[00:00.000 --> 00:06.000] The following news flash is brought to you by the Lone Star Lowdown, providing you daily [00:06.000 --> 00:13.000] bulletins for the commodities market, Today in History, news updates, and the inside scoop [00:13.000 --> 00:21.000] into the tides of the alternative. [00:21.000 --> 00:28.000] Markets for Friday, the 3rd of June, 2016, are currently treading with gold at $1,243.80 an ounce, [00:28.000 --> 00:35.000] silver $16.39 an ounce, Texas crude $49.17 an ounce of barrel, and Bitcoin is currently [00:35.000 --> 00:44.000] steadily rising at $573 U.S. currency. [00:44.000 --> 00:50.000] Today in history, the year 1784, the U.S. Army is officially established by the Congress [00:50.000 --> 00:55.000] of the Confederation, created to replace the disbanded Continental Army after the Revolutionary [00:55.000 --> 01:02.000] War. The U.S. Army was founded today in history. [01:02.000 --> 01:07.000] In recent news, the Brussels River, which runs 840 miles across much of the Lone Star State, [01:07.000 --> 01:11.000] has already risen to record levels, flooding neighborhoods west of Houston and forcing [01:11.000 --> 01:15.000] hundreds of people to evacuate, with worse news coming from the National Weather Service [01:15.000 --> 01:20.000] predicting another 4 to 5 inches through the area in the weekend. Just as last April, if [01:20.000 --> 01:24.000] you recall, more than 1,000 people were evacuated from northern Houston during another historic [01:24.000 --> 01:29.000] flood. In Austin over the weekend, more than 2,000 inmates were evacuated from prisons [01:29.000 --> 01:33.000] in low-lying regions. Consider that just two years ago, the Brussels River had run dry [01:33.000 --> 01:38.000] in some places due to drought, but is now in an obviously saturated state. A flash flood [01:38.000 --> 01:42.000] watch is currently in effect for all of south central Texas, according to the National Weather [01:42.000 --> 01:46.000] Service, and a river flood warning is in effect for the Brussels River. At least half a dozen [01:46.000 --> 01:54.000] fatalities have been a consequence of this flood. [01:54.000 --> 01:57.000] In what could be some of the most eyebrow-raising endorsements for presidential hopefuls in [01:57.000 --> 02:01.000] the United States, the President of Venezuela, Nicolas Maduro, came out and endorsed [02:01.000 --> 02:06.000] Democratic Socialist Bernie Sanders on Tuesday, calling him our revolutionary friend and implying [02:06.000 --> 02:10.000] that it is our broken political system as to the reason why Sanders is being marginalized. [02:10.000 --> 02:15.000] If that wasn't enough, North Korean state media, DPRK Today, published a column also [02:15.000 --> 02:19.000] released on Tuesday, which came out and endorsed Republican newcomer Donald Trump, calling [02:19.000 --> 02:23.000] him a wise politician and stating that it turns out that Trump is not a rough-talking, [02:23.000 --> 02:28.000] screwy, ignorant candidate they say he is, but is actually a wise politician and pristine [02:28.000 --> 02:32.000] presidential candidate. As of yet, no authoritarian dictator has come out and endorsed Hillary [02:32.000 --> 02:36.000] Clinton, though some suspect this is due to many of them wanting to retain some level [02:36.000 --> 02:40.000] of credibility. In what could only be considered ominous omens, it seems that many of black [02:40.000 --> 02:45.000] cats are crossing the American people's path to this upcoming presidential election. [03:10.000 --> 03:25.000] Well, I received my remedy today. It came in a box just like they say. I accepted it [03:25.000 --> 03:35.000] for value right away. It's not sooner, not later. We are originators and the pathways [03:35.000 --> 03:43.000] seem to get straighter every day. You are listening to Rule of Law Radio with Randy [03:43.000 --> 03:49.000] Kelton, Vet Pack. Go ahead, Randy. I think we've lost Ken, so we've got a special guest [03:49.000 --> 03:57.000] on the line. Yeah, we've got Mr. Michael Banerich, the Mr. Michael Banerich. Hello, [03:57.000 --> 04:02.000] Michael. Nice to have you back on the air. Hey, Randy. Thank you so much for having me [04:02.000 --> 04:12.000] on. I appreciate it. So you've been a stranger. What have you got going now? Well, I'm not [04:12.000 --> 04:18.000] any stranger now than I used to be, but I was up in Indiana for a long time taking care [04:18.000 --> 04:24.000] of my folks. I'm back in Austin and I'm doing my constitution classes again. I have one [04:24.000 --> 04:35.000] scheduled at Brave New Book next Saturday, June 11th from noon until 8 a.m. And I'm going [04:35.000 --> 04:42.000] to be switching it around a little bit. We're going to add some information about inner [04:42.000 --> 04:48.000] traveling without a driver's license. I'm going to hand out my last letter to the IRS [04:48.000 --> 04:56.000] if anybody's interested. And if we can't answer the questions that people really want [04:56.000 --> 05:07.000] to have answered. Good, good. And you know, we were just talking about Trump with Gary [05:07.000 --> 05:17.000] from San Antonio. And he's an indication that the public is more aware of the government [05:17.000 --> 05:26.000] right now. So this is probably a really good time because people are really, really unhappy. [05:26.000 --> 05:36.000] The fact that we have a real outsider like Trump and he got the nomination so early in [05:36.000 --> 05:42.000] the process, that should be a wake up call to everybody that the public is not a bunch [05:42.000 --> 05:50.000] of happy campers. So this may be a good time for your constitutional class. [05:50.000 --> 05:55.000] Well, I certainly hope so. You know, you're saying that he's kind of a canary in the coal [05:55.000 --> 06:03.000] mine, the indicator or worse thing. It's kind of like we don't think that now. [06:03.000 --> 06:11.000] Well, that's what I kind of take from Trump. You know, I don't think anybody is going after [06:11.000 --> 06:20.000] Trump because of his position, because I really don't know what his positions are. [06:20.000 --> 06:28.000] He seems to just say whatever comes to mind at the moment. And the fact that the public [06:28.000 --> 06:37.000] has rebelled so strongly against the establishment, the established systems, both Democratic [06:37.000 --> 06:44.000] and Republican, I think this is a real good sign. [06:44.000 --> 06:51.000] Well, I certainly hope so. I've been waiting for the general public to wake up and do something [06:51.000 --> 06:58.000] and I thought that after September 11th when they passed the Patriot Act, that that would [06:58.000 --> 07:05.000] be the final straw that Americans would stand up and go, no, this is not going to continue. [07:05.000 --> 07:08.000] But man, I was wrong. [07:08.000 --> 07:18.000] It takes a lot. And it seems that when we have one of these major false flags, the vast [07:18.000 --> 07:25.000] majority of the public seems to feel like they have to rally around that flag and never [07:25.000 --> 07:32.000] question it. It's taken them a while to begin to question everything. I think it's the new [07:32.000 --> 07:41.000] generation is the millennials and the 90s and you know, my son is he's in his 40s now [07:41.000 --> 07:50.000] and he is really, really unhappy with the system that we have left to him. And just [07:50.000 --> 07:58.000] from talking to him and his friends, the whole group, the ones that are taking over behind [07:58.000 --> 08:06.000] us are really, really unhappy with what they're seeing. So we may have a group here that is [08:06.000 --> 08:11.000] hungry for the information we can give them. [08:11.000 --> 08:20.000] Well, unfortunately, the kids have been going to college and they've been racking up tens [08:20.000 --> 08:28.000] of thousands, if not, and I can't find it, hundreds of thousands of dollars in school [08:28.000 --> 08:36.000] debt. And then they get out of school and they can't find a job. So yeah, I can understand [08:36.000 --> 08:40.000] why that might make somebody a little low, irritable. [08:40.000 --> 08:46.000] Yeah, and they're concerned that they're paying Social Security for a system that won't [08:46.000 --> 08:51.000] be there when they need it. They're not happy. [08:51.000 --> 08:54.000] It's over a decade now. [08:54.000 --> 09:02.000] So this may be our time, Robert. Robert, this may be our time, Michael, our time to, I'm [09:02.000 --> 09:11.000] calling everybody Robert lately. That's our producer. So it's our time to, you know, as [09:11.000 --> 09:16.000] long as we've been doing this, we've been hoping that the public would wake up and I [09:16.000 --> 09:21.000] think they are. If anything is an indication, Trump is an indication, they're waking up [09:21.000 --> 09:26.000] and they need someone, they need people like us. They need you out there to show them how [09:26.000 --> 09:31.000] things, how the Constitution should work. [09:31.000 --> 09:42.000] And they need something that they can do. [09:42.000 --> 09:44.000] Did we lose you, Michael? [09:44.000 --> 09:45.000] No, I'm here. [09:45.000 --> 09:51.000] Okay, I did have it. I'd kind of like to get your take on an issue that Vette and I were [09:51.000 --> 10:00.000] discussing on the break. Vette, will you tell us your take on what Target is doing? [10:00.000 --> 10:06.000] Okay, yes. So Brady and I were discussing, you know, hey, do you have anything that's [10:06.000 --> 10:10.000] going on with you right now that, you know, we could talk about? And I said, well, there's [10:10.000 --> 10:15.000] always something going on, but now it's Target. Apparently, Target's wanting to make the [10:15.000 --> 10:20.000] restrooms pretty much open to anybody. There's no men's restroom, women's restroom. There [10:20.000 --> 10:27.000] is a single family's restroom and then co-ed. So guess what? If you want to be a man and [10:27.000 --> 10:33.000] walk into what used to be the women's restroom with a 14-year-old girl and her mother, go [10:33.000 --> 10:39.000] right ahead because that's okay and Target's awesome. And my personal opinion is that is [10:39.000 --> 10:43.000] so wrong. [10:43.000 --> 10:51.000] And that's coming from someone who can bench press more than me, who's a black belt in [10:51.000 --> 11:02.000] karate, would have little reason to fear a man coming in there. But this is wrong. For [11:02.000 --> 11:11.000] me, Eve, just the idea is just, I don't want my daughter going into a men's room. You [11:11.000 --> 11:17.000] was talking, you mentioned human trafficking. Were you dressed that way? [11:17.000 --> 11:27.000] Yes, actually. And then they've actually found human trafficking. There was a girl that was [11:27.000 --> 11:34.000] taken from the restroom. They put the chloroform over the mouth and took her off. And luckily, [11:34.000 --> 11:39.000] her mother was waiting outside for her, got worried and scared. And as she walked in, [11:39.000 --> 11:45.000] she saw two men walking out with this woman and just ran over there and noticed it was [11:45.000 --> 11:51.000] her daughter and caught them. But it's still going on right now. So how about this Target [11:51.000 --> 11:56.000] deal? Let's go ahead and open it up to where when a man walks into a woman's restroom, [11:56.000 --> 12:03.000] it's not, oh my goodness, this is not right. It's, oh, well, they allow that now. So if [12:03.000 --> 12:10.000] he claims he's walking out with his girlfriend, then I guess it's okay. Even though he could [12:10.000 --> 12:15.000] be walking out with this girl and she goes missing. I mean, this could create some serious [12:15.000 --> 12:21.000] problems that they think, oh no, transgender. This is what's the problem here. We need to [12:21.000 --> 12:26.000] allow transgenders to go over there and be able to go into a restroom without feeling [12:26.000 --> 12:37.000] uncomfortable. Do you have any idea of what the number of transgender persons in the United [12:37.000 --> 12:50.000] States is? No, I cannot seem to find an actual percentage. I think that it is so low. Michael, [12:50.000 --> 13:03.000] you got a way we can challenge this? Well, it's a philosophical thing. We've allowed [13:03.000 --> 13:13.000] ourselves to be told that there are no absolutes. Nobody's got a correct answer. Everybody's [13:13.000 --> 13:22.000] opinion is equally valid. And we've allowed that kind of seep into our national psyche. [13:22.000 --> 13:29.000] And now when they say, well, you know, guys can go into here and women can go in there [13:29.000 --> 13:34.000] and you're not allowed to challenge that. I mean, we know that this is a visceral level. [13:34.000 --> 13:43.000] I mean, that's why you pause in your middle of your conversation to go, what? But we've [13:43.000 --> 13:52.000] been kind of conditioned to accept whatever the general public is told. I mean, this is [13:52.000 --> 13:59.000] what Politically Correct is all about. You know, you're obligated to toe the party line, [13:59.000 --> 14:06.000] whatever the general public wants. And, you know, you're the oddball if you challenge [14:06.000 --> 14:15.000] any of this stuff. So it's been a long kind of psychological battle for quite some time. [14:15.000 --> 