 48:54.580] you'll think about it, think back to the last time you were sent to the principal. Same [48:54.580 --> 49:00.900] thing. The only response that you have for dealing with public officials is what you [49:00.900 --> 49:08.100] learned in school. That is not appropriate anymore. We need to get over that. We need [49:08.100 --> 49:19.020] to be able to juxtapose the response set we used when we sent before the principal with [49:19.020 --> 49:25.660] the response set we use when we go to the principal. Want to know what the heck are [49:25.660 --> 49:35.740] you doing with my kids? You chomp. That pulls up a whole different set of response patterns. [49:35.740 --> 49:40.820] It's a little bit difficult to do that. It takes a little bit of experience. Fighting [49:40.820 --> 49:47.220] a ticket is a great way to get over that. What's he going to do? He's going to charge [49:47.220 --> 49:52.620] you what he was going to charge you anyway. This is no news. You get to go down there [49:52.620 --> 49:55.660] and beat him up and jerk him around and just have a great time. [49:55.660 --> 50:05.980] They're claiming he's going to have to pay court costs if he takes it to a jury trial. [50:05.980 --> 50:13.180] Six bucks? They were claiming like $137 and they said he'd have to pay the cops overtime. [50:13.180 --> 50:20.620] No, you don't either. They're lying to him. That's the first thing you got to understand. [50:20.620 --> 50:26.220] Make your recorder with you. They tell you something like that. You tell them, I'm an [50:26.220 --> 50:31.980] old guy and my hearing ain't what it used to be. Will you look and speak clearly into [50:31.980 --> 50:39.900] my pen, please? Make sure you have a pen in your pocket. If they think they're being recorded, [50:39.900 --> 50:46.860] that'll change their attitude. They'll lie to you if their lips are moving their lives. [50:46.860 --> 50:53.660] Don't believe anything to say. Never talk to them on the phone. Do everything in writing [50:53.660 --> 51:00.740] because they'll just lie to you. Don't go down there and talk to them. If you go down [51:00.740 --> 51:06.220] to the court and the prosecutor wants to go back in chambers and talk to you, don't ever [51:06.220 --> 51:14.220] do that. Absolutely not. Last time I had a judge and a prosecutor want to go back in [51:14.220 --> 51:19.500] chambers, this is where I'd kind of hammered them in court. They wanted to have a discussion [51:19.500 --> 51:26.100] in chambers. I told the judge, not going to happen. If you've got something that can't [51:26.100 --> 51:32.460] be said in this open courtroom, don't say it. I don't want to hear it. Well, I'm sorry [51:32.460 --> 51:38.220] to hear you feel that way. Why I feel that way? We ain't going back there where you guys [51:38.220 --> 51:43.620] can make up some lying BS story. They didn't throw me in jail for what I didn't do. We [51:43.620 --> 51:47.900] ain't going back there. We ain't going back there and have you threaten and try to threaten [51:47.900 --> 51:52.300] and intimidate me. Ain't going to happen. If you want to threaten me, do it in paper [51:52.300 --> 51:58.220] or do it out here in front of everybody. But it's good practice. You get more comfortable [51:58.220 --> 52:07.580] dealing with them. Well, can you ask it to be of the record for a pretrial? Wait, say [52:07.580 --> 52:16.660] that again. Can you ask the proceeding to be of the record for pretrial? It depends [52:16.660 --> 52:26.860] on whether or not the court is a court of record. You have to check with the courts. [52:26.860 --> 52:32.300] Most of these municipal courts have made themselves courts of records so that you can't get an [52:32.300 --> 52:39.060] automatic appeal. You have to appeal on a writ of error. So if they're a court of record, [52:39.060 --> 52:48.460] then they have to have one. But I always ask the judge if the court recorder has any hearing [52:48.460 --> 52:56.860] disabilities. And in Austin, they asked me what made me think that the court clerk, the [52:56.860 --> 52:59.900] court reporter had a hearing disability. I said, well, I'll talk to people who've been [52:59.900 --> 53:05.020] in the court here. And it seems like every time the judge does something really stupid [53:05.020 --> 53:13.420] or illegal, the court recorder winds up with a hearing disability, doesn't hear that part. [53:13.420 --> 53:22.020] Oh, that was so much fun. They assured me that the court recorder did not have a hearing [53:22.020 --> 53:29.220] difficulty. That way I get to warn them about screwing with the record. But bring your own, [53:29.220 --> 53:34.980] bring somebody there to take notes. Have somebody come in, sit right in the front row and just [53:34.980 --> 53:40.540] take furious notes. Doesn't matter if they're just scribbling on the paper. They keep looking [53:40.540 --> 53:46.980] up at them and writing real fast. So they think you have a written transcript that keeps [53:46.980 --> 53:54.260] them from lying like dogs. Is it legal to have a recorder there? Yes, but they will [53:54.260 --> 54:01.740] tell you it's not. So you bring the recorder, you set it on the table. And when the judge [54:01.740 --> 54:08.420] raises an objection, you remind him about Glick v. Cunifor. That Supreme Court said [54:08.420 --> 54:15.700] that it is a fundamental First Amendment right to record our public officials in the performance [54:15.700 --> 54:22.020] of their duty. Well, he probably won't care and he'll deny you the right to record it. [54:22.020 --> 54:26.780] Then when you leave the courtroom, you file criminal charges against the judge for exerting [54:26.780 --> 54:31.460] or purporting to exert an authority he doesn't expressly have and denying you your First [54:31.460 --> 54:39.940] Amendment right. Have you listened to this show much? Quite a bit. Then you're familiar [54:39.940 --> 54:46.740] with how to set up a public official so you can file criminal charges against him. What [54:46.740 --> 54:53.140] did he say? I said, are you familiar with how to set up a public official so that you [54:53.140 --> 55:01.140] can file criminal charges against him? He went up to that judge in Hazel and said, yeah, [55:01.140 --> 55:12.700] I'm not here. He was really a nice guy. And I really enjoyed jerking him around. But you [55:12.700 --> 55:19.020] can do that. And once you kind of get the feel for it, the only problem you have is [55:19.020 --> 55:27.180] it gets to be way too much fun. But they set themselves up for it all the time. So I would [55:27.180 --> 55:38.460] suggest that you go to Eddie Seminar or get a Seminar material and go to his Sunday evening [55:38.460 --> 55:43.300] presentations. He will give you lots of good information, lots of stuff you can do to these [55:43.300 --> 55:51.380] guys. It'll make tickets a lot more fun and it'll make it the great legal, best legal [55:51.380 --> 55:58.020] education you can get. If you heard the guy earlier, he had four or five felonies against [55:58.020 --> 56:07.500] him. He had no clue of what to do to protect himself. You fight two or three of these tickets [56:07.500 --> 56:12.060] and let them throw all their garbage at you. You come back at them with all kinds of stuff. [56:12.060 --> 56:17.980] When something more serious happens, you're going to be ready for them. You pretty well [56:17.980 --> 56:23.660] understand how the system works. You can learn it in the traffic courts and keep the best [56:23.660 --> 56:35.620] legal education you'll ever get. It's like