[00:00.000 --> 00:06.840] The following news flash is brought to you by The Lone Star Lowdown. [00:06.840 --> 00:13.200] Markets for Monday the 22nd of July 2019 open with Precious Metals, Gold $1,429 an ounce, [00:13.200 --> 00:21.400] Silver $16.45 an ounce, Copper $2.75 an ounce, Oil Texas Crew $55.63 a barrel, Brent Crew [00:21.400 --> 00:29.800] $62.47 a barrel, and Cryptos in order of Market Cap, Bitcoin Core $10,566.52, Ethereum [00:29.800 --> 00:41.400] $227.26, XRP Ripple $0.33, Litecoin $100.31, and Bitcoin Cash is at $324.10 a Crypto Coin. [00:41.400 --> 00:52.360] Today in history, the year 1916, the preparedness day bombing, a time suitcase bomb was detonated [00:52.360 --> 00:57.840] on Market Street in San Francisco during the World War I Preparedness Day Parade, killing [00:57.840 --> 01:04.840] 10 and entering 40. [01:04.840 --> 01:09.480] And recent news, since Governor Greg Abbott signed House Bill 1325 legalizing Hemp and [01:09.480 --> 01:14.160] attacks his law back in June, county prosecutors around the state, including Houston, Austin [01:14.160 --> 01:18.160] and San Antonio, have been dropping marijuana possession charges and even refusing to file [01:18.160 --> 01:22.800] new ones since they are stipulating that they do not have the time or the laboratory equipment [01:22.800 --> 01:24.800] to test the herb for THC. [01:24.800 --> 01:28.480] Margaret Moore, the Travis County District Attorney, announced earlier this month that [01:28.480 --> 01:33.200] she was dismissing 32 felony possession and delivery of marijuana cases because of the [01:33.200 --> 01:34.200] law. [01:34.200 --> 01:37.640] Mr. Abbott and other state officials, including the Attorney General, stipulated in a letter [01:37.640 --> 01:42.160] to county district attorneys back on Thursday that marijuana has not been decriminalized [01:42.160 --> 01:48.320] in Texas and that these actions demonstrate a misunderstanding of how HB 1325 works, as [01:48.320 --> 01:51.280] well as other cities too, like the District Attorney. [01:51.280 --> 01:57.400] In El Paso, Kyma Esparza, a Democrat who also stated earlier this month that the law, quote, [01:57.400 --> 02:01.800] will not have an effect on the prosecution of marijuana cases in El Paso. [02:01.800 --> 02:06.800] However, the issue was succinctly summarized by Mr. Brandon Ball, an assistant public defender [02:06.800 --> 02:10.800] in Harris County, who stated that, quote, the law is constantly changing on what makes [02:10.800 --> 02:13.520] something illegal based on its chemical makeup. [02:13.520 --> 02:17.440] It's important that if someone is charged with something, the test matches what they're [02:17.440 --> 02:22.640] charged with. [02:22.640 --> 02:27.280] A paper by Tulane University identified a five-and-a-half-inch American pocket shark [02:27.280 --> 02:32.400] as the first of its kind in the Gulf of Mexico, the specimen being only the second pocket [02:32.400 --> 02:38.080] shark ever captured or recorded with the other one being found way back in 1979 in the East [02:38.080 --> 02:39.080] Pacific Ocean. [02:39.080 --> 02:43.840] According to the university paper, the shark secretes a luminous fluid from a gland near [02:43.840 --> 02:50.120] its front fins for the purpose it is hypothesized to lure and prey who may be drawn into the [02:50.120 --> 03:16.120] glow. [03:16.120 --> 03:34.120] A paper by Tulane University identified a five-and-a-half-inch American pocket shark as the first of its [03:34.120 --> 03:44.000] kind in the Gulf of Mexico, the second of its kind in the Gulf of Mexico, the second of [03:44.000 --> 03:54.000] its kind in the Gulf of Mexico, the second of its kind in the Gulf of Mexico, the second [03:54.000 --> 04:00.000] Bad boys, bad boys, what you gonna do, what you gonna do when they come for you. [04:00.000 --> 04:02.000] The Chokiton, that's one. [04:02.000 --> 04:04.000] Okay, the bad boys are back. [04:04.000 --> 04:11.000] Randy Kelton, Jack Fountain, Rue de Raurédias on this Friday, the eighth day of January. [04:11.000 --> 04:13.000] I've gotten a lot of breathing. [04:13.000 --> 04:16.000] I forgot to tell you the year. [04:16.000 --> 04:17.000] You remember the year? [04:17.000 --> 04:18.000] What year is it? [04:18.000 --> 04:31.000] He told me today, I think it's Friday and I think it's the eighth day of January, 2021. [04:31.000 --> 04:34.000] But at least we made it this far. [04:34.000 --> 04:42.000] And I'm going to start out talking about databases, dang-blasted databases. [04:42.000 --> 04:57.000] In the process now of putting together the databases for the document creation tool that I've been planning for years and generating the data I need for them. [04:57.000 --> 05:05.000] And I spent two days and finally got access to the database. [05:05.000 --> 05:11.000] Those texts, it took them two minutes to find the typo I missed for two days. [05:11.000 --> 05:13.000] That was embarrassing. [05:13.000 --> 05:32.000] But anyway, I'm bringing up the traffic ticket site and I'm reworking it so that when you put your data in, it will generate your output documents immediately. [05:32.000 --> 05:41.000] Used to it would send me all the information and I'd have to run it through a couple of routines and then send it to everybody. [05:41.000 --> 05:53.000] But I'm building a database to collect it and then some queries to put together my output documents and they should send them to you immediately. [05:53.000 --> 05:59.000] And this time I'm going to promote it pretty serious. [05:59.000 --> 06:06.000] See if we can't generate a lot of activity. [06:06.000 --> 06:11.000] So are you ready to get some tickets, Brett? [06:11.000 --> 06:14.000] Are you going to send some cops my way? [06:14.000 --> 06:16.000] Oh yeah, I'll be glad to. [06:16.000 --> 06:22.000] I got a few here in Wise County that are not really happy with you right now. [06:22.000 --> 06:27.000] Well, you know, so far I've been having a lot of trouble getting them to pull me over. [06:27.000 --> 06:35.000] They come up behind me and I see, I'm like, in my mind, I kind of think, oh boy, here we go. [06:35.000 --> 06:45.000] Get my recorder ready and then they just, whew, they slow down, they peel off to the side, they go into a parking lot somewhere else. [06:45.000 --> 06:49.000] They drop off, they don't ever actually let them pull me over. [06:49.000 --> 06:51.000] They don't hit the lights. [06:51.000 --> 06:54.000] I'm wondering if it's, should I take that personally? [06:54.000 --> 06:56.000] You probably should. [06:56.000 --> 07:00.000] I take it you didn't get a letter from the chief of police. [07:00.000 --> 07:04.000] I mean, a Christmas card from the chief, please. [07:04.000 --> 07:14.000] No, last week I got from the chief of police chief was a fussy complaint about how the AG had crawled down his throat. [07:14.000 --> 07:18.000] Oh, poor baby. [07:18.000 --> 07:22.000] Okay, turning the phone lines on. [07:22.000 --> 07:27.000] Call in line 512-646-1984. [07:27.000 --> 07:31.000] If you have a question or a comment, give us a call. [07:31.000 --> 07:34.000] We'll be taking your calls all night. [07:34.000 --> 07:40.000] And I've been kind of avoiding the political thing. [07:40.000 --> 07:47.000] Getting over my depression from last, what happened Wednesday. [07:47.000 --> 07:50.000] Time for us to pick up and move on. [07:50.000 --> 07:56.000] So, in this new year, it's time to start taking them on. [07:56.000 --> 08:02.000] I will go down tomorrow and start collecting the final documents I need. [08:02.000 --> 08:11.000] I went to the clerk and tried to get into the records and I didn't have permissions. [08:11.000 --> 08:13.000] So, oh, that was a mistake. [08:13.000 --> 08:15.000] They made a boo boo. [08:15.000 --> 08:21.000] And so I sent a information to try to tell you that was a glitch. [08:21.000 --> 08:24.000] Yeah, like it's the computer fault. [08:24.000 --> 08:25.000] Yeah, it was a glitch. [08:25.000 --> 08:33.000] You see, the public line had permissions set on the public line. [08:33.000 --> 08:39.000] The password worked and it got me into their database. [08:39.000 --> 08:50.000] And I was able to search their records and pull up the cases with a list of all of the documents. [08:50.000 --> 08:57.000] But when I tried to open one of the documents, it said I didn't have permission. [08:57.000 --> 09:01.000] Now, that's kind of your area, Brett. [09:01.000 --> 09:08.000] How does a permission get changed by a glitch? [09:08.000 --> 09:12.000] You know, glitches don't set permissions. [09:12.000 --> 09:14.000] The administrators set permissions. [09:14.000 --> 09:17.000] They decide who's allowed to see what. [09:17.000 --> 09:21.000] And if they created a guest account that's supposed to be used by we the people, [09:21.000 --> 09:25.000] then they decide what does that account have access to. [09:25.000 --> 09:29.000] The computer doesn't know that we're the masters of the servants or else it would show us everything. [09:29.000 --> 09:30.000] Exactly. [09:30.000 --> 09:39.000] And that was exactly what I sent to them and got this quick letter back from the county attorney [09:39.000 --> 09:42.000] assuring me this was not a conspiracy. [09:42.000 --> 09:47.000] You know, I complained to him that permissions don't change themselves. [09:47.000 --> 09:50.000] Permissions have to be changed. [09:50.000 --> 09:54.000] Permissions do not get changed by a computer glitch. [09:54.000 --> 09:57.000] Somebody changed these permissions. [09:57.000 --> 10:04.000] And I had been trying to access these records and they've kind of got an idea of what I'm doing. [10:04.000 --> 10:08.000] I suspect some of them are listening to this show, at least I hope they are. [10:08.000 --> 10:12.000] And they've heard what I intend to do. [10:12.000 --> 10:13.000] And that's good. [10:13.000 --> 10:19.000] I want them to know what I'm doing because when they find out what