[00:00.000 --> 00:06.760] The following news flash is brought to you by The Lone Star Lowdown. [00:06.760 --> 00:13.200] Markets for Monday the 22nd of July 2019 open with Precious Metals, Gold $1,429 an ounce, [00:13.200 --> 00:21.440] Silver $16.45 an ounce, Copper $2.75 an ounce, Oil, Texas Crude $55.63 a barrel, Brent Crude [00:21.440 --> 00:29.960] $62.47 a barrel, and Cryptos in order of Market Cap, Bitcoin Core $10,566.52, Ethereum $200.00 [00:29.960 --> 00:41.360] $227.26, XRP Ripple $0.33, Litecoin $100.31, and Bitcoin Cash is at $324.10 a crypto coin. [00:41.360 --> 00:52.320] Today in history, the year 1916, the preparedness day bombing, a time suitcase bomb was detonated [00:52.320 --> 00:57.800] on Market Street in San Francisco during the World War I preparedness day parade, killing [00:57.800 --> 01:04.800] 10 and injuring 40. [01:04.800 --> 01:09.440] And recent news, since Governor Greg Abbott signed House Bill 1325 legalizing Hemp and [01:09.440 --> 01:14.080] attacks his law back in June, county prosecutors around the state including Houston, Austin [01:14.080 --> 01:18.120] and San Antonio have been dropping marijuana possession charges and even refusing to file [01:18.120 --> 01:22.760] new ones since they are stipulating that they do not have the time or the laboratory equipment [01:22.760 --> 01:24.760] to test the herb for THC. [01:24.760 --> 01:28.440] Margaret Moore, the Travis County District Attorney, announced earlier this month that [01:28.440 --> 01:33.000] she was dismissing 32 felony possession and delivery of marijuana cases because of the [01:33.000 --> 01:34.000] law. [01:34.000 --> 01:37.600] Mr. Abbott and other state officials, including the Attorney General stipulated in a letter [01:37.600 --> 01:42.080] to county district attorneys back on Thursday that marijuana has not been decriminalized [01:42.080 --> 01:48.240] in Texas and that these actions demonstrate a misunderstanding of how HB 1325 works, as [01:48.240 --> 01:51.200] well as other cities too like the District Attorney. [01:51.200 --> 01:57.280] In El Paso, Kyma Esparza, a Democrat who also stated earlier this month that the law quote [01:57.280 --> 02:01.840] will not have an effect on the prosecution of marijuana cases in El Paso. [02:01.840 --> 02:06.720] However, the issue was succinctly summarized by Mr. Brandon Ball, an assistant public defender [02:06.720 --> 02:11.200] in Harris County who stated that quote, the law is constantly changing on what makes something [02:11.200 --> 02:13.440] illegal based on its chemical makeup. [02:13.440 --> 02:17.360] It's important that if someone is charged with something, the test matches with their [02:17.360 --> 02:22.600] charge with. [02:22.600 --> 02:27.240] A paper by Tulane University identified a five and a half inch American pocket shark [02:27.240 --> 02:32.360] as the first of its kind in the Gulf of Mexico, the specimen being only the second pocket [02:32.360 --> 02:38.000] shark ever captured or recorded with the other one being found way back in 1979 in the East [02:38.000 --> 02:39.500] Pacific Ocean. [02:39.500 --> 02:43.800] According to the university paper, the shark secretes a luminous fluid from a gland near [02:43.800 --> 02:50.080] its front fins for the purpose it is hypothesized to lure and prey who may be drawn into the [02:50.080 --> 03:16.920] glow. [03:16.920 --> 03:45.280] Okay, we are back, rule of law radio, Randy Kelton, I'm Brett Fountain here on Friday [03:45.280 --> 03:52.760] the 11th of December 2020 and we're talking with John in New York who has been eloquently [03:52.760 --> 03:59.520] describing all kinds of things going on in these crazy new vaccines and was just describing [03:59.520 --> 04:04.160] about the metals that are inexplicably included in these vaccines. [04:04.160 --> 04:05.160] John? [04:05.160 --> 04:12.120] Well, yeah, just to summarize it, vaccines contain a, did you ever get a, I went to the [04:12.120 --> 04:14.440] drug store, I got an insert. [04:14.440 --> 04:20.760] I asked the drugist for the pharmacist for an insert of what goes in the vaccines and [04:20.760 --> 04:24.800] they're all a little bit differently made. [04:24.800 --> 04:34.040] Some use eggs, some use aborted baby fetal cells, aborted babies, they use their cells, [04:34.040 --> 04:40.480] you probably, they call them dipoint cells and you probably know that. [04:40.480 --> 04:52.480] Let's see, and all kinds of things, formaldehyde, let's see, formaldehyde, antibiotics, viruses, [04:52.480 --> 04:59.120] great viruses get in, there was a whole thing about the polio virus getting into, or not [04:59.120 --> 05:06.520] the polio virus, but SV40 which is a cancer virus which contaminated the polio virus, [05:06.520 --> 05:08.960] polio vaccines back in 1954. [05:08.960 --> 05:15.040] I knew about it and yet they went ahead with the, they deployed them anyway, they shot [05:15.040 --> 05:21.600] up a whole bunch of kids and the director, I believe it was, of the NIH, his own grandkids, [05:21.600 --> 05:27.040] one died and one was paralyzed because he was pigheaded, they said, well, we've declared [05:27.040 --> 05:32.960] a polio vaccine safe so we've got to go ahead with it now, and well, they did and a lot [05:32.960 --> 05:38.920] of kids got paralyzed and a lot of kids died, there were lawsuits, it was a real mess. [05:38.920 --> 05:45.920] The director, I think, don't quote me, I think the director of the NIH was at him, he stepped [05:45.920 --> 05:52.040] down and they realized they had to do something for damage control, guess who they hired to [05:52.040 --> 05:58.560] do damage control to get the public's confidence back on track for the polio vaccine, none [05:58.560 --> 06:00.560] other than 1973. [06:00.560 --> 06:12.000] I don't know his name, but does it start with an F and it won't quit ending with an F? [06:12.000 --> 06:15.960] No, his name was Tricky Dickie Nixon. [06:15.960 --> 06:22.000] I didn't see that coming. [06:22.000 --> 06:31.320] Back in 1955 or so, as the PR man for the NIH to get the public back on track to have confidence [06:31.320 --> 06:38.720] in the polio vaccine because it was a mess, the kids were dying left and right, basically, [06:38.720 --> 06:43.280] most of them were getting paralyzed rather than dying, and if I remember right, let's [06:43.280 --> 06:49.520] see if I can remember the guy's name, he was the president of the NIH, was it, or the director [06:49.520 --> 06:58.800] of the NIH, I can't think of his name, but his own, he says, oh, I believe in the polio [06:58.800 --> 07:01.720] vaccine so much, I'll use my own grandkids. [07:01.720 --> 07:07.160] Yeah, a granddaughter and a grandson, one died and the other one got paralyzed because [07:07.160 --> 07:16.480] he didn't listen to his quality control lady and she said, hey, this thing is littered [07:16.480 --> 07:24.400] with FV40, you're going to have the biggest uptick episode, what do you call it, epidemic [07:24.400 --> 07:28.080] of cancer in about 30 years that the world has ever seen. [07:28.080 --> 07:30.360] Well, guess what? [07:30.360 --> 07:36.320] Back in those days, about one in 10 people roughly got cancer. [07:36.320 --> 07:43.760] Well, it came true because now today, one in three gets cancer and those are the odds [07:43.760 --> 07:45.760] and what she said came true. [07:45.760 --> 07:52.200] Well, they didn't like what she had to say, they threw her off her job, they grabbed all [07:52.200 --> 07:58.800] her paperwork, they threatened her with, I guess, a gag order and because she told the [07:58.800 --> 08:01.320] truth, well, anyhow, you know how that is. [08:01.320 --> 08:05.800] Now, I do have one, if you want to know any more about vaccines, I'll be glad to go on, [08:05.800 --> 08:11.120] but I got a feeling that you probably, you've got other callers. [08:11.120 --> 08:19.640] I did have just one question for a ticket that somebody got in Iowa, in 2005, if you [08:19.640 --> 08:25.600] want any more information on vaccines, I can get into it, but in 2005, someone from New [08:25.600 --> 08:32.080] York state got a speeding ticket in the state of Iowa and now there's a law firm 15 years [08:32.080 --> 08:35.640] later that's still collecting for the municipality. [08:35.640 --> 08:41.680] Now, Iowa is not a reciprocal state with New York, so there's not an awful lot that [08:41.680 --> 08:43.920] Iowa can do about it. [08:43.920 --> 08:50.080] Is there, just for the sake of knowing, not that they can collect on it because they can't, [08:50.080 --> 08:56.360] is there a statute of limitation for how long they can collect on a traffic ticket and does [08:56.360 --> 08:58.840] it vary from state to state? [08:58.840 --> 09:04.120] I mean, if the state of New York told me I had a ticket from 15 years ago, what would [09:04.120 --> 09:06.000] I tell them? [09:06.000 --> 09:14.240] Well, if it were me, I would be looking, not just for across the state line, but does Iowa [09:14.240 --> 09:22.280] have any kind of a rule that says that they have a statute of limitations for a crime? [09:22.280 --> 09:27.880] So if they have to come up with the appropriate paperwork by, so let's say two years, that's [09:27.880 --> 09:32.880] what it'll be in Texas, two years, if they don't get the proper paperwork that's prescribed [09:32.880 --> 09:39.200] by law in front of a court, by two years, well, too late. [09:39.200 --> 09:48.600] They can't start it 15 years later, they have to at least get the, okay, I'm not the debt [09:48.600 --> 09:54.440] collection guy, but my recall is on any debt you've got seven years. [09:54.440 --> 09:57.880] Yeah, in New York state it would be six. [09:57.880 --> 10:01.680] Yeah, I can tell you that from experience. [10:01.680 --> 10:02.680] You're right. [10:02.680 --> 10:09.200] Okay, that's right, because this has been turned into a debt to a lawyer who's acting [10:09.200 --> 10:10.760] as a collection agent. [10:10.760 --> 10:13.400] So would that apply? [10:13.400 --> 10:17.160] Would the Fair Debt Collection Practices Act and the statute of limitations for the state [10:17.160 --> 10:19.840] apply to that? [10:19.840 --> 10:26.840] Generally, when someone is collecting for a state agency, the consumer protection laws [10:26.840 --> 10:27.840] do not apply. [10:27.840 --> 10:32.440] That's what I was given to understand, yeah. [10:32.440 --> 10:36.480] So this collection agency can keep on trying to collect? [10:36.480 --> 10:44.680] Well, you can still hammer the agency, you can tell them not to call you anymore and [10:44.680 --> 10:48.240] then when they call you, you can sue them for a thousand bucks a call. [10:48.240 --> 10:50.920] Yeah, yeah, that's what I did. [10:50.920 --> 10:53.040] That's something I will start putting together. [10:53.040 --> 11:03.480] I'm putting together an online tool that will provide most of this information so you can [11:03.480 --> 11:09.960] go online, ask a few questions, and it will start developing documents for like for credit [11:09.960 --> 11:11.840] repair and such. [11:11.840 --> 11:17.960] We'll be working on that, actually Brett's helping me with part of it. [11:17.960 --> 11:23.400] So we'll have that before and long, but right now I don't at this time. [11:23.400 --> 11:29.560] I was looking into credit repair and there are a lot of problems with credit repair is [11:29.560 --> 11:39.200] the credit factions have gotten a lot of restrictions putting on anybody who tries to help you with [11:39.200 --> 11:40.680] credit issues. [11:40.680 --> 11:47.000] They can't charge you anything until they finish, they read these things, it says there's [11:47.000 --> 11:56.720] nothing you can do and stuff put out by government agencies and Experion and the other quite [11:56.720 --> 12:02.040] reporting agencies, they've got these little verbs that says anything these companies can [12:02.040 --> 12:08.600] do, you can do yourself, well, they don't tell you everything. [12:08.600 --> 12:14.840] They don't even speak to the credit collection agencies using improper practices and John, [12:14.840 --> 12:18.000] you ought to know about that, you used to do that. [12:18.000 --> 12:23.240] Now can we do that, can we go after these lawyers who are acting as a collection agency [12:23.240 --> 12:29.080] in that regard when they call and they tell them not to call by letter and then they call, [12:29.080 --> 12:30.640] we can hit them with a violation? [12:30.640 --> 12:37.600] Yes, keep a log of that, I think it went up to $1,500. [12:37.600 --> 12:42.160] So we can treat them just like any other collection agency, even though they're collecting for [12:42.160 --> 12:43.160] a state agency? [12:43.160 --> 12:46.600] Yeah, let them make that argument in court. [12:46.600 --> 12:59.520] After you go ahead and vargarize them and file a complaint against them under FDCPA or FCRA. [12:59.520 --> 13:04.640] What would you use as a basis, the six year statute of limitations? [13:04.640 --> 13:10.080] No, just the fact that they called and you told them not to, you send them a debt validation [13:10.080 --> 13:11.080] letter. [13:11.080 --> 13:14.080] A non-existent debt and they're harassing me. [13:14.080 --> 13:21.400] Yeah, I've got one that they're on my credit record for $50 at Beals. [13:21.400 --> 13:26.760] My wife was buying some stuff and I put it on my card and I paid it and they've been [13:26.760 --> 13:29.200] trying to collect it for six, seven years. [13:29.200 --> 13:32.680] Oh yeah, my relative had the same problem. [13:32.680 --> 13:38.080] He paid a doctor and then they wanted to get paid again. [13:38.080 --> 13:39.080] I loved it. [13:39.080 --> 13:45.720] It was a real joke that came from a doctor's office. [13:45.720 --> 13:49.680] So treat them just like any other collection agency, the law will apply. [13:49.680 --> 13:50.680] Yeah. [13:50.680 --> 13:58.160] Well, it'll either apply or they'll have to go to court so it doesn't. [13:58.160 --> 14:04.960] In the real world we live in, these guys know it's very costly for you to go to court or [14:04.960 --> 14:08.880] for most people who don't know anything about it, they have to go hire a lawyer and it costs [14:08.880 --> 14:10.240] a lot of money. [14:10.240 --> 14:13.800] So 99.9% of the people won't do that. [14:13.800 --> 14:23.480] So we be that 0.1% that does and we hammer them good and that's what this shows about. [14:23.480 --> 14:25.040] It's not all about the law. [14:25.040 --> 14:27.760] It's a lot of us just about the money and the politics. [14:27.760 --> 14:28.760] Politics. [14:28.760 --> 14:29.760] Yeah. [14:29.760 --> 14:35.200] So go after them, bark, grieve them and get them to call you when you told them my letter [14:35.200 --> 14:36.200] not to. [14:36.200 --> 14:42.080] Yeah, and take a leaf out of Deborah's book and file a complaint with a better business [14:42.080 --> 14:43.080] bureau. [14:43.080 --> 14:49.520] She did that on a company and it really, really worked. [14:49.520 --> 14:52.800] So there's a lot of dirty rotten things you can do. [14:52.800 --> 14:53.800] Okay. [14:53.800 --> 14:56.320] Just treat them like a regular collection debt then. [14:56.320 --> 14:57.320] Okay. [14:57.320 --> 14:58.320] Yep. [14:58.320 --> 