OJT. Yeah. Besides, it can be so much fun. [56:35.620 --> 56:44.620] My last escapade was I went into a court in Mansfield. It was a JP court. And in the hearing [56:44.620 --> 56:51.940] before me, I stood up and the judge finally saw me standing there and he looked up and [56:51.940 --> 56:58.620] he said, can I help you? I said, yes, my name is Randall Kelton and I have a hearing disability. [56:58.620 --> 57:02.580] He said, well, Mr. Kelton, just what's wrong with your hearing? Well, judge, I was down [57:02.580 --> 57:07.420] in Mexico the other day and had a little too much of that tequila and I lost my hearing [57:07.420 --> 57:15.500] aid. Well, why are you telling me this, Mr. Kelton? I said, well, your honor, I need accommodation. [57:15.500 --> 57:20.940] Do you have accommodation for the hearing impaired? He said, no, we don't. I said, well, [57:20.940 --> 57:28.940] can you turn up your sound system? No, we can't. Well, then will you speak up? He did. [57:28.940 --> 57:32.820] He yelled at the bailiff, if Mr. Kelton doesn't say, shut up, you're going to throw him out [57:32.820 --> 57:39.380] of this court. So I sat down and shut up. Then I had my hearing and when I went out, [57:39.380 --> 57:44.940] I told the bailiff, you come with me. I go out, the bailiff comes out. I wanted to arrest [57:44.940 --> 57:53.620] the judge for failing to provide accommodation for the Americans under the Americans with [57:53.620 --> 58:02.260] Disabilities Act. I wanted to arrest the judge for Class A misdemeanor, official oppression. [58:02.260 --> 58:12.940] That was so much fun. So the judge knew I did that specifically to set him up. I gave [58:12.940 --> 58:23.660] him an opportunity to commit a crime and he was very accommodating. Okay. This is Randy [58:23.660 --> 58:33.460] Kelton, Steve Skidmore, Deborah Stevens, Root of Law Radio. Our call in number, 512-646-1984. [58:33.460 --> 58:39.620] We've got another hour. We'll keep the phones open all night. Give us a call. In Germany, [58:39.620 --> 58:43.220] we start getting a lot of calls toward the end. So if you've got a question or comment, [58:43.220 --> 58:47.460] give us a call. We'll be right back. [58:47.460 --> 58:55.420] Would you like to make more definite progress in your walk with God? Bibles for America [58:55.420 --> 59:01.100] is offering a free study Bible and a set of free Christian books that can really help. [59:01.100 --> 59:05.540] The New Testament Recovery Version is one of the most comprehensive study Bibles available [59:05.540 --> 59:10.060] today. It's an accurate translation and it contains thousands of footnotes that will [59:10.060 --> 59:15.260] help you to know God and to know the meaning of life. The free books are a three volume [59:15.260 --> 59:20.540] set called Basic Elements of the Christian Life. Chapter by chapter, Basic Elements of [59:20.540 --> 59:26.160] the Christian Life clearly presents God's plan of salvation, growing in Christ and how [59:26.160 --> 59:32.380] to build up the church. To order your free New Testament Recovery Version and Basic Elements [59:32.380 --> 59:45.340] of the Christian Life, call Bibles for America toll free at 888-551-0102. That's 888-551-0102. [59:45.340 --> 01:00:04.680] Or visit us online at bfa.org. This is the Liberty Beat, your daily source [01:00:04.680 --> 01:00:10.260] for Liberty news and activist updates. Online at thelibertybeat.com. I'm Brian Hagan with [01:00:10.260 --> 01:00:16.900] your Liberty Beat for Friday, January 3rd, 2014. Gold opened today at $1,228. Silver [01:00:16.900 --> 01:00:23.860] opened at $20.03, while Bitcoin is trading at $807.99. Support for the Liberty Beat comes [01:00:23.860 --> 01:00:28.580] from the Center for Natural Living Safe Water Initiative, a philanthropic effort to give [01:00:28.580 --> 01:00:33.520] at least 100 fluoride water filters to Austin families in need. To sign up to receive a [01:00:33.520 --> 01:00:40.140] filter or to donate, visit austinsafewater.com. 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That's the new [01:01:15.140 --> 01:01:20.140] podcast launched by the Liberty Beat's own John Bush, and now part of Let's Talk Bitcoin's [01:01:20.140 --> 01:01:25.900] podcast contest to earn a slot on their soon-to-launch Bitcoin network. Sovereign BTC is your guide [01:01:25.900 --> 01:01:31.020] to the practical side of everyday Bitcoin use, and can be heard at sovereignbtc.com [01:01:31.020 --> 01:01:35.860] backslash podcast. While you're there, find out how to vote for John's podcast. And now, [01:01:35.860 --> 01:01:40.060] this week's Bitcoin Tip of the Week. It's all about transaction fees. The blockchain [01:01:40.060 --> 01:01:45.020] serves as a public ledger where all Bitcoin transactions are recorded in sections called [01:01:45.020 --> 01:01:49.820] blocks. These transactions are accepted and confirmed on the blockchain by miners. The [01:01:49.820 --> 01:01:54.540] work miners do helps prevent double spending of Bitcoins and ensures the security of the [01:01:54.540 --> 01:02:00.100] Bitcoin network. In order to incentivize miners to process your transaction quickly, a small [01:02:00.100 --> 01:02:06.380] fee of.0001 Bitcoin is appreciated for a miner's efforts. The fees are not mandatory, [01:02:06.380 --> 01:02:10.300] but they're seen as a contribution to the overall durability and resilience of the Bitcoin [01:02:10.300 --> 01:02:14.780] network. This week's Bitcoin Tip of the Week, sponsored by blockchain.info, the world's [01:02:14.780 --> 01:02:20.060] most popular Bitcoin wallet. Simple and secure, blockchain is the easiest way to get started [01:02:20.060 --> 01:02:25.220] using Bitcoin. To learn more or to create a wallet today, visit blockchain.info. The [01:02:25.220 --> 01:02:29.100] Liberty Beat brought to you by Austin Animal Clinic, celebrating their 59th year of quality [01:02:29.100 --> 01:02:36.820] compassionate pet care. In Austin, at 4330 North Lamar Boulevard. By phone, 512-453-6686. [01:02:36.820 --> 01:02:42.860] Or online at AustinAnimalClinicInc.com. Support also comes from Central Texas Gunworks, CH [01:02:42.860 --> 01:02:49.580] Health Courses, Self-Defense Training, and Firearms Sales. Call them up, 512-731-3585, [01:02:49.580 --> 01:02:56.300] online at CentralTexasGunworks.com. This is the Liberty Beat for Friday, January 3, 2014. [01:02:56.300 --> 01:03:03.300] Check out the website at theLibertyBeat.com. [01:03:26.300 --> 01:03:46.620] Okay, we are back. Randy Kelton, Steve Skidmore, and the call board is open. So I'm going to [01:03:46.620 --> 01:03:53.060] go back to talking about language, use of language, writing, some of the things to do [01:03:53.060 --> 01:04:04.020] when you're writing motions. If you're going to write a motion or a pleading, always write [01:04:04.020 --> 01:04:11.020] as if you're writing to an eighth grader. And that's not meant as any kind of criticism [01:04:11.020 --> 01:04:16.940] of the judges. I'm not saying that they have the mentality of an eighth grader. What I'm [01:04:16.940 --> 01:04:25.020] saying is that they are busy. They've got a lot of pleadings to read. And they don't [01:04:25.020 --> 01:04:32.940] have time to try to dig in your pleading and figure out what it means. What it means needs [01:04:32.940 --> 01:04:40.980] to be very clear. I was in a hearing once for Robert Fox, and Robert kind of rambles [01:04:40.980 --> 01:04:49.580] in his pleadings. And they had four pleadings for Robert that I had written, and five or [01:04:49.580 --> 01:04:54.700] six that Robert had written. And