I'm doing, [10:19.000 --> 10:25.000] they're going to start running around to see if they can find a way to hit me off. [10:25.000 --> 10:28.000] But they don't have a way to hit me off. [10:28.000 --> 10:30.000] And that way... [10:30.000 --> 10:34.000] Maybe they would, except for all you're asking them to do is follow the law. [10:34.000 --> 10:35.000] Exactly. [10:35.000 --> 10:37.000] So that's tough to hit off then. [10:37.000 --> 10:39.000] Oh, it gets better. [10:39.000 --> 10:41.000] Since I couldn't get... [10:41.000 --> 10:49.000] I sent in an information request because I went down there and they were concerned about COVID and all this stuff. [10:49.000 --> 11:00.000] So I sent a request asking the clerk if she could send me all of these records in electronic format [11:00.000 --> 11:03.000] since they keep it in electronic format. [11:03.000 --> 11:10.000] And that would avoid me having to come down there and create a nuisance for her and her staff. [11:10.000 --> 11:17.000] And for all of the listeners, that is Texas government code 552-228. [11:17.000 --> 11:21.000] If you ask for it in electronic format, they got to give it to you. [11:21.000 --> 11:26.000] Well, the county attorney... [11:26.000 --> 11:29.000] Okay, they just didn't respond that time. [11:29.000 --> 11:36.000] And then so I went down there to get them in person and then the computer didn't work. [11:36.000 --> 11:46.000] So then I sent this written request, the second request, notifying, you know, noticing them that they didn't respond timely to the first one. [11:46.000 --> 11:51.000] And then when I finally had to go down there personally, your computers didn't work. [11:51.000 --> 11:59.000] And I think they've complained about how permissions don't just get changed by a glitch. [11:59.000 --> 12:05.000] And he sent a letter back assuring me that this was not a conspiracy. [12:05.000 --> 12:10.000] And he sent a letter to the attorney general asking the attorney dealing. [12:10.000 --> 12:15.000] He accused me of requesting the records under the Open Records Act. [12:15.000 --> 12:21.000] He claims that the Open Records Act did not apply to court records. [12:21.000 --> 12:26.000] And he sent an attorney general letter opinion to that effect. [12:26.000 --> 12:30.000] And I haven't had time to research it out. [12:30.000 --> 12:42.000] But it seems to say that if the Constitution grants you a constitutional right to a public court, [12:42.000 --> 12:53.000] but somebody asks for records under a statute that doesn't apply to the court records, [12:53.000 --> 12:57.000] then the court does not have to produce the records. [12:57.000 --> 13:00.000] How does that work? [13:00.000 --> 13:11.000] So if I ask for it and cite the wrong statute, does the Constitution become inoperable? [13:11.000 --> 13:14.000] I say no, no. [13:14.000 --> 13:16.000] That's what I'm going to say. [13:16.000 --> 13:21.000] And I'm going to go after him criminally for filing that. [13:21.000 --> 13:29.000] Actually, I'm going to go after the clerk criminally because I wonder, you need to get another attorney. [13:29.000 --> 13:31.000] This one's not giving you good advice. [13:31.000 --> 13:36.000] And that attorney is not the custodian of the record. [13:36.000 --> 13:37.000] You are. [13:37.000 --> 13:42.000] So whatever he does, he does in your name. [13:42.000 --> 13:44.000] So he does this. [13:44.000 --> 13:59.000] And what he forgot is that when he is representing a public official, he has just stepped outside his immunity. [13:59.000 --> 14:09.000] Now, when I went to him about him telling a local police officer not to give one of my criminal complaints to a magistrate, [14:09.000 --> 14:13.000] he come out and told me that he didn't do that. [14:13.000 --> 14:17.000] He said, Mr. Kelton, do you think I might have lost my professional mind? [14:17.000 --> 14:24.000] Do you really think I would waive my sovereign immunity by giving legal advice to the police? [14:24.000 --> 14:27.000] I said, well, I didn't think so. [14:27.000 --> 14:30.000] I'm just following the thunder here, James. [14:30.000 --> 14:35.000] It turned out I just found out recently that he lied to me. [14:35.000 --> 14:40.000] He did tell the chief of police not to give that to the magistrate. [14:40.000 --> 14:48.000] And when I left his office, I went back to the chief's office, knocked on the door, and one of the officers opened the door and he knew why I was there. [14:48.000 --> 14:50.000] And he's grinning real big. [14:50.000 --> 14:52.000] What can I do for you, Mr. Kelton? [14:52.000 --> 15:03.000] I said, tell the chief that James Staten, the county attorney, just threw his behind under the bus and I'm here to run him over with it. [15:03.000 --> 15:06.000] He laughed and he said, well, I'll let you in on one condition. [15:06.000 --> 15:08.000] I said, what's that? [15:08.000 --> 15:09.000] You let me watch. [15:09.000 --> 15:10.000] Watch hack. [15:10.000 --> 15:12.000] Take video. [15:12.000 --> 15:13.000] And I did. [15:13.000 --> 15:21.000] I read the chief's right act and the chief sat there and kept his mouth shut and put up with my abuse. [15:21.000 --> 15:30.000] And it turned out the prosecuting attorney had lied to me that he did do what he said he did. [15:30.000 --> 15:42.000] So this time the prosecuting attorney sent an information request for the district district clerk. [15:42.000 --> 15:49.000] So tell me, Brett, what is wrong with that picture? [15:49.000 --> 15:52.000] Well, there's the district and there's the county. [15:52.000 --> 15:58.000] They get their funds from different places and if they try to cross the lines, then that's a misappropriation of public funds. [15:58.000 --> 16:00.000] That's what I thought. [16:00.000 --> 16:12.000] The first thing that stood out to me, though, was that he was talking like a lawyer to you when he said, did you really think I would risk my career and lose my professional mind and all that stuff? [16:12.000 --> 16:21.000] That's just a whole bunch of fancy shiny look over here, did you really think? But he's not actually answering your question. [16:21.000 --> 16:24.000] It's like his typical for an attorney. [16:24.000 --> 16:25.000] Exactly. [16:25.000 --> 16:26.000] But I didn't care. [16:26.000 --> 16:28.000] He gave me a shot at the chief. [16:28.000 --> 16:33.000] I got to ream the chief really good. [16:33.000 --> 16:37.000] But now I get to use it against him. [16:37.000 --> 16:45.000] He doesn't, he doesn't get to say that he didn't know that he was outside the scope with his son. [16:45.000 --> 16:52.000] That's right. He admitted it to you. He knew that wouldn't be right, even if he just did it. [16:52.000 --> 16:56.000] So now I got him. I get to sue him. Hang on. [16:56.000 --> 17:00.000] Going to our sponsors, we'll be right back. [17:00.000 --> 17:05.000] Are you being harassed by debt collectors with phone calls, letters, or even lawsuits? [17:05.000 --> 17:09.000] Stop debt collectors now with the Michael Mirris Proven Method. [17:09.000 --> 17:14.000] Michael Mirris has won six cases in federal court against debt collectors and now you can win two. [17:14.000 --> 17:20.000] You'll get step-by-step instructions in plain English on how to win in court using federal civil rights statutes. [17:20.000 --> 17:26.000] What to do when contacted by phones, mail, or court summons. How to answer letters and phone calls. 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[18:04.000 --> 18:09.000] In today's America we live in an us against them society and if we the people are ever going to have a free society [18:09.000 --> 18:12.000] then we're going to have to stand and defend our own rights. [18:12.000 --> 18:15.000] Among those rights are the right to travel freely from place to place. [18:15.000 --> 18:19.000] The right to act in our own private capacity and most importantly the right to due process of law. [18:19.000 --> 18:25.000] Traffic courts afford us the least expensive opportunity to learn how to enforce and preserve our rights through due process. [18:25.000 --> 18:30.000] Former Sheriff's Deputy Eddie Craig in conjunction with Rule of Law Radio has put together the most comprehensive teaching tool available [18:30.000 --> 18:34.000] that will help you understand what due process is and how to hold courts to the rule of law. [18:34.000 --> 18:40.000] You can get your own copy of this invaluable material by going to ruleoflawradio.com and ordering your copy today. [18:40.000 --> 18:44.000] By ordering now you'll receive a copy of Eddie's book The Texas Transportation Code, The Law Versus the Lie, [18:44.000 --> 18:47.000] video and audio of the original 2009 seminar. [18:47.000 --> 18:50.000] Hundreds of research documents and other useful resource material. [18:50.000 --> 18:54.000] Learn how to fight for your rights with the help of this material from ruleoflawradio.com. [18:54.000 --> 18:59.000] By ordering your copy today and together we can have free society we all want and deserve. [19:25.000 --> 19:29.000] The Texas Transportation Code [19:29.000 --> 19:34.000] The Texas Transportation Code [19:34.000 --> 19:39.000] The Texas Transportation Code [19:53.000 --> 19:57.000] Okay, we are back. Ramda Kelton, Brett Fountain, Rule of Law Radio. [19:57.000 --> 20:05.000] And I like those kinds of discussions because it kind of demonstrates the strategy that we use. [20:05.000 --> 20:13.000] Instead of expecting public officials to do what they're supposed to and then getting upset and frustrated when they don't, [20:13.000 --> 20:21.000] it's better to go in with the expectations that they won't do what they're supposed to. [20:21.000 --> 20:28.000] And then you get to look for things that they did that they weren't supposed to. [20:28.000 --> 20:32.000] But if we're not looking for them, a lot of times we'll miss them. [20:32.000 --> 20:39.000] Like the county attorney responding for the district clerk or