15:00.880] Then if they're lawyers, they're low hanging fruit. [15:00.880 --> 15:02.480] No, I know. [15:02.480 --> 15:03.480] I know. [15:03.480 --> 15:04.480] They got bar card. [15:04.480 --> 15:05.480] Yeah. [15:05.480 --> 15:08.280] And not only that, they have a lot of restrictions. [15:08.280 --> 15:14.720] You can coax them into doing something stupid like doing a hard pull on your credit once [15:14.720 --> 15:15.720] they're in collection. [15:15.720 --> 15:16.720] That's a felony. [15:16.720 --> 15:17.720] Yeah. [15:17.720 --> 15:25.200] You were mentioning, you've always mentioned that and it sounds like the debt is in collection [15:25.200 --> 15:26.200] now. [15:26.200 --> 15:29.800] They gave it to an attorney who's acting as a collection agency. [15:29.800 --> 15:33.000] So you would think that that's in collection now, correct? [15:33.000 --> 15:39.600] If they have sold the debt to the lawyer, then he's no longer collecting for the governmental [15:39.600 --> 15:42.000] agencies, collecting for himself. [15:42.000 --> 15:43.000] Yeah. [15:43.000 --> 15:44.000] That's right. [15:44.000 --> 15:47.200] And so you can go after him anyway. [15:47.200 --> 15:50.720] If he's collecting for the agency, let him prove it up. [15:50.720 --> 15:51.720] Yeah. [15:51.720 --> 15:52.720] Okay. [15:52.720 --> 15:53.720] All right. [15:53.720 --> 15:59.600] And then every time he files a motion or a pleading, bar grieve him for it. [15:59.600 --> 16:00.600] And his superiors. [16:00.600 --> 16:04.280] Yeah, the whole law firm. [16:04.280 --> 16:07.400] I got that from a guy. [16:07.400 --> 16:14.280] So I would have to look up the law and see in Iowa if they have a statute of limitations, [16:14.280 --> 16:17.080] how long they can collect on a debt such as this. [16:17.080 --> 16:18.080] Yeah. [16:18.080 --> 16:25.440] And guys, with the internet, looking up the law is, you listen here, we're doing the show [16:25.440 --> 16:34.160] and Ted in Utah, Benches issue in Utah and while we're talking, Brett digs down in the [16:34.160 --> 16:39.640] law and comes up with the exact statute he needs from Utah. [16:39.640 --> 16:43.120] It's not that hard. [16:43.120 --> 16:53.360] I had a woman call me for several months asking me if you could record people in Florida without [16:53.360 --> 16:54.360] telling them. [16:54.360 --> 17:00.200] And I told her, I know you can't in Texas, but I don't know about Florida and after. [17:00.200 --> 17:05.520] Are you being harassed by debt collectors with phone calls, letters, or even lawsuits? [17:05.520 --> 17:09.040] Stop debt collectors now with the Michael Meyers proven method. [17:09.040 --> 17:13.360] Michael Meyers has won six cases in federal court against debt collectors and now you [17:13.360 --> 17:14.360] can win two. [17:14.360 --> 17:19.160] You'll get step-by-step instructions in plain English on how to win in court using federal [17:19.160 --> 17:20.160] civil rights statute. [17:20.160 --> 17:24.520] What to do when contacted by phones, mail, or court summons? [17:24.520 --> 17:26.520] How to answer letters and phone calls? [17:26.520 --> 17:29.160] How to get debt collectors out of your credit report? [17:29.160 --> 17:33.800] How to turn the financial tables on them and make them pay you to go away? [17:33.800 --> 17:38.920] The Michael Meyers proven method is the solution for how to stop debt collectors. [17:38.920 --> 17:41.040] Personal consultation is available as well. [17:41.040 --> 17:46.600] For more information, please visit ruleoflawradio.com and click on the blue Michael Meyers banner [17:46.600 --> 17:49.600] or email Michael Meyers at yahoo.com. [17:49.600 --> 17:58.520] This is 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 [17:58.520 --> 17:59.520] collectors now. [17:59.520 --> 18:04.600] Rule of Law Radio is proud to offer the Rule of Law Traffic Seminar. [18:04.600 --> 18:08.200] In today's America, we live in an us against them society and if we the people are ever [18:08.200 --> 18:12.000] going to have a free society, then we're going to have to stand and defend our own rights. [18:12.000 --> 18:15.360] Among those rights are the right to travel freely from place to place, the right to [18:15.360 --> 18:19.200] act in our own private capacity, and most importantly, the right to due process of law. [18:19.200 --> 18:23.520] The traffic courts afford us the least expensive opportunity to learn how to enforce and preserve [18:23.520 --> 18:25.040] our rights through due process. 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[18:54.160 --> 19:24.120] Order your copy today and together we can have free society we all want and deserve. [19:24.120 --> 19:48.320] Okay, we are back, Randy Kelton, Brett Frountain, Rule of Law Radio, and we're talking to John [19:48.320 --> 20:04.800] in New York and Brett's doing a little digging on statute of limitations and traffic in Iowa. [20:04.800 --> 20:08.720] Everybody's always asking about what law this, what law that, and that's great because this [20:08.720 --> 20:14.840] is Rule of Law Radio, that's what we do, but we always want people to remember. [20:14.840 --> 20:21.440] We look at these guys and they do this all day, so they have a lot of things stacked [20:21.440 --> 20:22.440] against us. [20:22.440 --> 20:26.680] Well, we've got some things of our own. [20:26.680 --> 20:33.640] We don't always have to think about, if I make this claim, can I win it at the end of [20:33.640 --> 20:34.640] the day? [20:34.640 --> 20:39.560] I think of it a little different. [20:39.560 --> 20:45.160] How much am I going to cost them fighting me on this issue? [20:45.160 --> 20:51.880] I don't care if I win or not, it's all about the money, so we cost them a lot of money. [20:51.880 --> 20:58.280] They have to start doing little research and every time they do, I bar grieve them and [20:58.280 --> 21:03.840] it raises their cost, so there's more than one way to look at this. [21:03.840 --> 21:11.320] How can we drag them into court on and beat them up with? [21:11.320 --> 21:18.800] Maybe I should build a tool that will automatically produce a better business bureau complaint. [21:18.800 --> 21:22.120] That's an idea. [21:22.120 --> 21:25.920] That really worked. [21:25.920 --> 21:32.040] Every time I've used better business bureau, I had a $6,000 special made leather couch [21:32.040 --> 21:33.240] the wife bought. [21:33.240 --> 21:35.240] They couldn't sit on it. [21:35.240 --> 21:40.760] They made a couch that the cushions were real hard and they tipped forward, so as you're [21:40.760 --> 21:43.320] sitting there, you scoot forward on the couch. [21:43.320 --> 21:47.920] We had them up four or five times to try to fix it, finally told them, come get it, and [21:47.920 --> 21:52.640] they said there'd be a 40% restocking charge. [21:52.640 --> 21:55.880] I called them and said, no, they won't. [21:55.880 --> 22:00.720] Read the better business bureau complaint tomorrow. [22:00.720 --> 22:03.880] By noon, they called us. [22:03.880 --> 22:05.200] When can we pick it up? [22:05.200 --> 22:08.480] We have your $6,000 check. [22:08.480 --> 22:12.480] They couldn't get that fast enough. [22:12.480 --> 22:20.240] Then when you do that, then you write a response saying that it was settled. [22:20.240 --> 22:23.440] That's factually resolved, yeah. [22:23.440 --> 22:24.440] But it never goes away. [22:24.440 --> 22:27.440] It stays on there anyway. [22:27.440 --> 22:40.600] I accidentally mailed a box of soap to somebody and got this company's address on it somehow. [22:40.600 --> 22:50.560] They got it and it was a white powder I got a call from a Fort Worth police officer about [22:50.560 --> 22:51.560] that. [22:51.560 --> 22:52.560] Oh, it's really good soap. [22:52.560 --> 23:02.560] Maybe they thought I was trying to get back at them, but that was an honest mistake. [23:02.560 --> 23:07.560] They got really excited. [23:07.560 --> 23:16.160] Oh, I wanted to mention, I just wanted to go back and tell you, MIT, Massachusetts Institute [23:16.160 --> 23:19.040] of Technology has developed. [23:19.040 --> 23:21.400] You're ready for this? [23:21.400 --> 23:27.520] You know this already, you know the RFID chip they want to stick in everybody's hand? [23:27.520 --> 23:28.520] Yes. [23:28.520 --> 23:33.400] Well, they've got liquid chips now that go into the vaccine. [23:33.400 --> 23:35.960] Yes, I know about that. [23:35.960 --> 23:39.440] You know about the liquid chips. [23:39.440 --> 23:40.440] Yeah. [23:40.440 --> 23:42.440] What do you think? [23:42.440 --> 23:46.280] It's not really like an RFID chip. [23:46.280 --> 23:51.360] They can shine a certain frequency of light on you and you'll glow in that light. [23:51.360 --> 23:53.240] So they can see if you've had it. [23:53.240 --> 23:59.880] It doesn't really transmit anything like the RFID chip does and that is in the vaccine. [23:59.880 --> 24:05.280] That way when I give it to you, they can just look at you with a set of glasses and tell [24:05.280 --> 24:07.600] you if you had it. [24:07.600 --> 24:11.360] I think it's for more than one reason though. [24:11.360 --> 24:16.200] I have been reading about how they get inside your head. [24:16.200 --> 24:25.840] They can transmit certain frequencies, usually high one, and modulate them with certain sound [24:25.840 --> 24:38.880] and produce emotions like anger, calm, excited, crying, and what they're trying to do. [24:38.880 --> 24:43.240] This is going to sound like I'm wearing a tinfoil hat now. [24:43.240 --> 24:47.160] They are trying to, I don't know how much you know about this, but there's what they [24:47.160 --> 24:53.920] call the end of the human age and we're going into transhumanism. [24:53.920 --> 24:58.520] They want to combine just like you see that I am the terminator. [24:58.520 --> 25:04.560] I'm here to protect you, says Arnold Schwarzenegger. [25:04.560 --> 25:19.600] They're trying to, well done, no problemo, anyway, what they're trying to do is combine [25:19.600 --> 25:21.200] machines with humans. [25:21.200 --> 25:23.120] They've been trying to do that for a long time. [25:23.120 --> 25:29.680] They want to make super soldiers who can exist on two hours of sleep and that's what this [25:29.680 --> 25:33.280] whole thing with the vaccines is all about. [25:33.280 --> 25:40.000] They're trying to alter the genetic code in humans, DNA, RNA, and you know as well as [25:40.000 --> 25:47.880] I do what happens when you mess with the DNA, you're asking for cancer, you're asking for [25:47.880 --> 25:53.000] birth defects down the road, and you think that they've bothered to test these vaccines? [25:53.000 --> 25:59.400] Okay, here's the problem, John, you know, it's like when we're doing the show several [25:59.400 --> 26:07.440] years ago people were concerned about us losing our anonymity, about all of our information [26:07.440 --> 26:13.920] getting out into the public, and I told everybody, guys, that horse got out of the barn 20 years [26:13.920 --> 26:17.680] ago, way too late for that. [26:17.680 --> 26:23.840] John, this horse is out of the barn, it has been for a long time. [26:23.840 --> 26:29.880] This is coming, we're not going to be able to stop it and we're not going to be able [26:29.880 --> 26:39.400] to hide from it, it will be everywhere, just like everybody's got cars, this will be everywhere, [26:39.400 --> 26:45.000] it's coming, we just have to find a way to moderate it and keep it from killing all [26:45.000 --> 26:46.000] of us. [26:46.000 --> 26:51.040] Well that's what they want to do, they want to flip a switch and kill people, and I'm [26:51.040 --> 26:55.840] okay, I can't say that, I don't know who they are, and I've been hearing that stuff [26:55.840 --> 27:00.960] for a very long time, along with a lot of other things that didn't happen, I don't like [27:00.960 --> 27:06.520] those kinds of generalities unless we have something to support them. [27:06.520 --> 27:13.840] There was a lot of concern about overpopulation, and there's groups out there that still have [27:13.840 --> 27:22.600] this concern and they don't realize that what has emerged with improved technology is the [27:22.600 --> 27:28.960] real problem will be the human race not reproducing enough to maintain itself. [27:28.960 --> 27:38.400] It's already happening in Europe, we're closing in on non-growth, Europe's already close to [27:38.400 --> 27:45.280] the point of what statistically is no return, people aren't having as many kids because [27:45.280 --> 27:51.920] kids are so expensive, you don't need six or eight kids when you're not an agrarian [27:51.920 --> 27:56.560] in society where you're working on a farm, two people can't make it on a farm but six [27:56.560 --> 28:03.040] can, so when we've come out of third world nation status people stop having as many [28:03.040 --> 28:07.120] kids and it looks like we're going to depopulate ourselves. [28:07.120 --> 28:14.280] China already did that, they had the one child rule and now they're here. [28:14.280 --> 28:20.200] It turned out to be a bad idea because now they're becoming an industrial nation and [28:20.200 --> 28:24.360] they don't have enough workers and they're trying to pull in workers from all over the [28:24.360 --> 28:25.360] planet. [28:25.360 --> 28:28.920] And they're turning them into slaves, doing it. [28:28.920 --> 28:35.440] And the problem here has always been the case, the problem is as third world nations [28:35.440 --> 28:41.920] rise out of third world nation status, they'll stop having more children too. [28:41.920 --> 28:49.080] And what we're looking at 20, 30 years down the road is populations decreasing all of [28:49.080 --> 28:56.320] their own, we don't need a virus, I mean a vaccine to wipe out the population, we're [28:56.320 --> 28:59.200] going to do that ourselves. [28:59.200 --> 29:04.680] And the pattern is already establishing so it's very clear to all of these people who [29:04.680 --> 29:10.360] are concerned about population density, it's very clear to them the population is decreasing [29:10.360 --> 29:12.640] and it's going to continue to do so. [29:12.640 --> 29:17.360] So that's my story and I'm sticking to it. [29:17.360 --> 29:21.800] Okay, I'm sure you've got a board full of callers, I don't want to take up any more [29:21.800 --> 29:27.480] time but the liquid chips, oh yeah, they want to be able to flip a switch and kill people, [29:27.480 --> 29:28.480] that's a fact. [29:28.480 --> 29:31.480] That's not a fact, that's speculation. [29:31.480 --> 29:36.480] No, no, I can show you, I'll have to send you this. [29:36.480 --> 29:42.960] John, before you go, we're about to go to sponsors but before you go I did want to just offer [29:42.960 --> 29:46.880] you this Iowa code just real quickly. [29:46.880 --> 29:54.480] It's section 802.4, simple misdemeanor, one year, they have to commence prosecution within [29:54.480 --> 29:55.960] one year after commission. [29:55.960 --> 30:01.160] Okay, hold on, we'll be right back. [30:01.160 --> 30:05.600] Everyone knows that walking is great exercise but you might not know that the way you walk [30:05.600 --> 30:07.720] could predict how long you're going to live. [30:07.720 --> 30:12.960] I'm Dr. Tathrin Albrecht and