14:22.000] And the reason that they are winning this battle is because they've been fighting for [14:22.000 --> 14:30.000] decades and most of us didn't even know that there was a fight going on. So the answer [14:30.000 --> 14:39.000] is not going to be simple, but it will be fundamental once we decide to go back to absolutes. [14:39.000 --> 14:48.000] You know, men are men, women are women, and that's the way we want it to be. [14:48.000 --> 15:00.000] My concern is that a man by his nature is dramatically stronger than a woman. For the [15:00.000 --> 15:11.000] most part, no, that is an exception. She's a small exception. She's a lifter. She's an [15:11.000 --> 15:19.000] incredible shape. I'm six feet tall, 200 pounds, and she can press more than me. And she's [15:19.000 --> 15:30.000] a black belt in karate. But most women are not. And I am, just by my physiology, very, [15:30.000 --> 15:35.000] very much stronger than a woman. Very few women would have a chance against me, even [15:35.000 --> 15:43.000] though I'm out of shape. Someone in their prime and determined, a woman would have very [15:43.000 --> 15:56.000] little chance. And if God created man, he created us horribly flawed. And I can't imagine [15:56.000 --> 16:09.000] us allowing the very minute number of transgenders to affect the culture in a way that we allow [16:09.000 --> 16:18.000] the much larger number of sexually deviant men to enter female washrooms. I just can't [16:18.000 --> 16:20.000] see that as being reasonable. [16:20.000 --> 16:29.000] That's terrible. I mean, just imagine the children. Sure, a dad walks into Target and [16:29.000 --> 16:34.000] he's got his daughter with him, and she's got to go to the restroom. What does he do? [16:34.000 --> 16:40.000] Well, okay, sure, if it's co-gender whatever restroom, then he walks into whatever restroom [16:40.000 --> 16:45.000] that he wants to and takes her. But you know what? Target has a family restroom. Period. [16:45.000 --> 16:50.000] Done deal. End of story. So the dad takes her to the family restroom. Why does it have [16:50.000 --> 16:54.000] to be co-gender? If they feel like they can't walk into a restroom. [16:54.000 --> 17:01.000] Hold on. I have to interrupt you. We're about to go to break. We'll be right back. [17:01.000 --> 17:06.000] Did you know that the Logos Radio Network is a truly listener-supported radio network? [17:06.000 --> 17:10.000] On top of the on-air talent, producers, and other hardworking individuals working behind [17:10.000 --> 17:14.000] the scenes, Logos Radio Network is kept on the air by the generous support of listeners [17:14.000 --> 17:19.000] like you. And we appreciate our loyal listeners making contributions every year in our annual [17:19.000 --> 17:23.000] fundraisers, which help keep the lights on and Logos Radio Network on the air. [17:23.000 --> 17:28.000] Head on over to logosradionetwork.com to make your contribution. Every $25 donation enters [17:28.000 --> 17:33.000] you for a chance to win prizes from Central Texas Gunworks. First prize being a Spiked [17:33.000 --> 17:38.000] Skull Lower Receiver. Second prize being a Taurus Curve. Ten winners will receive gift [17:38.000 --> 17:42.000] cards from All About Vapor. And if you donate your $25 contribution early enough, you'll [17:42.000 --> 17:47.000] also receive a complimentary jar of My Magic Mud. Donations by all major credit cards are [17:47.000 --> 17:52.000] accepted, as well as contributions by Bitcoin. The Logos Radio Network Fundraiser. Head on [17:52.000 --> 17:57.000] over to logosradionetwork.com for more information and to donate to keep the Logos Radio Network [17:57.000 --> 17:59.000] on the air. [18:27.000 --> 18:34.000] Thank you very much. [18:57.000 --> 19:05.000] We're listening to the Logos Radio Network. The Logos Radio Network.com. [19:27.000 --> 19:32.000] We're listening to Rule of Law Radio with Randy Kelton, Vent Pack, and apparently he [19:32.000 --> 19:37.000] had to save me because I got to going. [19:37.000 --> 19:48.000] Okay, we were talking about this transgender, co-ed bathroom thing. I am concerned. When [19:48.000 --> 19:57.000] this first came up, I looked at it and I thought, this is not an issue. I mean, per capita, [19:57.000 --> 20:01.000] how many transgenders do we have out there? [20:01.000 --> 20:07.000] 23% of the population, 700,000 out of the whole entire United States, somewhere around [20:07.000 --> 20:08.000] there. [20:08.000 --> 20:22.000] That's like zero. It rounds down to zero and this has become a national issue. The transgenders [20:22.000 --> 20:29.000] are concerned about going into a male facility when they're dressed like a female. I guess [20:29.000 --> 20:39.000] they're concerned with homophobia, but homophobia is disappearing from the culture. There are [20:39.000 --> 20:48.000] a few, but there's always going to be a few. Allowing that fear on the small percentage [20:48.000 --> 20:59.000] of transgenders to pressure us into letting all of this sexual deviance and 99% of the [20:59.000 --> 21:05.000] sexual deviance are males. Unfortunately or unfortunately, we're the side that's screwed [21:05.000 --> 21:08.000] up in this regard. [21:08.000 --> 21:16.000] I don't want these guys in the same bathroom, the same secluded, closed up area with my [21:16.000 --> 21:27.000] children and my wife and my female friends. I don't want them to have to deal with that [21:27.000 --> 21:36.000] kind of serious, incredible risk. I mean, transgender is a tiny little portion of the [21:36.000 --> 21:42.000] population, but sexual deviance is not so tiny. And even someone who's not otherwise [21:42.000 --> 21:53.000] sexual deviant, if they're marginal or borderline, this is not a place they should be. [21:53.000 --> 22:01.000] I totally agree. I mean, especially in Texas where a lot of people carry guns. If I'm a [22:01.000 --> 22:08.000] mother and I feel like my child is being threatened, I'm carrying a gun. This could seriously [22:08.000 --> 22:13.000] start some major chaos. I mean, I just think that they're open at the door that should [22:13.000 --> 22:17.000] never have even been talked about. I mean, it's stupid. [22:17.000 --> 22:26.000] Yeah. And you're going to have women with children in a female facility, the man walks [22:26.000 --> 22:37.000] in. If the man is not extremely careful, he could get charged. He could get accused because [22:37.000 --> 22:43.000] the woman is so terrified of him. If he says anything or does anything that can be misinterpreted, [22:43.000 --> 22:52.000] he's likely to. Even if they pass it, I do not want to go into a toilet facility where [22:52.000 --> 23:02.000] there are women. A woman has nothing to fear from me. A woman has nothing to fear from [23:02.000 --> 23:12.000] me or anyone else while I'm around. But I still wouldn't want to go into that facility. [23:12.000 --> 23:24.000] This is getting way too crazy. Now, 30 years from now, this may not be a problem. If our [23:24.000 --> 23:32.000] children and our children's children are more knowledgeable and sophisticated than we are, [23:32.000 --> 23:42.000] this may cease to be so great a problem. But right now, due to statistics on sex crimes, [23:42.000 --> 23:47.000] who here doesn't know someone who's been accused of a sex crime? [23:47.000 --> 23:57.000] Oh, yeah, absolutely. How many transgenders do you know? I don't know anyone. Me either. [23:57.000 --> 24:05.000] I've never met one. I've met some transvestites and they're pretty cool for the most part. [24:05.000 --> 24:13.000] They're not transgenders. And most of the transvestites I've ever met, I wouldn't want [24:13.000 --> 24:18.000] to mess with them. They'd beat the crap out of me. [24:18.000 --> 24:25.000] Even gays, if you open it up to every single person that's out there, it's just like a [24:25.000 --> 24:31.000] smoker. You know what? If you walk into a facility, you know you're not supposed to smoke. [24:31.000 --> 24:38.000] You walk into a restroom, whatever it is that God gave you when you were born is the direction [24:38.000 --> 24:42.000] that you're supposed to go when you go to the toilet, period. I just don't understand [24:42.000 --> 24:47.000] why they have to go there. [24:47.000 --> 24:57.000] They've created an issue, or an issue that never existed. And this is a common strategy. [24:57.000 --> 25:01.000] Where they don't have anything to argue about. They don't have anything to... [25:01.000 --> 25:10.000] Well, they actually don't want us to talk about the issues. So they create a non-issue. [25:10.000 --> 25:14.000] Anyway, I don't know how to fix this. I'm real frustrated by it. [25:14.000 --> 25:21.000] Yeah. I don't know if we write letters to Target or Congress. I mean, I don't even think [25:21.000 --> 25:25.000] that there's any way that we can fight this besides watch and see if Target loses money. [25:25.000 --> 25:33.000] Yeah. I did mention that earlier to that. Letters from citizens to company executives [25:33.000 --> 25:40.000] are very, very powerful. Especially if they're well-considered, well-written letters. [25:40.000 --> 25:52.000] And if you are as concerned about this issue as I am, write a letter to the CEO of Target. [25:52.000 --> 26:00.000] Letters to companies make a big difference. I've ran my own business for 40 years. [26:00.000 --> 26:07.000] And the hardest thing for me to do in running my own business is to find out what my people [26:07.000 --> 26:13.000] on the bottom are doing. Because if my low-level managers and stuff are screwing up, [26:13.000 --> 26:17.000] the last thing they're going to do is come tell me. They're going to do everything [26:17.000 --> 26:26.000] they can to hide it from me. So the only way I can find out is what I get from my customers. [26:26.000 --> 26:35.000] I need them to talk to me. I had a situation where a friend of mine moved in to this area. [26:35.000 --> 26:39.000] And at the time, we were out in the country. They still had party lines. [26:39.000 --> 26:46.000] And this was back in the 70s, late 70s, early 80s. And he paid for a private line [26:46.000 --> 26:50.000] because he had a business, had to pay extra, put in 200 feet underground cable. [26:50.000 --> 26:56.000] They put him on a six-party line. Well, he was really, really upset. [26:56.000 --> 27:02.000] So I happened to know that the head office, the corporate office, wasn't in Colleen, [27:02.000 --> 27:06.000] like they told you, but is actually in Chicago. So I called the Chicago office. [27:06.000 --> 27:11.000] And I asked to talk to the president. And they gave me the president's secretary. [27:11.000 --> 27:16.000] And she said, well, he's not in. I said, well, who is in? And I talked like I was real upset. [27:16.000 --> 27:21.000] I asked for the president by name. I called up and asked who the president was. [27:21.000 --> 27:24.000] And they gave me a little problem. They finally told me. [27:24.000 --> 27:28.000] I hung up, called back and asked for the president by name, got his secretary. [27:28.000 --> 27:33.000] And I'm acting like I'm really upset. I asked for him. I said, well, he's not here. [27:33.000 --> 27:39.000] Well, who is here? Well, Mr. Rice is here. Well, who's he? Well, he's the chairman of the board. [27:39.000 --> 27:43.000] Oh, he'll do. And this friend of mine was there. [27:43.000 --> 27:46.000] And I said, Mark, this guy's name is Rice. He can help you. [27:46.000 --> 27:50.000] And I gave him the phone. I didn't tell him who he was. [27:50.000 --> 27:57.000] Mike grabbed the phone, told him, look, you SOB, I paid you people for a private line. [27:57.000 --> 28:01.000] You put me on a six party line. I'm going to have my private line. [28:01.000 --> 28:04.000] I have to come up to Chicago and kick your behind again. [28:04.000 --> 28:10.000] He hangs up. And I said, Mark, you know who that was? [28:10.000 --> 28:15.000] Ah, some Rice SOB. I said, how's the chairman of the board? [28:15.000 --> 28:24.000] The next day, I came over to Mark's house. I bet there were 200 guys out there. [28:24.000 --> 28:29.000] Upholes, back echoes everywhere. [28:29.000 --> 28:33.000] Two years later, I saw the head of maintenance for Syntel. [28:33.000 --> 28:38.000] And we had a tornado in town. And I come out front and he saw me. [28:38.000 --> 28:40.000] He said, hey, wait a minute, I've got somebody I want to introduce you to. [28:40.000 --> 28:45.000] This guy's down from Jacksboro, about 60 miles away, helping us fix the mess. [28:45.000 --> 28:48.000] And he calls this guy over. He said, hey, I want you to meet somebody. [28:48.000 --> 28:53.000] I said, you know who this is? The guy said, no, this is the guy that called the chairman of the board. [28:53.000 --> 28:59.000] Two years later, this guy says, ooh, he cringed. [28:59.000 --> 29:05.000] The guy, the head of maintenance told me, you almost got my boss fired. [29:05.000 --> 29:18.000] Calling corporate really makes a difference because nobody in Lowdown wants good information getting to corporate. [29:18.000 --> 29:24.000] You and I as ordinary citizens, we have tremendous power. [29:24.000 --> 29:29.000] If you have a problem with a company, call, ask who the president is. [29:29.000 --> 29:34.000] And if you get