the district judge. [20:39.000 --> 20:43.000] I have a response from both of them. [20:43.000 --> 20:49.000] I put in a request to the district judge and to the district attorney at different times. [20:49.000 --> 20:55.000] And James Staten, the county attorney, responded to both. [20:55.000 --> 21:03.000] I don't understand why we have a district attorney and nobody's going to him. [21:03.000 --> 21:07.000] They're going to Staten. I think Staten is promoting this. [21:07.000 --> 21:10.000] I'm getting a lot of background noise somewhere. [21:10.000 --> 21:19.000] I think Staten is setting this up because he wants to make himself look more important around there. [21:19.000 --> 21:31.000] I'm going to give him important when I start filing criminal charges against public officials for doing what he told them to do. [21:31.000 --> 21:33.000] Oh, that's going to be fun. [21:33.000 --> 21:40.000] That's kind of the point of this. Give them an opportunity to screw up and you will never be disappointed. [21:40.000 --> 21:44.000] Ask them to do and expect them to do what they're supposed to. [21:44.000 --> 21:47.000] And you will always be disappointed. [21:47.000 --> 21:51.000] Okay, we are going to go to our callers. [21:51.000 --> 21:57.000] We're going to start with Mark in Massachusetts. Hello, Mark. [21:57.000 --> 22:01.000] What do you have for us today? [22:01.000 --> 22:06.000] Thank you, Randy. So it's actually what you were talking about. [22:06.000 --> 22:09.000] I'm kind of happy you're talking about it. [22:09.000 --> 22:16.000] So I put in our freedom of information request to the governor of Massachusetts. [22:16.000 --> 22:30.000] I just simply asked to define, I wanted a definition of his executive order of what the words person and individual and members, what were the definitions of those words. [22:30.000 --> 22:38.000] And so, of course, they told me they didn't have to answer that question because he was the governor. [22:38.000 --> 22:47.000] And the person who answered, the person who's in charge of answering those questions is a legal assistant. [22:47.000 --> 22:54.000] And I got an on-stationary that had the rest of the legal team on it. [22:54.000 --> 23:07.000] So I know there's the judicial part, the judiciary is getting in between me and the executive branch. [23:07.000 --> 23:11.000] So I was wondering if you could comment on that. Like, what are my options? [23:11.000 --> 23:18.000] Okay, I'm not sure you said the judiciary was in on it. What did that mean? [23:18.000 --> 23:25.000] I'm not in on it, but so the legal assistant is part of the, she's got a bar card. [23:25.000 --> 23:27.000] Oh, good. [23:27.000 --> 23:38.000] She's the officer of the call. I'm assuming she does because she said she's a, if she's not, she's in trouble because she's putting herself out there as a legal assistant. [23:38.000 --> 23:42.000] And I'm assuming she has a bar card. [23:42.000 --> 23:43.000] So I'm assuming... [23:43.000 --> 23:47.000] Okay, she can be a legal assistant without being an attorney. [23:47.000 --> 23:53.000] But if she's a legal assistant for the governor, almost certainly she's an attorney. [23:53.000 --> 24:08.000] Yeah. And so she also sent in on paper a letterhead with all the other, like, four or five other, you know, top people in the department that were all lawyers. [24:08.000 --> 24:21.000] Okay, then all of them need to get bar grieved just for yucks. But you put the request into the governor, unless your state's different than most every other state. [24:21.000 --> 24:32.000] The governor is the custodian of the record for the executive branch, not some assistant lawyer. [24:32.000 --> 24:40.000] Now the assistant lawyer can certainly do what she's doing, but the governor is responding at superior. [24:40.000 --> 24:47.000] You did not hire that assistant. You hired the governor. [24:47.000 --> 24:52.000] The assistant answers to the governor. The governor answers to you. [24:52.000 --> 25:04.000] Have you looked at the criminal complaint that I filed with the Travis County District Attorney against Governor Abbott here in Texas? [25:04.000 --> 25:09.000] I didn't read the whole thing. I was just looking at that. [25:09.000 --> 25:13.000] It may give you some ideas of how to go after him. [25:13.000 --> 25:24.000] I'm speaking to Texas law, but the penal code for all of the states are almost the same except the original colonies. [25:24.000 --> 25:28.000] Some of those are a little bit different. [25:28.000 --> 25:35.000] Pennsylvania. I haven't done a little work with Massachusetts, but not a lot. [25:35.000 --> 25:43.000] The original colonies did not adopt the model penal code, so they're a little bit different. [25:43.000 --> 25:52.000] But the ones that did not adopt the model penal code didn't because their laws were so close already. [25:52.000 --> 26:00.000] Have you read the open records statute for Massachusetts? [26:00.000 --> 26:05.000] I'll get that right in a minute. [26:05.000 --> 26:14.000] I did a while ago. It's rather lengthly, and I feel like it's a backstop for them. [26:14.000 --> 26:18.000] There's only a few places in there that you care about. [26:18.000 --> 26:24.000] There will be a section that tells them they have to produce, and that's joined right at the beginning. [26:24.000 --> 26:34.000] Then there will be a section that tells these are the records that are specifically made open for public inspection. [26:34.000 --> 26:43.000] I have a request that lists all of the stuff that's in that section. [26:43.000 --> 26:46.000] I call it my scope and content request. [26:46.000 --> 26:48.000] That's for Texas, right? [26:48.000 --> 26:55.000] Yes, but every state is going to have a section that says these records are open for inspection. [26:55.000 --> 27:04.000] You always try to make your request in terms of what's listed in that section. [27:04.000 --> 27:16.000] Then down at the end, it will tell you if the open records statute is a criminal or civil statute in Massachusetts. [27:16.000 --> 27:20.000] Is it a criminal or a civil statute? [27:20.000 --> 27:24.000] I just couldn't find that in the criminal code. [27:24.000 --> 27:30.000] No, it'll be in the act itself, and it's generally right at the end. [27:30.000 --> 27:46.000] Yeah, Massachusetts, I just found it. It's Massachusetts General Laws, Part 1, Title 1, Chapter 4, Section 7, and Subsection 26. [27:46.000 --> 27:48.000] It's a pretty short little thing. [27:48.000 --> 27:55.000] I mean, it's longer than most of the ones around it, but it's not anywhere near as long as Texas. [27:55.000 --> 28:06.000] And it does say at the very end, any person denied access to public records may pursue the remedy provided for in Section 10A of Chapter 66. [28:06.000 --> 28:10.000] So we can go find what that is. [28:10.000 --> 28:18.000] If I remember, they do talk about like a civil complaint, a civil action. [28:18.000 --> 28:21.000] Do they grant damages? [28:21.000 --> 28:24.000] Yeah, I don't know. [28:24.000 --> 28:28.000] Well, there is another way to do this. [28:28.000 --> 28:35.000] Before I go that far, let's step back to the original request. [28:35.000 --> 28:45.000] You're asking them to define terms, and that is not exactly asking for records. [28:45.000 --> 29:00.000] Well, I asked the way I asked for it. I asked for the record that explains, like, the record that they got that from. [29:00.000 --> 29:04.000] The record that... I don't know how you're going to tell me. I'm sorry. [29:04.000 --> 29:11.000] No, that's okay. You went to write exactly where I wanted to go. [29:11.000 --> 29:15.000] I was thinking, how do we ask for this? [29:15.000 --> 29:25.000] What definitions are used by the department to define terms of art? [29:25.000 --> 29:44.000] Terms that have a special meaning in legal parlance or within the context of this statute that is different than the definition of the term used in the common tongue. [29:44.000 --> 29:48.000] There's got to be something in there with definitions. [29:48.000 --> 30:02.000] And if they don't have any definitions, they'll have to tell you, and then you go to Webster's and see what they mean. [30:02.000 --> 30:07.000] It's clear cell phones have changed the way we live and work, but have they negatively affected our health? [30:07.000 --> 30:15.000] I'm Dr. Catherine Albrecht, and I'll be back in just a moment with new findings about how cell phones may actually alter our brain chemistry. [30:15.000 --> 30:20.000] Privacy is under attack. When you give up data about yourself, you'll never get it back again. [30:20.000 --> 30:25.000] And once your privacy is gone, you'll find your freedoms will start to vanish too. [30:25.000 --> 30:30.000] So protect your rights, say no to surveillance, and keep your information to yourself. [30:30.000 --> 30:33.000] Privacy, it's worth hanging on to. [30:33.000 --> 30:40.000] This public service announcement is brought to you by StartPage.com, the private search engine alternative to Google, Yahoo, and Bing. [30:40.000 --> 30:44.000] Start over with StartPage. [30:44.000 --> 30:47.000] Cell phones emit radio frequency energy. It's a fact. [30:47.000 --> 30:52.000] But whether it's dangerous to have a phone beaming this kind of radiation near your head has been disputed. [30:52.000 --> 30:56.000] Some have blamed it for brain tumors, while cell phone companies have downplayed concerns. [30:56.000 --> 31:02.000] Well, now the Journal of the American Medical Association is confirming that cell phones affect brain chemistry. [31:02.000 --> 31:11.000] A study of 47 volunteers showed that glucose metabolism in the area of the brain closest to the cell phone antenna increases when the cell phone is on. [31:11.000 --> 31:16.000] While researchers aren't sure whether this exposure causes damage, I'm not taking any chances. [31:16.000 --> 31:20.000] I always keep the phone far from my body, and I use a corded headset. [31:20.000 --> 