I'll be back to tell you more about walking prognostication [30:12.960 --> 30:14.640] in just a moment. [30:14.640 --> 30:19.000] Privacy is under attack, when you give up data about yourself you'll never get it back [30:19.000 --> 30:24.600] again and once your privacy is gone you'll find your freedoms will start to vanish too. [30:24.600 --> 30:30.200] So protect your rights, say no to surveillance and keep your information to yourself. [30:30.200 --> 30:32.400] Privacy, it's worth hanging on to. [30:32.400 --> 30:36.720] This public service announcement is brought to you by StartPage.com, the private search [30:36.720 --> 30:40.200] engine alternative to Google, Yahoo and Bing. [30:40.200 --> 30:43.520] Start over with StartPage. [30:43.520 --> 30:47.920] New research shows how fast you walk could predict how long you're going to live. [30:47.920 --> 30:52.520] The Journal of the American Medical Association reports that older adults who walk one meter [30:52.520 --> 30:55.720] per second or faster live longer than expected. [30:55.720 --> 31:00.160] In case you're wondering, one meter per second is about two and a quarter miles per hour. [31:00.160 --> 31:05.280] A senior's age, gender and walking speed were as good at predicting life expectancy as more [31:05.280 --> 31:07.200] traditional statistical measures. [31:07.200 --> 31:10.480] Generally speaking, faster walkers live longer. [31:10.480 --> 31:15.400] Measuring walking speed is quick and inexpensive, it only takes a stopwatch, some space to walk [31:15.400 --> 31:16.840] in a few minutes. [31:16.840 --> 31:21.000] Researchers say it could help doctors identify older patients who need special care. [31:21.000 --> 31:26.400] I'm Dr. Catherine Albrecht, more news and information at CatherineAlbrecht.com. [31:51.000 --> 32:05.680] Logos Radio Network welcomes a new show to our lineup for the new year. [32:05.680 --> 32:11.880] Scripture Talk with Nana will begin Wednesday, January 8th from 8 to 10 p.m. central time. [32:11.880 --> 32:14.960] Our goal is in accord with Matthew 516. [32:14.960 --> 32:20.000] Let your light so shine before men that they may see your good works and glorify your father [32:20.000 --> 32:21.560] which is in heaven. [32:21.560 --> 32:26.680] We wish to reflect God's light and be a blessing to all those with a hearing ear. [32:26.680 --> 32:31.920] Join Nana and guests for both verse by verse Bible studies and topical Bible studies designed [32:31.920 --> 32:35.040] to provoke unto love and good works. [32:35.040 --> 32:39.440] Our verse by verse Bible studies will begin in the book of Matthew where we will discuss [32:39.440 --> 32:41.200] one chapter per week. [32:41.200 --> 32:46.280] Our topical Bible studies will vary each week and will explore sound doctrine as well as [32:46.280 --> 32:48.480] Christian character development. [32:48.480 --> 32:56.120] So mark your calendar and join us live on LogosRadioNetwork.com Wednesdays from 8 to 10 p.m. starting January [32:56.120 --> 33:02.200] 8th for an inspiring and motivating discussion of the Scriptures. [33:02.200 --> 33:32.040] Live Free Speech Radio LogosRadioNetwork.com [33:32.200 --> 34:02.080] Okay, we are back, Randy Kelton, Brett Fountain Ruella Radio, we're going to dunk John like [34:02.080 --> 34:04.080] a hot rock. [34:04.080 --> 34:06.440] John, I need you to do something for me. [34:06.440 --> 34:08.440] I didn't do that good at the end of the break. [34:08.440 --> 34:09.440] Say, I'll be back. [34:09.440 --> 34:10.440] I'll be back. [34:10.440 --> 34:11.440] Very good. [34:11.440 --> 34:12.440] Thank you, John. [34:12.440 --> 34:13.440] Now we're going to Tina in California. [34:13.440 --> 34:14.440] Hello, Tina. [34:14.440 --> 34:28.360] Hello, Randy and Brett and John and Scott and everybody. [34:28.360 --> 34:37.880] I was watching a movie today about Henry V and they used the term churlish. [34:37.880 --> 34:39.200] Very churlish. [34:39.200 --> 34:46.640] Henry was a nasty man. [34:46.640 --> 34:49.040] What do you have for us today? [34:49.040 --> 34:58.560] Well, I wanted to share something I heard today about the COVID issue and it's from someone [34:58.560 --> 35:06.480] here in California, a very dear friend of mine in more Northern California, who has [35:06.480 --> 35:14.400] a very close friend who, you know, had a grandparent in a nursing home and they were in [35:14.400 --> 35:25.720] a very nice private facility because they, you know, had some wealth and this grandparent [35:25.720 --> 35:35.080] was tested every few days, you know, for COVID and every time it came back negative. [35:35.080 --> 35:42.280] And they finally passed away at the age of 90 something from Alzheimer's because that's [35:42.280 --> 35:45.440] what they were in the facility for. [35:45.440 --> 35:54.480] And three days before the death, they had tested negative for COVID but the death certificate [35:54.480 --> 35:59.000] said they died of COVID. [35:59.000 --> 36:05.120] And this person was enraged, she's like, no, they didn't. [36:05.120 --> 36:06.120] They tested it. [36:06.120 --> 36:12.080] I have the results from every test you have given them and it's negative. [36:12.080 --> 36:17.880] You can't tell me on the death certificate that they died of COVID two days or three [36:17.880 --> 36:19.840] days after testing negative. [36:19.840 --> 36:26.040] It turns out from what they learned and I'm, the truth here is say I know because I'm not [36:26.040 --> 36:35.160] privy to the whole thing that this particular facility, like perhaps many others, gets paid [36:35.160 --> 36:44.120] a lot more from reporting a COVID death than a regular Alzheimer's death. [36:44.120 --> 36:47.920] Thirty, $39,000 is the last I heard. [36:47.920 --> 36:50.560] Oh, I thought it was 37. [36:50.560 --> 36:59.600] Yeah, something similar to that whereas a regular is like, you know, $2,500. [36:59.600 --> 37:05.240] And I just was, you know, it's really frosting me here because, you know, there's so many [37:05.240 --> 37:10.440] people that are panicking and worried and, you know, even my own partner, oh, well, when [37:10.440 --> 37:16.440] we get the vaccine, we'll be all safe, I heard you and I talked to the court this morning, [37:16.440 --> 37:21.160] you know, they just, the guy who helped me, you know, with the transcript issue and he [37:21.160 --> 37:24.760] said, oh, yeah, we're going to be okay when the vaccine comes in, we're all going to be [37:24.760 --> 37:26.760] okay. [37:26.760 --> 37:32.200] I didn't want to burst his bubble but he didn't say anything, yeah, I'm sure we will. [37:32.200 --> 37:38.920] So they, you know, I mean, I'm hearing that this was, this was a person who's extremely [37:38.920 --> 37:47.960] credible, worked for Google as an accountant until they got laid off early this year. [37:47.960 --> 37:53.960] She's definitely a strong supporter, highly, highly educated. [37:53.960 --> 37:59.680] You know, just someone you would, that people in California would never think would be a [37:59.680 --> 38:00.680] Trump supporter. [38:00.680 --> 38:04.480] You look at her and you think there's no way. [38:04.480 --> 38:10.560] And she said, you know, I've seen the writing on the wall and she said, her son is a, some [38:10.560 --> 38:18.720] kind of physicist, you know, scientist who's doing this and he told her, he said, mom, [38:18.720 --> 38:21.000] do not take a vaccine. [38:21.000 --> 38:27.000] He said, I am not taking it, I refuse, I don't care what they say, it is not safe, I'm not [38:27.000 --> 38:28.000] taking it. [38:28.000 --> 38:36.720] You know, I mean, her son is probably in his late 20s, you know, PhD, you know, newly [38:36.720 --> 38:43.640] admitted and he's telling her absolutely no way on earth. [38:43.640 --> 38:44.640] You need to take this. [38:44.640 --> 38:45.640] So what is that? [38:45.640 --> 38:50.160] Why is that telling us, you know, you hear from John, you hear from you. [38:50.160 --> 38:57.160] I mean, why is it people are bought into this hype of, oh my God, we're all going to be [38:57.160 --> 39:00.160] saved when the vaccine comes in. [39:00.160 --> 39:13.640] There is a large segment of the population who, their focus is somewhere else. [39:13.640 --> 39:21.640] You're on this show because you're a skeptic is because you don't buy what you've been [39:21.640 --> 39:22.640] hearing. [39:22.640 --> 39:32.120] But a large portion of the population, their focus is elsewhere and they can't know everything. [39:32.120 --> 39:38.960] So there has to be areas where we trust and accept what we're told. [39:38.960 --> 39:46.160] You have had experience, hard experience to demonstrate that those people in positions [39:46.160 --> 39:51.000] of power and influence don't always tell you the truth and they're not always looking [39:51.000 --> 39:52.920] out for your self-interest. [39:52.920 --> 39:58.600] But large portion of the public is not that way. [39:58.600 --> 40:08.680] American Revolution, 3% supported the revolution, it's always been a small portion, the rest [40:08.680 --> 40:10.760] everybody else. [40:10.760 --> 40:16.720] I hate to call people sheep and say they're just mindless because they're not. [40:16.720 --> 40:23.920] They're busy with their own issues and we haven't been able to get their attention yet. [40:23.920 --> 40:26.360] Once you get their attention, then they'll listen. [40:26.360 --> 40:33.920] But in order for someone to accept that what everything they're hearing on the news and [40:33.920 --> 40:40.240] everything you're hearing from the public officials is untrue, they have to accept [40:40.240 --> 40:46.560] that they're on their own, that they don't have this protection, they always thought [40:46.560 --> 40:49.400] their country brought to them. [40:49.400 --> 40:53.200] So it's hard to get people to accept that. [40:53.200 --> 40:55.200] We're dealing with cognitive dissonance. [40:55.200 --> 40:58.680] Is it that way? [40:58.680 --> 41:00.920] They don't want to believe that. [41:00.920 --> 41:04.360] Yeah, don't force me to believe it. [41:04.360 --> 41:06.080] They believe that we can be, yeah. [41:06.080 --> 41:14.160] They don't want to be told that everything they've believed the whole life is fake. [41:14.160 --> 41:18.680] They don't want to be told that they have followed the wrong path. [41:18.680 --> 41:19.680] They don't want to... [41:19.680 --> 41:29.040] I mean, I was talking to my partner today, well, I tried to, I said I tried to talk to [41:29.040 --> 41:30.040] them. [41:30.040 --> 41:38.600] I've been researching a lot and been sent a lot of information from doctors and researchers [41:38.600 --> 41:50.320] and also John about the effect of vitamin D with K2 and other things on helping to prevent. [41:50.320 --> 41:51.320] It doesn't... [41:51.320 --> 41:53.240] Nothing can actually totally prevent. [41:53.240 --> 41:59.120] It helps to prevent and helps if you've got COVID. [41:59.120 --> 42:05.680] And the more I researched when I was sent all this and the more I looked into the information, [42:05.680 --> 42:15.880] vitamin D is very, very helpful and they said that the reports I was reading said that most [42:15.880 --> 42:21.840] of the reason that people get flu and cold weather isn't because of the cold, it's because [42:21.840 --> 42:28.840] they lack vitamin D in the winter because you get more of it in the sunshine. [42:28.840 --> 42:34.680] And it seems to make sense, everything I've read and I just tried to just suggest, hey, [42:34.680 --> 42:37.880] do you want to take some of the vitamin D I'm taking? [42:37.880 --> 42:44.600] Oh, it's all hogwash, it's quackery, it's this and I don't want to believe it. [42:44.600 --> 42:46.760] It's a simple vitamin. [42:46.760 --> 42:48.760] Can it harm you? [42:48.760 --> 42:54.080] No, not unless you take it in massive, massive doses. [42:54.080 --> 42:56.080] Can it possibly help you? [42:56.080 --> 42:57.080] Yes. [42:57.080 --> 43:04.120] But this is an MIT graduate who refuses to look at this, who refuses to accept that there [43:04.120 --> 43:14.320] might be some natural, potential vitamin that might help, absolutely refuses to see it. [43:14.320 --> 43:18.960] How do you get through to someone who's supposed to be so smart and an MIT graduate who refuses [43:18.960 --> 43:19.960] to look? [43:19.960 --> 43:25.520] It's a good question. [43:25.520 --> 43:30.840] Something I've dealt with the whole time I've done this show. [43:30.840 --> 43:38.400] There are a lot of tools that I use that I don't talk about very often for that purpose. [43:38.400 --> 43:41.120] Those people I'm trying to reach kind of make some nervous. [43:41.120 --> 43:43.520] Something off the plate, Brandy. [43:43.520 --> 43:46.440] We will be right back. [43:46.440 --> 43:50.000] I'm stuck, I need John back here to do that. [43:50.000 --> 43:51.000] Okay. [43:51.000 --> 43:55.280] This is Brandy Keltner, Brett Fountain, rule of law radio. [43:55.280 --> 44:00.480] I call it number 512-646-1984. [44:00.480 --> 44:06.520] Through advances in technology, our lives have greatly improved, except in the area of nutrition. [44:06.520 --> 44:11.280] People feed their pets better than they feed themselves, and it's time we changed all that. [44:11.280 --> 44:17.560] Our primary defense against aging and disease in this toxic environment is good nutrition. [44:17.560 --> 44:22.360] In a world where natural foods have been irradiated, adulterated, and mutilated, young [44:22.360 --> 44:25.800] Jevity can provide the nutrients you need. [44:25.800 --> 44:31.520] Logo radio network gets many requests to endorse all sorts of products, most of which we reject. [44:31.520 --> 44:36.800] We have come to trust Jevity so much, we became a marketing distributor, along with [44:36.800 --> 44:39.560] Alex Jones, Ben Fuchs, and many others. [44:39.560 --> 44:45.920] When you order from LogoRadioNetwork.com, your health will improve as you help support [44:45.920 --> 44:47.560] quality radio. [44:47.560 --> 44:53.040] As you realize the benefits of young Jevity, you may want to join us as a distributor. [44:53.040 --> 44:59.080] You can experience improved health, help your friends and family, and increase your income. [44:59.080 --> 45:00.080] Order now. [45:00.080 --> 45:04.080] Are you the plaintiff or defendant in a lawsuit? [45:04.080 --> 45:11.000] Win your case without an attorney with Jurisdictionary, the affordable, easy-to-understand 4-CD course [45:11.000 --> 45:14.000] that will show you how in 24 hours, step-by-step. [45:14.000 --> 45:18.720] If you have a lawyer, know what your lawyer should be doing. [45:18.720 --> 45:23.000] If you don't have a lawyer, know what you should do for yourself. [45:23.000 --> 45:27.920] Thousands have won with our step-by-step course, and now you can too. [45:27.920 --> 45:34.600] Jurisdictionary was created by a licensed attorney with 22 years of case-winning experience. [45:34.600 --> 45:39.040] Even if you're not in a lawsuit, you can learn what everyone should understand about [45:39.040 --> 45:43.440] the principles and practices that control our American courts. [45:43.440 --> 45:49.680] You'll receive our audio classroom, video seminar, tutorials, forms for civil cases, [45:49.680 --> 