the name, hang up, call back, ask for the president by name. [29:34.000 --> 29:41.000] And chew him out like an errant stepchild. Things get changed. [29:41.000 --> 29:43.000] Okay, about to go to break. [29:43.000 --> 29:48.000] Yes. This is Room of Love Radio. You're listening to Randy Kelton, Vet Pack. [29:48.000 --> 30:02.000] Call us at 512-646-1984. We'll be right back. [30:02.000 --> 30:07.000] The brassiere, also known as a bra, is a 20th century fashion phenomenon. [30:07.000 --> 30:11.000] It can do wonders for your figure, but it might also harm your health. [30:11.000 --> 30:15.000] I'm Dr. Catherine Albrecht, and I'll be back with a life-saving tip in just a moment. [30:15.000 --> 30:21.000] Privacy is under attack. When you give up data about yourself, you'll never get it back again. [30:21.000 --> 30:26.000] And once your privacy is gone, you'll find your freedoms will start to vanish too. [30:26.000 --> 30:31.000] So protect your rights. Say no to surveillance and keep your information to yourself. [30:31.000 --> 30:33.000] Privacy, it's worth hanging on to. [30:33.000 --> 30:37.000] This public service announcement is brought to you by Startpage.com, [30:37.000 --> 30:41.000] the private search engine alternative to Google, Yahoo, and Bing. [30:41.000 --> 30:44.000] Start over with Startpage. [30:44.000 --> 30:48.000] They shape and lift and give a gal cleavage where none existed before. [30:48.000 --> 30:53.000] Bras are indisputable figure enhancers that make clothes look incredible on women. [30:53.000 --> 30:55.000] But could they also cause cancer? [30:55.000 --> 30:59.000] In their book Dress to Kill, medical anthropologists Sid Singer and Soma Grismire [30:59.000 --> 31:05.000] point out that 1 in 7 women who wear a bra more than 12 hours a day contract breast cancer. [31:05.000 --> 31:11.000] If they also wear one to bed, their risk rises to a 3 out of 4 chance of getting the dreaded disease. [31:11.000 --> 31:15.000] If you want to avoid breast cancer, go easy on wearing that bra or skip it altogether. [31:15.000 --> 31:20.000] Reportedly, only 1 in 168 women who go bra-free get breast cancer. [31:20.000 --> 31:30.000] I'm Dr. Katherine Albrecht. More news and information at KatherineAlbrecht.com. [31:51.000 --> 32:00.000] Call 888-910-4367 and see what our powder, seeds, and oil can do for you, only at mqsa.org. [32:00.000 --> 32:05.000] Rule of Law Radio is proud to offer the Rule of Law traffic seminar. [32:05.000 --> 32:07.000] In today's America, we live in an us-against-them society, [32:07.000 --> 32:09.000] and if we the people are ever going to have a free society, [32:09.000 --> 32:12.000] then we're going to have to stand and defend our own rights. [32:12.000 --> 32:15.000] Among those rights are the right to travel freely from place to place, [32:15.000 --> 32:19.000] the right to act in our own private capacity, and most importantly, the right to due process of law. [32:19.000 --> 32:25.000] Traffic courts afford us the least expensive opportunity to learn how to enforce and preserve our rights through due process. [32:25.000 --> 32:28.000] Former Sheriff's Deputy Eddie Craig, in conjunction with Rule of Law Radio, [32:28.000 --> 32:33.000] has put together the most comprehensive teaching tool available that will help you understand what due process is [32:33.000 --> 32:35.000] and how to hold courts to the rule of law. [32:35.000 --> 32:39.000] You can get your own copy of this invaluable material by going to ruleoflawradio.com [32:39.000 --> 32:40.000] and ordering your copy today. [32:40.000 --> 32:45.000] By ordering now, you'll receive a copy of Eddie's book, The Texas Transportation Code, The Law Versus the Lie, [32:45.000 --> 32:50.000] video and audio of the original 2009 seminar, hundreds of research documents, and other useful resource material. [32:50.000 --> 32:54.000] Learn how to fight for your rights with the help of this material from ruleoflawradio.com. [32:54.000 --> 33:19.000] Order your copy today and together we can have the free society we all want and deserve. [33:24.000 --> 33:27.000] You're listening to Rule of Law Radio. We are back. [33:27.000 --> 33:32.000] This is Randy Kelton, Vet Pack, and I believe we are about to bring on Oliver from Tennessee. [33:32.000 --> 33:34.000] Randy, you want to go out and bring him in? [33:34.000 --> 33:39.000] All righty. Hello, Oliver. What do you have for us today? [33:39.000 --> 33:48.000] And just so you know, you have in the background the constitutional expert, Mr. Michael Baderick. [33:48.000 --> 33:52.000] And he's there to make sure we don't screw anything up. [33:52.000 --> 34:00.000] Okay, go ahead, Oliver. [34:00.000 --> 34:05.000] Are you there, Oliver? I'm not getting any sound. [34:05.000 --> 34:13.000] You might want to check your mic, see if maybe your cheek hit the mute button. [34:13.000 --> 34:20.000] Okay, Oliver, I'm not getting any sound. If you can hear me, hang up and call right back in and I'll bring you on. [34:20.000 --> 34:25.000] Okay, so we've kind of lost Oliver. We're going to go back, go to Michael. [34:25.000 --> 34:36.000] Michael, you did the constitutional class and I'm just an ordinary guy and I've never actually read the whole Constitution. [34:36.000 --> 34:40.000] I hear a lot about it and hear about all my constitutional rights. [34:40.000 --> 34:47.000] How is the Constitution relevant in my everyday life? [34:47.000 --> 34:54.000] Well, fundamentally, it establishes the flow of power. [34:54.000 --> 35:04.000] There is a concept that's been around since prior to the Magna Carta, [35:04.000 --> 35:11.000] that the creator is always more powerful than the created. [35:11.000 --> 35:19.000] And as we study the Constitution, we discover that you and I have inherent rights. [35:19.000 --> 35:23.000] We were born with these rights. We can't take them away. [35:23.000 --> 35:31.000] And we, when we created the government, give the government privileges. [35:31.000 --> 35:34.000] Privileges are temporary. They can be revoked. [35:34.000 --> 35:42.000] And when we study all the basics, when we study the history, we realize that the government works for us. [35:42.000 --> 35:45.000] We are in charge. They're supposed to work for us. [35:45.000 --> 35:52.000] And unfortunately, most of what the Constitution says is being ignored. [35:52.000 --> 35:56.000] I ask people, you know, you haven't read the Constitution. [35:56.000 --> 36:02.000] If the government was doing something unconstitutional, how would you know? [36:02.000 --> 36:05.000] And the answer is you really wouldn't. [36:05.000 --> 36:10.000] So when we study the Constitution, especially the way I do it in my class, [36:10.000 --> 36:18.000] people are pretty much stunned to discover how corrupt the government currently is. [36:18.000 --> 36:23.000] And that's when they start to ask, you know, how can we fix it? [36:23.000 --> 36:26.000] Now, that's the most important question. [36:26.000 --> 36:30.000] Recognizing that there is a problem is step one. [36:30.000 --> 36:35.000] But then asking how you fix the problem is really important. [36:35.000 --> 36:39.000] And we can't fix the problem. [36:39.000 --> 36:52.000] We just have to start exercising the authority that we have over the government. [36:52.000 --> 36:53.000] Are you there? [36:53.000 --> 37:00.000] Yeah, I just reached up and turned a page off on my computer here, [37:00.000 --> 37:03.000] and your voice stopped, and I was stunned. [37:03.000 --> 37:07.000] I was wondering if I shut you off. [37:07.000 --> 37:08.000] Okay. [37:08.000 --> 37:12.000] I was confused. [37:12.000 --> 37:23.000] Okay, so the Constitution grants privileges to public officials. [37:23.000 --> 37:33.000] We have power, and we the people grant those powers to the government. [37:33.000 --> 37:37.000] And I've been listening to what you've been saying, [37:37.000 --> 37:44.000] and it led me to a primary premise concerning what I do. [37:44.000 --> 37:48.000] Everybody who listens to the show all the time will recognize this, [37:48.000 --> 37:51.000] because I talk about this a lot. [37:51.000 --> 37:59.000] I say that when I walk into a courthouse, I am the baddest motor scooter in the building. [37:59.000 --> 38:04.000] And there's only one reason I'm the baddest motor scooter in the building, [38:04.000 --> 38:06.000] and that's because I'm nobody. [38:06.000 --> 38:13.000] I'm not a judge, a prosecutor, a clerk, a bailiff. [38:13.000 --> 38:16.000] They're all public servants. [38:16.000 --> 38:18.000] They're the servants. [38:18.000 --> 38:24.000] I am the master, and they are not to forget it. [38:24.000 --> 38:28.000] And this came directly from your Constitution course. [38:28.000 --> 38:37.000] It took a while for that to sink in, that the Constitution does not grant me any rights. [38:37.000 --> 38:40.000] I already got them. [38:40.000 --> 38:45.000] I got the right to do anything I want to, [38:45.000 --> 38:58.000] unless I and my other masters have agreed that we will restrict ourselves in a certain way [38:58.000 --> 39:01.000] and we made this agreement through our legislature [39:01.000 --> 39:09.000] and placed specific, stipulated restrictions on my behavior. [39:09.000 --> 39:20.000] If there's not a specific, stipulated restriction on my behavior, everything else is my right. [39:20.000 --> 39:24.000] The Constitution does not grant me any rights. [39:24.000 --> 39:26.000] I already got them all. [39:26.000 --> 39:29.000] It just specifically directs... [39:29.000 --> 39:35.000] That's a simple statement, but it's a really fundamental concept, [39:35.000 --> 39:42.000] and that's why I spend so much time on that concept early in the class, [39:42.000 --> 39:51.000] because you have to truly understand where the power comes from. [39:51.000 --> 39:58.000] And unfortunately, we have been misled in so many ways [39:58.000 --> 40:05.000] that we don't believe the truth when we finally hear it. [40:05.000 --> 40:13.000] You know, I've known you a long time, and it took quite a while for this to gel. [40:13.000 --> 40:20.000] I've been studying law and seeking remedy, [40:20.000 --> 40:29.000] and it took a long time for what I got from Michael's class to really gel in my mind. [40:29.000 --> 40:34.000] Wait a minute, wait a minute, I can do any darn thing I want to. [40:34.000 --> 40:39.000] It's the other side, the public official. [40:39.000 --> 40:45.000] He can only do what he is specifically authorized to do. [40:45.000 --> 40:50.000] I just went down to the federal court, and I took a criminal complaint [40:50.000 --> 40:56.000] against a federal judge to the clerk, and I said, I need you to get to this, too. [40:56.000 --> 40:58.000] We're magistrate. [40:58.000 --> 41:06.000] And he said, well, you have to take that to the U.S. Attorney. [41:06.000 --> 41:11.000] I said, would you come up with that? [41:11.000 --> 41:16.000] I haven't seen anything that says I have to take a complaint to a U.S. Attorney. [41:16.000 --> 41:17.000] Well, that's how it's all done. [41:17.000 --> 41:21.000] I don't care how you guys do it. [41:21.000 --> 41:26.000] I'm not one of you guys. [41:26.000 --> 41:28.000] You're all public servants. [41:28.000 --> 41:35.000] I am the master, and as the master, we do it the way I say, [41:35.000 --> 41:40.000] unless the law specifically stipulates something else, and I can't find anything. [41:40.000 --> 41:43.000] The way I read the law, everything goes to a magistrate, [41:43.000 --> 41:45.000] where you have law saying something else. [41:45.000 --> 41:47.000] Well, this is our procedure. [41:47.000 --> 41:50.000] I don't care about your procedure. [41:50.000 --> 41:52.000] You follow your procedure. [41:52.000 --> 41:54.000] I don't have to follow your procedure. [41:54.000 --> 41:57.000] Does that make sense, Michael? [41:57.000 --> 41:59.000] It makes perfectly good sense. [41:59.000 --> 42:07.000] I love the sound of that, but it is so contrary to what most people have been taught [42:07.000 --> 42:11.000] that they think that you've got to be making this up, [42:11.000 --> 42:20.000] but there's got to be some caveat or some fine print that makes that not true, and it's not. [42:20.000 --> 42:25.000] We do have that level of authority, [42:25.000 --> 42:33.000] and the only thing that is required for us to restore the proper order of things [42:33.000 --> 42:47.000] is to begin executing that authority, to take that responsibility and believe that we have it. [42:47.000 --> 42:56.000] Yes, and I've been doing this show quite a while, and the last two years or so, [42:56.000 --> 43:00.000] the people who's listening to the show, [43:00.000 --> 43:06.000] begin to notice that I don't have so many people calling in saying, [43:06.000 --> 43:08.000] oh, they're doing horrible things to me. [43:08.000 --> 43:11.000] What can I do? What can I do? [43:11.000 --> 43:17.000] What I'm getting more and more is, okay, I beat them up this way, and I beat them up that way. [43:17.000 --> 43:21.000] Now, how can I beat them up some more? [43:21.000 --> 43:28.000] It is very fulfilling to have people calling me with really sophisticated questions [43:28.000 --> 43:32.000] on how they can move further. [43:32.000 --> 43:37.000] I