31:30.000] I'm Dr. Catherine Albrecht. More news and information at CatherineAlbrecht.com. [31:30.000 --> 31:34.000] I lost my son on September 11, 2001. [31:34.000 --> 31:38.000] Most people don't know that a third tower fell on September 11. [31:38.000 --> 31:42.000] World Trade Center 7, a 47-story skyscraper, is not hit by a plane. [31:42.000 --> 31:46.000] Although the official explanation is that fire brought down Building 7, [31:46.000 --> 31:50.000] over 1,200 architects and engineers have looked into the evidence [31:50.000 --> 31:52.000] and believed there is more to the story. [31:52.000 --> 31:55.000] Bring justice to my son, my uncle, my nephews, my son. [31:55.000 --> 31:57.000] Go to BuildingWhat.org. [31:57.000 --> 32:00.000] Why it fell, why it matters, and what you can do. [32:00.000 --> 32:05.000] Logos Radio Network welcomes a new show to our lineup for the new year. [32:05.000 --> 32:11.000] Scripture Talk with Nana will begin Wednesday, January 8, from 8 to 10 p.m. Central Time. [32:11.000 --> 32:14.000] Our goal is in accord with Matthew 5, 16. [32:14.000 --> 32:18.000] Let your light so shine before men that they may see your good works [32:18.000 --> 32:21.000] and glorify your Father which is in heaven. [32:21.000 --> 32:26.000] We wish to reflect God's light and be a blessing to all those with a hearing ear. [32:26.000 --> 32:29.000] Join Nana and guests for both verse-by-verse Bible studies [32:29.000 --> 32:34.000] and topical Bible studies designed to provoke unto love and good works. [32:34.000 --> 32:38.000] Our verse-by-verse Bible studies will begin in the book of Matthew [32:38.000 --> 32:41.000] where we will discuss one chapter per week. [32:41.000 --> 32:43.000] Our topical Bible studies will vary each week [32:43.000 --> 32:48.000] and will explore sound doctrine as well as Christian character development. [32:48.000 --> 32:53.000] So mark your calendar and join us live on LogosRadioNetwork.com [32:53.000 --> 32:56.000] Wednesdays from 8 to 10 p.m. starting January 8 [32:56.000 --> 33:00.000] for an inspiring and motivating discussion of the Scriptures. [33:00.000 --> 33:10.000] You're listening to the LogosRadio Network at LogosRadioNetwork.com [33:14.000 --> 33:16.000] Yeah, I got the warrant. [33:16.000 --> 33:19.000] And I'm gonna solve them. [33:19.000 --> 33:22.000] Today I'll document them. [33:22.000 --> 33:24.000] Prosecute them. [33:24.000 --> 33:26.000] Okay. [33:26.000 --> 33:29.000] What was that? [33:42.000 --> 33:44.000] Okay, we are back. [33:44.000 --> 33:47.000] Randy Kelton, Brett Fountain, Real Vlog Radio [33:47.000 --> 33:50.000] and we're talking to Mark in Massachusetts, [33:50.000 --> 33:52.000] Massachusetts. [33:52.000 --> 33:57.000] What were the terms again that you wanted to define? [33:57.000 --> 34:01.000] So my letter was very short. [34:01.000 --> 34:07.000] I asked for the records that define the words person, [34:07.000 --> 34:11.000] members, individual, and customer. [34:14.000 --> 34:17.000] Individual and customer. [34:17.000 --> 34:18.000] Okay. [34:18.000 --> 34:20.000] They were all legal terms. [34:20.000 --> 34:22.000] You were going somewhere with this. [34:22.000 --> 34:25.000] Where were you going with this? [34:25.000 --> 34:31.000] So any executive orders, the governor or the city that I live and give, [34:31.000 --> 34:34.000] they never say man, woman, or people. [34:34.000 --> 34:36.000] They're always legal terms. [34:36.000 --> 34:38.000] So I wanted to separate. [34:38.000 --> 34:49.000] I wanted to start to separate their orders from, you know, me, from people. [34:49.000 --> 34:53.000] So you want to see how they get to you, the singular human being. [34:53.000 --> 34:55.000] Does that make sense? [34:55.000 --> 34:56.000] Yeah. [34:56.000 --> 34:59.000] And then I was going, this is, I was, I'll tell you where I was going with that. [34:59.000 --> 35:01.000] I was going to send them an affidavit. [35:01.000 --> 35:03.000] I didn't know how I was going to write it up, [35:03.000 --> 35:10.000] but I would pretty much get them to agree that their orders don't affect me. [35:10.000 --> 35:11.000] Right. [35:11.000 --> 35:18.000] And so they would agree with that by defaulting. [35:18.000 --> 35:26.000] By defining these person or members or customers. [35:26.000 --> 35:32.000] Or by simply certifying that they don't have those records either way. [35:32.000 --> 35:40.000] Well, that doesn't help much because we still have the common tongue meaning of those terms. [35:40.000 --> 35:41.000] Exactly. [35:41.000 --> 35:47.000] Then you can go back to that and decide whether or not you're part of his intended scope. [35:47.000 --> 35:48.000] Okay. [35:48.000 --> 35:53.000] So either it doesn't apply to you or he just violated the Constitution, one of the two. [35:53.000 --> 36:04.000] Have you looked at the Constitution of Massachusetts as it applies to the powers of the governor? [36:04.000 --> 36:14.000] I've so, I haven't, you know, so I have, I have read that the Massachusetts Constitution quite a bit. [36:14.000 --> 36:21.000] What section creates the office of governor? [36:21.000 --> 36:23.000] Probably at the beginning. [36:23.000 --> 36:24.000] Okay. [36:24.000 --> 36:25.000] Let me explain why I'm asking that. [36:25.000 --> 36:30.000] It's chapter five or section five in Texas. [36:30.000 --> 36:31.000] Okay. [36:31.000 --> 36:36.000] And it specifically states what the governor can do. [36:36.000 --> 36:46.000] It doesn't state what he can do because he can only do what it says he can do. [36:46.000 --> 36:55.000] It's real important to understand that you, you do anything you want to unless the law specifically forbids you to do it. [36:55.000 --> 36:59.000] But he is not a private citizen in this capacity. [36:59.000 --> 37:08.000] He is a public official and as a public official, he may only do what the law specifically authorizes him to do. [37:08.000 --> 37:21.000] And generally the chief executive officer of the state has power over the executive branch. [37:21.000 --> 37:28.000] That's the only branch that has a chief officer. [37:28.000 --> 37:35.000] The, all the states have a governor and the United States as a group has a president. [37:35.000 --> 37:44.000] But those governors as a rule only rule over the executive branch. [37:44.000 --> 37:49.000] You are, you're not a member of the executive branch. [37:49.000 --> 37:59.000] So he didn't have anything say you, he has no power to issue any order that affects you personally. [37:59.000 --> 38:02.000] He can only issue orders to the executive branch. [38:02.000 --> 38:09.000] And that's, that's why I asked about reading my complaint because that's primarily what I went to. [38:09.000 --> 38:18.000] And our founders, their biggest fear where the governors and the president, their biggest fear was president. [38:18.000 --> 38:21.000] The second biggest fear were governors. [38:21.000 --> 38:22.000] We had to have them. [38:22.000 --> 38:29.000] They felt we had to have any, a single executive heading up that branch. [38:29.000 --> 38:43.000] But that was the biggest terror that that single executive would overreach his power and try to take over the other two branches. [38:43.000 --> 38:46.000] And that's exactly what the governors have done. [38:46.000 --> 38:48.000] Right. [38:48.000 --> 38:50.000] That's where the weaknesses. [38:50.000 --> 39:01.000] How does the governor have power to issue an order that affects you? [39:01.000 --> 39:05.000] And secondly, you can't find it. [39:05.000 --> 39:13.000] If the governor cannot issue an order that affects one of your rights. [39:13.000 --> 39:23.000] Can he issue an order to a entity that is in contractual privity with the executive branch? [39:23.000 --> 39:27.000] For instance, a business that has a license. [39:27.000 --> 39:35.000] Can he order that business to violate one of your constitutional rights? [39:35.000 --> 39:41.000] I'm calling that a breach of the constitution by proxy. [39:41.000 --> 39:46.000] You have a proxy here who doesn't want to interfere with your rights. [39:46.000 --> 39:51.000] Doesn't want to interfere with your access to his restaurant. [39:51.000 --> 39:57.000] But he's ordered to and threatened with reparations if he doesn't. [39:57.000 --> 40:03.000] Thereby, he is a proxy for the governor and denying you your rights. [40:03.000 --> 40:07.000] And that's criminal. [40:07.000 --> 40:13.000] Can't they be treated like the government if they're in collusion with the government? [40:13.000 --> 40:20.000] Well, you don't want to do that because that brings them under their qualified immunity. [40:20.000 --> 40:24.000] You want to treat him like a personal individual. [40:24.000 --> 40:33.000] When a public official exerts or purports to exert an authority they do not expressly have, [40:33.000 --> 40:37.000] they act outside of scope. [40:37.000 --> 40:44.000] And when they step out of scope, they step out from under the umbrella. [40:44.000 --> 40:50.000] They step outside the bounds of their immunity. [40:50.000 --> 40:54.000] So you go for them personally. [40:54.000 --> 40:57.000] That's how we deal. [40:57.000 --> 40:59.000] Exactly. [40:59.000 --> 41:05.000] But the guy behind you pealed because she cut him off. Same spot. [41:05.000 --> 41:10.000] So the governor can make orders. [41:10.000 --> 41:14.000] Right? But he can't. [41:14.000 --> 41:24.000] He can only make orders that affect governmental entities that fall under the executive branch. [41:24.000 --> 41:29.000] He can't issue orders to the legislature. He cannot issue orders to the courts. [41:29.000 --> 41:38.000] He can't issue order to county sheriffs, to county clerks, to elected officials or outside of his scope. [41:38.000 --> 41:45.000] Only agencies that fall under the executive branch. [41:45.000 --> 41:56.000] So I was kind of thinking like instead of going to the top, that it would be easier to go to the bottom. [41:56.000 --> 42:01.000] Where I would just get them to agree with me that, and I don't think that's going to happen, [42:01.000 --> 42:05.000] but agree with me that this order doesn't apply to me. [42:05.000 --> 42:14.000] A man, right? It only applies to those legal fictions that the government created, right? [42:14.000 --> 42:21.000] And I guess they can do that, but I was thinking of then getting an injunction. [42:21.000 --> 42:25.000] Okay, good, good, good, good. You're thinking where I was going. [42:25.000 --> 42:28.000] When you were saying that, I was thinking. [42:28.000 --> 42:36.000] The way to get that is petition for, file a petition for declaratory judgment. [42:36.000 --> 42:37.000] Sure. [42:37.000 --> 42:42.000] I have found that most of these lawyers do not know what that is. [42:42.000 --> 42:50.000] Some of them do in limited context in bankruptcies. [42:50.000 --> 43:02.000] They use declaratory judgments to have the judge throw someone out of the bankruptcy who doesn't prove up a claim. [43:02.000 --> 43:06.000] The declaratory judgment is not asking for damages or anything. [43:06.000 --> 43:10.000] You're asking the judge to say, this guy came in here with his claim. [43:10.000 --> 43:15.000] He made his pitch for his claim, but it's insufficient under law. [43:15.000 --> 43:19.000] We asked the court to rule that his claim is insufficient. [43:19.000 --> 43:23.000] You're asking for a declaratory judgment. You're not asking for damages. [43:23.000 --> 43:28.000] You're not asking for sanctions or anything else. [43:28.000 --> 43:34.000] You're just asking the judge to rule on the rights of the parties. [43:34.000 --> 43:36.000] The rights or the status? [43:36.000 --> 43:44.000] Yes, and that is not susceptible to a rule 12B motion to dismiss for failure to stay to claim. [43:44.000 --> 43:50.000] And when you file a petition for declaratory judgment, almost every time we get a rule 12. [43:50.000 --> 43:55.000] Hang on, I hear the music. [43:55.000 --> 43:59.000] Randy Calton, Brett Fountain, we'll be right back. [43:59.000 --> 44:06.000] Through advances in technology, our lives have greatly improved, except in the area of nutrition. [44:06.000 --> 44:11.000] People feed their pets better than they feed themselves, and it's time we changed all that. [44:11.000 --> 44:17.000] Our primary defense against aging and disease in this toxic environment is good nutrition. [44:17.000 --> 44:22.000] In a world where natural foods have been irradiated, adulterated, and mutilated, [44:22.000 --> 44:25.000] young Jevedee can provide the nutrients you need. [44:25.000 --> 44:31.000] Logos Radio Network gets many requests to endorse all sorts of products, most of which we reject. [44:31.000 --> 44:34.000] We have come to trust Jevedee so much. [44:34.000 --> 44:39.000] We became a marketing distributor along with Alex Jones, Ben Fuchs, and many others. [44:39.000 --> 44:47.000] When you order from LogosRadioNetwork.com, your health will improve as you help support quality radio. [44:47.000 --> 44:51.000] As you realize the benefits of Jevedee, you may want to join us. [44:51.000 --> 44:58.000] As a distributor, you can experience improved health, help your friends and family, and increase your income. [44:58.000 --> 45:00.000] Order now. [45:00.000 --> 45:03.000] Are you the plaintiff or defendant in a lawsuit? [45:03.000 --> 45:10.000] Win your case without an attorney with Jurisdictionary, the affordable, easy-to-understand 4-CD course [45:10.000 --> 45:14.000] that will show you how in 24 hours, step-by-step. [45:14.000 --> 45:18.000] If you have a lawyer, know what your lawyer should be doing. [45:18.000 --> 45:22.000] If you don't have a lawyer, know what you should do for yourself. [45:22.000 --> 45:27.000] Thousands have won with our step-by-step course, and now you can too. [45:27.000 --> 45:33.000] Jurisdictionary was created by a licensed attorney with 22 years of case-winning experience. [45:33.000 --> 45:38.000] Even if you're not in a lawsuit, you can learn what everyone should understand [45:38.000 --> 45:42.000] about the principles and practices that control our American courts. [45:42.000 --> 45:51.000] You'll receive our audio classroom, video seminar, tutorials, forms for civil cases, prosa tactics, and much more. [45:51.000 --> 45:55.000] Please visit ruleoflawradio.com and click on the banner. [45:55.000 --> 46:14.000] Or call toll-free 866-LAW-EZ. [46:14.000 --> 46:25.000] Oh-oh-oh-oh-oh, oh-oh-oh-oh, oh-oh-oh-oh, oh-oh-oh-oh-oh, yeah. [46:25.000 --> 46:31.000] Always I must be careful what I'm wishing for. [46:31.000 --> 46:36.000] When I'm hungry, I like to know just what I'm fishing for. [46:36.000 --> 46:42.000] I ain't asking for much, I ain't trying to be no-bloodin'. [46:42.000 --> 47:01.240] Okay, we are back. [47:01.240 --> 47:11.160] Randy Kelton, Brett Fountain, Rue de la Radio on this Friday, the 8th day of January, 2021. [47:11.160 --> 47:18.400] And we're talking to Marca and Massachusetts, I'm working on that, all those hillbillies, [47:18.400 --> 47:26.400] we don't know how to say it, but you might get more ground, you might get where you're [47:26.400 --> 47:34.680] going, where you want to get to by going the criminal route. [47:34.680 --> 47:40.960] You can file a civil suit, but they deal with those all the time, and the governor [47:40.960 --> 47:47.200] knows that if you see the governor personally, that the state will still indemnify him. [47:47.200 --> 47:53.200] But the reason for suing him personally is because then they don't get to throw it out [47:53.200 --> 47:59.600] for qualified immunity, or official immunity, or absolute immunity, which they all think [47:59.600 --> 48:06.920] they have, when you go for outside scope, you don't have any of those. [48:06.920 --> 48:20.360] Have you read through all of his, the governor's executive orders, looking for criminal violations, [48:20.360 --> 48:26.800] for extinctions of his authority beyond what he's constitutionally granted? [48:26.800 --> 48:35.880] Yeah, you know, in most, so it's the same, like I've read in other states, they rely [48:35.880 --> 48:43.960] on federal, I just don't understand it enough, but he's relying on the federal civil emergency [48:43.960 --> 48:48.920] law, and so I don't know how he could get to the state. [48:48.920 --> 48:51.120] Good, good, that's good, because... [48:51.120 --> 48:54.520] That's bad for him, he shouldn't be relying on that. [48:54.520 --> 49:02.400] That's a Massachusetts case, Jacobson v. something, I think it's Jacobson. [49:02.400 --> 49:10.040] And it says that the legislature can pass state rulings that violate federal constitutional [49:10.040 --> 49:13.800] provisions in an emergency. [49:13.800 --> 49:19.320] Did you catch the key word in there? [49:19.320 --> 49:23.440] Legislature, didn't say anything about the governor, right. [49:23.440 --> 49:26.320] The governor never had this power. [49:26.320 --> 49:34.800] The argument I make here in Texas is that the governor could have gone to the legislature. [49:34.800 --> 49:40.080] He could have called the legislature into special session, and I guarantee you, your [49:40.080 --> 49:47.960] governor can do the same thing, and he can tell them what he wants them to address. [49:47.960 --> 49:58.680] He had a legal way of doing this, but didn't use it. [49:58.680 --> 50:06.360] He issued an order that said that if you come into the state of Texas, and I got Joseph [50:06.360 --> 50:14.200] on the line, we were talking about this yesterday, you come into the state of Texas from a location [50:14.200 --> 50:22.040] of his choosing, then you must imprison yourself for two weeks. [50:22.040 --> 50:34.760] You can pick where you're going to imprison yourself, but he commandeered the Texas Highway [50:34.760 --> 50:36.480] Patrol. [50:36.480 --> 50:42.680] The governor in our constitution is given direct authority over the militia the same [50:42.680 --> 50:47.120] way the president is given direct authority over the military. [50:47.120 --> 50:58.320] Problem, we don't have a Texas militia, so he commandeered the Highway Patrol and informed [50:58.320 --> 51:04.840] us that he would send the Highway Patrol out to make certain that you were in fact imprisoning [51:04.840 --> 51:07.200] yourself or you said you would be. [51:07.200 --> 51:12.680] If you weren't, he would send these guys out with guns, and they would use the force of [51:12.680 --> 51:18.040] those guns to take you and put you in prison for up to six months. [51:18.040 --> 51:21.000] Well, is that a fact, Jack? [51:21.000 --> 51:26.760] So, Brett, what crime would that be? [51:26.760 --> 51:28.440] Sounds like aggravated kidnapping. [51:28.440 --> 51:33.120] Yeah, it sounds like sedition to me. [51:33.120 --> 51:41.760] He usurped the legislature, and he used an armed force to usurp the legislature. [51:41.760 --> 51:52.080] 577.001, Texas government code, I believe, calls that sedition, and it charged him with [51:52.080 --> 51:53.080] it. [51:53.080 --> 52:00.880] Did your governor issue any orders that he indicated that he would use the policing function [52:00.880 --> 52:03.240] of the state to enforce? [52:03.240 --> 52:07.440] Well, not yet. [52:07.440 --> 52:17.920] He has called out the Massachusetts Guard, but this is the birthplace of Liberty, so maybe [52:17.920 --> 52:18.920] he's waiting. [52:18.920 --> 52:19.920] Good. [52:19.920 --> 52:29.680] He might be more careful, and if he has not exceeded his authority, please let me know. [52:29.680 --> 52:32.280] I need that. [52:32.280 --> 52:36.200] We need to be able to say to the governor of the state of Texas, you have to do all this [52:36.200 --> 52:37.200] garbage. [52:37.200 --> 52:42.440] If you want to know how you should have done it, go talk to the governor of Massachusetts, [52:42.440 --> 52:46.880] Massachusetts, he will explain to you how you should have done it. [52:46.880 --> 52:49.080] I