45:52.040] prosa tactics, and much more. [45:52.040 --> 45:56.320] Please visit ruleoflawradio.com and click on the banner. [45:56.320 --> 46:22.320] Or call toll-free 866-LAW-E-Z. [46:22.320 --> 46:28.880] Yes, always I must be careful what I'm wishing for. [46:28.880 --> 46:35.000] When I'm hungry, I like to know just what I'm wishing for. [46:35.000 --> 46:40.720] I ain't asking for much, I ain't trying to be no glutton. [46:40.720 --> 46:47.280] I'm just here making my living, pushing buttons. [46:47.280 --> 47:02.720] Alright, we are back, rule of law radio, Randy Kelton, I'm Brett Fountain on this Friday [47:02.720 --> 47:09.360] the 11th of December 2020 and we are talking with Tina in California. [47:09.360 --> 47:11.640] Tina, go ahead. [47:11.640 --> 47:19.280] Well, I was just kind of wondering what the heck is going on with this, you know, people [47:19.280 --> 47:26.800] not understanding or not wanting to, not wanting to understand or listen to alternatives. [47:26.800 --> 47:32.400] They, you know, I mean my partner is a prime example. [47:32.400 --> 47:41.720] She is definitely in the high risk group for age and past medical history and on high blood [47:41.720 --> 47:50.840] pressure medication, but very, very educated men who, if a doctor says, take this pill, [47:50.840 --> 47:51.840] okay, how many? [47:51.840 --> 47:52.840] Do you have questions? [47:52.840 --> 47:53.840] Just take it. [47:53.840 --> 48:01.200] Now, as medications, four of them have been recalled five times in the last year and [48:01.200 --> 48:05.480] a half for issues. [48:05.480 --> 48:12.280] What is driving people who are highly educated to just accept what these people say and not [48:12.280 --> 48:13.920] question? [48:13.920 --> 48:22.120] My philosophy is if it can't hurt you because it's a natural vitamin or a hub, why not take [48:22.120 --> 48:23.120] it? [48:23.120 --> 48:29.400] You know, because it can't hurt you unless it's in such massive doses that no one's [48:29.400 --> 48:31.400] ever going to be able to take. [48:31.400 --> 48:37.640] You know, if it's from the pharmaceutical industry, I feel like, okay, how many times [48:37.640 --> 48:39.280] has it been recalled? [48:39.280 --> 48:43.920] How many adverts have I seen on the TV saying, oh, talk to your doctor about this. [48:43.920 --> 48:47.440] You need this because you've got this symptom. [48:47.440 --> 48:49.040] Maybe I'm the person who's wrong. [48:49.040 --> 48:50.040] I don't know. [48:50.040 --> 49:00.200] But I'm just probably to understand why so many educated people are just captured in [49:00.200 --> 49:01.200] this. [49:01.200 --> 49:02.200] It's a great question. [49:02.200 --> 49:14.560] It's not something we can fix, but I can't, I don't know the solution for it. [49:14.560 --> 49:26.960] I don't, and it seems that people in the more liberal states buy into this much more easily [49:26.960 --> 49:30.600] than the people in the more conservative states. [49:30.600 --> 49:36.440] Perhaps that's my, in observation, maybe it's not right. [49:36.440 --> 49:45.720] I don't know, but the people that I talk to who really look into these issues are alternative [49:45.720 --> 49:51.280] doctors, who people are more conservative, people who come from different countries. [49:51.280 --> 50:04.640] You know, I have friends from, you know, Iran, very, very dear people who came here [50:04.640 --> 50:11.800] with absolutely nothing and couldn't even speak the language from, you know, what's [50:11.800 --> 50:12.800] Romania? [50:12.800 --> 50:18.280] Youngly, yes, very young person from Romania whose family fled here. [50:18.280 --> 50:25.400] And she's just like, I can't even talk to people my age because they don't get it. [50:25.400 --> 50:32.360] People from, you know, Lebanon, one of our friends, dear, dear friends, people from other [50:32.360 --> 50:38.720] countries who have been through all this, get it. [50:38.720 --> 50:44.360] And they can't talk to people here, you know, of any semblance, especially in Romania, [50:44.360 --> 50:45.360] as I call it. [50:45.360 --> 50:48.840] And I just, you know, I'm just puzzled and frustrated. [50:48.840 --> 50:52.760] I don't know, I don't know where to go with this because I have absolutely refused to [50:52.760 --> 50:57.160] take the vaccine and, you know, I've been told, you know, you're just putting us at [50:57.160 --> 51:04.520] risk because you will refuse to follow, you know, what's right. [51:04.520 --> 51:09.480] So I'm being accused of basically a crime because I'm being accused of potentially [51:09.480 --> 51:17.480] killing my partner and other people we know because I refuse to be told what I must put [51:17.480 --> 51:18.480] in my body. [51:18.480 --> 51:21.480] This is a hard issue. [51:21.480 --> 51:31.000] I've dealt with this the whole time I do the radio show, trying to find a way to reach [51:31.000 --> 51:32.000] people. [51:32.000 --> 51:38.960] And for the most part, the only ones I reach are the ones who have went along and get along [51:38.960 --> 51:43.680] and then all of a sudden they get a ticket or they get arrested for something they didn't [51:43.680 --> 51:48.480] do and then it's like the lights come on. [51:48.480 --> 51:56.760] Well, maybe it wasn't like I thought it was this whole time, but it generally takes something [51:56.760 --> 52:02.800] to push them off center. [52:02.800 --> 52:05.560] You've had that happen to you. [52:05.560 --> 52:06.760] You were pushed off center. [52:06.760 --> 52:08.760] You were foreclosed on. [52:08.760 --> 52:09.760] Yes. [52:09.760 --> 52:16.680] Were you like this before you were foreclosed on? [52:16.680 --> 52:26.920] I think to a certain degree, I was because my father was a little bit of a rebel, he [52:26.920 --> 52:33.880] should say, you know, things like it says don't, you know, don't go on the grass. [52:33.880 --> 52:38.800] So, you know, just kind of follow, you just end the rules, you don't break the new [52:38.800 --> 52:47.040] system, you know, you don't follow what the politicians say, you know, if you were teased [52:47.040 --> 52:53.920] very mercilessly when we were children, I mean, mercilessly, one of the favorite things [52:53.920 --> 53:00.280] people used to say about us, what we were, the Belsen babies. [53:00.280 --> 53:07.080] And for those who are old enough to know what Belsen babies mean, Bergen Belsen was [53:07.080 --> 53:09.960] the German concentration camp. [53:09.960 --> 53:16.280] And three kids, you know, looked like someone out of there because you could count every [53:16.280 --> 53:18.720] rib we had. [53:18.720 --> 53:22.440] And you know, we were teased about that. [53:22.440 --> 53:29.760] We were very healthy, but we didn't look like, you know, others in the same thing. [53:29.760 --> 53:34.840] So my dad used to say, you know, when you get told, oh, you know, if I had legs like [53:34.840 --> 53:39.040] yours, I'd walk on my hands, you'd say, oh, if I had a mouth like yours, I'd keep it [53:39.040 --> 53:40.040] zipped. [53:40.040 --> 53:41.040] You know, he would just give us a response. [53:41.040 --> 53:47.760] He would just say, if the crowd goes this way, you know, you go the other way, he said, [53:47.760 --> 53:49.400] because sometimes you'll be wrong. [53:49.400 --> 53:53.240] You just have to be wrong, and then you go on. [53:53.240 --> 53:57.200] The American Indians had a name for that. [53:57.200 --> 53:59.320] They called them contrarers. [53:59.320 --> 54:03.680] They did everything backwards. [54:03.680 --> 54:05.920] They said the opposite of what they met. [54:05.920 --> 54:14.880] I have a sister that, what we call it in psychology, it says polarity response. [54:14.880 --> 54:21.720] If I say Linda, don't do that, she'll do it if it her lips the pulp. [54:21.720 --> 54:23.960] It's not because she wants to. [54:23.960 --> 54:27.360] She's just wired that way. [54:27.360 --> 54:31.720] Some of us are just character types. [54:31.720 --> 54:41.880] I wasn't exactly a contrarer, but I just never had it in me to follow everybody else. [54:41.880 --> 54:53.360] I always had my own direction, and I hope they don't blame me for that because I'm different, [54:53.360 --> 55:00.040] and I'll try not to blame them for being the character type they are. [55:00.040 --> 55:11.240] I try to work, develop some tools and techniques to help get their attention where it's necessary. [55:11.240 --> 55:19.560] My primary study is psychology, it's not law, and my biggest interest is psychology, understanding [55:19.560 --> 55:26.280] how the human animal works, and I have lots of tools. [55:26.280 --> 55:32.640] I use them on the air for the most part, the stories that I tell that most people have [55:32.640 --> 55:34.560] heard these stories. [55:34.560 --> 55:40.320] They're not just stories, they are for the most part therapeutic metaphor. [55:40.320 --> 55:46.520] There's a story I tell about a prosecuting attorney who went to the prosecutor's office [55:46.520 --> 55:52.960] to get him to verify some criminal affidavits, and they sent out this young kid, and he looked [55:52.960 --> 55:58.840] at him, and they were criminal complaints against his boss, and he said, I can't sign these, [55:58.840 --> 56:03.360] I'm just a peon around here, and I said, what's the matter, chicken? [56:03.360 --> 56:09.760] Yes, I am, and I said, I like this guy, but he went and got his boss, and his boss looked [56:09.760 --> 56:16.160] at him, flipped through the pages a little bit, and then just tossed them at me, papers [56:16.160 --> 56:17.160] went everywhere. [56:17.160 --> 56:21.120] He said, I'm not going to sign these, and I was picking them up off the floor, and I [56:21.120 --> 56:24.840] said, is there any special reason, or are you just pissed off today? [56:24.840 --> 56:30.320] I'm just not going to sign them, so I said, oh, okay, so I went to the receptionist, and [56:30.320 --> 56:35.360] I said, ma'am, have you got an attorney who's literate? [56:35.360 --> 56:40.840] She said, you got one who can write, I need one to verify these criminal affidavits, and [56:40.840 --> 56:47.080] of course had their duty under article 2.05, Texas Code of Criminal Procedure, and Roger [56:47.080 --> 56:53.120] Jones, their head of the intake section, went through the papers and said, Mr. Calton, [56:53.120 --> 56:56.640] you are not welcome here anymore. [56:56.640 --> 57:02.040] I said, well, Mr. Jones, I feel disparaged, you're going to hurt my feelings. [57:02.040 --> 57:06.720] Mr. Calton, you're going to have to leave the building, and I knew I shouldn't have [57:06.720 --> 57:09.640] done it, but I couldn't have helped myself. [57:09.640 --> 57:15.680] I said, I'll tell you what, Mr. Jones, if you'll just bend over, while I pull that [57:15.680 --> 57:20.080] wild hair out of you behind for you, and you and I can go back and treat one another like [57:20.080 --> 57:26.920] mature and responsible adults, well, it stopped him in his tracks. [57:26.920 --> 57:40.640] Now, what I did was something very specific, do this step, do this step, do this step. [57:40.640 --> 57:49.720] He said something that was intended to elicit a response from me, but I kind of come to [57:49.720 --> 57:57.880] understand that if somebody elicits a response from you, that's not yours, that's theirs. [57:57.880 --> 58:01.840] When I was five years old, I pretty well knew the full range of human response within my [58:01.840 --> 58:02.840] native culture. [58:02.840 --> 58:09.280] I knew what would make you smile, frown, happy, sad, to think that he could say something [58:09.280 --> 58:17.720] that would do something that would make me angry, and not know, of course he knew. [58:17.720 --> 58:23.280] He threw those papers at me on purpose to get me to get angry so he could accuse me [58:23.280 --> 58:28.360] of being agitated in order me to leave the building. [58:28.360 --> 58:37.840] Well, I might have been born at night, but it wasn't last night, so I ignored it, and [58:37.840 --> 58:42.760] I did something else very specific I'll speak to when we come back on the other side. [58:42.760 --> 58:48.080] I call this the rubber ball theory, and it's actually, I think it's on my website, we'll [58:48.080 --> 58:50.240] be right back. [58:50.240 --> 58:54.360] Would you like to make more definite progress in your walk with God? [58:54.360 --> 58:59.560] Bibles for America is offering a free study Bible and a set of free Christian books that [58:59.560 --> 59:00.880] can really help. [59:00.880 --> 59:05.360] The New Testament recovery version is one of the most comprehensive study Bibles available [59:05.360 --> 59:06.360] today. [59:06.360 --> 59:10.280] It's an accurate translation, and it contains thousands of footnotes that will help you [59:10.280 --> 59:13.380] to know God and to know the meaning of life. [59:13.380 --> 59:18.640] The free books are a three-volume set called Basic Elements of the Christian Life. [59:18.640 --> 59:22.920] Chapter by chapter, Basic Elements of the Christian Life clearly presents God's plan [59:22.920 --> 59:27.840] of salvation, growing in Christ, and how to build up the church. [59:27.840 --> 59:32.840] To order your free New Testament recovery version and Basic Elements of the Christian [59:32.840 --> 59:45.600] Life, call Bibles for America toll free at 888-551-0102, that's 888-551-0102, or visit [59:45.600 --> 01:00:00.600] us online at bfa.org. [01:00:00.600 --> 01:00:06.640] To follow in these flashes brought to you by The Lone Star Lowdowns. [01:00:06.640 --> 01:00:13.040] Markets for Monday the 22nd of July 2019 open with precious metals, gold at $1,429 an ounce, [01:00:13.040 --> 01:00:21.360] silver $16.45 an ounce, copper $2.75 an ounce, oil Texas crude $55.63 a barrel, brand crude [01:00:21.360 --> 01:00:29.680] $62.47 a barrel, and cryptos in order of market cap, bitcoin core $10,566.52, ethereum [01:00:29.680 --> 01:00:46.120] $227.26, XRP Ripple $0.33, litecoin $100.31, and bitcoin cash is at $324.10 a crypto coin. [01:00:46.120 --> 01:00:52.320] Today in history, the year 1916, the preparedness day bombing, a time suitcase bomb was detonated [01:00:52.320 --> 01:00:57.640] on Market Street in San Francisco during the World War I Preparedness Day Parade, killing [01:00:57.640 --> 01:01:04.680] 10 and entering 40. [01:01:04.680 --> 01:01:09.360] And recent news, since Governor Greg Abbott signed House Bill 1325 legalizing hemp into [01:01:09.360 --> 01:01:14.120] taxes law back in June, county prosecutors around the state including Houston, Austin, [01:01:14.120 --> 01:01:18.760] San Antonio have been dropping marijuana possession charges and even refusing to file new ones [01:01:18.760 --> 01:01:22.760] since they are stipulating that they do not have the time or the laboratory equipment to [01:01:22.760 --> 01:01:27.680] test the herb for THC. Margaret Moore, the Travis County District Attorney announced earlier [01:01:27.680 --> 01:01:32.400] this month that she was dismissing 32 felony possession and delivery of marijuana cases [01:01:32.400 --> 01:01:33.600] because of the law. [01:01:33.600 --> 01:01:37.480] Mr. Abbott and other state officials, including the Attorney General stipulated in a letter [01:01:37.480 --> 01:01:42.000] that