don't get anywhere near as many calls from people who are just starting out. [43:37.000 --> 43:44.000] We have a lot of people out there who are beginning to get it and understand it [43:44.000 --> 43:46.000] and are taking these people on. [43:46.000 --> 43:49.000] Hang on, about to go to break. [43:49.000 --> 43:56.000] Randy Kelton at Vet Pack, Wheel of Law Radio, here with our special guest, Mr. Michael Van Derick. [43:56.000 --> 44:02.000] We'll be right back. [44:02.000 --> 44:06.000] Hello, my name is Stuart Smith from NaturesPureOrganics.com, [44:06.000 --> 44:11.000] and I would like to invite you to come by our store at 1904 Guadalupe Street, Sweet D, [44:11.000 --> 44:14.000] here in Austin, Texas, buying Brave New Books and Chase Paint [44:14.000 --> 44:18.000] to see all our fantastic health and wellness products with your very own eyes. [44:18.000 --> 44:22.000] Have a look at our Miracle Healing Clay that started our adventure in alternative medicine. [44:22.000 --> 44:26.000] Take a peek at some of our other wonderful products, including our Australian Eme oil, [44:26.000 --> 44:30.000] lotion candles, olive oil, soaps, and colloidal silver and gold. [44:30.000 --> 44:37.000] Call 512-264-4043 or find us online at NaturesPureOrganics.com. [44:37.000 --> 44:43.000] That's 512-264-4043, NaturesPureOrganics.com. [44:43.000 --> 44:47.000] Don't forget to like us on Facebook for information on events and our products. [44:47.000 --> 45:01.000] NaturesPureOrganics.com. [45:01.000 --> 45:04.000] Are you the plaintiff or defendant in a lawsuit? [45:04.000 --> 45:07.000] Win your case without an attorney with Juris Dictionary, [45:07.000 --> 45:15.000] the affordable, easy to understand, 4-CD course that will show you how in 24 hours, step by step. [45:15.000 --> 45:19.000] If you have a lawyer, know what your lawyer should be doing. [45:19.000 --> 45:23.000] If you don't have a lawyer, know what you should do for yourself. [45:23.000 --> 45:28.000] Thousands have won with our step-by-step course, and now you can too. [45:28.000 --> 45:34.000] Juris Dictionary was created by a licensed attorney with 22 years of case-winning experience. [45:34.000 --> 45:39.000] Even if you're not in a lawsuit, you can learn what everyone should understand [45:39.000 --> 45:43.000] about the principles and practices that control our American courts. [45:43.000 --> 45:49.000] You'll receive our audio classroom, video seminar, tutorials, forms for civil cases, [45:49.000 --> 45:52.000] pro se tactics, and much more. [45:52.000 --> 46:14.000] Please visit RuleOfLawRadio.com and click on the banner or call toll-free 866-LAW-EZ. [46:14.000 --> 46:31.000] We are back. [46:31.000 --> 46:37.000] This is Rule of Law Radio with Randy Kelton, Vet Pack, and our special guest, Michael Bannerich. [46:37.000 --> 46:40.000] Okay, Randy, you guys go ahead. [46:40.000 --> 46:47.000] Okay, we're back. Our call-in numbers, 512-646-1984 call lines are open, [46:47.000 --> 46:49.000] and we'll have them open all night. [46:49.000 --> 46:56.000] We're talking to our special guest, Mr. Michael Bannerich, about his Constitution class. [46:56.000 --> 46:58.000] Now, Michael's been doing the class for a long time, [46:58.000 --> 47:02.000] and I've been doing legal research for a long time. [47:02.000 --> 47:08.000] And when I first went through his class, you know, I've been doing a lot of research, [47:08.000 --> 47:11.000] and I thought I kind of understood what was going on. [47:11.000 --> 47:17.000] But after going through his class, he dramatically changed my perspective. [47:17.000 --> 47:23.000] And anyone who listens to the show a lot, if you've listened for a while, [47:23.000 --> 47:31.000] you'll recognize how what I'm doing has evolved over the years. [47:31.000 --> 47:40.000] And one of the primary things that I've evolved into is this concept of the master and the servant. [47:40.000 --> 47:50.000] And it's probably for you and I as a way of dramatically affecting the system under which we live [47:50.000 --> 47:59.000] is the most important concept that I've developed, and this came right directly out of Michael's class. [47:59.000 --> 48:05.000] This idea that you and I are, I don't like to say sovereigns, [48:05.000 --> 48:08.000] because we're really not sovereigns because sovereigns have subjects. [48:08.000 --> 48:10.000] We don't have subjects. [48:10.000 --> 48:12.000] But we are the masters of our servants. [48:12.000 --> 48:19.000] That was the best set of terms I could come up with to describe this relationship. [48:19.000 --> 48:21.000] They are all my servants. [48:21.000 --> 48:26.000] When I go into a courthouse, I have two hats. [48:26.000 --> 48:30.000] You know, judges all have two hats. [48:30.000 --> 48:33.000] They've got a judge's hat and they've got a magistrate's hat. [48:33.000 --> 48:39.000] If certain things happen, the judge takes off his judge's hat and he puts on his magistrate's hat. [48:39.000 --> 48:45.000] Well, I go in as a litigant, either a defendant or a plaintiff, [48:45.000 --> 48:55.000] and I go in with my litigant's hat on unless one of my public officials steps outside one of my legal lines, [48:55.000 --> 49:10.000] in which case it's my duty to take off my litigant's hat and put on my master's hat and act as the master of my servants. [49:10.000 --> 49:24.000] I have all of these servants that I, along with all of my fellow masters, have empowered to do certain things. [49:24.000 --> 49:29.000] And it is important that we act like the master. [49:29.000 --> 49:40.000] The master doesn't wait until his servant has done something horrendous before he stands up and redirects him. [49:40.000 --> 49:44.000] I'd like to think of this in terms of my grandkids. [49:44.000 --> 49:48.000] You know, I love my grandkids dearly. [49:48.000 --> 49:53.000] But if one of them runs out on the road, well, I'm fixing to tan his side. [49:53.000 --> 49:57.000] If he just runs toward the road, I'm going to tan his side. [49:57.000 --> 50:00.000] I'm not going to wait until he gets out in it. [50:00.000 --> 50:08.000] And it's inappropriate for us to wink at our public officials' discords. [50:08.000 --> 50:17.000] One of the ways I explain how we got into this horrible mess we're in is that our public officials, [50:17.000 --> 50:27.000] over a period of time, made a number of adjustments toward administrative convenience and adjudicative expediency. [50:27.000 --> 50:28.000] Wow. [50:28.000 --> 50:45.000] To the point that when you look at the practice now and compare it to the code, they don't look anything like each other. [50:45.000 --> 50:50.000] So the question was, how the heck did it get this way? [50:50.000 --> 50:58.000] It got this way because the first time one of our public officials made a minor adjustment toward administrative convenience or adjudicative expediency, [50:58.000 --> 51:09.000] we didn't wail in righteous indignation and jump up and down and force them back inside the letter of law. [51:09.000 --> 51:21.000] We sat back and, quote, Shakespeare winked at their discords until we reached a point to where every step is presently practiced in the criminal justice system. [51:21.000 --> 51:27.000] The state of Texas is not only wrong, it is very specifically against particular law. [51:27.000 --> 51:32.000] You read the code, you look at the practice, you think you've stepped through the looking glass. [51:32.000 --> 51:37.000] You can't blame our public officials for this mess. [51:37.000 --> 51:49.000] This is our fault because we didn't provide them the same kind of oversight we asked them to provide for us. [51:49.000 --> 52:08.000] We asked them to hold us to the letter of law, to protect us from our own distraction, from our own willingness to be incautious. [52:08.000 --> 52:23.000] That's the term, I guess, expediency. Something that stood out in my mind is I used to drive to work down a little blacktop road that ran into a T intersection. [52:23.000 --> 52:32.000] It was out in the middle of nowhere. Two blacktop roads come together, one lane both directions, and there was a stop sign there. [52:32.000 --> 52:39.000] And I knew the only reason they put that stop sign there is so they could have a sheriff's deputy sitting on the other side waiting to write me a ticket. [52:39.000 --> 52:47.000] I pulled up to that stop sign, and the only reason I stopped is because I was certain there would be a cop over there waiting to write me a ticket. [52:47.000 --> 52:57.000] I stopped. I looked one way to my left. I looked to my right and started to pull out, and this truck blasted past me. [52:57.000 --> 53:03.000] And I was astounded. I had no idea he was there. [53:03.000 --> 53:17.000] I put the car in park, got out, walked out in the road, and when I looked down the roadway, it looked like I was siding down the road, but it actually turned back to the left just a little bit. [53:17.000 --> 53:22.000] Just enough so it hid that truck behind the leaves. [53:22.000 --> 53:27.000] I thought I was looking down the road, but I was only seeing half of it. [53:27.000 --> 53:33.000] If that stop sign hadn't have been there, I'd have pulled right out in front of him and he'd have killed me. [53:33.000 --> 53:38.000] There was a hazard there that was not apparent. [53:38.000 --> 53:46.000] And that stop sign was warning me, there is a hazard here. Don't ignore me, or you might die. [53:46.000 --> 53:58.000] While I didn't obey the stop sign because I thought I might die, I obeyed the stop sign because I thought that dirty rotten cop would write me that annoying ticket. [53:58.000 --> 54:14.000] Well, we need to change our perspective and understand that, for the most part, we've put laws in place to protect us from our own distraction, from our own excesses. [54:14.000 --> 54:24.000] And we've asked the police to enforce those laws to keep us from doing stupid things that will get us hurt or cause us misery. [54:24.000 --> 54:34.000] We ask our police and our public officials to provide us that service, and we did not return the favor. [54:34.000 --> 54:45.000] This is why the police are under such scrutiny right now, because we did not do our job and police our police. [54:45.000 --> 54:58.000] If we want a good effective police system and government, we have to stand right on top of them and be the CEO and do not let them step across our legal lines. [54:58.000 --> 55:08.000] It's much more powerful if you go after someone for something that is seemingly minor. [55:08.000 --> 55:15.000] I asked, I requested to challenge the grand jury pool in the county I live in. [55:15.000 --> 55:20.000] Prosecuting attorney said, Mr. Kelton, do you expect to be indicted? I said, to no. [55:20.000 --> 55:27.000] Well, then you mind if I ask, why do you want to challenge the pool? Because it can? [55:27.000 --> 55:34.000] Oh, okay. So I go to challenge the pool. The judge impanels the grand jury without giving me opportunity to challenge the pool. [55:34.000 --> 55:43.000] So he comes down off the bench and I tell him, Your Honor, you need to call the grand jury back in, disband the grand jury, [55:43.000 --> 55:48.000] re-impanel the pool so that I have opportunity to challenge the pool. [55:48.000 --> 55:58.000] But he gave me a bunch of stuff. You got to figure, you got to follow the right procedure. Where there are no procedures, your duty to provide me with my right. [55:58.000 --> 56:03.000] Well, Mr. Kelton, you'll just have to figure out how to do it. And I said, well, we'll have to see what Travis Kelly has to say about that. [56:03.000 --> 56:13.000] You threatening me? They called the bailiff over. Mr. bailiff, arrest this man. He just threatened me. And the bailiff put his hand on my arm. He touched me. [56:13.000 --> 56:22.000] And when he did, I looked down at his pistol. So I said, Mr. bailiff, I see you're wearing a pistol. Yes, Mr. Kelton, I am. Tell me, Mr. bailiff, is that pistol loaded? [56:22.000 --> 56:30.000] Yes, Mr. Kelton, it is. And the judge got it. And he said, Mr. bailiff, you can stand down. This will be necessary. [56:30.000 --> 56:51.000] Sorry, Bubba. That bell's already been rung. The bailiff touched me while prominently displaying a deadly weapon at the direction of the district judge in order to prevent me from exercising a right. [56:51.000 --> 57:03.000] 2202B2A Texas Penal Code makes that a first degree felony, 20 to life. But the bailiff didn't commit it. The judge did. [57:03.000 --> 57:21.000] As respond to yet superior, he assaulted me with a deadly weapon. The bailiff was the deadly weapon. I charged him with a grand jury, first degree felony aggravated assault for having the bailiff touch me. [57:21.000 --> 57:34.000] That is no way I'd get him indicted for that. That is so crappy. But the judge had to spend 30 days wondering if he was going to get indicted. [57:34.000 --> 57:40.000] This is our job. This is how we fix this kind of garbage. [57:40.000 --> 57:54.000] I also charged the Texas Ranger with criminal conspiracy because I gave it to the Ranger and he followed Texas Ranger protocol and gave it to the prosecuting attorney who refused to touch it. [57:54.000 --> 58:05.000] So I charged the Ranger and the Department of Public Safety with