they pulled out Robert's, they were going through his [01:04:54.700 --> 01:05:01.220] and the prosecutor would say, well, your honor, I'm not sure what this one is. But I think [01:05:01.220 --> 01:05:06.820] it's this. So we'll call it this. And they did that with all of his. They got to mine [01:05:06.820 --> 01:05:12.420] and looked at it. Oh, your honor, we need to have an evidence hearing on these. There [01:05:12.420 --> 01:05:18.660] was no question as to what mine were, because I had written it in very simple language, [01:05:18.660 --> 01:05:25.340] as straightforward as I could with these tools I had been talking about earlier. So the first [01:05:25.340 --> 01:05:30.180] thing you need to do is write for an eighth grader. Write so somebody can read through [01:05:30.180 --> 01:05:42.940] it one time and not get a bunch of questions in their mind that aren't answered. And then [01:05:42.940 --> 01:05:48.500] before you write a pleading, if you're going to try to represent yourself or write your [01:05:48.500 --> 01:05:54.620] own pleadings, the first thing you should do is get on the phone and call a couple of [01:05:54.620 --> 01:06:04.460] law firms and make up a story. Tell them you've got a daughter in high school and she's writing [01:06:04.460 --> 01:06:15.900] a paper on the legal process. And she heard about litigation guides. Do you guys have [01:06:15.900 --> 01:06:25.060] any old litigation guides laying around that she could use as stuff to take to school to [01:06:25.060 --> 01:06:32.180] show the students about what they are and how they're used and stuff? I told a woman [01:06:32.180 --> 01:06:42.120] in Amarillo to do this and she did. The second law firm she called said, do you have a station [01:06:42.120 --> 01:06:52.980] wagon or a pickup truck? Because in Texas, we have litigation guides primarily by O'Connor. [01:06:52.980 --> 01:06:59.380] West puts out a set, but they're not near as good. DiSarnio puts out a set, but O'Connor's [01:06:59.380 --> 01:07:08.180] is by far the best. You have Texas civil trials, the open Texas civil trials. What kind of [01:07:08.180 --> 01:07:13.760] motion do you want to file? You look it up in there, you turn to that motion. It tells [01:07:13.760 --> 01:07:19.700] you when to file the motion, how to file the motion, how to write the motion, case law [01:07:19.700 --> 01:07:27.860] in support of the motion, how to argue against the motion. Everything you need for this motion, [01:07:27.860 --> 01:07:35.420] it's all in one place. You can go to O'Connor's forums and they have a forum for just about [01:07:35.420 --> 01:07:42.300] every motion you can think of. It is really, really important that you use these forums. [01:07:42.300 --> 01:07:50.580] If you're not in Texas, go to a lawyer in your state and find out what is the primary [01:07:50.580 --> 01:07:58.860] litigation guide used in the state. Find out what it is and then see if they have a set [01:07:58.860 --> 01:08:06.260] of standard forms. These are all fill in the blank forms. I'll tell you a story about that. [01:08:06.260 --> 01:08:11.620] A friend of mine, Ken Magnuson, had a foreclosure issue and he's trying to get a temporary restraining [01:08:11.620 --> 01:08:16.860] order. He wrote up a temporary restraining order, sent it to me and asked me to read [01:08:16.860 --> 01:08:21.220] it and asked me what I thought about it. I read it and I called him up. Now, Ken is the [01:08:21.220 --> 01:08:28.780] guy I go to for civil strategy. He is really good at civil strategy. I called him up and [01:08:28.780 --> 01:08:34.820] he said, what do you think of that petition for TRO? I said, it's a piece of crap, Ken. [01:08:34.820 --> 01:08:40.420] Oh, you think you could do better? You bet I can. So I wrote him up and sent it to him. [01:08:40.420 --> 01:08:46.700] He went to court. They didn't expect the other lawyers to show up, but he did. They go in, [01:08:46.700 --> 01:08:53.980] the judge gives him the TRO, hands the lawyers his hat. They come out of court and the lawyer [01:08:53.980 --> 01:09:01.860] said, are you an attorney? And he said, no, but my brother is. He said, did you write [01:09:01.860 --> 01:09:11.780] this? He said, well, I had some help. And the lawyer said, that is very good. And Ken [01:09:11.780 --> 01:09:16.740] told me that, see, I hadn't told him I used, when I wrote the form, I used O'Connor's form [01:09:16.740 --> 01:09:25.540] and filled in the blanks. And I thought about that. What in the world is going on? It took [01:09:25.540 --> 01:09:31.500] a while to occur to me what was actually happening here. And when a pro se goes in, the law firm [01:09:31.500 --> 01:09:35.940] will always send their youngest lawyer in there to give him some experience. And I figured [01:09:35.940 --> 01:09:44.820] okay, pro se's are easy to handle. So the lawyer comes in there and he's got this petition [01:09:44.820 --> 01:09:52.460] for a temporary restraining order and it looks exactly like the one the law firm uses. And [01:09:52.460 --> 01:10:01.980] he's wondering how this guy did that. He did it because the law firm used the same template. [01:10:01.980 --> 01:10:10.100] That's what makes it so important. You have this judge who is busy. You come in and you [01:10:10.100 --> 01:10:18.100] give him a motion with 20 cases he's never seen before. And the lawyer gives him a motion [01:10:18.100 --> 01:10:25.180] with everything exactly where he expects to see it. All the standard case law exactly [01:10:25.180 --> 01:10:30.660] the way he expects to see it. And they may have one issue where the lawyer has to address [01:10:30.660 --> 01:10:36.740] different case law. So he's got this one where he has to look at two cases and he's got yours [01:10:36.740 --> 01:10:42.940] where he has to figure out the whole motion he's never seen before. And you got 20 cases [01:10:42.940 --> 01:10:50.220] in there he's never seen. Denied. Now that may not be right. But the lawyer, the judge [01:10:50.220 --> 01:10:55.220] is going to say, man, I don't have time for this. Yeah, deny it. Take it to the appeals [01:10:55.220 --> 01:11:01.660] court if you don't like it. If you want the judge to rule in your favor. Now I know a [01:11:01.660 --> 01:11:07.460] lot of people are saying, well, that's not right. Yeah, that's true. It's not. That judge [01:11:07.460 --> 01:11:14.620] shouldn't do that. That's true. He shouldn't. But he is a human being and human beings do [01:11:14.620 --> 01:11:23.060] what they do. We need to understand what human beings do. You give him a motion that structure [01:11:23.060 --> 01:11:27.260] he's never seen before with a lot of case law he's never seen before. He is not going [01:11:27.260 --> 01:11:34.060] to want to read it. So get the litigation guide, pull the forms from the litigation [01:11:34.060 --> 01:11:39.260] guide. It will save you so much trouble. And look in the litigation guide. It has all the [01:11:39.260 --> 01:11:47.900] case law that you need for almost anything. And it's case law everybody uses. You ever [01:11:47.900 --> 01:11:54.780] go into court and these lawyers are kicking back these cases back and forth. And the judge [01:11:54.780 --> 01:11:59.460] and the lawyers all seem to know what those cases are. And then you go down to the legal [01:11:59.460 --> 01:12:06.740] library and you see these lines and lines of shelves and books. And you think how in [01:12:06.740 --> 01:12:15.140] the heck can these guys have all this stuff memorized? Well, they don't. Most of the lawyers [01:12:15.140 --> 01:12:21.300] specialize in one area. They argue the same cases over and over. They all use the same [01:12:21.300 --> 01:12:25.860] case law because nine percent of it's in the litigation guide. And where there's a special [01:12:25.860 --> 01:12:33.140] issue is one or two cases that are different. That's the trick of how they do that. So it's [01:12:33.140 --> 01:12:39.300] not hard to come up to speed with them. So find the litigation guide. Here in Texas, [01:12:39.300 --> 01:12:45.540] O'Connor's is the best one. If you have a case with a difficult issue, you might want [01:12:45.540 --> 01:12:52.940] to go down to the legal library and look at Darsarnio's. Darsarnio, he is still a professor [01:12:52.940 --> 01:13:01.580] at Baylor, but he wrote up these litigation guides and they are just packed full of case [01:13:01.580 --> 01:13:10.080] law. More case law than you can ever get to. So if you have a thorny issue where you need [01:13:10.080 --> 01:13:16.660] different case law that's readily available in the O'Connor's litigation guide, they have [01:13:16.660 --> 01:13:21.380] a lot of case law, but not near as much as Darsarnio. That's mostly all you need to do [01:13:21.380 --> 01:13:29.500] to do legal research. And you will be pulling cases from the same places that the lawyers [01:13:29.500 --> 01:13:37.980] pull their cases. There's a really good Darsarnio on litigation guide on quiet titles. I highly [01:13:37.980 --> 01:13:48.340] recommend the read. Darsarnio goes into great detail, far more than O'Connor's does, but [01:13:48.340 --> 01:13:58.340] O'Connor's is a better structural guide. There are sections, if you go through the O'Connor [01:13:58.340 --> 01:14:10.820] Civil Trials, they tell you Darsarnio's is more technical. O'Connor says, this is a motion [01:14:10.820 --> 01:14:16.620] for a petition for writamandamus. This is when you file a writamandamus. This is how [01:14:16.620 --> 01:14:22.980] you file a writamandamus. This is how it's structured. These are all of the issues. This [01:14:22.980 --> 01:14:28.780] is the order in which the issues need to be in the documents. It gives you all that technical [01:14:28.780 --> 01:14:29.780] detail. [01:14:29.780 --> 01:14:34.780] Then you go to the document itself and it's filled in the blanks. It doesn't get much [01:14:34.780 --> 01:14:35.780] easier. [01:14:35.780 --> 01:14:40.940] Yeah. Fill in the blanks, pick the paragraph. They'll have three paragraphs and each one [01:14:40.940 --> 01:14:50.780] of them, and the issue is, are you the plaintiff? Is the plaintiff an individual? Pick this [01:14:50.780 --> 01:14:56.060] one. If the plaintiff's a corporation, pick this one. If the plaintiff's an LLC, pick [01:14:56.060 --> 01:15:02.300] this one and you just pick the one that fits. Save you an incredible amount of time and [01:15:02.300 --> 01:15:07.100] grief and headache. Make life a whole lot easier. [01:15:07.100 --> 01:15:16.260] And then when you go to actually writing the documents, get some books on good writing. [01:15:16.260 --> 01:15:23.380] There are some techniques and I've got lots of stuff on how to write well. I'm hard headed [01:15:23.380 --> 01:15:29.620] so it takes me a long time to figure this stuff out, but one of the best pieces of information [01:15:29.620 --> 01:15:39.020] or advice on writing that I got is look at all the words in your document. If a word [01:15:39.020 --> 01:15:48.500] is not doing anything, take it out. And that kind of is what led me to conversational ellipsis. [01:15:48.500 --> 01:15:57.980] If an argument is not leading you toward your intended outcome, take it out. If you use [01:15:57.980 --> 01:16:08.660] language that carries connotations or implications that aren't specifically stated, take them [01:16:08.660 --> 01:16:17.460] out. The judge will not be happy. Don't mess with the judge. He knows his business. He's [01:16:17.460 --> 01:16:25.780] savvy, especially people in family though I warn them about this all the time. Be careful [01:16:25.780 --> 01:16:32.980] of how you try to influence the judge. People do not like to be manipulated. The judge is [01:16:32.980 --> 01:16:37.060] there to determine the facts in accordance with the rules of evidence and apply the law [01:16:37.060 --> 01:16:43.500] to the facts as it comes to him in the case. Whether the opponent's a nice guy, a jerk, [01:16:43.500 --> 01:16:46.820] don't make any difference and you shouldn't bring it up to the judge, it'll just annoy [01:16:46.820 --> 01:16:51.180] him. I'll pick this up when we come back on the other side. This is Randy Kelton, Steve [01:16:51.180 --> 01:16:59.500] Kiddmore, Rue of La Radio. I'll call it number 512-646-1984. We'll be right back. [01:16:59.500 --> 01:17:07.180] To celebrate recent victories for our right to bear arms, Logos Radio Network is giving [01:17:07.180 --> 01:17:12.660] away two firearms as part of this year's fundraiser sponsored by Zombie Killers, ammo and guns. [01:17:12.660 --> 01:17:17.700] Support Logos Radio Network by donating just $25 to their fundraiser and you'll get your [01:17:17.700 --> 01:17:23.300] name entered into the drawing. First place prize is a Ruger LC9 with laser and holster. [01:17:23.300 --> 01:17:30.060] Second place prize is a Mosin M1891-30 with bayonet. Every $25 you donate will put your [01:17:30.060 --> 01:17:34.940] name in the hat. So increase your chances of winning by increasing your donation. Winners [01:17:34.940 --> 01:17:40.420] must be eligible to lawfully own and possess these items. 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[01:19:22.900 --> 01:19:37.460] We're open Monday through Friday 10 to 6, Saturdays 10 to 2. Visit us at CapitalCoinandBullying.com [01:19:37.460 --> 01:19:38.460] or call 512-646-6440. [01:19:38.460 --> 01:20:05.780] We're open Monday through Friday 10 to 6, Saturdays 10 to 2. Visit us at CapitalCoinandBullying.com [01:20:05.780 --> 01:20:12.780] or call 512-646-6440. [01:20:35.780 --> 01:20:42.780] We're open Monday through Friday 10 to 6, Saturdays 10 to 2. Visit us at CapitalCoinandBullying.com [01:20:42.780 --> 01:21:05.780] or call 512-646-6440. [01:21:12.780 --> 01:21:21.740] We need to be very careful with descriptive words that we use. There's a lot of times, [01:21:21.740 --> 01:21:28.540] one of the primary things that we tend to do with English language is something called [01:21:28.540 --> 01:21:37.260] nominalization. Nominalization is where you take a verb or an action and turn it into [01:21:37.260 --> 01:21:49.700] a noun. He really makes me mad. No, he don't. Mad is not something you are. It's not a [01:21:49.700 --> 01:22:04.460] state of being. Mad is a way of acting. It's a way of perceiving. It is a action. He makes [01:22:04.460 --> 01:22:12.420] me feel angry. That's more appropriate. It's hard to explain this and I have to work at [01:22:12.420 --> 01:22:19.420] it because we haven't talked about it on the air a lot. Mainly we take predicates and convert [01:22:19.420 --> 01:22:27.580] predicates into nouns. They should stay predicates. They should stay descriptive terms. Nobody [01:22:27.580 --> 01:22:37.520] can make you angry. If you think something makes you angry, it tends to take on a life [01:22:37.520 --> 01:22:47.580] of its own. If someone could make me mad, that's a state of being that I don't have [01:22:47.580 --> 01:22:58.140] the kind of control over that I do over an action that I take. When he does that, I feel [01:22:58.140 --> 01:23:06.180] angry or annoyed. When I think in terms of I feel angry or