county district attorneys back on Thursday that marijuana has not been decriminalized [01:01:42.000 --> 01:01:48.160] in Texas and that these actions demonstrate a misunderstanding of how HB 1325 works, as [01:01:48.160 --> 01:01:54.400] well as other cities too like the District Attorney in El Paso, Cayma Esparza, a Democrat [01:01:54.400 --> 01:01:58.880] who also stated earlier this month that the law, quote, will not have an effect on the [01:01:58.880 --> 01:02:01.760] prosecution of marijuana cases in El Paso. [01:02:01.760 --> 01:02:06.680] However, the issue was succinctly summarized by Mr. Brandon Ball, an assistant public defender [01:02:06.680 --> 01:02:10.680] in Harris County who stated that, quote, the law is constantly changing on what makes [01:02:10.680 --> 01:02:13.400] something illegal based on its chemical makeup. [01:02:13.400 --> 01:02:17.280] It's important that if someone is charged with something, the test matches what they're [01:02:17.280 --> 01:02:22.520] charged with. [01:02:22.520 --> 01:02:27.120] A paper by Tulane University identified a five and a half inch American pocket shark [01:02:27.120 --> 01:02:32.280] as the first of its kind in the Gulf of Mexico, the specimen being only the second pocket [01:02:32.280 --> 01:02:37.920] shark ever captured or recorded with the other one being found way back in 1979 in the East [01:02:37.920 --> 01:02:39.400] Pacific Ocean. [01:02:39.400 --> 01:02:43.680] According to the university paper, the shark secretes a luminous fluid from a gland near [01:02:43.680 --> 01:02:49.960] its front fins for the purposes hypothesized to lure and prey who may be drawn into the [01:02:49.960 --> 01:03:18.760] flow. [01:03:18.760 --> 01:03:48.680] Okay, we are back, Randy Kelton, Brett Fountain, Rudula Radio on this, the 11th day of December. [01:03:48.680 --> 01:03:54.680] 2020 and we were talking about what I call the rubber ball theory. [01:03:54.680 --> 01:04:00.680] This is one of the tools I use to build metaphors. [01:04:00.680 --> 01:04:15.680] And what I did to Roger Jones was, Roger Jones was trying to get, he did something that he can generally elicit a very predictable response. [01:04:15.680 --> 01:04:19.680] And someone does something and your response just comes out. [01:04:19.680 --> 01:04:22.680] Well, that's not yours, that's theirs. [01:04:22.680 --> 01:04:24.680] They know how to predict what you're going to do. [01:04:24.680 --> 01:04:40.680] So the trick is, is when somebody says something or does something and your response just comes out, it is literally and physically comes from your inside, your stomach, your center chakra. [01:04:40.680 --> 01:04:41.680] That's not yours. [01:04:41.680 --> 01:04:44.680] That's an internal automatic response. [01:04:44.680 --> 01:04:53.680] We humans have the capacity to stop, pause and reflect, determine a course of action and then initiate. [01:04:53.680 --> 01:04:54.680] We can do that. [01:04:54.680 --> 01:04:56.680] But for the most part, we don't. [01:04:56.680 --> 01:04:59.680] For the most part, we just do whatever we feel like doing. [01:04:59.680 --> 01:05:04.680] Somebody says something or does something and our response just comes out. [01:05:04.680 --> 01:05:19.680] Well, 90% of the time, the vast majority of the time, that allows us to be very elegant in complex situations because we don't have to figure out every little move. [01:05:19.680 --> 01:05:28.680] But when someone's trying to manipulate you, we tend to notice that more, especially if we begin to begin to pay attention to it. [01:05:28.680 --> 01:05:40.680] If somebody does something or responses is automatic, whatever you do, don't do what you feel like doing. [01:05:40.680 --> 01:05:57.680] We all know people who consistently elicit the same types of negative responses, like the person who can always get you in an argument or always make you feel angry or make you feel bad about yourself. [01:05:57.680 --> 01:06:01.680] And for the most part, it has nothing to do with you. [01:06:01.680 --> 01:06:07.680] It has to do with old internal patterns that they're running in their mind. [01:06:07.680 --> 01:06:16.680] Patterns of behavior they've learned earlier in life that may or may not be appropriate anymore. [01:06:16.680 --> 01:06:22.680] So when I find someone running one of these negative routines, I pull out this tool. [01:06:22.680 --> 01:06:32.680] And whatever they try to get me to do, whatever I feel like doing, don't do it. [01:06:32.680 --> 01:06:43.680] It's hard to catch that because this is really subtle and it's better with someone like Roger Jones who wasn't very subtle in what he was doing. [01:06:43.680 --> 01:06:46.680] It was pretty obvious, so it made it easier to catch. [01:06:46.680 --> 01:06:56.680] When you catch them doing that, just whatever you do, don't do what you feel like doing and immediately something else come to mind. [01:06:56.680 --> 01:07:01.680] And the trick and the power in this tool, don't do that either. [01:07:01.680 --> 01:07:20.680] If I try to get you to respond angry to me and you don't respond that way, I can pretty well anticipate your alternative just as well as I can anticipate your first expected response. [01:07:20.680 --> 01:07:30.680] Puff's had a hard day at the office. He's miserable. He drove home in heavy traffic. He walks in the house and he plops. [01:07:30.680 --> 01:07:33.680] Mom's had a great day. She's fished him a great meal. [01:07:33.680 --> 01:07:44.680] He plops down at the table, throws some potatoes on his plate and says, past the darn gravy. [01:07:44.680 --> 01:07:53.680] What's mom going to feel like doing with that gravy in this country, in this culture? [01:07:53.680 --> 01:08:08.680] We all know what she's going to feel like doing with that gravy and it would be ignorant of us not to realize that he knows what she's going to feel like doing with that gravy. [01:08:08.680 --> 01:08:15.680] So the real question is, why is he trying to get her to bounce the gravy boat off his head? [01:08:15.680 --> 01:08:24.680] Well, in this case, mom has had a especially good day and realizes if I throw the gravy boat at him, he's going to say this. [01:08:24.680 --> 01:08:28.680] I'm going to say this. He's going to say this. I'm going to wind up in my room crying. [01:08:28.680 --> 01:08:33.680] He's going to wind up in a dim sulk and been there, done that more times than I care to remember. [01:08:33.680 --> 01:08:37.680] So she decides not to throw the gravy boat at him. [01:08:37.680 --> 01:08:40.680] So what does she do instead? [01:08:40.680 --> 01:08:49.680] She pretends like he asked her really nice, will you pass some of that delicious gravy and response to that instead? [01:08:49.680 --> 01:08:52.680] Oh, here you go, dear. [01:08:52.680 --> 01:09:03.680] Now, he knows something's wrong with that, but he's not quite sure exactly what it is. [01:09:03.680 --> 01:09:08.680] He's called a new linguistic programming pattern interruption. [01:09:08.680 --> 01:09:15.680] He was running this internal pattern and it just got interrupted. [01:09:15.680 --> 01:09:22.680] The trick and power to this is to subtly interrupt their pattern. [01:09:22.680 --> 01:09:25.680] If you do it, obviously they'll catch you. [01:09:25.680 --> 01:09:36.680] So you try to bond appropriately to the circumstances just different than the one they expect. [01:09:36.680 --> 01:09:40.680] And if you do that, it'll cause a pattern interruption. [01:09:40.680 --> 01:09:50.680] What that does is take these internal automatic patterns we run over and over and over and it forces them up into the conscious awareness. [01:09:50.680 --> 01:09:57.680] Now, let's say you're walking up a set of stairs, you've got an arm full of books, you're talking to somebody else, [01:09:57.680 --> 01:10:05.680] and somebody has put a quarter inch piece of plywood on one of the steps and put a carpet over it. [01:10:05.680 --> 01:10:10.680] So you can't really see it, but when you pick your foot up from one step and set it to the other step, [01:10:10.680 --> 01:10:15.680] it's going to hit the step a quarter inch before you expect it to. [01:10:15.680 --> 01:10:21.680] And bam, that will get your entire attention immediately. [01:10:21.680 --> 01:10:26.680] It interrupted an automatic pattern that you normally pay no attention to. [01:10:26.680 --> 01:10:30.680] We've probably all had that experience in one time or another. [01:10:30.680 --> 01:10:35.680] And then what the conscious mind does is looks around and says, what, what, what, what, what happened? [01:10:35.680 --> 01:10:43.680] And what you will normally do if you, I call this the rubber ball theory, I could give you three rubber balls. [01:10:43.680 --> 01:10:49.680] One hard is the golf ball, one soft and squishy, one medium. [01:10:49.680 --> 01:10:57.680] Based on your experience and your environment, you could predict how hard to throw each one of those up against the wall so they come back where you could catch it. [01:10:57.680 --> 01:11:05.680] Let's imagine you take your center ball, your fearless weight, fearless density, and you throw it up against the wall. [01:11:05.680 --> 01:11:12.680] But instead of bouncing off the wall, it hits the wall, splashes and slides to the ground. [01:11:12.680 --> 01:11:17.680] You go over and pick it up. You feel it's white, you feel it's density. [01:11:17.680 --> 01:11:20.680] You feel the wall is flat, hard and smooth. [01:11:20.680 --> 01:11:25.680] Everything in your environment tells you that thing should have come back to me. [01:11:25.680 --> 01:11:28.680] So what are you going to do? [01:11:28.680 --> 01:11:35.680] If you're like 99% of the people, you're going to take two steps back and you're going to throw it harder. [01:11:35.680 --> 01:11:39.680] What the heck do you do to this darn gravy? [01:11:39.680 --> 01:11:48.680] When you interrupt someone's pattern, you can expect them to try to express the pattern even more strongly. [01:11:48.680 --> 01:12:05.680] I interrupted John West and when he sees the papers at me, I interrupted his expectation just by going over to the clerk and asking if he had an attorney who's literate. [01:12:05.680 --> 01:12:09.680] And I was standing there thinking, you know, that didn't work out right. [01:12:09.680 --> 01:12:14.680] So when I turned back to him, he tried something even stronger. [01:12:14.680 --> 01:12:17.680] That didn't work either. [01:12:17.680 --> 01:12:21.680] So when that didn't work, he tried something even stronger. [01:12:21.680 --> 01:12:25.680] And when I interrupted that one, it stopped him in his tracks. [01:12:25.680 --> 01:12:36.680] I can pretty well guarantee you that he will remember that experience in his conscious awareness till the day he dies. [01:12:36.680 --> 01:12:43.680] He did not necessarily know that I knew what was going on in his brain. [01:12:43.680 --> 01:12:45.680] He didn't need to know that. [01:12:45.680 --> 01:12:54.680] But the next time he has someone come in and ask him to sign some documents, you can be pretty sure he's not going to throw them at him. [01:12:54.680 --> 01:12:57.680] That didn't work out so well. [01:12:57.680 --> 01:12:59.680] Does that make sense, Tina? [01:12:59.680 --> 01:13:03.680] Yeah, I think some of it does. [01:13:03.680 --> 01:13:06.680] Some of it has got to absorb a little more. [01:13:06.680 --> 01:13:12.680] There are more tools. [01:13:12.680 --> 01:13:17.680] Your partner, what's important to your partner? [01:13:17.680 --> 01:13:24.680] How can you – this is called a reframe. [01:13:24.680 --> 01:13:33.680] You take his frame of reference and parrot his frame of reference with a different set of facts. [01:13:33.680 --> 01:13:40.680] Add what you want him to do to those facts and deliver it back to him. [01:13:40.680 --> 01:13:42.680] This is a little more complex. [01:13:42.680 --> 01:13:49.680] I haven't talked about reframing on the air, but I do it while we're in the show all the time. [01:13:49.680 --> 01:13:54.680] As we take circumstances and try to frame from a different context. [01:13:54.680 --> 01:13:59.680] Let's say you've got someone who's always rush, rush, rush, rush, rush and they screw up everything. [01:13:59.680 --> 01:14:04.680] You're telling the story about a hair and a tortoise. [01:14:04.680 --> 01:14:14.680] You mimic the same happenings, but you shift the context to something else. [01:14:14.680 --> 01:14:21.680] So internally he will recognize the patterns of what he does, [01:14:21.680 --> 01:14:26.680] but he doesn't have to take responsibility for it because you've changed the characters. [01:14:26.680 --> 01:14:30.680] You've changed the locations, the people. [01:14:30.680 --> 01:14:34.680] Then you demonstrate a problem and demonstrate a solution, [01:14:34.680 --> 01:14:39.680] and you do the whole thing outside his conscious awareness. [01:14:39.680 --> 01:14:48.680] He hears it, he sees it, but because he's listening to your story, he's missing the underlying pattern. [01:14:48.680 --> 01:14:52.680] People run patterns all the time. [01:14:52.680 --> 01:14:59.680] If you can't get through that pattern, your partner is running a pattern you can't get through. [01:14:59.680 --> 01:15:07.680] You need to back up and analyze the pattern and see if you can find a way to trip him up in it. [01:15:07.680 --> 01:15:11.680] I'm probably wasting everybody's time. This is a little too complex. [01:15:11.680 --> 01:15:17.680] I understand how to do this. It's hard to teach you. It took me a lot of years to work this out. [01:15:17.680 --> 01:15:25.680] I use it on the air all the time because what you're talking about is difficult. [01:15:25.680 --> 01:15:32.680] It's hard to do it directly consciously. I'm always laying little plants. [01:15:32.680 --> 01:15:38.680] I try to set things out there that you'll trip over in the future. [01:15:38.680 --> 01:15:43.680] When you trip over, think back. I have people calling all the time. [01:15:43.680 --> 01:15:50.680] They talk about some of these stories I tell and how they had something that reminded them of that. [01:15:50.680 --> 01:15:53.680] That's what the purpose of this is. [01:15:53.680 --> 01:16:03.680] These stories are to mimic current behavior and then juxtapose a new behavior on top of it. [01:16:03.680 --> 01:16:12.680] I'm probably too deep in this stuff. I won't waste any more time on this, but it is hard. [01:16:12.680 --> 01:16:15.680] It's very hard. It's very interesting. [01:16:15.680 --> 01:16:27.680] I'm sure there are more people than me in this situation that appreciate just learning a little bit more about maybe why we're struggling with all this. [01:16:27.680 --> 01:16:34.680] Let's keep going and if anyone else can chime in, that would be great. [01:16:34.680 --> 01:16:42.680] Thank you, Tina. We're about to go to our sponsors and we'll come back. We're going to go to Irving in Nevada. [01:16:42.680 --> 01:16:48.680] Thank you, Tina. This is Randy Kelton, Brett Fountain, root of our radio. [01:16:48.680 --> 01:16:57.680] I'm not going to give out the calling number. We may have time for one more call. 512-646-1984. [01:16:57.680 --> 01:17:23.680] We'll be right back. [01:17:28.680 --> 01:17:33.680] How to turn the financial tables on them and make them