need that. [52:49.080 --> 52:51.440] Has he ordered you to wear masks? [52:51.440 --> 52:59.160] Yes, we have a curfew, and we have the whole mask mandate, and they tightened up the last [52:59.160 --> 53:00.160] few weeks. [53:00.160 --> 53:04.160] Okay, who did that, the legislature or the governor? [53:04.160 --> 53:06.080] No, the governor. [53:06.080 --> 53:14.200] Ah, read your code, read his constitutional mandate. [53:14.200 --> 53:25.320] His constitutional mandate, it will not include the creation or abolishing of law. [53:25.320 --> 53:33.000] That was the greatest fear of our founders, that he will absolutely be forbidden to do [53:33.000 --> 53:36.440] that. [53:36.440 --> 53:45.640] So he just created laws, now he can create rules and regulations, but rules and regulations [53:45.640 --> 53:53.280] only apply to executive members of the executive branch. [53:53.280 --> 53:55.640] They don't apply to the people. [53:55.640 --> 54:02.840] Right, that's why I think he's getting the stores to enforce as edicts. [54:02.840 --> 54:07.240] That's constitutional violation by proxy. [54:07.240 --> 54:11.560] That's conspiracy to commit. [54:11.560 --> 54:21.720] If I conspire with you, or if I coerce you to deny me, I'm sorry, if I didn't coerce [54:21.720 --> 54:31.360] you to deny Brett in one of his constitutional rights, what's that called? [54:31.360 --> 54:34.480] A tort. [54:34.480 --> 54:46.040] Well, it's called extortion, or it's coercion, if you do not need to be coerced in his conspiracy, [54:46.040 --> 54:50.800] but any way you wrap it, it's criminal. [54:50.800 --> 54:57.040] If you personally don't commit the crime against me, but you get somebody else to do it, if [54:57.040 --> 55:10.520] you do it by threat, then the other person may not be liable, but they will be prosecutable. [55:10.520 --> 55:15.400] And here's how that goes. [55:15.400 --> 55:19.360] If another person takes an act that denies being full and free access to or enjoyment [55:19.360 --> 55:32.040] of right, I can charge them criminally under 18 U.S. code 19, I'm getting brain dead, 18 [55:32.040 --> 55:38.320] U.S. code 242, I'm mixing up two halves of the Ku Klux Klan Act. [55:38.320 --> 55:46.840] The first half of the act, 18 U.S. code 242, makes it a crime for a public official to [55:46.840 --> 55:54.000] exert or purport to exert an authority he does not expressly have and in the process [55:54.000 --> 55:57.480] denies citizen full and free access to or enjoyment of right. [55:57.480 --> 56:04.440] That takes both of them, a public official can exert or purport to exert an authority [56:04.440 --> 56:11.520] he doesn't have, but if he doesn't harm anybody, no harm no foul, or if he doesn't misapply [56:11.520 --> 56:13.440] funds, no harm no foul. [56:13.440 --> 56:16.880] But if he denies someone in a right, then that's crime. [56:16.880 --> 56:20.120] Now that's the first half of the Ku Klux Klan Act. [56:20.120 --> 56:26.040] The second half was codified into 42 U.S. code 1983. [56:26.040 --> 56:29.240] That one says you can sue him for it. [56:29.240 --> 56:36.560] And we just had a great Supreme Court case come down over religious freedom where FBI [56:36.560 --> 56:44.280] agents put these Muslims on a watch list so they couldn't fly anywhere because they wouldn't [56:44.280 --> 56:46.600] spy on other Muslims. [56:46.600 --> 56:51.480] And the Supreme said, yes, you can sue them personally for that. [56:51.480 --> 56:59.000] So they have been rendering rules that kind of limited our ability to sue public officials. [56:59.000 --> 57:03.240] They just opened that back up and the governor's right in the middle of it. [57:03.240 --> 57:07.840] So the person can be charged and sued. [57:07.840 --> 57:20.120] However, they have an affirmative defense if they took this action under threat or duress. [57:20.120 --> 57:23.640] They don't have a bar to prosecution. [57:23.640 --> 57:27.680] They have an affirmative defense. [57:27.680 --> 57:29.480] Important you understand the two. [57:29.480 --> 57:37.280] So if this star owner says, well, I'm going to deny you in your right because the governor [57:37.280 --> 57:43.800] might do something bad to me if I don't, well, good luck with that, Barbara. [57:43.800 --> 57:47.280] We sue you for denying me in my right. [57:47.280 --> 57:52.720] And if you want to throw the governor under the bus, we'll knock yourself out. [57:52.720 --> 57:55.240] You don't have, you're not immune from prosecution. [57:55.240 --> 58:00.440] You can always bring that up as a affirmative defense. [58:00.440 --> 58:05.960] It's important to understand that statute of limitations is the same way. [58:05.960 --> 58:12.520] Once the limitations have run, that doesn't say you can't sue them. [58:12.520 --> 58:16.280] It just means they have an affirmative defense that they have to bring. [58:16.280 --> 58:19.080] If they don't bring that defense, they waive it. [58:19.080 --> 58:21.360] So let's make them bring it. [58:21.360 --> 58:25.800] Get the store owner to throw the governor under the bus, that'll be a lot more fun. [58:25.800 --> 58:34.200] Hang on, Randy Calton, Brett Fountain, Arula's Live Radio, I call in number 512-646-1984. [58:34.200 --> 58:38.400] We have four slots on the call-in board, three of them are filled up. [58:38.400 --> 58:45.240] We've got one more room for one more and when we're full, after someone drops off, then [58:45.240 --> 58:48.360] you can call back in and be able to get in. [58:48.360 --> 58:49.360] Hang on. [58:49.360 --> 58:54.120] Would you like to make more definite progress in your walk with God? [58:54.120 --> 58:59.320] Bibles for America is offering a free study Bible and a set of free Christian books that [58:59.320 --> 59:00.640] can really help. [59:00.640 --> 59:04.960] The New Testament recovery version is one of the most comprehensive study Bibles available [59:04.960 --> 59:05.960] today. [59:05.960 --> 59:10.000] It's an accurate translation and it contains thousands of footnotes that will help you [59:10.000 --> 59:13.120] to know God and to know the meaning of life. [59:13.120 --> 59:18.360] The free books are a three-volume set called Basic Elements of the Christian Life. [59:18.360 --> 59:24.040] Hereby, chapter Basic Elements of the Christian Life clearly presents God's plan of salvation, [59:24.040 --> 59:27.560] growing in Christ and how to build up the church. [59:27.560 --> 59:32.600] To order your free New Testament recovery version and Basic Elements of the Christian [59:32.600 --> 59:40.360] Life, call Bibles for America toll-free at 888-551-0102. [59:40.360 --> 59:44.880] That's 888-551-0102. [59:44.880 --> 59:50.160] Or visit us online at bfa.org. [59:50.160 --> 01:00:00.680] Live, free speech radio, logosradionetwork.com. [01:00:00.680 --> 01:00:06.720] The following news flash is brought to you by the Lone Star Lowdown. [01:00:06.720 --> 01:00:13.120] Markets for Monday the 22nd of July 2019 open with precious metals, gold, $1,429 an ounce, [01:00:13.120 --> 01:00:21.040] silver, $16.45 an ounce, copper, $2.75 an ounce, oil, Texas crude, $55.63 a barrel, [01:00:21.040 --> 01:00:27.680] brand crude, $62.47 a barrel, and cryptos in order of market cap, Bitcoin Core, $10,566 [01:00:27.680 --> 01:00:37.920] and 52 cents, Ethereum, $227.26, XRP, Ripple, $0.33, Litecoin, $100.31, and Bitcoin Cash [01:00:37.920 --> 01:00:46.160] is at $324.10 a crypto coin. [01:00:46.160 --> 01:00:52.400] Today in History, the year 1916, the Preparedness Day Bombing, a time suitcase bomb, was detonated [01:00:52.400 --> 01:00:57.720] on Market Street in San Francisco during the World War I Preparedness Day Parade, killing [01:00:57.720 --> 01:00:59.720] 10 and entering 40. [01:00:59.720 --> 01:01:04.720] Today in History. [01:01:04.720 --> 01:01:09.400] In recent news, since Governor Greg Abbott signed House Bill 1325 legalizing Hemp into [01:01:09.400 --> 01:01:14.040] Texas law back in June, county prosecutors around the state, including Houston, Austin [01:01:14.040 --> 01:01:18.040] and San Antonio, have been dropping marijuana possession charges and even refusing to file [01:01:18.040 --> 01:01:22.680] new ones since they are stipulating that they do not have the time or the laboratory equipment [01:01:22.680 --> 01:01:24.680] to test the herb for THC. [01:01:24.680 --> 01:01:28.400] Margaret Moore, the Travis County District Attorney, announced earlier this month that [01:01:28.400 --> 01:01:32.920] she was dismissing 32 felony possession and delivery of marijuana cases because of the [01:01:32.920 --> 01:01:33.920] law. [01:01:33.920 --> 01:01:37.600] They have it in other state officials, including the Attorney General, stipulated in a letter [01:01:37.600 --> 01:01:42.080] to county district attorneys back on Thursday that marijuana has not been decriminalized [01:01:42.080 --> 01:01:48.240] in Texas and that these actions demonstrate a misunderstanding of how HB 1325 works, as [01:01:48.240 --> 01:01:54.480] well as other cities too, like the district attorney in El Paso, Cayma Esparza, a Democrat [01:01:54.480 --> 01:01:58.960] who also stated earlier this month that the law, quote, will not have an effect on the [01:01:58.960 --> 01:02:01.800] prosecution of marijuana cases in El Paso. [01:02:01.800 --> 01:02:06.720] However, the issue was succinctly summarized by Mr. Brandon Ball, an assistant public defender [01:02:06.720 --> 01:02:10.720] in Harris County, who stated that, quote, the law is constantly changing on what makes [01:02:10.720 --> 01:02:13.440] something illegal based on its chemical makeup. [01:02:13.440 --> 01:02:17.320] It's important that if someone is charged with something, the test matches what they're [01:02:17.320 --> 01:02:22.560] charged with. [01:02:22.560 --> 01:02:28.080] A paper by Tulane University identified a five-and-a-half-inch American pocket shark as the first of its [01:02:28.080 --> 01:02:33.560] kind in the Gulf of