annoyed, that's something [01:23:06.180 --> 01:23:13.020] I have control over. But if I think of it as a state of being, I'm depressed. No, you're [01:23:13.020 --> 01:23:21.300] not depressed. Depression is an action. Depression is a behavior. It's not a state of being. [01:23:21.300 --> 01:23:27.580] Our psychiatrists and psychologists or whatever have turned depression into a noun. They've [01:23:27.580 --> 01:23:39.380] nominalized a behavior. It's not a noun. It's a verb. There was one particular book. A lot [01:23:39.380 --> 01:23:46.460] of the research I've done has been with neurolinguistic programming, but not the current neurolinguistic [01:23:46.460 --> 01:23:56.340] programming. Grindr and Bandelier back in the early to mid-90s, I think it was even [01:23:56.340 --> 01:24:06.580] further back than that, did a series of books on how the mind works. At the time, I had [01:24:06.580 --> 01:24:18.340] done a lot of research. Eric Byrne, Fritz Perls, Glasser, Piaget. Freud gave me a headache. [01:24:18.340 --> 01:24:26.420] The guy was nuts. When I read it, I said, this guy's wacko. He's been pretty well discredited. [01:24:26.420 --> 01:24:35.980] He really was a wacko. But when I got to Grindr and Bandelier, they were the first ones that [01:24:35.980 --> 01:24:46.180] treated the living mind as if it were ultimately understandable and consistent. In these works, [01:24:46.180 --> 01:24:55.060] one of their first works is called Structures of Magic. It was dry as gunpowder. It was [01:24:55.060 --> 01:25:05.300] a book written by therapists for therapists, but it was primarily about language and how [01:25:05.300 --> 01:25:12.300] the language works. Sometimes, there's been two or three times on the show I've had someone [01:25:12.300 --> 01:25:25.220] call in that was particularly distressed. I've had two that frightened me because I [01:25:25.220 --> 01:25:32.340] had someone that was clearly on the edge and I didn't know what to do with them. When [01:25:32.340 --> 01:25:39.980] I do that, I shift into a different mode. In this mode, I pay attention to the predicates [01:25:39.980 --> 01:25:51.700] someone uses. If you will listen to someone who is emotionally involved in an issue and [01:25:51.700 --> 01:25:58.740] they're talking about the issue and they're using a lot of emotional terms, start paying [01:25:58.740 --> 01:26:08.540] attention to the state of being terms that they use, the normalizations, or primarily [01:26:08.540 --> 01:26:15.380] pay attention to the predicates that they use, to the descriptive words they use. He [01:26:15.380 --> 01:26:27.580] makes me mad. Go to the normalization mad. What does the person mean by mad? Ask him. [01:26:27.580 --> 01:26:32.420] How does he make you mad? How do you act when you're mad that's different when you're [01:26:32.420 --> 01:26:46.060] not mad? This is a method where the actor introduces no content. This is a primary tenet [01:26:46.060 --> 01:26:55.500] of NLP in its beginning where they paid attention to the processes. They would say, okay, today [01:26:55.500 --> 01:27:02.420] we're going to do phobias. Who's got a phobia? Wait a minute. Don't tell me what it is because [01:27:02.420 --> 01:27:09.940] if you tell me what it is, I'll think I know something about it and I'll hallucinate. I [01:27:09.940 --> 01:27:18.340] will offer up to you a solution that I think would work for me and it may work for you [01:27:18.340 --> 01:27:25.300] and it may not, so we're not going to go there. Follow these steps. If you have a phobia, [01:27:25.300 --> 01:27:28.540] do this step, do this step, do this step, you get rid of the phobia. They're making [01:27:28.540 --> 01:27:34.300] difference what it is. They were the first one that treated the mind like it was understandable [01:27:34.300 --> 01:27:41.340] and with phobias, what they did was a triple disassociation and once you see what they [01:27:41.340 --> 01:27:48.020] do, it was absolutely obvious. I used to really frustrate my wife when we were, our kids were [01:27:48.020 --> 01:27:58.180] growing up and I told her, treat your children like really, really smart dogs, a dog that [01:27:58.180 --> 01:28:08.780] you love dearly. Now, if a dog makes a dump in the floor, you don't go into all of the [01:28:08.780 --> 01:28:16.380] deep-seated psychological implications of that. You say, this is a dog and if you bring [01:28:16.380 --> 01:28:20.980] the dog in and make loud noises, it doesn't make any difference what you say and you point [01:28:20.980 --> 01:28:26.980] the dog's nose at the dump in the floor and you make really loud noises so the dog understands [01:28:26.980 --> 01:28:31.100] you're unhappy and you take the dog outside. You learn to start doing it out the floor [01:28:31.100 --> 01:28:37.940] and you start doing it outside. Dogs do that. If a cow takes a dump in the house, get him [01:28:37.940 --> 01:28:44.300] out of the house. He's a cow, you're not going to train a cow. They don't have those genes. [01:28:44.300 --> 01:28:52.460] And how children work, treat, you know, what we did with our children is we treated children [01:28:52.460 --> 01:28:59.300] like small human beings. It was really, really important that we realized these are human [01:28:59.300 --> 01:29:07.340] beings and never discount them, never disrespect them, but we did give them discipline and [01:29:07.340 --> 01:29:14.940] we did teach them based on how human beings respond. We didn't go into a bunch of psychological [01:29:14.940 --> 01:29:21.740] stuff. My son, we'll tell you, he's grown now. The worst punishment I ever gave him [01:29:21.740 --> 01:29:29.620] was he had a problem with concentration. I went and got a Hershey bar and ate it in front [01:29:29.620 --> 01:29:36.380] of him as his punishment. He'll tell you today that was the worst punishment I ever gave [01:29:36.380 --> 01:29:45.780] him. That's cruel and unusual. Very unusual. It was both, but it was paying attention to [01:29:45.780 --> 01:29:52.180] how it got his attention in a way that a whipping or other punishment would never have gotten [01:29:52.180 --> 01:29:57.660] his attention. I'm telling you. Hang on, Randy Kelton, Devin Stevens, We Will All Radio, we'll [01:29:57.660 --> 01:30:10.620] be right back. Are you stressed? In our fast paced world, many of us are, but there's something [01:30:10.620 --> 01:30:15.860] better than alcohol or big pharma pills, and it could add years to your life. I'm Dr. Catherine [01:30:15.860 --> 01:30:20.780] Albrecht and I'll be back with more in just a moment. Privacy is under attack. When you [01:30:20.780 --> 01:30:25.300] give up data about yourself, you'll never get it back again. And once your privacy is [01:30:25.300 --> 01:30:30.500] gone, you'll find your freedoms will start to vanish too. So protect your rights. Say [01:30:30.500 --> 01:30:36.820] no to surveillance and keep your information to yourself. Privacy, it's worth hanging onto. [01:30:36.820 --> 01:30:41.100] This public service announcement is brought to you by StartPage.com, the private search [01:30:41.100 --> 01:30:49.100] engine alternative to Google, Yahoo and Bing. 