felony conspiracy to commit. And they had to wait 30 days to see if their careers ended. [58:05.000 --> 58:15.000] This is our job. Don't wait until they do something really horrible. Sting them the first time they step across a legal line. [58:15.000 --> 58:20.000] Be the sovereign. Be the CEO. [58:20.000 --> 58:22.000] Do I sound like I'm preaching, Vette? [58:22.000 --> 58:30.000] A little bit, yeah. I was getting ready to cut you off because we have to take break. [58:30.000 --> 58:50.000] All right. You are listening to Rule of Law Radio. This is Randy Kelton, Vette PAC. We've got about an hour left. You guys give us a call, 512-646-1984. We'll be right back. [58:50.000 --> 59:01.000] Would you like to make more definite progress in your walk with God? Bibles for America is offering a free study Bible and a set of free Christian books that can really help. [59:01.000 --> 59:13.000] The New Testament Recovery Version is one of the most comprehensive study Bibles available today. It's an accurate translation and it contains thousands of footnotes that will help you to know God and to know the meaning of life. [59:13.000 --> 59:27.000] The free books are a three-volume set called Basic Elements of the Christian Life. Chapter by chapter, Basic Elements of the Christian Life clearly presents God's plan of salvation, growing in Christ, and how to build up the Church. [59:27.000 --> 59:49.000] To order your free New Testament Recovery Version and Basic Elements of the Christian Life, call Bibles for America toll-free at 888-551-0102. That's 888-551-0102. Or visit us online at bfa.org. [59:49.000 --> 01:00:00.000] You're listening to the Logos Radio Network at logosradionetwork.com. [01:00:00.000 --> 01:00:20.000] The following newsflash is brought to you by the Lone Star Lowdown, providing the jelly bulletins for the commodities market. Today in history, news updates and the inside scoop into the tides of the alternative. [01:00:20.000 --> 01:00:44.000] Markets for Friday, the 3rd of June, 2016, are currently treading with gold at $1,243.80 an ounce, silver $16.39 an ounce, Texas crude $49.17 a barrel, and Bitcoin is currently steadily rising at 573 U.S. currency. [01:00:44.000 --> 01:01:02.000] Today in history, the year 1784, the U.S. Army is officially established by the Congress of the Confederation, created to replace the disbanded Continental Army after the Revolutionary War. The U.S. Army was founded today in history. [01:01:02.000 --> 01:01:19.000] In recent news, the Brussels River, which runs 840 miles across much of the Lone Star State, has already risen to record levels, flooding neighborhoods west of Houston and forcing hundreds of people to evacuate, with worse news coming from the National Weather Service predicting another 4 to 5 inches through the area in the weekend. [01:01:19.000 --> 01:01:37.000] Just as last April, if you recall, more than 1,000 people were evacuated from northern Houston during another historic flood. In Austin over the weekend, more than 2,000 inmates were evacuated from prisons in low-lying regions. Consider that just two years ago, the Brussels River had run dry in some places due to drought, but is now in an obviously saturated state. [01:01:37.000 --> 01:01:53.000] A flash flood watch is currently in effect for all of south-central Texas, according to the National Weather Service, and a river flood warning is in effect for the Brussels River. At least half a dozen fatalities have been a consequence of this flood. [01:01:53.000 --> 01:02:10.000] In what could be some of the most eyebrow-raising endorsements for presidential hopefuls in the United States, the president of Venezuela, Nicolas Maduro, came out and endorsed democratic socialist Bernie Sanders on Tuesday, calling him our revolutionary friend and implying that it is our broken political system as to the reason why Sanders is being marginalized. [01:02:10.000 --> 01:02:29.000] If that wasn't enough, North Korean state media, DPRK Today, published a column, also released on Tuesday, which came out and endorsed Republican newcomer Donald Trump, calling him a wise politician and stating that it turns out that Trump is not a rough-talking, screwy, ignorant candidate they say he is, but is actually a wise politician and pristine presidential candidate. [01:02:29.000 --> 01:02:44.000] As of yet, no authoritarian dictators come out and endorse Hillary Clinton, though some suspect this is due to many of them wanting to retain some level of credibility. In what could only be considered ominous omens, it seems that many of black cats are crossing the American people's path to this upcoming presidential election. [01:02:59.000 --> 01:03:22.000] We are back. [01:03:22.000 --> 01:03:33.000] Listening to Rule of Law Radio with Brandi Kelton, Zet-Tac. Brandi, what else did you want to discuss with our listeners? [01:03:33.000 --> 01:03:36.000] Okay. [01:03:36.000 --> 01:03:41.000] What else, where I was at? Okay, I'm unmuted. [01:03:41.000 --> 01:03:55.000] I primarily want to talk about, when I went out, I was talking about what our responsibility is as the master of our servants. [01:03:55.000 --> 01:04:14.000] And I wanted Michael to kind of address not how we're authorized by the Constitution to do that, because it doesn't do that at all, but how we stand as the master behind the Constitution. [01:04:14.000 --> 01:04:28.000] One of the things that I do in my class is to ask people to raise their hand if the Constitution applies to them. And when they raise their hand, I correct them. [01:04:28.000 --> 01:04:45.000] Do you go to Congress every day to work? Do you live in the White House, you know, wear a black pair of pajamas and sit on the court bench? [01:04:45.000 --> 01:05:00.000] And I explained that the Constitution gives government officials limited privilege. It gives them the authority to do certain things. [01:05:00.000 --> 01:05:15.000] And the purpose of that authority is to protect our lives, our liberty, and our private property. There is no other legitimate purpose in the way for what the government does. [01:05:15.000 --> 01:05:37.000] And we, the people, have created the government for our own benefit. The benefit that we get is that although we are naturally going to protect our own life, liberty, and private property, because there's a process of living, [01:05:37.000 --> 01:05:55.000] we have deliberately created the government to assist us with that process. And if the government is doing anything other than defending our life, liberty, and property, then it's not valid. [01:05:55.000 --> 01:06:11.000] The government's not supposed to be doing that. So it's a real fundamental concept. And if you don't understand that fundamental concept, then you're going to allow yourself to be misled by the government. [01:06:11.000 --> 01:06:25.000] And the government is going to tell you for their own benefit that you have to do this. You have to do that. You have to get a driver's license. You have to pay your taxes. You have to follow all these instructions that we've invented. [01:06:25.000 --> 01:06:44.000] And we're just going to take it for granted. Now, I also point out that the government does not have unlimited authority. You know, assuming the government came out and said, okay, you have to get down on all fours and bark like a dog. [01:06:44.000 --> 01:07:01.000] How many people are actually going to do that? Now, I mean, I'm sure your listeners are going, oh, that would never happen to me. I would never do that. But I think the people would be surprised generally. [01:07:01.000 --> 01:07:16.000] They fall under government authority by simply doing exactly what the government has told them to do. Look at everybody that goes to the airport. [01:07:16.000 --> 01:07:26.000] You know, you go through the airport and they say, okay, you know, stand inside this little box, lift your hands up over your head. We're going to take this naked picture of you. [01:07:26.000 --> 01:07:36.000] And people just do that without even thinking. You know, it's like, really? Why are you doing that? [01:07:36.000 --> 01:07:59.000] So we have to readjust our whole mental mindset. You know, as you said, you and I have known each other for a long time and it took you a while to understand how important it is that we are the mask and that the government is our servant. [01:07:59.000 --> 01:08:14.000] And most people will agree with that philosophically, but they're not willing to take the next step and say, well, okay, yes, I'm actually going to enforce that authority that I have over the government. [01:08:14.000 --> 01:08:33.000] And once we start doing that, and you've been on this program for so long, you just told me recently that, you know, people are calling in with much greater problems. They're out there. They're sticking it to the government and they're coming back and asking questions about how can I stick it to the government again? [01:08:33.000 --> 01:09:02.000] This is progress. This is what we've needed for a long, long time. And I'm very pleased that your listeners are, you know, understanding what you have to teach and they're responding to it and taking it and using it to accomplish good things. [01:09:02.000 --> 01:09:21.000] Well, I'm really pleased of late that we have so many who are very sophisticated. We had a caller earlier from Tennessee, Oliver from Tennessee, and he's really taking these guys on. [01:09:21.000 --> 01:09:38.000] Scott from Texas. Scott is working these guys over. He went into a traffic court and started to bring up travel issue, right to travel issue, and the judge shouted him down and wouldn't let him bring that issue up. [01:09:38.000 --> 01:09:41.000] So he called me and said, what do we do? [01:09:41.000 --> 01:09:52.000] Well, criminal charges against him, of course. So he took prepared criminal charges and took them to the grand jury, filed them with the grand jury on him. [01:09:52.000 --> 01:10:03.000] So we have a lot of people out there who are beginning to stand up and take these guys on and the climate is changing. [01:10:03.000 --> 01:10:18.000] We have a situation where the public seems to have become so disenchanted with the government that they understand that we have to stand up and do something. [01:10:18.000 --> 01:10:33.000] And this show, that's what the show is about, is we don't talk about our rights philosophically. We talk about our rights specifically. [01:10:33.000 --> 01:10:48.000] And we don't say there's some general way of, some general idea that should protect your rights. Now we say do these things and protect your rights. Take these actions. [01:10:48.000 --> 01:11:05.000] And people are beginning to get it and it's very fulfilling that we're getting a lot more people who are willing to stand up and be the masters the way the Constitution intended us to be. [01:11:05.000 --> 01:11:19.000] I think if there was a weakness in the Constitution is it didn't instruct you and I on our responsibility to ensure the enforcement of the Constitution. [01:11:19.000 --> 01:11:36.000] They just accepted that they were, but at the time we had, we just finished, got through the revolution. We had a lot of people who were in the mindset of enforcing their rights and protecting their rights. [01:11:36.000 --> 01:11:51.000] So they probably didn't think it was necessary to explain to us in detail that we are the, the overseers of the overseers. [01:11:51.000 --> 01:12:09.000] And it did take this, we have been so programmed by those in positions of power and authority to believe that the government is all powerful. [01:12:09.000 --> 01:12:28.000] And then it started in grade school that we were forced to go to a government mandated school system for some 12 years. And in this school system we were told about these great and wonderful rights that we had. [01:12:28.000 --> 01:12:41.000] And at the same time it was very clearly demonstrated that while you may have these rights, while you're in this school don't even think about trying to express one of them. [01:12:41.000 --> 01:13:00.000] Or the whole weight of the system would land right square in your head. We put our children through 12 years of this hypocrisy, where we talk the talk, but make sure that no one walks the walk. [01:13:00.000 --> 01:13:23.000] And then when we get out of high school, we get out in the real world, we have almost no direct interaction with the government. So when we do have an interaction with the government, the only behavioral set that we have to draw on is what we learned in grade school and high school. [01:13:23.000 --> 01:13:40.000] And the whole purpose of this show is to change that mindset. I went to a court with a friend of mine, just several years ago, he had a traffic ticket and I went with him. [01:13:40.000 --> 01:13:59.000] So I had a different perspective because I didn't have a dog in the hunt. And I'm watching all these people. There was this one individual, older man, very well appointed, really expensive suit, and he was clearly a CEO or a high level management. [01:13:59.000 --> 01:14:15.000] We go into court, they called him up first. He stepped up in front of the judge, the judge holding some papers, and the papers were vibrating in his hand. He was visibly