pay you to go away. [01:17:33.680 --> 01:17:40.680] The Michael Mirris Proven Method is the solution for how to stop debt collectors. Personal consultation is available as well. [01:17:40.680 --> 01:17:48.680] For more information, please visit ruleoflawradio.com and click on the blue Michael Mirris banner or email Michael Mirris at yahoo.com. [01:17:48.680 --> 01:17:56.680] That's ruleoflawradio.com or email m-i-c-h-a-e-l-m-i-r-r-a-s at yahoo.com. [01:17:56.680 --> 01:17:59.680] To learn how to stop debt collectors' net. [01:17:59.680 --> 01:18:04.680] I love logos. Without the shows on this network, I'd be almost as ignorant as my friends. [01:18:04.680 --> 01:18:08.680] I'm so addicted to the truth now that there's no going back. I need my truth pick. [01:18:08.680 --> 01:18:12.680] I'd be lost without logos and I really want to help keep this network on the air. [01:18:12.680 --> 01:18:19.680] I'd love to volunteer as a show producer but I'm a bit of a Luddite and I really don't have any money to give because I spend it all on supplements. [01:18:19.680 --> 01:18:21.680] How can I help logos? [01:18:21.680 --> 01:18:28.680] Well, I'm glad you asked. Whenever you order anything from Amazon, you can help logos with ordering your supplies or holiday gifts. [01:18:28.680 --> 01:18:30.680] First thing you do is clear your cookies. [01:18:30.680 --> 01:18:33.680] Now, go to logosreguletwork.com. [01:18:33.680 --> 01:18:36.680] Click on the Amazon logo and bookmark it. [01:18:36.680 --> 01:18:42.680] Now, when you order anything from Amazon, you use that link and logos gets a few pesos. [01:18:42.680 --> 01:18:43.680] Do I pay extra? [01:18:43.680 --> 01:18:44.680] No. [01:18:44.680 --> 01:18:46.680] Do you have to do anything different when I order? [01:18:46.680 --> 01:18:47.680] No. [01:18:47.680 --> 01:18:48.680] Can I use my Amazon Prime? [01:18:48.680 --> 01:18:49.680] No. [01:18:49.680 --> 01:18:50.680] I mean, yes. [01:18:50.680 --> 01:18:54.680] Wow. Giving without doing anything or spending any money. This is perfect. [01:18:54.680 --> 01:18:56.680] Thank you so much. [01:18:56.680 --> 01:18:57.680] We are logos. [01:18:57.680 --> 01:18:59.680] Happy holidays, logos. [01:18:59.680 --> 01:19:21.680] Oh, come on. [01:19:21.680 --> 01:19:49.680] Thank you so much. [01:19:49.680 --> 01:19:55.680] All right, we are back. [01:19:55.680 --> 01:19:57.680] This is the rule of law radio. [01:19:57.680 --> 01:19:58.680] Randy Kelton. [01:19:58.680 --> 01:20:00.680] I'm Brett Fountain. [01:20:00.680 --> 01:20:07.680] And we're going to go ahead to our next caller, which is Irvin and Nevada. [01:20:07.680 --> 01:20:09.680] Good evening, Irvin. [01:20:09.680 --> 01:20:11.680] What have you got for us tonight? [01:20:11.680 --> 01:20:13.680] Taking the call. [01:20:13.680 --> 01:20:19.680] Yeah, I had sent you an email regarding your speaking last night. [01:20:19.680 --> 01:20:24.680] I'm guessing you get a lot of emails by the chance that you see that. [01:20:24.680 --> 01:20:25.680] I haven't seen it. [01:20:25.680 --> 01:20:27.680] Randy, did he send you something? [01:20:27.680 --> 01:20:30.680] Yes, I saw it. [01:20:30.680 --> 01:20:36.680] Okay. Well, first off, the, you know, that business about the private attorney general, [01:20:36.680 --> 01:20:40.680] the whole Wikipedia page, as I said, was kind of saying, no, you can't do it. [01:20:40.680 --> 01:20:45.680] They mentioned that one little niche of this civil rights attorney sees award act. [01:20:45.680 --> 01:20:53.680] And if you're saying that your rights were violated, so I thought that that might be something to look into. [01:20:53.680 --> 01:20:59.680] And by the way, just jumping to the caller while ago talking about the traffic ticket. [01:20:59.680 --> 01:21:06.680] As I mentioned you, I got one and a friend got one all in Clark County in Nevada. [01:21:06.680 --> 01:21:11.680] And I'm not certain if I mentioned that because all the stuff I filed, [01:21:11.680 --> 01:21:17.680] they eventually said it went into the judge's chambers and they transferred to it to a debt collector. [01:21:17.680 --> 01:21:19.680] But we never got a call on that one. [01:21:19.680 --> 01:21:27.680] On mine, same thing happened, but I did get a letter once from a debt collector and I just sent him a debt validation letter. [01:21:27.680 --> 01:21:32.680] And by the way, his collection letter had a copy of my ticket. [01:21:32.680 --> 01:21:37.680] You may remember I said that the guy gave me a doohickey which spit out my ticket. [01:21:37.680 --> 01:21:40.680] I didn't have my signature, but the one the debt collector had did. [01:21:40.680 --> 01:21:42.680] But anyway, I never heard him again. [01:21:42.680 --> 01:21:52.680] And I had mentioned that if it gets to the warrant status, they only have 60 days for the warrant. [01:21:52.680 --> 01:21:55.680] Okay, wait, I have a question about that. [01:21:55.680 --> 01:21:56.680] Sure. [01:21:56.680 --> 01:22:05.680] Is that in Nevada code? Because generally, when it wants a warrant issued, it never goes away. [01:22:05.680 --> 01:22:06.680] So that's unusual. [01:22:06.680 --> 01:22:09.680] Brett and I discussed that yesterday that... [01:22:09.680 --> 01:22:10.680] Right. [01:22:10.680 --> 01:22:11.680] It's stale. [01:22:11.680 --> 01:22:13.680] I've never heard of that before. [01:22:13.680 --> 01:22:17.680] Oh, it's a California case. [01:22:17.680 --> 01:22:28.680] If you want a California case with a Supreme Court, Scotus referred to it and they said 60 days, it's stale. [01:22:28.680 --> 01:22:31.680] So that's where I got that from. [01:22:31.680 --> 01:22:35.680] What did stale mean? [01:22:35.680 --> 01:22:48.680] Because of the, let's see, what's the amendment that mentions a right to a speedy trial? [01:22:48.680 --> 01:22:52.680] And so it says if you can't bring the person... [01:22:52.680 --> 01:22:56.680] You mentioned something which I think a while ago about a year, they have to prosecute it. [01:22:56.680 --> 01:23:01.680] Well, they said if you issue a warrant for someone, you've got 60 days to get them basically. [01:23:01.680 --> 01:23:02.680] Otherwise, the warrant's stale. [01:23:02.680 --> 01:23:05.680] And of course, there was also the fact that there was other things that was void. [01:23:05.680 --> 01:23:06.680] You know, the judge hadn't signed it. [01:23:06.680 --> 01:23:11.680] It wasn't sealed and it had no affidavit in support of probable cause. [01:23:11.680 --> 01:23:12.680] Okay. [01:23:12.680 --> 01:23:14.680] Send me that case. [01:23:14.680 --> 01:23:16.680] I would very much like to see that. [01:23:16.680 --> 01:23:17.680] Yes. [01:23:17.680 --> 01:23:18.680] Okay. [01:23:18.680 --> 01:23:26.680] And getting to the PCPA, I had said that, yeah, right, that I had some success in a lower court, [01:23:26.680 --> 01:23:34.680] in small claims years ago, including one time when the lawyer, the debt collector, the lawyer for the company said, [01:23:34.680 --> 01:23:37.680] we're on Indian land, Oklahoma, and this isn't five of us. [01:23:37.680 --> 01:23:39.680] But he said, I think small claims court is unbignified. [01:23:39.680 --> 01:23:44.680] And so he moved it to federal court, even though it was only a couple thousand dollars, [01:23:44.680 --> 01:23:47.680] because of course, if it's a federal question involved, they can do that. [01:23:47.680 --> 01:23:50.680] And, you know, the PCPA and those things are. [01:23:50.680 --> 01:23:53.680] And still as we got the federal court, you're up in your settlement. [01:23:53.680 --> 01:23:57.680] He spent four bucks for this client's money just because he was unbignified. [01:23:57.680 --> 01:24:04.680] But the main point was with the PCPA, I got some judgments and collected settlements too. [01:24:04.680 --> 01:24:11.680] And like the, you got the FCRA, Fair Credit Reporting Act, the FDCPA, Fair Debt Collection Practices Act, [01:24:11.680 --> 01:24:14.680] and the TCPA, the Telephone Consumer Protection Act. [01:24:14.680 --> 01:24:19.680] All three of those started either 1990 or 1991. [01:24:19.680 --> 01:24:26.680] And I actually saw a speech by the CEO of Midland that's one of the largest and not the largest debt collectors. [01:24:26.680 --> 01:24:32.680] Speaking, I think the stockholders said in public, it's not always profitable to follow the law. [01:24:32.680 --> 01:24:41.680] And they said the TCPA, which unlike the others, can be five hundred to fifteen hundred dollars per violation. [01:24:41.680 --> 01:24:45.680] It's five hundred if it's negligent, it's fifteen hundred if it's local annoying. [01:24:45.680 --> 01:24:55.680] And he said that, okay, number one, when it was formed, people were more worried about vacuum machines [01:24:55.680 --> 01:24:58.680] and using up their paper than cell phones. [01:24:58.680 --> 01:25:01.680] Number two, automated dialers. [01:25:01.680 --> 01:25:04.680] I mean, I'm not proud to say I used to be a telemarketer in 2000. [01:25:04.680 --> 01:25:06.680] And my boss at the time said, I got this new thing. [01:25:06.680 --> 01:25:07.680] It's going to revolutionize the industry. [01:25:07.680 --> 01:25:09.680] It's called an auto dial in thousand in sequence. [01:25:09.680 --> 01:25:13.680] But not only you interrupted doing your dinner, you know, you pick up the phone. [01:25:13.680 --> 01:25:17.680] It's dead space while they search for somebody to pitch you something you don't want to buy. [01:25:17.680 --> 01:25:23.680] And number three is that the penalties have not increased one dime in almost thirty years. [01:25:23.680 --> 01:25:26.680] So they're paying not cheaper dollars that they have to pay at all. [01:25:26.680 --> 01:25:30.680] And of course, the last one is that not many people know about this stuff. [01:25:30.680 --> 01:25:31.680] Maybe, you know, it's five and a hundred. [01:25:31.680 --> 01:25:34.680] And those five, maybe only one or two is going to try to do anything about it. [01:25:34.680 --> 01:25:36.680] So that's kind of what they're counting on. [01:25:36.680 --> 01:25:40.680] It's kind of like when the Maches and Gimbles used to put aside three to five percent per pilters, [01:25:40.680 --> 01:25:42.680] including some from their own employees. [01:25:42.680 --> 01:25:46.680] So the Decolectic companies are just trying to hammer you. [01:25:46.680 --> 01:25:49.680] And if you show you know something, they'll kind of go away. [01:25:49.680 --> 01:25:55.680] But anyway, with the TCPA, you can get three or four violations in one phone call, which are done. [01:25:55.680 --> 01:26:02.680] For example, if you're on the do not call list, that's, you know, five hundred to fifteen hundred. [01:26:02.680 --> 01:26:06.680] They use an auto dialer and nobody in the twenty-first century is dialing phones. [01:26:06.680 --> 01:26:09.680] Even Skype, if you see this, the auto dialer. [01:26:09.680 --> 01:26:16.680] Okay. Number three, if you've expressly told them not to call you, that's to get another violation. [01:26:16.680 --> 01:26:22.680] And number four, if they don't identify themselves immediately, being from a Decolectic company. [01:26:22.680 --> 01:26:26.680] And another one that they do sometimes is we call it a spooks call. [01:26:26.680 --> 01:26:32.680] Sometimes they get a call and will show 702 area code, which is Las Vegas, but they're not in Las Vegas. [01:26:32.680 --> 01:26:33.680] That's illegal. [01:26:33.680 --> 01:26:38.680] Now, sometimes that's done when they're sitting in Udemy someplace, but sometimes they do it anywhere in the United States. [01:26:38.680 --> 01:26:40.680] And that's strictly illegal, you know. [01:26:40.680 --> 01:26:41.680] So that's just another violation. [01:26:41.680 --> 01:26:48.680] Go after them four with that gentleman who was mentioning the getting in the phone calls with a traffic ticket. [01:26:48.680 --> 01:26:55.680] But getting to what we discussed last night with the traffic tickets. [01:26:55.680 --> 01:27:00.680] So the situation where, as I said, we have two warrants and my third friend made it. [01:27:00.680 --> 01:27:03.680] It didn't go to warrant, but they took her property. [01:27:03.680 --> 01:27:12.680] So I thought maybe, I mean, maybe if something, you know, so it was a color of laws and taking someone's property, the color of law is probably a crime. [01:27:12.680 --> 01:27:27.680] And so did you have any more thoughts on how to pursue that, that they need class action or that the private attorney general, that was viable or not? [01:27:27.680 --> 01:27:32.680] Okay, I don't like class action. [01:27:32.680 --> 01:27:34.680] In a class action, you have to have an attorney. [01:27:34.680 --> 01:27:35.680] In many sense. [01:27:35.680 --> 01:27:37.680] I spoke, it's just me, my wife and my friend. [01:27:37.680 --> 01:27:44.680] It's not, you know, it's not, I got a check today for $12 and 29 cents from class action suit for my wife. [01:27:44.680 --> 01:27:45.680] It's something years ago. [01:27:45.680 --> 01:27:48.680] So I bet literally $12 and 29 cents. [01:27:48.680 --> 01:27:53.680] So if the lead person gets money and maybe the lawyers gets money, but I haven't heard many other people. [01:27:53.680 --> 01:27:55.680] Yeah, that's generally the way it works. [01:27:55.680 --> 01:27:57.680] You get chump change. [01:27:57.680 --> 01:28:03.680] And for that chump change, you have your claim is extinguished. [01:28:03.680 --> 01:28:10.680] My wife just got a notice over some products she bought. [01:28:10.680 --> 01:28:16.680] Oh, an EpiPen that there was an EpiPen she bought. [01:28:16.680 --> 01:28:26.680] And there was a lawsuit apparently and said if she didn't do anything, she would be included in the suit. [01:28:26.680 --> 01:28:29.680] So that's wrongful. [01:28:29.680 --> 01:28:33.680] You don't get to include me in a suit for not doing something. [01:28:33.680 --> 01:28:37.680] You only get me to include me in a suit if I choose it. [01:28:37.680 --> 01:28:49.680] So if she doesn't do anything, they'll put her name in the suit and she may get a nickel if they get some type of settlement. [01:28:49.680 --> 01:28:59.680] And they'll get all the money, they will collect the attorney fees from the other party and the members of the party gets nothing. [01:28:59.680 --> 01:29:07.680] Well, if she has a problem occur because of this EpiPen, now she can't sue. [01:29:07.680 --> 01:29:11.680] So it's pretty well a scam. [01:29:11.680 --> 01:29:17.680] So if there's three of you, you can all three be named yourselves in the suit. [01:29:17.680 --> 01:29:21.680] Three people in the suit is not a class action. [01:29:21.680 --> 01:29:22.680] Brett, do you know how many years? [01:29:22.680 --> 01:29:26.680] I think it's 25 that takes to build a class. [01:29:26.680 --> 01:29:27.680] It's something like that. [01:29:27.680 --> 01:29:28.680] No idea. [01:29:28.680 --> 01:29:34.680] But you all three can be parties to the suit. [01:29:34.680 --> 01:29:39.680] That way all three of you can bargree them every time. [01:29:39.680 --> 01:29:43.680] Oh, by the way, we did once get like 900 bucks. [01:29:43.680 --> 01:29:48.680] Okay, we're about to go to our sponsors. [01:29:48.680 --> 01:30:15.680] Randy Kelton, Brett Fountain, we'll be right back. [01:30:15.680 --> 