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Call 888-910-4367, [01:32:51.780 --> 01:33:02.540] 888-910-4367 and see what our powder, seeds and oil can do for you. Only at hempUSA.org. [01:33:02.540 --> 01:33:17.980] You are listening to the Logos Radio Network. LogosRadioNetwork.com. [01:33:17.980 --> 01:33:38.980] Okay, I was just digging that base. Okay, we're back and I know I kind of got off [01:33:38.980 --> 01:33:48.180] subject there. Sometimes I ramble late in the day. You leave too late in the day? Yeah, [01:33:48.180 --> 01:34:01.140] it's kind of late for me. I'm old. Legal documentation is not so difficult. It's different. It's [01:34:01.140 --> 01:34:07.980] not something most people do all the time. It seems totally alien and foreign but there [01:34:07.980 --> 01:34:13.580] are just some basic things to understand about it. Once you get the basics down, it's not [01:34:13.580 --> 01:34:19.900] that terribly difficult. What I was talking about before we went out was that kind of [01:34:19.900 --> 01:34:27.820] off the subject is about predicates. I know some of these things sound really esoteric [01:34:27.820 --> 01:34:41.060] but those things that we get to do in writing that aren't obvious often are the most powerful. [01:34:41.060 --> 01:34:48.500] When you write a legal document or when you write anything, look at the terms that you [01:34:48.500 --> 01:35:03.100] use. If you have a term that is a nominalization where you take a behavior and turn it into [01:35:03.100 --> 01:35:17.220] a state like anger, depression, he frustrates me. No, he doesn't. He causes you to act in [01:35:17.220 --> 01:35:28.500] a way that you describe as being frustrated. Enormalization takes on a power of its own. [01:35:28.500 --> 01:35:38.860] It takes on a state that tends to give us less options. The two or three times I had [01:35:38.860 --> 01:35:47.500] people that were really distraught, then you just shift into asking them to define the [01:35:47.500 --> 01:35:52.980] deletions. Oftentimes, we leave things out. That's one of the things I probably should [01:35:52.980 --> 01:36:01.460] have addressed earlier were deletions. In all of these, most everybody that we've talked [01:36:01.460 --> 01:36:11.900] to today had a tremendous amount of deletions. In your writing, if you look at it closely, [01:36:11.900 --> 01:36:22.060] you'll hear me on here ask someone for referential index. I ask for referential index because [01:36:22.060 --> 01:36:32.620] the writing contained deletions. Their speech contained deletions. They made statements [01:36:32.620 --> 01:36:44.580] that presupposed that I had information I did not have. In short, that may be one of [01:36:44.580 --> 01:36:53.140] the biggest sins we all commit in writing. It's difficult not to do that, to pay attention [01:36:53.140 --> 01:37:01.340] to the deletions. We're writing about something that we are intimately familiar with. We know [01:37:01.340 --> 01:37:10.980] the whole story and we try to give the other person enough information so that they can [01:37:10.980 --> 01:37:20.660] understand the whole story without having to give them every detail. We have to figure [01:37:20.660 --> 01:37:28.780] out which details to give them and which not to give them a headache with. We necessarily [01:37:28.780 --> 01:37:39.780] have to have deletions. You just simply cannot tell everything and nobody wants to hear everything. [01:37:39.780 --> 01:37:51.180] How do you determine what to put in and what to take out? When we talked to Steve about [01:37:51.180 --> 01:37:59.980] his issue earlier at the beginning of the show, it wasn't until we got to the end of [01:37:59.980 --> 01:38:12.380] his story about this hearing that we hit on the whole point of the whole thing. We got [01:38:12.380 --> 01:38:21.060] back to subject matter jurisdiction. Now, what we do with that, when he got to that, [01:38:21.060 --> 01:38:26.180] that was perfect for me because now, okay, subject matter jurisdiction, that's a great [01:38:26.180 --> 01:38:33.540] issue. Now, how do we bring our reader to subject matter jurisdiction? This kind of [01:38:33.540 --> 01:38:43.620] goes to technique concerning deletions and additions. What do I need to do to bring my [01:38:43.620 --> 01:38:53.300] reader to the conclusion that somewhere in here, there was a lack of subject matter jurisdiction? [01:38:53.300 --> 01:38:59.340] When we did that, we kind of did some of this on the break. In order to get to subject matter [01:38:59.340 --> 01:39:11.860] jurisdiction, we needed a default in 2007, a foreclosure in 2009, and we needed the default [01:39:11.860 --> 01:39:19.420] to support the foreclosure. There couldn't be a foreclosure without a default. Then the [01:39:19.420 --> 01:39:25.940] default supports the notice to vacate. Then there was a notice to vacate because there [01:39:25.940 --> 01:39:37.220] was a foreclosure. Then there was an unlawful detainer hearing or an eviction hearing. Then [01:39:37.220 --> 01:39:43.900] there was a dismissal of the eviction hearing. The dismissal of the eviction hearing sets [01:39:43.900 --> 01:39:54.180] the clock for the statute of limitations. We've run down the numbers. The next action [01:39:54.180 --> 01:40:07.740] to evict was in what, 2013? The first one was in 2009. There was a second one in 2013 [01:40:07.740 --> 01:40:15.340] that was a year and seven months outside, and then another one in 2013. [01:40:15.340 --> 01:40:21.900] We go from the 2009 to the 2013 and that says, like a subject matter jurisdiction, that's [01:40:21.900 --> 01:40:30.180] all that's really needed. Everything else is fluff. The only thing that needs to be [01:40:30.180 --> 01:40:39.660] there is the law. These are the facts that support the law. There was an eviction hearing [01:40:39.660 --> 01:40:49.240] in 2009. It was dismissed in 2009 and more than four years, the two years passed before [01:40:49.240 --> 01:40:56.460] there was another action, lack of subject matter jurisdiction. Now we can go back and [01:40:56.460 --> 01:41:02.020] say, you know, all this other stuff is nice and interesting and all of that, but we don't [01:41:02.020 --> 01:41:08.180] need it. The reason that, you know, about the other side coming out in the hall, say, [01:41:08.180 --> 01:41:14.380] oh yeah, we'll dismiss about irrelevant. The only thing that's relevant is the fact [01:41:14.380 --> 01:41:21.460] that the case was in fact dismissed. Now, if you want to add more information, you certainly [01:41:21.460 --> 01:41:30.460] can, but keep in mind, you've got a judge here who's busy and the shorter you can make [01:41:30.460 --> 01:41:37.620] the presentation to him, get to the facts and the conclusions based on the facts, the [01:41:37.620 --> 01:41:44.700] quicker you can do that, the more likely he is to accept what you're reading and what [01:41:44.700 --> 01:41:52.100] you're presenting. He is a person after all. He is busy. He don't have time for a lot [01:41:52.100 --> 01:42:00.460] of stuff because he has to read 20 or 30 of these a day and the quicker he can read them, [01:42:00.460 --> 01:42:06.260] get done and go play golf, the happier he's going to be. Now, it may not be right for [01:42:06.260 --> 01:42:11.540] a judge to rule on a pleading without reading it. That's exactly what happened in a case [01:42:11.540 --> 01:42:18.420] that I told you earlier about the judge with the hearing thing. Well, when I got to my [01:42:18.420 --> 01:42:26.140] hearing, it was an eviction hearing and I told him that there was a challenge to subject [01:42:26.140 --> 01:42:32.500] matter jurisdiction before the court because we had filed a trespass to try title in the [01:42:32.500 --> 01:42:38.820] district court, a challenge title, therefore denying this court subject matter jurisdiction. [01:42:38.820 --> 01:42:48.900] Well, we had filed that motion while the judge was in court. The judge said, Mr. Kelton, [01:42:48.900 --> 01:42:54.980] just