shaking, he could barely speak. [01:14:15.000 --> 01:14:21.000] And I thought, what in the world is going on? [01:14:21.000 --> 01:14:28.000] And then it occurred to me, this guy is standing in front of the principal. [01:14:28.000 --> 01:14:42.000] He went to 12 years of grade school and high school, being subjected to this hypocrisy, got out of school, went to work in the real world, and had no real interaction with governmental officials. [01:14:42.000 --> 01:14:56.000] First time he has any interaction, he gets a ticket. And when he steps up in front of the judge, what behavioral set does he have? What tools does he have for dealing with these kinds of officials? [01:14:56.000 --> 01:15:09.000] He has the tools he learned in grade school and high school. And I want to say, hold on, hold on. You are not a student being sent to the principal. You're the parent. [01:15:09.000 --> 01:15:19.000] Go into the principal wanting to know what the heck are you doing to my kids? This elicits the whole different response set. [01:15:19.000 --> 01:15:31.000] Everything we do in this show is focused toward that outcome. If we get that point, then we've done our job. [01:15:31.000 --> 01:15:47.000] And it appears as though we're having an effect. People are beginning to realize not only that we can affect government and how government is operated, but it's easy. [01:15:47.000 --> 01:16:00.000] And it is fun to award people on a regular basis. You have to be real careful with this. This can become way too much fun. [01:16:00.000 --> 01:16:20.000] The first time you get to see a public official doing the chicken dance, the chicken dance, that's where they start shifting from one foot to the other and say, oh, well, Mr. Kelton, you see, Mr. Kelton, it's like this, Mr. Kelton. [01:16:20.000 --> 01:16:34.000] You'll have trouble not grinning in their face. And their problem is, is they can tell. The reason I mentioned this judge that I filed criminal charges against. [01:16:34.000 --> 01:16:46.000] The reason he stopped his bailiff is he realized that I wasn't getting excited or upset or frightened. Something wrong was going on here. He was being set up and he knew it. [01:16:46.000 --> 01:17:00.000] Randy, we're going to have to take a break. All right. This is your little live radio. You're listening to Randy Kelton, Vet Pack. Call us at 512-646-1984. We'll be right back. [01:17:16.000 --> 01:17:38.000] How to get debt collectors out of your credit report. How to turn the financial tables on them and make them pay you to go away. The Michael Mears Proven Method is the solution for how to stop debt collectors. [01:17:38.000 --> 01:17:49.000] Personal consultation is available as well. For more information, please visit ruleoflawradio.com and click on the blue Michael Mears banner or email michaelmears at yahoo.com. [01:17:49.000 --> 01:18:01.000] That's ruleoflawradio.com or email m-i-c-h-a-e-l-m-i-r-r-a-s at yahoo.com to learn how to stop debt collectors now. [01:18:01.000 --> 01:18:11.000] Did you know that the Logos Radio Network is a truly listener-supported radio network on top of the on-air talent, producers and other hardworking individuals working behind the scenes? [01:18:11.000 --> 01:18:23.000] Logos Radio Network is kept on the air by the generous support of listeners like you. And we appreciate our loyal listeners making contributions every year in our annual fundraisers, which help keep the lights on and Logos Radio Network on the air. [01:18:23.000 --> 01:18:32.000] Head on over to logosradionetwork.com to make your contribution. Every $25 donation enters you for a chance to win prizes from Central Texas Gunworks. [01:18:32.000 --> 01:18:39.000] First prize being a Spiked Skull Lower Receiver. Second prize being a Taurus Curve. Ten winners will receive gift cards from All About Vapor. [01:18:39.000 --> 01:18:50.000] And if you donate your $25 contribution early enough, you will also receive a complimentary jar of My Magic Mud. Donations by all major credit cards are accepted as well as contributions by Bitcoin. [01:18:50.000 --> 01:18:58.000] The Logos Radio Network Fundraiser. Head on over to logosradionetwork.com for more information and to donate to keep the Logos Radio Network on the air. [01:19:20.000 --> 01:19:48.000] Still listening to Rule of Law Radio, we are back with Randy Kelton, Vet Pack and Michael Bad Eric. [01:19:48.000 --> 01:19:51.000] Randy, I think you wanted to ask him a couple of questions. [01:19:51.000 --> 01:20:00.000] Yes, Michael, can you kind of give us a synopsis of your constitutional class? [01:20:00.000 --> 01:20:16.000] The first two hours of class is basically philosophical. Before we can understand the Constitution, we have to understand why we have any government at all. [01:20:16.000 --> 01:20:26.000] And I filter a scenario where, I mean, everybody's upset with the government. Nobody is happy. It's like, well, okay, why don't we just get rid of government altogether? [01:20:26.000 --> 01:20:32.000] We'll just eliminate the government. And, you know, people get really nervous about that. [01:20:32.000 --> 01:20:46.000] You know, nobody wants to have anarchy. And I go, well, okay, if you don't want anarchy, we have to have some form of government. But which form of government should we have? [01:20:46.000 --> 01:20:53.000] Should we have socialism or communism? You know, what do you think would be best? [01:20:53.000 --> 01:21:05.000] And I point out that most of the governments in the world are socialist and or communist. And I go, well, all those people can't be wrong, can they? [01:21:05.000 --> 01:21:17.000] And the answer is, yes, they can be wrong. Nobody in my classes wants communism or socialism, but they can't explain why. [01:21:17.000 --> 01:21:26.000] And the end result is that communism and socialism do not recognize private property. [01:21:26.000 --> 01:21:35.000] Under those systems of government, there is no private property. The government owns everything, and therefore the government controls everything. [01:21:35.000 --> 01:21:52.000] And we discover from a brief examination of history that the United States and specifically our Constitution are designed specifically to defend private property. [01:21:52.000 --> 01:22:09.000] That John Adams, who was president right after George Washington, said the moment the idea is accepted in society that the law of property is not as sacred as the law of God, [01:22:09.000 --> 01:22:17.000] and that there's not a force of law and public justice to protect it, then tyranny and anarchy commence. [01:22:17.000 --> 01:22:25.000] And so communism and the Constitution are mutually exclusive. Either you have private property or you don't. [01:22:25.000 --> 01:22:35.000] And if you don't have private property, then ultimately you have no rights, the government is in charge, and you end up being a slave. [01:22:35.000 --> 01:22:47.000] And people have a difficult time making that connection at first, but after a little bit of practice, that's the only conclusion that you can come to. [01:22:47.000 --> 01:23:00.000] Now that you understand why the founding fathers developed the Constitution in the first place, now the Constitution is fairly easy to read and understand. [01:23:00.000 --> 01:23:08.000] He's like, well, what does this clause do? Well, this clause is going to protect my life, my liberty, and my private property. [01:23:08.000 --> 01:23:22.000] And you say, well, how do you know that? Because that's the only purpose, the only legitimate purpose of the government and the only thing specified by this particular Constitution. [01:23:22.000 --> 01:23:35.000] And it again leads us back to the topic we've covered a couple of times already this evening, is that we are the masters, they are our servants, and they work for us. [01:23:35.000 --> 01:23:42.000] And I think the thing that astonishes most people is like, well, that's not the way we do it. [01:23:42.000 --> 01:23:57.000] I go, yeah, I know, that's why I'm teaching this class, because I think that we ought to do it that way. And if people can just kind of hang in there a little bit, they suddenly see the light. [01:23:57.000 --> 01:24:05.000] You can almost literally see the lightbulb flash on. And then all of a sudden, they are highly motivated. [01:24:05.000 --> 01:24:14.000] It's like, well, okay, now that we know the answer, how do we make this happen? And it's like, okay, fine, now I've got your attention. [01:24:14.000 --> 01:24:25.000] Let's talk about traveling without a driver's license. Let's talk about writing a letter to the IRS going, I'm sorry, gentlemen, it doesn't apply to me. [01:24:25.000 --> 01:24:38.000] So it affects our lives in profound ways, but you have to understand what those principles are. [01:24:38.000 --> 01:24:43.000] And that's what I try to do in a deep, thorough understanding. [01:24:43.000 --> 01:24:55.000] I'm glad you brought up the traffic issue. I do think that that is very illustrative of where we stand before our government. [01:24:55.000 --> 01:25:11.000] Will you address how the Constitution relates to the idea of traffic and transportation and travel? [01:25:11.000 --> 01:25:15.000] The Constitution doesn't address it specifically. [01:25:15.000 --> 01:25:25.000] Again, you have to remember that the Constitution is giving a list of privileges to our government officials. [01:25:25.000 --> 01:25:31.000] It's not talking about what you and I have a right to do without asking. [01:25:31.000 --> 01:25:49.000] However, in my research, I personally do not have a driver's license. I don't want one. It makes me have one because traveling and driving are two different things. [01:25:49.000 --> 01:25:55.000] I've come up with a metaphor that I hope will explain it. [01:25:55.000 --> 01:26:06.000] Hypothetically, I go to the bar and find an attractive woman, buy her a drink, and she takes me to this hotel, has sex with me, and then asks me for money. [01:26:06.000 --> 01:26:14.000] If I pay her, both of us get arrested for prostitution and pander because prostitution is illegal. [01:26:14.000 --> 01:26:24.000] Now, again, under this hypothetical, I go to the bar, buy her some drinks, she takes me to the hotel, and we have this wonderful evening, and then she goes home. [01:26:24.000 --> 01:26:38.000] If she hasn't charged me money, then she may be promiscuous, but she's not a prostitute, and neither of us can get arrested. [01:26:38.000 --> 01:26:48.000] So the difference between promiscuous and prostitution is quite literally the transaction of money. [01:26:48.000 --> 01:26:58.000] It turns out that the same differentiation is true between traveling and driving. [01:26:58.000 --> 01:27:10.000] Driving is explicitly a commercial activity. You are transporting goods for passengers for hire. [01:27:10.000 --> 01:27:18.000] And the government does have a legitimate authority to control and regulate commerce. [01:27:18.000 --> 01:27:24.000] It does not have the authority to regulate your personal travel. [01:27:24.000 --> 01:27:36.000] And the right to travel is so old, it is mentioned specifically in the Articles of Confederation, and I double-checked it myself, it's really there. [01:27:36.000 --> 01:27:50.000] When I am in my automobile, traveling down the highway, and I'm not charging anybody money to be in my car, [01:27:50.000 --> 01:27:59.000] then I am not driving, I'm not engaged in commerce, even though it may look exactly like commerce. [01:27:59.000 --> 01:28:15.000] It's not. There is this legal distinction, and my plan is to continue to travel, exercising my right to do so, inevitably. [01:28:15.000 --> 01:28:27.000] I mean, it's just a matter of time before one of our police officers in Texas, for whatever reason, decides to pull me over. [01:28:27.000 --> 01:28:40.000] I'm hoping to take all this paperwork to explain the legal differences between traveling and the commercial activity of driving, [01:28:40.000 --> 01:28:45.000] and to tell them that, you know, they're obligated to leave me alone. [01:28:45.000 --> 01:28:55.000] They have no jurisdictional authority to control my inherent right to travel. [01:28:55.000 --> 01:29:06.000] So it will be interesting to see just how successful I am in explaining these rights in part. [01:29:06.000 --> 01:29:19.000] I just had a traffic ticket thrown out the other day because my chief of police in Decatur, Texas, is just nowhere to be. [01:29:19.000 --> 01:29:30.000] The chief knows me real well. I could hear him do the chicken dance over the telephone when I challenged exactly these issues. [01:29:30.000 --> 01:29:41.000] And I didn't show up for my first hearing, and that dirty rotten prosecutor dismissed the case before I got there, ruined all my fun. [01:29:41.000 --> 01:29:44.000] Brandy, we're going to have to take a break. [01:29:44.000 --> 01:29:46.000] Go ahead. [01:29:46.000 --> 01:29:49.000] Okay. I'm taking this out. [01:29:49.000 --> 01:29:50.000] This is Rule of Law Radio. [01:29:50.000 --> 01:29:53.000] You're listening to Randy Kelton, Vet Pack. [01:29:53.000 --> 01:29:57.000] Call us at 512-646-1984. [01:29:57.000 --> 01:30:02.000] We've got 30 more minutes, and it looks like we might have. [01:30:02.000 --> 01:30:09.000] Police arrested activists