Mexico, the specimen being only the second pocket shark ever captured [01:02:33.560 --> 01:02:39.440] or recorded with the other one being found way back in 1979 in the East Pacific Ocean. [01:02:39.440 --> 01:02:43.760] According to the university paper, the shark secretes a luminous fluid from a gland near [01:02:43.760 --> 01:02:50.040] its front fins for the purposes hypothesized to lure and prey who may be drawn into the [01:02:50.040 --> 01:03:00.040] glow. [01:03:00.040 --> 01:03:24.040] It's all according to the will of the Almighty, I read his book and it says he cares for the [01:03:24.040 --> 01:03:31.040] world. [01:03:31.040 --> 01:03:33.760] Okay. [01:03:33.760 --> 01:03:34.760] We are back. [01:03:34.760 --> 01:03:39.320] Randy Kelkin, Fountain Rural Law Radio, we're talking to Mark and Matt Stusitz. [01:03:39.320 --> 01:03:46.360] Mark, so do you have a plan? [01:03:46.360 --> 01:03:47.600] I think so. [01:03:47.600 --> 01:03:53.000] I think, like I said, I think that, I think, you know, instead of going up to the governor, [01:03:53.000 --> 01:04:00.480] I just want to use, I want to start maybe with the city and, but one thing, maybe you [01:04:00.480 --> 01:04:07.560] could help me with like the freedom of information request, like what violations has, because [01:04:07.560 --> 01:04:14.480] I know you guys like to talk about this, what violations like criminal and bar complaints, [01:04:14.480 --> 01:04:18.880] would you say that these people are guilty of? [01:04:18.880 --> 01:04:23.400] Oh, everything's a bar complaint. [01:04:23.400 --> 01:04:29.480] If they're a lawyer, if they breathe, that has to be a bar complaint, go ahead and press. [01:04:29.480 --> 01:04:32.040] Yeah, I was going to say the same thing. [01:04:32.040 --> 01:04:36.000] If they're a lawyer, you got to make sure it's a lawyer or else it doesn't have any [01:04:36.000 --> 01:04:37.920] effect. [01:04:37.920 --> 01:04:43.200] You want to first read through what the law says over here and what they're calling the [01:04:43.200 --> 01:04:44.200] 26th. [01:04:44.200 --> 01:04:51.360] That's in Massachusetts, it's the general laws, part one, title one, chapter four, section [01:04:51.360 --> 01:04:55.600] seven, subsection 26. [01:04:55.600 --> 01:04:56.600] Read through that whole thing. [01:04:56.600 --> 01:04:58.600] It's not that long. [01:04:58.600 --> 01:05:03.640] And you'll get an idea of exactly what they're required to do and then you can sting them [01:05:03.640 --> 01:05:07.560] for everything that they do outside that. [01:05:07.560 --> 01:05:08.560] Okay. [01:05:08.560 --> 01:05:19.720] Wait, wait, wait, wait, also read through the bar association standards. [01:05:19.720 --> 01:05:27.960] Bar association standards will tell you how the lawyer is supposed to conduct themselves, [01:05:27.960 --> 01:05:31.640] how the lawyers are supposed to conduct themselves. [01:05:31.640 --> 01:05:40.080] And then you, once you've read that, then you read the open records law and compare [01:05:40.080 --> 01:05:42.440] that to what the lawyers are supposed to do. [01:05:42.440 --> 01:05:48.800] It'll give you some really good focused complaints to bring. [01:05:48.800 --> 01:05:55.200] And you know what, Randy, I'll just correct me if you think I'm wrong here, but if I were [01:05:55.200 --> 01:06:00.920] in your position, mark here in Massachusetts and I'm looking at the Massachusetts law. [01:06:00.920 --> 01:06:07.560] If I were in your position there, I would say this is not enough for me to get what [01:06:07.560 --> 01:06:08.560] I need out of it. [01:06:08.560 --> 01:06:11.360] So I'm going to pull in some Texas law. [01:06:11.360 --> 01:06:17.600] They've addressed this better than Massachusetts has. [01:06:17.600 --> 01:06:23.600] So I would say go take a look at Texas government code 552.001. [01:06:23.600 --> 01:06:26.400] Read it three times and get it deep in your soul. [01:06:26.400 --> 01:06:29.960] We are the people, we are the masters of our service. [01:06:29.960 --> 01:06:30.960] Texas government code 552.001. [01:06:30.960 --> 01:06:31.960] Do you have that in front of you? [01:06:31.960 --> 01:06:32.960] Will you read it? [01:06:32.960 --> 01:06:33.960] Do I? [01:06:33.960 --> 01:06:34.960] No. [01:06:34.960 --> 01:06:35.960] Hold on. [01:06:35.960 --> 01:06:49.960] I read that and I thought I would that I could produce such a well-structured paragraph. [01:06:49.960 --> 01:06:59.920] It says, under the fundamental philosophy of the American constitutional form of law [01:06:59.920 --> 01:07:05.120] of representative government that adheres to the principle that government is the servant [01:07:05.120 --> 01:07:07.000] and not the master of the people. [01:07:07.000 --> 01:07:13.600] It is the policy of this state that each person is entitled, unless otherwise expressly [01:07:13.600 --> 01:07:20.240] provided by law, at all times to complete information about the affairs of government [01:07:20.240 --> 01:07:24.600] and the official acts of public officials and employees. [01:07:24.600 --> 01:07:30.680] The people in delegating authority do not give their public servants the right to decide [01:07:30.680 --> 01:07:35.320] what is good for the people to know and what is not good for them to know. [01:07:35.320 --> 01:07:41.160] The people insist on remaining informed so that they may retain control over the instruments [01:07:41.160 --> 01:07:43.320] they have created. [01:07:43.320 --> 01:07:49.320] The provisions of this chapter shall be liberally construed to implement this policy. [01:07:49.320 --> 01:07:54.960] And then if that weren't clear enough, it says, this chapter shall be liberally construed [01:07:54.960 --> 01:08:01.760] in favor of granting a request for information. [01:08:01.760 --> 01:08:10.080] I need to take that paragraph and rewrite it as if I were making that as a positive [01:08:10.080 --> 01:08:20.120] statement and put that into my information requests. [01:08:20.120 --> 01:08:22.600] What do you think, Mark? [01:08:22.600 --> 01:08:29.480] We have an article right in the Constitution right at the beginning where it says something [01:08:29.480 --> 01:08:35.360] like that with the government, the people retain all the rights and at the end it says [01:08:35.360 --> 01:08:40.640] and those that we give limited power are answerable to them. [01:08:40.640 --> 01:08:45.840] I have to find that but I think that pretty much says it. [01:08:45.840 --> 01:08:46.840] Yeah, amen. [01:08:46.840 --> 01:08:48.640] They don't answer to me, right? [01:08:48.640 --> 01:08:50.200] Doesn't that make sense? [01:08:50.200 --> 01:08:54.400] A woman, a woman. [01:08:54.400 --> 01:08:56.160] That was an inside joke. [01:08:56.160 --> 01:09:04.080] The legislature, I just got an email that they no longer just saying amen, they're saying [01:09:04.080 --> 01:09:05.680] amen and amen women. [01:09:05.680 --> 01:09:08.680] Oh, I saw that. [01:09:08.680 --> 01:09:14.440] Anyway, it is, but that's what we got coming. [01:09:14.440 --> 01:09:24.640] A lot of ridiculousness, but Mark, this could be a lot of fun and it can be very powerful. [01:09:24.640 --> 01:09:35.800] What we don't see is people going after these governors for violations of constitutional [01:09:35.800 --> 01:09:37.360] rights and the law. [01:09:37.360 --> 01:09:42.160] I'm reading these lawsuits that these lawyers are filing. [01:09:42.160 --> 01:09:48.320] I have one out of New Mexico and they're suing the state of New Mexico for distorting the [01:09:48.320 --> 01:09:50.760] facts on COVID. [01:09:50.760 --> 01:09:56.080] I'm reading this and saying, why the heck are you doing that? [01:09:56.080 --> 01:10:05.120] I've got one where a lawyer sued the mayor of Cleveland, Texas about some orders that [01:10:05.120 --> 01:10:16.840] he issued and he's arguing the necessity and the effectiveness of the orders. [01:10:16.840 --> 01:10:20.880] I'm thinking, why on earth would you do that? [01:10:20.880 --> 01:10:24.680] Isn't that like going and pinching a rattlesnake on the tail? [01:10:24.680 --> 01:10:34.280] Kind of like that, given the rattlesnake of what he needs to come back and bite you. [01:10:34.280 --> 01:10:39.920] Make the claim that the governor denied me in a constitutional right how dare he that [01:10:39.920 --> 01:10:48.920] no good scoundrel or the governor used his power to coerce this business owner to deny [01:10:48.920 --> 01:10:51.600] me in my constitutional rights. [01:10:51.600 --> 01:11:02.560] Don't say anything about COVID or executive orders, let them bring those up. [01:11:02.560 --> 01:11:06.880] Did you say objection relevance? [01:11:06.880 --> 01:11:12.400] If you bring them up, you give them relevance. [01:11:12.400 --> 01:11:14.000] Make them bring it up. [01:11:14.000 --> 01:11:16.960] What does that have to do with anything? [01:11:16.960 --> 01:11:23.360] Oh, well, it was a crisis, objection relevance. [01:11:23.360 --> 01:11:32.240] Where in the constitutional law was a governor given power to violate a constitutional right [01:11:32.240 --> 01:11:39.280] because of some crisis. [01:11:39.280 --> 01:11:45.640] They want to go to the crisis, we don't want to get there yet. [01:11:45.640 --> 01:11:47.160] We want to know how you got the authority. [01:11:47.160 --> 01:11:51.920] They're going to bring up Jacobson, Jacobson or Michelson's, there's one case out of mass [01:11:51.920 --> 01:11:59.800] issues that's on this issue and they'll bring that one up and we'll say, okay, we got that, [01:11:59.800 --> 01:12:10.200] the legislature can do those things, not the governor might really put him on the dime. [01:12:10.200 --> 01:12:17.400] If you want, as you look into it, send me an email, I will send you my research. [01:12:17.400 --> 01:12:24.440] Look through this complaint I filed, you can get it off of Rural Law Radio, oh, you already [01:12:24.440 --> 01:12:25.440] got it. [01:12:25.440 --> 01:12:32.920] I look through