because you filed a trespass to try title action does not necessarily mean that this [01:42:54.980 --> 01:43:06.740] court does not have subject matter jurisdiction. Your motion is denied. He never read it. [01:43:06.740 --> 01:43:18.100] He dismissed the, he denied the motion without reading it. They will do that. They will deny [01:43:18.100 --> 01:43:23.380] your motion without reading it if it's too long or if it's too difficult to understand, [01:43:23.380 --> 01:43:28.660] they'll just deny it. This time we caught it. This time there was no way he could have [01:43:28.660 --> 01:43:31.940] read it because there was no time because he was in court and we were watching it the [01:43:31.940 --> 01:43:39.380] whole time. But, but they will do that. They're human beings. They have their angers and frustrations [01:43:39.380 --> 01:43:45.460] and prejudices. We want to try to avoid them. And speaking of prejudices, I'll speak to [01:43:45.460 --> 01:43:49.860] that a little bit when we get back on the other side. Randy Kelton, Steve Skidmore, [01:43:49.860 --> 01:43:56.580] we have our radio call in number 512-646-1984. We'll be right back. [01:43:56.580 --> 01:44:03.860] Okay. You feel tired when talking about important topics like money and politics? [01:44:03.860 --> 01:44:07.540] Sorry. 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So if you or anybody you know suffers from stupidity, [01:44:46.180 --> 01:44:54.580] then you need to call 512-480-2503 or visit them in 1904 Guadalupe or brave new bookstore.com. [01:44:54.580 --> 01:44:58.020] Side effects from using Brave New Books products may include discernment and enlarged vocabulary [01:44:58.020 --> 01:45:03.620] and an overall increase in mental functioning. Are you the plaintiff or defendant in a lawsuit? [01:45:04.260 --> 01:45:09.780] Win your case without an attorney with Jurisdictionary, the affordable, easy to understand [01:45:09.780 --> 01:45:17.060] four CD course that will show you how in 24 hours, step by step. If you have a lawyer, [01:45:17.060 --> 01:45:21.780] know what your lawyer should be doing. If you don't have a lawyer, know what you should do [01:45:21.780 --> 01:45:28.020] for yourself. Thousands have won with our step by step course and now you can too. [01:45:28.020 --> 01:45:33.940] Jurisdictionary was created by a licensed attorney with 22 years of case winning experience. [01:45:34.580 --> 01:45:40.100] Even if you're not in a lawsuit, you can learn what everyone should understand about the principles [01:45:40.100 --> 01:45:46.820] and practices that control our American courts. You'll receive our audio classroom, video seminar, [01:45:46.820 --> 01:45:55.140] tutorials, forms for civil cases, pro se tactics, and much more. Please visit ruleoflawradio.com [01:45:55.140 --> 01:46:20.580] and click on the banner or call toll free 866-LAW-EZ. [01:46:25.140 --> 01:46:41.460] Okay, we are back. Randy Kelton, Steve Skedmore, Rule Law Radio. And when we went out, I was just [01:46:41.460 --> 01:46:53.540] going to prejudice. If you attempt to adjudicate your case as a pro se, [01:46:53.540 --> 01:46:59.060] you're going to have to deal with pro se prejudice or pro se bias. [01:47:01.060 --> 01:47:11.460] Even if the judge really wants to be totally fair and honest, human beings are human beings. [01:47:12.740 --> 01:47:20.500] And human beings that are judges are almost always lawyers before their judges. Not always. [01:47:20.500 --> 01:47:28.420] Not always. JPs can be elected who are not lawyers, but they deal with, even if they're [01:47:28.420 --> 01:47:34.580] not lawyers, they deal with lawyers all the time and they tend to, they get pro se's come in who [01:47:34.580 --> 01:47:39.780] don't know anything about what they're doing and they get frustrated with them and they develop a [01:47:39.780 --> 01:47:49.140] bias against pro se's, whether they want to or not. And if they're lawyers, the bias is even greater. [01:47:49.140 --> 01:47:56.500] So if you go in to represent yourself, you need to understand that that's going to be there [01:47:57.140 --> 01:48:04.820] and you need to do everything you can to keep from triggering that bias. [01:48:06.180 --> 01:48:14.820] We have guys here in the legal reform area who do a lot of these things that [01:48:14.820 --> 01:48:24.180] I consider go-to-patriot mythology. I prepared a document for someone in California and sent it to [01:48:24.180 --> 01:48:33.860] him and his father was a researcher that I had known for a while. He got the document, worked it [01:48:33.860 --> 01:48:40.820] over and they sent it back to me. The son sent it back to me to get my opinion on it and it started [01:48:40.820 --> 01:48:52.740] out with a man on the land, single sovereign, just a whole string of this stuff. And I called him up [01:48:53.940 --> 01:49:01.060] and I said, Ray, what is all this crap? He said, well, it's all true. I said, well, you're fat [01:49:01.060 --> 01:49:06.340] bald and old. You didn't put that in there. He said, well, it's not relevant. That's right, Ray. [01:49:06.340 --> 01:49:16.820] All that garbage is not relevant. You put that in there and the judge reads that and he sees [01:49:18.020 --> 01:49:25.140] pro se wacko and he don't pay any attention to anything else you write, even if he wants to, [01:49:26.340 --> 01:49:32.260] because you've stuck that roadblock in front of him. You've waved this red flag in front of him [01:49:32.260 --> 01:49:39.380] and said, I put stupid stuff in my pleading, so don't pay any attention to it. I'm a member [01:49:39.380 --> 01:49:45.380] of the Republic of Texas. That's what they think when they say anything that has the look of [01:49:46.020 --> 01:49:54.660] this pro se mythological approach. When they see a red thumbprint on the document. [01:49:54.660 --> 01:50:03.940] I've heard these arguments about how these things have influence, but the only influence I've ever [01:50:03.940 --> 01:50:12.180] seen is to get the judge not to trust anything you say, to get the judge to lump you in with all these [01:50:12.180 --> 01:50:21.540] guys who get out here and just file this garbage with the courts. And the guys that have been filing [01:50:21.540 --> 01:50:28.660] these leads against public officials, the Republic of Texas really got the courts after the pro se. [01:50:29.540 --> 01:50:36.180] So if you're going to prepare a document yourself, you need it to look exactly like something a [01:50:36.180 --> 01:50:48.180] lawyer would file. And I have a way to do that. I have one skill that I have honed above all others. [01:50:48.180 --> 01:50:57.460] I am an expert and accomplished plagiarist. I don't want to write anything up. If I can avoid it, [01:50:57.460 --> 01:51:04.980] I want to find where a lawyer has written it and steal his stuff and put it in mine. Anything that's [01:51:04.980 --> 01:51:11.780] been filed in the court is public record. There is actually a lawyer here in Texas who sued somebody [01:51:11.780 --> 01:51:19.300] for plagiarism, for using a portion of his, one of his pleadings. And the courts threw him out [01:51:20.260 --> 01:51:26.500] for filing a frivolous lawsuit because once your document's filed in the public record, [01:51:26.500 --> 01:51:31.460] it becomes part of the public domain. So don't write it if you can avoid it. [01:51:31.460 --> 01:51:39.860] Steve Skidmore, what's five, six years ago, when he first started this company, he was a [01:51:39.860 --> 01:51:44.420] lawyer. When he first started this foreclosure thing, came to me and