outside the Capitol building for, get this, selling lemonade without a permit. [01:30:09.000 --> 01:30:10.000] I'm Dr. Catherine Albrecht. [01:30:10.000 --> 01:30:15.000] Back to tell you how cops are cracking down on lemonade stands across America next. [01:30:15.000 --> 01:30:22.000] Your search engine is watching you, recording all your searches and creating a massive database of your personal information. [01:30:22.000 --> 01:30:23.000] That's creepy. [01:30:23.000 --> 01:30:25.000] But it doesn't have to be that way. [01:30:25.000 --> 01:30:28.000] Startpage.com is the world's most private search engine. [01:30:28.000 --> 01:30:35.000] Startpage doesn't store your IP address, make a record of your searches or use tracking cookies, and they're third-party certified. [01:30:35.000 --> 01:30:39.000] If you don't like Big Brother spying on you, start over with Startpage. [01:30:39.000 --> 01:30:42.000] Great search results and total privacy. [01:30:42.000 --> 01:30:45.000] Startpage.com, the world's most private search engine. [01:30:45.000 --> 01:30:50.000] As far as I know, nobody's been punished on Wall Street yet for the 08 crash. [01:30:50.000 --> 01:30:58.000] Instead, police have been putting children's lemonade stands out of business in seven states, including Texas, Georgia, and Maryland. [01:30:58.000 --> 01:31:02.000] Kitty lemonade stands, the nerve of those hardened criminals. [01:31:02.000 --> 01:31:07.000] To make a point, activists set up a 10-cent-a-cup lemonade stand on the lawn of the Capitol building. [01:31:07.000 --> 01:31:14.000] Cops monitored the lemonistas with binoculars, then arrested the group on charges of vending without a permit. [01:31:14.000 --> 01:31:18.000] Thumbs down to the sour-faced cops who handcuffed the protesters. [01:31:18.000 --> 01:31:23.000] And long live lemon liberty to the sweet demonstrators on the right side of freedom. [01:31:23.000 --> 01:31:30.000] I'm Dr. Catherine Albrecht. More news and information at CatherineAlbrecht.com. [01:31:30.000 --> 01:31:36.000] This is Building 7, a 47-story skyscraper that fell on the afternoon of September 11. [01:31:36.000 --> 01:31:38.000] The government says that fire brought it down. [01:31:38.000 --> 01:31:43.000] However, 1,500 architects and engineers have concluded it was a controlled demolition. [01:31:43.000 --> 01:31:46.000] Over 6,000 of my fellow service members have given their lives. [01:31:46.000 --> 01:31:48.000] Thousands of my fellow first responders are dying. [01:31:48.000 --> 01:31:50.000] I'm not a conspiracy theorist. [01:31:50.000 --> 01:31:51.000] I'm a structural engineer. [01:31:51.000 --> 01:31:52.000] I'm a New York City correctional officer. [01:31:52.000 --> 01:31:53.000] I'm an Air Force pilot. [01:31:53.000 --> 01:31:55.000] I'm a father who lost his son. [01:31:55.000 --> 01:31:57.000] We're Americans, and we deserve the truth. [01:31:57.000 --> 01:32:07.000] Go to RememberBuilding7.org today. [01:32:27.000 --> 01:32:45.000] And we'll donate another $100 to the Logos Radio Network to help continue this program. [01:32:45.000 --> 01:32:50.000] So if those out of town roofers come knocking, your door should be locking. [01:32:50.000 --> 01:32:58.000] That's 512-992-8745 or hillcountryhomeimprovements.com. Discounts are based on full roof replacement. [01:32:58.000 --> 01:33:01.000] May not actually be kidding about chemtrails. [01:33:01.000 --> 01:33:21.000] You are listening to the Logos Radio Network, logosradionetwork.com. [01:33:21.000 --> 01:33:22.000] We are back. [01:33:22.000 --> 01:33:36.000] This is Rule of Law Radio with Randy Kelton, Zet Pack, and Randy, we've got David online from South Dakota. [01:33:36.000 --> 01:33:39.000] Hello, Mr. David. [01:33:39.000 --> 01:33:43.000] Do you have a question for Michael Bannerick? [01:33:43.000 --> 01:33:49.000] Well, I put you on the dime or what? [01:33:49.000 --> 01:33:52.000] He can help answer the question. [01:33:52.000 --> 01:33:53.000] Okay. [01:33:53.000 --> 01:33:55.000] What do you have for us? [01:33:55.000 --> 01:33:59.000] I recently visited in Texas. [01:33:59.000 --> 01:34:05.000] I was in a big trademark, and they had a going-out-of-business thing. [01:34:05.000 --> 01:34:06.000] Hold on. [01:34:06.000 --> 01:34:09.000] Move the mic down by your chin. [01:34:09.000 --> 01:34:13.000] Your mic's kind of distorting. [01:34:13.000 --> 01:34:14.000] Okay. Is that better? [01:34:14.000 --> 01:34:18.000] Oh, much better. [01:34:18.000 --> 01:34:24.000] Anyway, going-out-of-business thing. [01:34:24.000 --> 01:34:25.000] Okay. [01:34:25.000 --> 01:34:26.000] Hold on. [01:34:26.000 --> 01:34:31.000] Going-out-of-business or going-out-for-business? [01:34:31.000 --> 01:34:32.000] Of business. [01:34:32.000 --> 01:34:33.000] Okay. [01:34:33.000 --> 01:34:34.000] Going-out-of-business. [01:34:34.000 --> 01:34:46.000] You have to go to the comptroller and get the permit as you're going-out-of-business. [01:34:46.000 --> 01:34:56.000] And this is basically where they're breaking the law that advertising price charging a [01:34:56.000 --> 01:34:59.000] different one. [01:34:59.000 --> 01:35:10.000] Do you or Michael understand the deceptive trade practices act? [01:35:10.000 --> 01:35:11.000] Okay. [01:35:11.000 --> 01:35:12.000] We're kind of breaking up. [01:35:12.000 --> 01:35:14.000] I'm getting bits and pieces. [01:35:14.000 --> 01:35:18.000] He's saying that they're advertising going-out-of-business sale. [01:35:18.000 --> 01:35:23.000] And how are they violating the Deceptive Trade Practices Act? [01:35:23.000 --> 01:35:28.000] Well, that's what my question is about. [01:35:28.000 --> 01:35:34.000] In other words, the sign says 30% off, lowest marked price. [01:35:34.000 --> 01:35:44.000] And when you pick up an item, it has two or three prices, they take the 30% off and you [01:35:44.000 --> 01:35:46.000] get what they advertise. [01:35:46.000 --> 01:35:48.000] What's the answer? [01:35:48.000 --> 01:35:54.000] So you say there's, you take the tag off and there's two or three prices, so you don't [01:35:54.000 --> 01:35:59.000] know which price is 30% off. [01:35:59.000 --> 01:36:10.000] But the sign above it says 30% off, lowest marked price. [01:36:10.000 --> 01:36:12.000] You follow me? [01:36:12.000 --> 01:36:17.000] 30% off, lowest marked price? [01:36:17.000 --> 01:36:18.000] Five. [01:36:18.000 --> 01:36:20.000] Okay. [01:36:20.000 --> 01:36:21.000] All right. [01:36:21.000 --> 01:36:29.000] And so because it looks like there's going to be a question when you check out, and thankfully [01:36:29.000 --> 01:36:37.000] knew that this is a different item, you call the manager and you say, what's the price [01:36:37.000 --> 01:36:41.000] of this item at this time? [01:36:41.000 --> 01:36:53.000] And she says, this price is, and she is middled, that's the lowest like the sign says. [01:36:53.000 --> 01:36:57.000] Wait a minute, I'm having a terrible time understanding you. [01:36:57.000 --> 01:36:59.000] Your mic is booming. [01:36:59.000 --> 01:37:01.000] This is way too much gain. [01:37:01.000 --> 01:37:04.000] Can you move it down away from your mouth a little further? [01:37:04.000 --> 01:37:13.000] Yeah, just the second one. [01:37:13.000 --> 01:37:15.000] You might turn the volume down a little bit. [01:37:15.000 --> 01:37:25.000] That should lower the mic gain if you're on a cell phone. [01:37:25.000 --> 01:37:26.000] Okay. [01:37:26.000 --> 01:37:30.000] So this is a Deceptive Trade Practices Act. [01:37:30.000 --> 01:37:34.000] Let me just kind of make sure I understand where we're at. [01:37:34.000 --> 01:37:42.000] They have, and it's claiming that it's 30% off the lowest marked price where they have [01:37:42.000 --> 01:37:45.000] a number of marked prices. [01:37:45.000 --> 01:37:54.000] Am I correct in that part? [01:37:54.000 --> 01:37:57.000] Hello, David. [01:37:57.000 --> 01:38:01.000] Maybe that you got it too far from your mouth. [01:38:01.000 --> 01:38:08.000] We're not hearing anything at all. [01:38:08.000 --> 01:38:18.000] Okay, we're apparently having a problem with David's connection. [01:38:18.000 --> 01:38:19.000] No, we're not getting anything. [01:38:19.000 --> 01:38:23.000] Okay, David, what you might try is hang up and call back in. [01:38:23.000 --> 01:38:29.000] You're the only caller on the board, so if you call back in, we'll take you right away. [01:38:29.000 --> 01:38:32.000] Try something above, David. [01:38:32.000 --> 01:38:33.000] Are you there? [01:38:33.000 --> 01:38:34.000] Okay. [01:38:34.000 --> 01:38:36.000] Now I can hear you. [01:38:36.000 --> 01:38:37.000] Okay. [01:38:37.000 --> 01:38:40.000] Here's what happened. [01:38:40.000 --> 01:38:49.000] So I just heard David gave me the price, and I continued to shop. [01:38:49.000 --> 01:38:56.000] So I go to the second, third, and fourth, and fifth, and maybe 12 different items. [01:38:56.000 --> 01:39:04.000] And then I asked to verify the price on each item because they were all in a different situation. [01:39:04.000 --> 01:39:07.000] I'm building up to the point. [01:39:07.000 --> 01:39:15.000] Does the Texas Deceptive Trade Practices Act and the US Federal Trade Practices Act kick [01:39:15.000 --> 01:39:20.000] in after you have paid for an item and they've applied the wrong price to you? [01:39:20.000 --> 01:39:27.000] Or does it apply when they tell you the wrong price? [01:39:27.000 --> 01:39:34.000] If I wanted to sue them in federal court, would it be something I could do? [01:39:34.000 --> 01:39:45.000] Because I got out to check up, and they wanted about $47 more than the ticket should have been. [01:39:45.000 --> 01:39:47.000] And I said, well, I'm sorry. [01:39:47.000 --> 01:39:52.000] You're not applying the prices you're advertising. [01:39:52.000 --> 01:39:56.000] So I didn't buy one red cent after an hour and a half of shopping. [01:39:56.000 --> 01:39:59.000] I left with nothing. [01:39:59.000 --> 01:40:11.000] Well, the point at which they made the claim of what was owed would be the point at which the infraction occurred. [01:40:11.000 --> 01:40:24.000] But as to how to apply that in the Fed or the state, it would be, I'd have to read the statute itself. [01:40:24.000 --> 01:40:33.000] I'm not terribly familiar with the Deceptive Trade Practices Act, either with the state or the Fed. [01:40:33.000 --> 01:40:37.000] It's never been my area of research. [01:40:37.000 --> 01:40:38.000] Okay. [01:40:38.000 --> 01:40:43.000] Your question is very specific and very focused. [01:40:43.000 --> 01:40:48.000] I could guess, but it would only be a guess. [01:40:48.000 --> 01:40:59.000] I would say at the point when they told you how much they would charge, that was the point at which, and if an infraction occurred, that's when it occurred. [01:40:59.000 --> 01:41:04.000] When they told me the price, it was incorrect, not when I paid the price, it was incorrect. [01:41:04.000 --> 01:41:08.000] What, when they told you the price? [01:41:08.000 --> 01:41:10.000] I got you. [01:41:10.000 --> 01:41:11.000] Okay. [01:41:11.000 --> 01:41:16.000] Well, I should have emailed you, but I heard you on the radio and it was quiet. [01:41:16.000 --> 01:41:21.000] That means no one was in line, and I said, well, I'll just call in and ask, Randy. [01:41:21.000 --> 01:41:28.000] Yes, it's very unusual at this time of the day that we're out of callers, but we are today, I guess. [01:41:28.000 --> 01:41:37.000] Maybe everybody's out barbecuing today or something, or if they're in Texas, maybe they're in their boats. [01:41:37.000 --> 01:41:41.000] Yeah. [01:41:41.000 --> 01:41:51.000] The other thing, Randy, because Texas gives an agricultural exemption for if you're a property owner, [01:41:51.000 --> 01:42:03.000] where you either cut and sell timber or raise agricultural products, you can get an exemption number from the state of Texas, [01:42:03.000 --> 01:42:14.000] which means you don't pay sales tax because you're creating product, and Texas is a agricultural manufacturing established state, [01:42:14.000 --> 01:42:21.000] and therefore they give us breaks when we produce farm products. [01:42:21.000 --> 01:42:34.000] My question is this, if a seller refuses to honor your agricultural timber, [01:42:34.000 --> 01:42:41.000] a number which the state comptroller has issued to people that ask for it, [01:42:41.000 --> 01:42:54.000] what would I look to find the statute that they're violating so that I could either send them a tort letter or file a court case against them? [01:42:54.000 --> 01:43:05.000] Okay, that would almost be whoever issued the, whatever agency issued the exemption. [01:43:05.000 --> 01:43:18.000] That's the state comptroller, so I should go back to the comptroller and say, what are my legal outs when someone refuses to honor this exemption? [01:43:18.000 --> 01:43:26.000] Yeah, I would say absolutely the comptroller, because he's the one who would collect these taxes, [01:43:26.000 --> 01:43:36.000] and if someone's collecting the tax inappropriately, the comptroller would be the one to do the audit, [01:43:36.000 --> 01:43:42.000] the one who could determine that it was being collected improperly. [01:43:42.000 --> 01:43:57.000] Randy, you ready? We've got to go out on break. All right, this is Rule of Law Radio. You're listening to Randy Kelton, Vet Pack. Call us 512-646-1984. We've got a few more minutes. We'll be right back. [01:44:12.000 --> 01:44:22.000] You'll find gluten-free options, and all products are free from high fructose corn syrup, aspartame, soy, and MSG. 