01:30:18.680] Privacy is under attack. [01:30:18.680 --> 01:30:21.680] When you give up data about yourself, you'll never get it back again. [01:30:21.680 --> 01:30:26.680] And once your privacy is gone, you'll find your freedoms will start to vanish too. [01:30:26.680 --> 01:30:28.680] So protect your rights. [01:30:28.680 --> 01:30:31.680] Say no to surveillance and keep your information to yourself. [01:30:31.680 --> 01:30:34.680] Privacy, it's worth hanging on to. [01:30:34.680 --> 01:30:41.680] This message is brought to you by startpage.com, the private search engine alternative to Google, Yahoo, and Bing. [01:30:41.680 --> 01:30:44.680] Start over with Start Page. [01:30:44.680 --> 01:30:51.680] Governments love power, so it's only natural they'd want to control the power going into your home too with a smart grid. [01:30:51.680 --> 01:30:58.680] So they're installing a national network of smart meters to remotely monitor electric use for efficiency and avoid grid failure. [01:30:58.680 --> 01:31:07.680] But cybersecurity expert David Chalk says not so fast if we make the national power grid controllable through the web, hackers will have a field day. [01:31:07.680 --> 01:31:14.680] Working remotely, they could tap in and black out the entire nation, leaving us vulnerable to our enemies. [01:31:14.680 --> 01:31:18.680] I'd want to pose smart meters for privacy and health reasons. [01:31:18.680 --> 01:31:23.680] But catastrophic failures caused by hackers? There's nothing smart about that. [01:31:23.680 --> 01:31:30.680] I'm Dr. Catherine Albrecht for startpage.com, the world's most private search engine. [01:31:30.680 --> 01:31:36.680] This is Building 7, a 47-story skyscraper that fell on the afternoon of September 11th. [01:31:36.680 --> 01:31:38.680] The government says that fire brought it down. [01:31:38.680 --> 01:31:43.680] However, 1,500 architects and engineers have concluded it was a controlled demolition. [01:31:43.680 --> 01:31:46.680] Over 6,000 of my fellow service members have given their lives. [01:31:46.680 --> 01:31:49.680] And thousands of my fellow force responders are dying. [01:31:49.680 --> 01:31:50.680] I'm not a conspiracy theorist. [01:31:50.680 --> 01:31:51.680] I'm a structural engineer. [01:31:51.680 --> 01:31:52.680] I'm a New York City correction officer. [01:31:52.680 --> 01:31:53.680] I'm an Air Force pilot. [01:31:53.680 --> 01:31:55.680] I'm a father who lost his son. [01:31:55.680 --> 01:31:58.680] We're Americans, and we deserve the truth. [01:31:58.680 --> 01:32:01.680] Go to RememberBuilding7.org today. [01:32:01.680 --> 01:32:06.680] Rule of Law Radio is proud to offer the Rule of Law Traffic Seminar. [01:32:06.680 --> 01:32:08.680] In today's America, we live in an us-against-them society. [01:32:08.680 --> 01:32:13.680] If we, the people, are ever going to have a free society, then we're going to have to stand and defend our own rights. [01:32:13.680 --> 01:32:16.680] Among those rights are the right to travel freely from place to place, [01:32:16.680 --> 01:32:20.680] the right to act in our own private capacity, and most importantly, the right to due process of law. [01:32:20.680 --> 01:32:26.680] The traffic courts afford us the least expensive opportunity to learn how to enforce and preserve our rights through due process. [01:32:26.680 --> 01:32:31.680] Sheriff's Deputy Eddie Craig, in conjunction with Rule of Law Radio, has put together the most comprehensive teaching tool available [01:32:31.680 --> 01:32:35.680] that will help you understand what due process is and how to hold the courts to the rule of law. [01:32:35.680 --> 01:32:41.680] You can get your own copy of this invaluable material by going to ruleoflawradio.com and ordering your copy today. [01:32:41.680 --> 01:32:45.680] By ordering now, you'll receive a copy of Eddie's book, The Texas Transportation Code, The Law Versus the Lie, [01:32:45.680 --> 01:32:51.680] video and audio of the original 2009 seminar, hundreds of research documents, and other useful resource material. [01:32:51.680 --> 01:32:55.680] Learn how to fight for your rights with the help of this material from ruleoflawradio.com. [01:32:55.680 --> 01:32:59.680] For your copy today and together, we can have the free society we all want and deserve. [01:33:26.680 --> 01:33:35.680] To use against the workers of iniquity, to do the most of capability available for all eternity, [01:33:35.680 --> 01:33:42.680] they come from natural amenity with step-by-step rules and authenticity. [01:33:42.680 --> 01:33:54.680] To reduce the rigidity, to rebuild the credibility, and to say the truth in nature must be just decidedly. [01:33:54.680 --> 01:33:59.680] Okay, we are back. Randy Kelton, rule of law radio. [01:33:59.680 --> 01:34:03.680] Oh, we got somebody else on the show. Who is that, Brett? [01:34:03.680 --> 01:34:05.680] Oh, it's Brett Fountain. [01:34:05.680 --> 01:34:12.680] Just kidding. Randy Kelton, Brett Fountain, rule of law radio. [01:34:12.680 --> 01:34:14.680] We're talking to Irvin in Nevada. [01:34:14.680 --> 01:34:19.680] And on the break, we were discussing this case. [01:34:19.680 --> 01:34:26.680] Irvin, can you email me the case, because Brett couldn't find it from the first day. [01:34:26.680 --> 01:34:30.680] In front of me is Ruth R.O.S.T. versus... [01:34:30.680 --> 01:34:36.680] Okay, and where were we when we went out? I had that in my mind a second ago. [01:34:36.680 --> 01:34:44.680] Oh, I think I just was mentioning that we did complain to the Consumer Financial Bureau about our servicer. [01:34:44.680 --> 01:34:51.680] Yeah, hello. It looks like we might have lost Irvin. Irvin, are you still there? [01:34:51.680 --> 01:34:55.680] No, I'm here. Irvin, I heard you. [01:34:55.680 --> 01:34:58.680] Let me check my system. [01:34:58.680 --> 01:35:00.680] Have you got your... [01:35:00.680 --> 01:35:02.680] Well, I could hear you. [01:35:02.680 --> 01:35:04.680] Your cable needs a little wiggle. [01:35:04.680 --> 01:35:05.680] Hello, hello. [01:35:05.680 --> 01:35:07.680] No, there he is. Okay. [01:35:07.680 --> 01:35:08.680] All right. [01:35:08.680 --> 01:35:16.680] I've got a sound deal on my cable, and I thought I'd leaned against it, but I could hear Brett, so if I could hear Brett, I should. [01:35:16.680 --> 01:35:18.680] Anyway, I can hear you now. [01:35:18.680 --> 01:35:20.680] Okay, I was saying this. [01:35:20.680 --> 01:35:24.680] Ruth R.O.S.T. versus the Municipal Court. [01:35:24.680 --> 01:35:32.680] It's the civil number 19438 First District Division I, September 12, 1960, [01:35:32.680 --> 01:35:38.680] in the Southern Judicial District County of San Mateo, but again, I'll send it to you. [01:35:38.680 --> 01:35:49.680] I was saying that we did get like a $900 check from some servicer we didn't even know we had when we complained to the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau a couple of years ago. [01:35:49.680 --> 01:36:04.680] Our servicer is Will Fargo, and I wrote a made debt collection letter, I mean, a devaluation letter in September of 2014, [01:36:04.680 --> 01:36:07.680] and we stopped paying November of 2014. [01:36:07.680 --> 01:36:09.680] We haven't paid since. [01:36:09.680 --> 01:36:17.680] Now, I've gone into court and tried to quiet title and got my head caved in that you know what happened, basically. [01:36:17.680 --> 01:36:23.680] They send bills all these years, and I always answer them with some additional acceptance or something or another. [01:36:23.680 --> 01:36:34.680] And I try, by the way, MERS is involved with that case, and I learned from you years ago, you know, to try for free to contract. [01:36:34.680 --> 01:36:41.680] MERS, I mean, this has changed since then, but MERS does not even have a license to do business, say, in Nevada. [01:36:41.680 --> 01:36:56.680] And, of course, they're getting the loan, and we see at some point after we stopped paying in late 2014, on January 15th, we had crossing letters by Quintanets. [01:36:56.680 --> 01:37:07.680] I sent them a letter saying, how come we've made 29 payments to you, Will Fargo, and the only one to the original so-called lender, [01:37:07.680 --> 01:37:15.680] but you're still, they're still entitled. And on the 15th, they wrote us saying, you didn't pay for December, [01:37:15.680 --> 01:37:19.680] and now you haven't paid for January, and it was only January 15th. [01:37:19.680 --> 01:37:24.680] So, if you don't pay, we're going to start for closure proceedings February 19th of a strange day. [01:37:24.680 --> 01:37:35.680] And then, exactly a week later, at the 22nd of January, they sent us an assignment from GRI, the original lender, to Will Fargo. [01:37:35.680 --> 01:37:46.680] Well, it's my understanding that for them to get those, what do you call it, remits, and all that tax through those tax managers, they're supposed to put then any loan in the thing within 90 days of closing. [01:37:46.680 --> 01:37:53.680] And this was almost three years after the loan supposedly closed. That was one thing right there. [01:37:53.680 --> 01:38:02.680] And the assignment was bogus. It was one of these things where someone was a vice president of MERS, and they worked for Will Fargo. [01:38:02.680 --> 01:38:09.680] And they got a Minnesota. And last but not least, right at that same day, January 15th happened to be the Supreme Court case 9-0, [01:38:09.680 --> 01:38:14.680] Jezanowski versus Country Ride, which said you can rescind a loan. [01:38:14.680 --> 01:38:21.680] So, actually, I did that later, like March 4th, about six weeks later, which is beat the three-year deadline. [01:38:21.680 --> 01:38:25.680] But the judge just ignored Jezanowski, and, you know, that's... [01:38:25.680 --> 01:38:36.680] Okay, I did a cert to the California Supreme on Jezanowski and what's it called, Glasser. [01:38:36.680 --> 01:38:53.680] I asked the Supreme to distinguish Glasser because of Jezanowski based on the real estate settlement procedures act that says that right at the end, right at the last provision in it, [01:38:53.680 --> 01:39:07.680] is revision. And the last part of revision of rescission says that once foreclosure, the foreclosure process begins, the right to rescind renews. [01:39:07.680 --> 01:39:13.680] Yes. Yeah, there's a thing that says as soon as you go into foreclosure that you can bring it up then. [01:39:13.680 --> 01:39:23.680] And we did that, and that was the cert we sent to the Supreme, and it took them nine months, and they refused to hear it. [01:39:23.680 --> 01:39:31.680] The Court of Appeals blew it out, but we filed a, who the heck are you sued? [01:39:31.680 --> 01:39:34.680] And that was just... Lucky we put that... [01:39:34.680 --> 01:39:42.680] Yeah, Wells Fargo was the lender, Wells Fargo was the servicer, Wells Fargo was doing the foreclosure, and we said, who the heck are you? [01:39:42.680 --> 01:39:50.680] We don't know who you are. We never end in the contract. You never end in the contract with your alleged principal. [01:39:50.680 --> 01:39:54.680] Prove up your claim. [01:39:54.680 --> 01:39:59.680] Seven years later, they denied my cert. [01:39:59.680 --> 01:40:06.680] So I went to the guy and asked him, you know, that was just my BS suit. [01:40:06.680 --> 01:40:10.680] Now we got the real one. He said, I don't know. I'm tired of messing with it. [01:40:10.680 --> 01:40:15.680] His parents had passed away in the interim, and he inherited a million dollars. [01:40:15.680 --> 01:40:20.680] So he went to Wells Fargo and asked him, how much you want, how much I owe you? [01:40:20.680 --> 01:40:24.680] And they said 580,000. He wrote him a check. [01:40:24.680 --> 01:40:31.680] He paid 350. That was the original purchase price, but he hadn't paid on it in seven years. [01:40:31.680 --> 01:40:38.680] And so he paid them off, and then he sold it for 890. [01:40:38.680 --> 01:40:41.680] Oh, well, that would be more. [01:40:41.680 --> 01:40:46.680] He did real good. [01:40:46.680 --> 01:40:52.680] We can do those kind of things. And I was just getting warmed up on them. We were about to get to the good suit. [01:40:52.680 --> 01:40:56.680] So probably to talk off the air, I got all kind of stuff you can do. [01:40:56.680 --> 01:41:01.680] And I got a lot of the arguments that you can make, but they're not of much value. [01:41:01.680 --> 01:41:14.680] MERS and robo-signing. Most of the robo-signed documents are documents over which you have no standing. [01:41:14.680 --> 01:41:20.680] Some of them you have standing. And Tina can tell you about that, because she's got Mnuchin, [01:41:20.680 --> 01:41:26.680] who was the chairman of the Board of One West Bank or president or something. [01:41:26.680 --> 01:41:35.680] Yeah, when she got a forged document that was a quit claim, [01:41:35.680 --> 01:41:43.680] claiming she did a quit claim to some other party, and they tried to use that in a bankruptcy against her. [01:41:43.680 --> 01:41:52.680] And so she filed criminally against him in Travis County, Texas, and they're going to give it to the grand jury next month. [01:41:52.680 --> 01:41:58.680] Oh, yeah, I already described that years ago on their program. [01:41:58.680 --> 01:42:06.680] Well, right now Mnuchin is the director of the Treasury, and she may take him out. [01:42:06.680 --> 01:42:11.680] So anyway, there's a lot of things we can do. [01:42:11.680 --> 01:42:15.680] One quick thing with that assignment, by the way. There's something you're... [01:42:15.680 --> 01:42:28.680] You're able to fight any kind of challenge to the detrust. You're actually required to do it. [01:42:28.680 --> 01:42:32.680] So then trying to say, you're not a party. This assignment was just sort of a phase anyway. [01:42:32.680 --> 01:42:34.680] It's not technically true. [01:42:34.680 --> 01:42:37.680] And one of the things is statute of limitations. [01:42:37.680 --> 01:42:42.680] I thought the statute of limitations for years in Nevada was five years. [01:42:42.680 --> 01:42:49.680] So we had four colleges that had written contracts, which aren't worth the paper that I've written on, [01:42:49.680 --> 01:42:55.680] but written contracts, no, oral contracts, written contracts, open-ended contracts, and promissory notes. [01:42:55.680 --> 01:43:01.680] And the statute of limitations for promissory notes in state of Nevada is three years, like I said, in the year of paper six. [01:43:01.680 --> 01:43:04.680] So there should be S.O.L. just on that point alone. [01:43:04.680 --> 01:43:08.680] But, you know, that's just a lot of things, but we're not out of the house. [01:43:08.680 --> 01:43:14.680] But I can't seem to get them off that title. Now, I did have one of the questions that was embarrassing. [01:43:14.680 --> 01:43:21.680] I got a judgment in federal court against a debt collector. [01:43:21.680 --> 01:43:24.680] The court granted the judgment, the default judgment. [01:43:24.680 --> 01:43:36.680] And I filed a subpoena to reduce documents and papers, and served it. [01:43:36.680 --> 01:43:41.680] Okay, hold on. This is good. We're about to go to our sponsors. [01:43:41.680 --> 01:43:44.680] You're a guy after all in heart. Okay. [01:43:44.680 --> 01:43:46.680] That sounds really intriguing. [01:43:46.680 --> 01:43:48.680] We're looking forward to hearing more about that. [01:43:48.680 --> 01:43:49.680] Here. [01:43:49.680 --> 01:43:52.680] Ready to count, Brett Fountain? [01:43:52.680 --> 01:43:55.680] We'll allow radio. I'm not going to give out the call-in number. [01:43:55.680 --> 01:43:59.680] We're going to our last segment. We'll be right back. [01:43:59.680 --> 01:44:05.680] Through advances in technology, our lives have greatly improved, except in the area of nutrition. 