he needed a lawsuit. [01:51:44.980 --> 01:51:49.940] And I told him, I hadn't finished my research. And he said, I don't have time for you to finish [01:51:49.940 --> 01:51:54.740] your research. We need something. So I went on the internet, pulled down a couple of two or three [01:51:54.740 --> 01:52:00.660] suits and looked at some stuff that looked cool. Most of it, I didn't have a clue as to what it was. [01:52:00.660 --> 01:52:03.700] And I pulled it out and dropped it in a lawsuit and sent it to him. [01:52:03.700 --> 01:52:08.980] It's not quite what I was expecting, but yeah, okay. [01:52:10.740 --> 01:52:11.540] But it worked. [01:52:12.900 --> 01:52:13.700] Yeah. [01:52:13.700 --> 01:52:19.220] The lawyer on the other side filed a response and said, your honor, this suit's a piece of crap. [01:52:20.820 --> 01:52:21.540] He was right. [01:52:22.260 --> 01:52:26.260] And the judge came back and said, yeah, this suit is a piece of crap. Fix it. [01:52:26.260 --> 01:52:34.020] But I think my point there is, is don't miss a deadline. You got to get something filed, [01:52:34.020 --> 01:52:37.780] get something filed. It can be garbage, but get something filed. [01:52:37.780 --> 01:52:38.900] You can always amend it. [01:52:39.700 --> 01:52:45.380] But look, as you, if you could find, you know, I didn't have time then, [01:52:45.380 --> 01:52:51.060] so I just grabbed what I could. I generally try to find stuff right on point. The thing I'd like [01:52:51.060 --> 01:53:01.540] to do most is take a section out of a court opinion. These tend to be really well written [01:53:02.260 --> 01:53:06.340] and they're written in a very particular style. [01:53:07.540 --> 01:53:15.220] When you take an argument out of a court opinion that fits your issue and you drop it in the [01:53:15.220 --> 01:53:23.860] in the document, I use it because most of these, they abide by the adage. [01:53:25.060 --> 01:53:29.380] Never make a proactive statement out of your, of law, out of your own mouth. [01:53:30.580 --> 01:53:34.260] You must make a proactive statement of law out of the mouth of the courts. [01:53:34.260 --> 01:53:38.260] So they'll say, they'll make this statement and they'll know, [01:53:38.260 --> 01:53:41.380] they're behind it. There'll be a citation. This is where they got it. [01:53:41.380 --> 01:53:45.620] They make this other statement and citation where they got it. [01:53:46.340 --> 01:53:53.140] So you read the paragraph and it has these sentences in there and each one of them has [01:53:53.140 --> 01:53:56.260] a case citing behind it showing what law they got it out of. [01:53:57.700 --> 01:54:07.540] And they have a way of writing that is peculiar and I'm often amazed at how well written a lot [01:54:07.540 --> 01:54:13.540] of these opinions are. So I just pull that section out and drop it right in my document. [01:54:14.180 --> 01:54:19.540] I don't cite the case I got it out of because I don't need to. [01:54:20.340 --> 01:54:27.220] I use this paragraph or these two or three paragraphs and every sentence cites cases for me. [01:54:28.820 --> 01:54:31.300] When the court looks at it, they'll know exactly what I did. [01:54:31.300 --> 01:54:38.500] But I use the same argument that the court used when it gave the ruling in favor. [01:54:40.740 --> 01:54:47.780] So become a good plagiarist. Write as little of your own stuff as you can. [01:54:49.620 --> 01:54:53.620] Get as much out of the, especially the court opinions. [01:54:53.620 --> 01:54:57.700] Now, quoting from lawyers can sometimes be a problem because [01:54:57.700 --> 01:55:03.700] frankly, some of you, you hear Steve Chuckle back there. He knows where I'm going. [01:55:03.700 --> 01:55:04.500] Oh, yeah. [01:55:04.500 --> 01:55:11.140] Some of these documents I get from lawyers, I wonder, do they have their kid in kindergarten [01:55:11.140 --> 01:55:20.900] write this garbage? Did this guy really file this trash with the courts? Lawyers really get arrogant [01:55:20.900 --> 01:55:27.860] and sometimes they do some really, really crappy work. And one of the little things while I'm [01:55:28.660 --> 01:55:35.700] on that point about lawyers is when you get a lawyer quoting case law, [01:55:36.740 --> 01:55:40.900] you should always look it up. And I don't use [01:55:40.900 --> 01:55:50.180] Lexus or Westlaw anymore. If I'm looking for a case, I just put the case in a search engine [01:55:50.180 --> 01:55:58.340] on the internet and bang, I'll find it. I do better on the internet than I do with Westlaw or Lexus. [01:55:58.340 --> 01:56:04.660] Well, Google scholars got a real good, like poor man's Lexus. [01:56:04.660 --> 01:56:13.300] Yeah. And it's great. So when these lawyers cite a case, look it up. You will be amazed [01:56:13.300 --> 01:56:15.940] how often they cite cases that don't exist. [01:56:16.820 --> 01:56:23.140] And speaking of, speaking of citing cases in Google Scholar, if you don't know how to cite [01:56:23.140 --> 01:56:30.020] a case with Google Scholar, if you find a case that you want to read, right click and open it [01:56:30.020 --> 01:56:36.660] up in another tab. Keep your search page open. If you find what you want, you want to cite it, [01:56:36.660 --> 01:56:42.660] go back to your search hits. And at the bottom of that little excerpt, you'll see a blue tag [01:56:42.660 --> 01:56:48.740] that says cite, click it. It's already highlighted. It'll open up another window. Your case site is [01:56:48.740 --> 01:56:54.820] already highlighted. Just right click, copy, paste it into your document, move on. Quote what part [01:56:54.820 --> 01:57:02.420] is poignant. Show what part of the document you got it from. You're good to go. Move on. [01:57:03.380 --> 01:57:10.740] Maybe next time we should do at least a few segments on how to do research and how to [01:57:11.860 --> 01:57:21.380] construct documents based on legal research and case law. But always check a lawyer's case law. [01:57:21.380 --> 01:57:29.940] We've had, I had one friend that the lawyer cited a section out of a case for this is IRS deal. [01:57:29.940 --> 01:57:36.020] And when he read it, the court said, this is what has been claimed. But then went on to say, [01:57:36.020 --> 01:57:42.740] that's all nonsense. It gave the opposite ruling. So the guy took the case, the lawyer cited and [01:57:42.740 --> 01:57:50.660] pulled his argument out of the lawyer's case. This was absolutely hilarious. So don't trust lawyers. [01:57:51.700 --> 01:57:59.300] They don't like to work hard and they produce garbage documentation. Quite often. Okay. We are [01:58:00.020 --> 01:58:06.020] out of time. You've used up another wasted four perfectly good hours. [01:58:06.020 --> 01:58:13.780] Out of time. You've used up another wasted four perfectly good hours. [01:58:18.020 --> 01:58:23.220] Okay. And if I seem disjointed, it's because I'm working on building a [01:58:24.500 --> 01:58:29.060] seminar that I don't know how to do yet. So I'm using you folks as practice. [01:58:29.060 --> 01:58:34.660] Oh no. On the outro you tell everybody they've been guinea pigs for the last four hours. [01:58:38.100 --> 01:58:42.340] I hope it interspersed in all that. There was a little bit of good information. [01:58:42.340 --> 01:58:47.620] Thank you for listening. We'll be back next week. Pattern interruption. [01:58:50.260 --> 01:58:56.660] Bibles for America is offering absolutely free a unique study Bible called the New Testament [01:58:56.660 --> 01:59:02.180] recovery version. 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