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Win your case without an attorney with Juris Dictionary, [01:45:07.000 --> 01:45:15.000] the affordable, easy-to-understand, 4-CD course that will show you how in 24 hours, step-by-step. [01:45:15.000 --> 01:45:22.000] If you have a lawyer, know what your lawyer should be doing. If you don't have a lawyer, know what you should do for yourself. [01:45:22.000 --> 01:45:27.000] Thousands have won with our step-by-step course, and now you can too. [01:45:27.000 --> 01:45:34.000] Juris Dictionary was created by a licensed attorney with 22 years of case-winning experience. [01:45:34.000 --> 01:45:43.000] Even if you're not in a lawsuit, you can learn what everyone should understand about the principles and practices that control our American courts. [01:45:43.000 --> 01:45:52.000] You'll receive our audio classroom, video seminar, tutorials, forms for civil cases, pro se tactics, and much more. [01:45:52.000 --> 01:46:01.000] Please visit RuleOfLawRadio.com and click on the banner or call toll-free, 866-LAW-EZ. [01:46:22.000 --> 01:46:49.000] All right, we are back. This is Rule of Law Radio with Randy Kelton, Vet Pack. [01:46:49.000 --> 01:46:54.000] Randy, go ahead, and we've got another caller on the line. [01:46:54.000 --> 01:47:01.000] Okay, we've got Sonny in Georgia. We're finishing up with David in South Dakota. [01:47:01.000 --> 01:47:06.000] David, I have no idea how to ask the question. You stumped the chump. [01:47:06.000 --> 01:47:11.000] Right here at the end of the show, you called in and stumped the chump. [01:47:11.000 --> 01:47:20.000] No, I didn't. I wasn't even trying to stump the chump. Randy, you know the answer, but you just can't focus up at this minute. [01:47:20.000 --> 01:47:29.000] I could probably guess at an answer, but it's not an area that I am knowledgeable in directly. [01:47:29.000 --> 01:47:37.000] So I'm reluctant to state because it's not always straightforward. [01:47:37.000 --> 01:47:44.000] Okay. Well, you know that in Texas, if you're 65 or older and someone breaks the Deceptive Trade Practices Act [01:47:44.000 --> 01:47:52.000] and you're the beneficiary of their breaking the law, that you're personally entitled to triple damages? [01:47:52.000 --> 01:47:57.000] No, I didn't know that, and I am 65 or older. [01:47:57.000 --> 01:48:03.000] You're getting close to that age. You need to learn that law and then quote it. [01:48:03.000 --> 01:48:11.000] Yes, I do. I need to research that because I am definitely older. [01:48:11.000 --> 01:48:19.000] Well, I know you're a little bit younger than me by 10 years, but regardless, if you're over 65, [01:48:19.000 --> 01:48:25.000] you get triple damages and the damages that you collect go directly to you. [01:48:25.000 --> 01:48:32.000] They don't go to an attorney. They don't go to the court costs. They come directly to the person who's been damaged. [01:48:32.000 --> 01:48:35.000] So that's a penalty. [01:48:35.000 --> 01:48:37.000] It's a penalty, yeah. [01:48:37.000 --> 01:48:45.000] Penalties go to the person aggrieved. Fines and fees go to the government. [01:48:45.000 --> 01:48:53.000] Can you send me an email directing me to where to look to look that up? [01:48:53.000 --> 01:48:59.000] Texas Deceptive Trade Practices Act. You know, it's been on the law books so long. [01:48:59.000 --> 01:49:02.000] Randy, I will send you that email. [01:49:02.000 --> 01:49:11.000] But I have a book as big as a two and a half, three inches thick and eight by 12. [01:49:11.000 --> 01:49:16.000] And that's all it is, Texas Deceptive Trade Practices Act and all of its amendments. [01:49:16.000 --> 01:49:22.000] And it's been on the books for 20 plus years, and it's been amended several times. [01:49:22.000 --> 01:49:29.000] But the gist of it is it really does protect older people. [01:49:29.000 --> 01:49:37.000] Wonderful. I need to look at that because I'm definitely older people. [01:49:37.000 --> 01:49:46.000] And I never have met Mr. Baton-Erin and I've never taken his course, but... [01:49:46.000 --> 01:49:51.000] Shame on you. Oh, naughty, naughty. You really need to take his course. [01:49:51.000 --> 01:49:58.000] You're in a 605 area code. I show you in South Dakota, but you're obviously in Texas. [01:49:58.000 --> 01:50:03.000] What area of Texas are you in? [01:50:03.000 --> 01:50:08.000] Well, I'm still in South Dakota, but I come to Texas from time to time. [01:50:08.000 --> 01:50:12.000] I do have properties up in the Panhandle. [01:50:12.000 --> 01:50:23.000] Oh, okay. Michael, can you kind of give us an idea of where your upcoming presentations are going to be? [01:50:23.000 --> 01:50:38.000] I have a presentation in Austin a week from tomorrow, another presentation in Fort Worth two weeks from tomorrow, and in July, July 9. [01:50:38.000 --> 01:50:45.000] I'm going to be down in Florida with my Robert Scott Bell, and we have a weekend planned. [01:50:45.000 --> 01:50:52.000] On Saturday, I teach my Constitution class, and on Sunday, we go out to the gun ring, [01:50:52.000 --> 01:50:59.000] and we learn how to defend our rights physically out at the gun ring. [01:50:59.000 --> 01:51:07.000] So it's going to be a really fun weekend learning about the rights and learning to defend them. [01:51:07.000 --> 01:51:12.000] How to defend your rights with extreme prejudice? [01:51:12.000 --> 01:51:14.000] Yes. [01:51:14.000 --> 01:51:19.000] Michael, go ahead and tell everybody what your website is in case someone wants to go [01:51:19.000 --> 01:51:22.000] and they want to find out exactly where you're going to be. [01:51:22.000 --> 01:51:28.000] My website is constitutionpreservation.org. [01:51:28.000 --> 01:51:38.000] Make sure you don't type Constitution null because that will take you someplace else. Just constitutionpreservation.org. [01:51:38.000 --> 01:51:43.000] Anybody has any questions, they can call me at the number there on the website. [01:51:43.000 --> 01:51:51.000] Preservation.org, okay. All right. [01:51:51.000 --> 01:51:57.000] Okay. Thank you, David. You've got two more callers and six more minutes. [01:51:57.000 --> 01:52:03.000] Let me get off your ear, and thank you for your time, Randy. I appreciate it. [01:52:03.000 --> 01:52:10.000] Thank you, David. Okay. Now we're going to go to Sonny in Georgia. Hello, Sonny. [01:52:10.000 --> 01:52:13.000] Hey, Randy. How are you doing tonight? [01:52:13.000 --> 01:52:15.000] I'm doing good. [01:52:15.000 --> 01:52:17.000] Good. [01:52:17.000 --> 01:52:32.000] I'm knee-deep in water. We're going to change our bumper music to how high is the water, mama? [01:52:32.000 --> 01:52:40.000] Well, the water is kind of high in Georgia in a different respect. [01:52:40.000 --> 01:52:54.000] I've got an original service document that I put in the record with a motion for default. [01:52:54.000 --> 01:53:00.000] Okay. Wait a minute. Service document. [01:53:00.000 --> 01:53:04.000] What does service document mean? [01:53:04.000 --> 01:53:10.000] It's the process service document. [01:53:10.000 --> 01:53:11.000] Oh, okay. [01:53:11.000 --> 01:53:15.000] Proof of service. [01:53:15.000 --> 01:53:18.000] Okay. What did they serve on you? [01:53:18.000 --> 01:53:31.000] Well, I served it on Deutsche Bank. It was a quiet title action. It was a quiet title action attacking the deed under power. [01:53:31.000 --> 01:53:35.000] Did Deutsche Bank answer in a timely fashion? [01:53:35.000 --> 01:53:41.000] No. They've been in default since April the 4th. [01:53:41.000 --> 01:53:47.000] Have you moved for no answer default? [01:53:47.000 --> 01:54:01.000] Yes, I have entered that motion and I included the original proof of service with that motion. The problem is it's disappeared from the record. [01:54:01.000 --> 01:54:06.000] Oh, your motion has or your proof of service? [01:54:06.000 --> 01:54:10.000] The motion, the proof of service. [01:54:10.000 --> 01:54:30.000] Okay. Just refile it. That's not necessarily an issue. Just refile it as an attachment to the, what did you file in? Did you file a motion for default judgment? [01:54:30.000 --> 01:54:31.000] Yes. [01:54:31.000 --> 01:54:37.000] Okay. Just file it as an attachment to the default judgment. [01:54:37.000 --> 01:54:52.000] You could go after the clerk and raise a big stink about it, but that's a side issue. Your primary issue is getting your ruling. So you just refile it as an attachment. [01:54:52.000 --> 01:54:59.000] Okay. I just wasn't sure who would be responsible for that. [01:54:59.000 --> 01:55:06.000] Clerk of the court, do you have a stamped copy of the one you filed? [01:55:06.000 --> 01:55:21.000] I do have a stamped copy of the, actually I have two. I had four of them stamped. They got the original motion and I got three copies of the motion. [01:55:21.000 --> 01:55:23.000] And all of them stamped? [01:55:23.000 --> 01:55:27.000] All of them stamped. I sent one to the defendant. [01:55:27.000 --> 01:55:35.000] Wait, hold on. Is the affidavit attached to the motion and did they stamp the affidavit? [01:55:35.000 --> 01:55:48.000] I did not have an affidavit. I had a verification, which may serve as the same thing. [01:55:48.000 --> 01:55:59.000] I'm sorry. I'm sorry. The certification of the document is missing. [01:55:59.000 --> 01:56:11.000] That was not stamped. They did not stamp the return of service, that return of service form. [01:56:11.000 --> 01:56:18.000] Oh, they normally don't. Do you have the return of service? [01:56:18.000 --> 01:56:21.000] I have a copy, but not the original. [01:56:21.000 --> 01:56:25.000] Okay. You filed the original in the court? [01:56:25.000 --> 01:56:35.000] Okay. Copy is good enough. Is this certified mail? Does it have a certified mail number on it? [01:56:35.000 --> 01:56:38.000] What does what have the certified mail? [01:56:38.000 --> 01:56:46.000] Your certificate of service. [01:56:46.000 --> 01:57:00.000] Okay. For those who don't know what we're talking about, when you file something in the court, you have to certify to the court that you served it on opposing counsel or opposing party. [01:57:00.000 --> 01:57:11.000] And generally, you always, when you serve something, you do it by certified mail because you'll get a certified mail number. [01:57:11.000 --> 01:57:22.000] And with that number, you can go back to the U.S. Postal Service and they can give you tracking on where it started and where it ended up. [01:57:22.000 --> 01:57:27.000] So the Postal Service can establish that the document was actually delivered. [01:57:27.000 --> 01:57:34.000] So all you need is a certified document number. [01:57:34.000 --> 01:57:39.000] Well, this was served by a process server in California. [01:57:39.000 --> 01:57:49.000] Okay. Did it get a copy of the report that the process server filed with the court? [01:57:49.000 --> 01:57:55.000] Or did they say whatever the process server sent to you? [01:57:55.000 --> 01:57:59.000] Just have them send you another one. [01:57:59.000 --> 01:58:11.000] If it was sent by a professional process server, that won't be a problem. The process server will authenticate that it was served. [01:58:11.000 --> 01:58:13.000] Perfect. [01:58:13.000 --> 01:58:17.000] Yeah. For life, human being always works. [01:58:17.000 --> 01:58:20.000] Okay. We are out of time. [01:58:20.000 --> 01:58:23.000] This is Randy Kelton, Vet Pack. [01:58:23.000 --> 01:58:27.000] And Vet Pack is going to take us out. [01:58:27.000 --> 01:58:32.000] Thank you, Michael, for being with us and we hope to have you on more often. [01:58:32.000 --> 01:58:35.000] Absolutely. I agree. [01:58:35.000 --> 01:58:38.000] You guys have a great night. Try to stay dry. [01:58:38.000 --> 01:58:43.000] Make sure you buy a boat, get you some oars, something so you can live and make it home out there. [01:58:43.000 --> 01:58:45.000] So have a good night. We'll see you next week. [01:58:45.000 --> 01:58:50.000] Randy Kelton, Vet Pack. [01:58:50.000 --> 01:58:58.000] Bibles for America is offering absolutely free a unique study Bible called the New Testament Recovery Version. [01:58:58.000 --> 01:59:08.000] The New Testament Recovery Version has over 9,000 footnotes that explain what the Bible says verse by verse, helping you to know God and to know the meaning of life. [01:59:08.000 --> 01:59:11.000] Order your free copy today from Bibles for America. [01:59:11.000 --> 01:59:20.000] Call us toll free at 888-551-0102 or visit us online at bfa.org. [01:59:20.000 --> 01:59:30.000] This translation is highly accurate and it comes with over 13,000 cross references, plus charts and maps and an outline for every book of the Bible. [01:59:30.000 --> 01:59:32.000] This is truly a Bible you can understand. [01:59:32.000 --> 01:59:49.000] To get your free copy of the New Testament Recovery Version, call us toll free at 888-551-0102. That's 888-551-0102 or visit us online at bfa.org. [01:59:49.000 --> 02:00:03.000] Looking for some truth? You found it, LogosRadioNetwork.com.