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[01:45:29.680 --> 01:45:35.680] Jurisdictionary was created by a licensed attorney with 22 years of case-winning experience. [01:45:35.680 --> 01:45:40.680] Even if you're not in a lawsuit, you can learn what everyone should understand [01:45:40.680 --> 01:45:44.680] about the principles and practices that control our American courts. [01:45:44.680 --> 01:45:53.680] You'll receive our audio classroom, video seminar, tutorials, forms for civil cases, prosa tactics, and much more. [01:45:53.680 --> 01:45:57.680] Please visit ruleoflawradio.com and click on the banner. [01:45:57.680 --> 01:46:26.680] Or call toll-free 866-LAW-E-Z. [01:46:27.680 --> 01:46:56.680] Okay, we are back. Randy Kelkin, Brett Fountain, rule of law radio on this Friday, the 11th day of December, [01:46:56.680 --> 01:47:00.680] 2020, and we're talking to Irving in Nevada. [01:47:00.680 --> 01:47:03.680] Okay, you were getting to the good part, Irving. [01:47:03.680 --> 01:47:05.680] Oh, okay. [01:47:05.680 --> 01:47:10.680] Yeah, well, it's very much like a dog that chases the fire truck and then catches it, then what? [01:47:10.680 --> 01:47:16.680] I got the judgment, so I filed the opinion to produce papers and documents. [01:47:16.680 --> 01:47:22.680] Now, in the past in lower courts, I sometimes sent them a cheque scribble of them being a debt collector that I got a judgment against. [01:47:22.680 --> 01:47:27.680] And when it cashed it, and I had their bank account, I had to go get my money. [01:47:27.680 --> 01:47:28.680] But this guy didn't fall for that. [01:47:28.680 --> 01:47:30.680] So anyway, so I filed that. [01:47:30.680 --> 01:47:38.680] And the judge quashed this, you know, that's the wording here, and he actually spoke to me in the process. [01:47:38.680 --> 01:47:44.680] But even more important than his decision, like how am I supposed to execute my judgment, is that it's not really a judge. [01:47:44.680 --> 01:47:46.680] It's a federal magistrate. [01:47:46.680 --> 01:47:52.680] Number one, federal magistrates in Fiddle Court are supposed to get permission from both sides to proceed. [01:47:52.680 --> 01:47:56.680] They suppose to send out a letter, but I've never seen that letter since I didn't get one. [01:47:56.680 --> 01:48:03.680] And early in the trial, I said, I can say at the court sometime, I do not consent to this guy being involved in the case. [01:48:03.680 --> 01:48:05.680] So he just ignored that blow and pass. [01:48:05.680 --> 01:48:10.680] Then I eventually filed an affidavit of bias and prejudice against him. [01:48:10.680 --> 01:48:15.680] And from what I read, anything is supposed to come to a halt, and that has to be resolved. [01:48:15.680 --> 01:48:18.680] And he blew past that and issued this disorder. [01:48:18.680 --> 01:48:24.680] So my question is, do I file a bit of mandamus in the pellet courts? [01:48:24.680 --> 01:48:28.680] No, sir, the magistrate. [01:48:28.680 --> 01:48:29.680] Pardon? [01:48:29.680 --> 01:48:30.680] Yeah, okay. [01:48:30.680 --> 01:48:33.680] I'm speaking to an ass, but you know, this is... [01:48:33.680 --> 01:48:35.680] Yeah, Bob Sutter gives him a head nod. [01:48:35.680 --> 01:48:41.680] He acted out of scope because he had no statutory authority. [01:48:41.680 --> 01:48:42.680] Right. [01:48:42.680 --> 01:48:43.680] Yeah. [01:48:43.680 --> 01:48:46.680] Let him explain. [01:48:46.680 --> 01:48:51.680] Lawyers would never do that because they don't want the judge upset at them. [01:48:51.680 --> 01:48:52.680] And with good cause. [01:48:52.680 --> 01:48:55.680] I had a lawyer tell me that, I can't do that. [01:48:55.680 --> 01:48:59.680] If I do that, you might get win your case. [01:48:59.680 --> 01:49:07.680] But the next client, the judge is going to pay me back by screwing my next client. [01:49:07.680 --> 01:49:09.680] Yeah, they pay golf together in a crowd, right? [01:49:09.680 --> 01:49:10.680] Yeah. [01:49:10.680 --> 01:49:14.680] So they're not used to somebody coming right at them. [01:49:14.680 --> 01:49:20.680] And here, they are required to send you that document. [01:49:20.680 --> 01:49:27.680] And the magistrate can't proceed until he gets that signed document back. [01:49:27.680 --> 01:49:30.680] So they didn't even bother to send it to you. [01:49:30.680 --> 01:49:36.680] And then you objected in court, so you can't say you didn't know. [01:49:36.680 --> 01:49:39.680] And that's going to be on the transcript. [01:49:39.680 --> 01:49:44.680] That means he had no subject matter jurisdiction. [01:49:44.680 --> 01:49:48.680] That means he has no immunity. [01:49:48.680 --> 01:49:52.680] You get to sue him personally because he acted outside of scope. [01:49:52.680 --> 01:50:04.680] And that's the verbiage you need to use to make sure they don't turn your suit into a suit against the state or the agency. [01:50:04.680 --> 01:50:11.680] You know, anytime you're suing someone, if you're going to sue a policeman, you allege he acted outside of scope. [01:50:11.680 --> 01:50:17.680] Otherwise, the city will come in and treat it as a suit against the city. [01:50:17.680 --> 01:50:22.680] Here, you want to sue that magistrate personally. [01:50:22.680 --> 01:50:24.680] That's going to get him excited. [01:50:24.680 --> 01:50:29.680] The individual capacity and not his official capacity, you need more to say that. [01:50:29.680 --> 01:50:30.680] Yeah, exactly. [01:50:30.680 --> 01:50:32.680] That's exactly right. [01:50:32.680 --> 01:50:34.680] He had no official capacity. [01:50:34.680 --> 01:50:41.680] He was in his individual capacity and he was exerting or purporting to exert an authority. [01:50:41.680 --> 01:50:48.680] He did not expressly have him in the process, denied you in your right to the due process of the laws. [01:50:48.680 --> 01:50:52.680] And that's 18 U.S. Code 242. [01:50:52.680 --> 01:51:01.680] Make up that criminal complaint and send it to the special agent in charge of the FBI and insure it for a thousand bucks. [01:51:01.680 --> 01:51:05.680] Special agent, not the AG, who I've already had dealings with, as I told you last night. [01:51:05.680 --> 01:51:07.680] Special agent of the FBI. [01:51:07.680 --> 01:51:11.680] That's the only guy whose name you can get. [01:51:11.680 --> 01:51:16.680] The rest of the feds are now secret agents. [01:51:16.680 --> 01:51:20.680] The special agent in charge, his name's on the website. [01:51:20.680 --> 01:51:28.680] So you send it to him, certified, return requested, and you insure it for a thousand dollars. [01:51:28.680 --> 01:51:37.680] A little tiny point of detail, if you send it insured, you can't send it restricted. [01:51:37.680 --> 01:51:39.680] That's what the post office told me. [01:51:39.680 --> 01:51:44.680] Restricted means only the person named could sign for it. [01:51:44.680 --> 01:51:49.680] So you send it certified, return received, and you insure it for a thousand bucks. [01:51:49.680 --> 01:52:08.680] And you put a cover letter on the complaint asking the special agent in charge to initial this cover letter and send it back to you in the stamp self-addressed envelope included so that you will know he actually received it. [01:52:08.680 --> 01:52:16.680] If you don't get that letter back, you call the postal inspectors and you want your thousand bucks. [01:52:16.680 --> 01:52:27.680] You know what the postal inspectors are going to do. [01:52:27.680 --> 01:52:38.680] Now, when the special agent in charge doesn't act on your complaint, then you make up a complaint against the special agent in charge. [01:52:38.680 --> 01:52:48.680] For misfeasance in office, and you send that to the foreman of the grand jury by way of the U.S. Attorney's Office. [01:52:48.680 --> 01:53:00.680] And you put a cover letter on that one that says, please initial this document and return it to me so that I know you received it as we have problems with U.S. [01:53:00.680 --> 01:53:09.680] Attorney's secreting documents from the grand jury, but please do not sign it because the U.S. [01:53:09.680 --> 01:53:17.680] Attorney has a rubber stamp with your name on it that he uses to rubber stamp superseding indictments. [01:53:17.680 --> 01:53:29.680] So he'll get the first indictment from the grand jury on something minor and then they start doing their investigation and every subsequent claim they find he rubber stamps it. [01:53:29.680 --> 01:53:33.680] And the foreman probably doesn't know he has a rubber stamp. [01:53:33.680 --> 01:53:41.680] Now, the foreman knows that he got a rubber stamp for the foreman, but he doesn't know he kept one himself. [01:53:41.680 --> 01:53:49.680] So you ask him to initial it, not sign it, and return it to you in the stamps after his envelope so you'll know he got it. [01:53:49.680 --> 01:53:52.680] Well, there's no way he's getting that. [01:53:52.680 --> 01:53:55.680] You're not going to get that letter back. [01:53:55.680 --> 01:54:11.680] So then you make up another complaint, but this one's against the U.S. Attorney for tampering with government document for seeking a criminal complaint against the special agent in charge from the grand jury. [01:54:11.680 --> 01:54:17.680] And when he opens this one, he's going to say, he set me up. [01:54:17.680 --> 01:54:20.680] Yes, as a matter of fact, we did. [01:54:20.680 --> 01:54:22.680] Sound like fun, John. [01:54:22.680 --> 01:54:25.680] I mean, Irving. [01:54:25.680 --> 01:54:27.680] Is that just called archive? [01:54:27.680 --> 01:54:33.680] Yes, it is, but the archive machine blew up about three weeks ago. [01:54:33.680 --> 01:54:39.680] And I don't know if Deb has it back up yet, but she should pretty soon. [01:54:39.680 --> 01:54:46.680] Okay, and as far as my actual judgment, in the lower level, I've taken up the counselors and cops. [01:54:46.680 --> 01:54:53.680] And I called the marshal's office and they acted like they didn't know what I was talking about. [01:54:53.680 --> 01:54:55.680] So there's nothing I can do to try to, I mean, this is an ongoing business. [01:54:55.680 --> 01:55:05.680] And I thought in the old days, you give them the big judgment, give them some of the bucket per mile, and they go over there and make the guy in his character register offices. [01:55:05.680 --> 01:55:18.680] Make up a little lawsuit against the constable or whoever wouldn't exercise your judgment. We had a guy in Fort Worth, a lawyer, the sued the IRS and got a $6,000 claim. [01:55:18.680 --> 01:55:24.680] They didn't pay. He went there with the sheriff and started carrying furniture out of their office. [01:55:24.680 --> 01:55:26.680] And they got him a check. [01:55:26.680 --> 01:55:36.680] If the constable doesn't want to do his job, well, you got this criminal accusation called official misconduct. [01:55:36.680 --> 01:55:49.680] If a public official acting on the call of his authority exerts, purports to exert authority he doesn't have or fails to perform a duty he's required to perform. [01:55:49.680 --> 01:55:56.680] That's a crime in every state. And it's also a denial of due process. [01:55:56.680 --> 01:56:03.680] The denial of due process is harm per se. So you don't even have to prove harm. [01:56:03.680 --> 01:56:12.680] But since you have a judgment and he refused to execute the judgment, you sue him for the amount of the judgment. [01:56:12.680 --> 01:56:19.680] What I bet happens is he gets off the dime. [01:56:19.680 --> 01:56:22.680] Okay, I see. [01:56:22.680 --> 01:56:36.680] Okay, we have a rule on this show and that rule is never ask a public official to do anything you actually want him to do. [01:56:36.680 --> 01:56:38.680] That's a test clinical or anything? [01:56:38.680 --> 01:56:45.680] Because you never ask a public official to do anything that the law does not command him to do. [01:56:45.680 --> 01:56:48.680] So when he doesn't do it, boom, you get to hammer him. [01:56:48.680 --> 01:56:53.680] So there you go, Bubba, you want to mess with me? We'll see how that works for you. [01:56:53.680 --> 01:56:59.680] Once you've ran him through this ringer one time, there are not going to want to go there again. [01:56:59.680 --> 01:57:02.680] We have a whole routine about that. [01:57:02.680 --> 01:57:11.680] But the crux of it is ask him to do something that required to do or catch them doing something that they were forbidden to do. [01:57:11.680 --> 01:57:15.680] And then start filing complaints and work your way up the line. [01:57:15.680 --> 01:57:18.680] In the state, you can go to the JP. [01:57:18.680 --> 01:57:24.680] Then when the JP doesn't do anything, you go to the county court against the JP. [01:57:24.680 --> 01:57:29.680] And when he doesn't do anything, you go against the county judge with the district judge. [01:57:29.680 --> 01:57:33.680] You go to the attorney general. You go to the Chief Justice of the Supreme. [01:57:33.680 --> 01:57:36.680] I got complaints against Chief Justice Supreme of Texas. [01:57:36.680 --> 01:57:42.680] I've got a complaint against him with the presiding judge of the Court of Criminal Appeals. [01:57:42.680 --> 01:57:45.680] So we're having a good time. [01:57:45.680 --> 01:57:49.680] I've also got a 150 page criminal complaint against the governor. [01:57:49.680 --> 01:57:59.680] I don't know, you're roughing a lot of feathers there. [01:57:59.680 --> 01:58:03.680] Was that Red River case from like 50 years ago? [01:58:03.680 --> 01:58:05.680] Oh, City of Riverside. [01:58:05.680 --> 01:58:10.680] I actually wrote the underlying, oh no, that's not the one. [01:58:10.680 --> 01:58:13.680] I've got another one, a due process. [01:58:13.680 --> 01:58:20.680] There's a common law thing where they said their banks make money out of Finney and the judge ended up dead like six months later on a voting accident, [01:58:20.680 --> 01:58:24.680] which happened to be kind of moved into the bodies for the poison. [01:58:24.680 --> 01:58:27.680] Yeah, OK, OK, we're about to run out of time. [01:58:27.680 --> 01:58:31.680] But remember Jesus went around the whole line preaching heresies. [01:58:31.680 --> 01:58:33.680] The Pharisees didn't care about that. [01:58:33.680 --> 01:58:37.680] He didn't get in trouble until he kicked over the tables of the money changers. [01:58:37.680 --> 01:58:40.680] They've always been the baddest guys on the block. [01:58:40.680 --> 01:58:42.680] Thank you all for listening. [01:58:42.680 --> 01:58:44.680] We'll be right back next Thursday. [01:58:44.680 --> 01:59:13.680] Bye. [01:59:14.680 --> 01:59:29.680] 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. [01:59:29.680 --> 01:59:32.680] This is truly a Bible you can understand. [01:59:32.680 --> 01:59:40.680] To get your free copy of the New Testament recovery version, call us toll free at 888-551-0102. [01:59:40.680 --> 01:59:48.680] That's 888-551-0102 or visit us online at bfa.org.