at the bottom where I go into each of the individual criminal accusations. [01:12:32.920 --> 01:12:36.840] Did they shut down the schools? [01:12:36.840 --> 01:12:39.520] I think the towns had the option. [01:12:39.520 --> 01:12:44.040] I think they did and then they opened them up shortly and I think they may have closed [01:12:44.040 --> 01:12:45.040] them again. [01:12:45.040 --> 01:12:49.680] Okay, so it was local and not the governor? [01:12:49.680 --> 01:12:54.760] Yeah, I think most of the things are local here. [01:12:54.760 --> 01:13:00.400] You may have the least intrusive governor that I've come across. [01:13:00.400 --> 01:13:08.440] My argument on that was that the schools do not belong to the state. [01:13:08.440 --> 01:13:12.600] The schools belong to the county. [01:13:12.600 --> 01:13:16.400] Your county property tax goes for those schools. [01:13:16.400 --> 01:13:17.400] We pay for them. [01:13:17.400 --> 01:13:22.120] The county pays for them, the state doesn't have anything to say about schools. [01:13:22.120 --> 01:13:29.480] Now the state has something to say about the teachers and the administrators who are licensed [01:13:29.480 --> 01:13:40.040] under the state and how they will teach and what subjects and when you look at the law [01:13:40.040 --> 01:13:47.400] in Texas, the Texas Education Agency has really very little authority over the state and that's [01:13:47.400 --> 01:13:54.280] the only member of the executive branch that has anything to do with the schools. [01:13:54.280 --> 01:13:58.640] But governor doesn't have anything to say about that and the governor issued orders [01:13:58.640 --> 01:14:00.120] to the sheriff's department. [01:14:00.120 --> 01:14:04.320] Did your governor do that? [01:14:04.320 --> 01:14:08.560] Like if somebody comes in from another state that's having a big problem like someone coming [01:14:08.560 --> 01:14:13.640] out of New York City, did he require them to sequester themselves for two weeks? [01:14:13.640 --> 01:14:16.840] Oh yeah, yeah, we got that. [01:14:16.840 --> 01:14:20.400] That goes to the right to travel. [01:14:20.400 --> 01:14:30.000] And that's the constitutional right, Pennsylvania, New Jersey is where it originally started. [01:14:30.000 --> 01:14:40.240] The right to travel goes to the right to travel from one state to another state and our founders [01:14:40.240 --> 01:14:50.120] considered it absolutely critical that for this union to hold together the right to freely [01:14:50.120 --> 01:14:55.560] travel from one state to another cannot be abridged. [01:14:55.560 --> 01:14:58.280] Where did the governor get that power? [01:14:58.280 --> 01:14:59.280] Right. [01:14:59.280 --> 01:15:04.600] And if you use the police to do it, now you get to charge him with sedition. [01:15:04.600 --> 01:15:15.960] I got him before a grand jury, we don't know if he'll get indicted or not and I made sure [01:15:15.960 --> 01:15:20.680] he knows about it because I called his office and told him about it that I was filing against [01:15:20.680 --> 01:15:26.080] Chief Justice of the Supreme and the presiding judge at the Court of Criminal Appeals. [01:15:26.080 --> 01:15:34.320] In Texas we have two high courts, Supreme for Civil, Court of Criminal Appeals for Criminal. [01:15:34.320 --> 01:15:42.480] I filed with the Chief Justice against the governor as well as with the grand jury because [01:15:42.480 --> 01:15:47.840] if the grand jury indicts the governor, the governor cannot, that indictment cannot be [01:15:47.840 --> 01:15:54.000] filed with the court until the governor's been arrested. [01:15:54.000 --> 01:16:00.360] That's because when the governor is arrested, the law commands whoever arrests him to take [01:16:00.360 --> 01:16:05.960] him directly to the magistrate for an examining trial and the governor gets the opportunity [01:16:05.960 --> 01:16:12.120] to put exculpatory evidence on the record. [01:16:12.120 --> 01:16:14.520] The Chief Justice denied him that right. [01:16:14.520 --> 01:16:21.520] Now he's got to stand in front of a grand jury with only my accusations and no rebuttal. [01:16:21.520 --> 01:16:26.120] So I filed against the Chief Justice with the head, his presiding judge of the Court of [01:16:26.120 --> 01:16:27.120] Criminal Appeals. [01:16:27.120 --> 01:16:28.720] This is going to be great fun. [01:16:28.720 --> 01:16:32.240] They're all going to the grand jury. [01:16:32.240 --> 01:16:38.680] This is at the end of the day, it's all political. [01:16:38.680 --> 01:16:42.200] And you're the master of the servant, you go right to the top. [01:16:42.200 --> 01:16:48.240] Hang on, Randy Kelton, Brett Staunton, rule of law radio, we'll be right back. [01:16:48.240 --> 01:16:52.760] But when we come back, we'll try to close out here, Mark, because we've got a bunch [01:16:52.760 --> 01:16:54.640] of other callers. [01:16:54.640 --> 01:17:00.280] So hang on everybody, we'll be right back. [01:17:00.280 --> 01:17:05.560] Are you being harassed by debt collectors with phone calls, letters, or even lawsuits? [01:17:05.560 --> 01:17:09.080] Stop debt collectors now with the Michael Mirris Proven Method. [01:17:09.080 --> 01:17:13.520] Michael Mirris has won six cases in federal court against debt collectors and now you [01:17:13.520 --> 01:17:14.520] can win two. [01:17:14.520 --> 01:17:19.320] You'll get step-by-step instructions in plain English on how to win in court using federal [01:17:19.320 --> 01:17:20.880] civil rights statutes. 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[01:18:01.280 --> 01:18:04.680] Without the shows on this network, I'd be almost as ignorant as my friends. [01:18:04.680 --> 01:18:07.480] I'm so addicted to the truth now that there's no going back. [01:18:07.480 --> 01:18:08.680] I need my truth pick. [01:18:08.680 --> 01:18:13.320] I'd be lost without logos and I really want to help keep this network on the air. [01:18:13.320 --> 01:18:17.120] I'd love to volunteer as a show producer but I'm a bit of a Luddite and I really don't [01:18:17.120 --> 01:18:20.520] have any money to give because I spend it all on supplements. [01:18:20.520 --> 01:18:22.000] How can I help logos? [01:18:22.000 --> 01:18:23.960] Well, I'm glad you asked. [01:18:23.960 --> 01:18:27.320] Whenever you order anything from Amazon, you can help logos. [01:18:27.320 --> 01:18:31.520] With order and your supplies or holiday gifts, first thing you do is clear your cookies. [01:18:31.520 --> 01:18:37.720] Now, go to logosregulnetwork.com, click on the Amazon logo and bookmark it. [01:18:37.720 --> 01:18:43.560] Now, when you order anything from Amazon, you use that link and logos gets a few pesos. [01:18:43.560 --> 01:18:44.560] Do I pay extra? [01:18:44.560 --> 01:18:45.560] No. [01:18:45.560 --> 01:18:47.320] Do I pay anything different when I order? [01:18:47.320 --> 01:18:48.320] No. [01:18:48.320 --> 01:18:49.320] Can I use my Amazon Prime? [01:18:49.320 --> 01:18:50.320] No. [01:18:50.320 --> 01:18:51.320] I mean, yes. [01:18:51.320 --> 01:18:52.320] Wow. [01:18:52.320 --> 01:18:56.040] Giving without doing anything or spending any money, this is perfect. [01:18:56.040 --> 01:18:57.040] Thank you so much. [01:18:57.040 --> 01:18:58.520] We are logos. [01:18:58.520 --> 01:19:00.520] Happy holidays, logos. [01:19:00.520 --> 01:19:09.960] This is the logos, logos, radio, network, radio, network, radio, radio, radio, radio, radio, [01:19:09.960 --> 01:19:33.880] network, network, radio, network, radio, network. [01:19:33.880 --> 01:19:48.600] Okay, we are back, Randy Kelton, Brett Fountain, Rule of Law Radio, and we're talking to Mark. [01:19:48.600 --> 01:19:52.440] Okay, Mark, did we give you some ideas to play with? [01:19:53.880 --> 01:20:01.720] Yes, I got more than enough. Thank you very much. Just quickly, so can a lawyer, just real quick, [01:20:01.720 --> 01:20:07.720] can a lawyer or lawyers be record access officers for the executive branch? [01:20:08.840 --> 01:20:17.240] Yes, but they're making a difference. Well, at least in Texas, you can, a director of an agency [01:20:17.240 --> 01:20:25.160] is construed as the custodian of the record, but the director can appoint a third party to be the [01:20:25.160 --> 01:20:33.240] custodian. Okay. But we don't care. We don't care what he does. That guy just works for him. [01:20:33.960 --> 01:20:39.560] Yeah, I don't care if they hire 50 people to help him assist with his duties of office. I elected [01:20:39.560 --> 01:20:46.280] this one dude. I expect him to respond to my request. If he hires a whole army of people to [01:20:46.280 --> 01:20:53.400] handle those requests, and one of them gives me the response back, that's okay. But if it's a [01:20:53.400 --> 01:20:58.840] lawyer that butts in and says, well, you can't have it because blah, blah, blah, I bar grieve him, [01:20:59.480 --> 01:21:10.680] and I go back to the head honcho. Respondee at superior. Okay. I didn't hire that guy. [01:21:10.680 --> 01:21:14.360] You can use that guy if you want to. This is what Brett does. He tells the lawyer, [01:21:14.360 --> 01:21:17.800] I didn't hire you. If you want to talk to your boss, talk to your boss. Don't talk to me. [01:21:17.800 --> 01:21:25.080] You're harassing me and you bar grieve them. Okay. All right. If you're a lawyer, what do you do? [01:21:26.280 --> 01:21:34.360] Right. Lawyers are used to everybody listening to them. And if both parties have lawyers, [01:21:35.800 --> 01:21:42.360] then they have forbidden the parties to talk to each other. Only the lawyers can talk to each [01:21:42.360 --> 01:21:48.040] other. And the lawyers can't talk to the opposing client. But if you don't have a lawyer, [01:21:49.320 --> 01:21:55.720] and you don't fall under any of that, you owe that lawyer on the other side absolutely nothing. [01:21:57.560 --> 01:22:00.040] You don't have to listen to him. You don't have to talk to him. [01:22:00.680 --> 01:22:05.480] And Brett started doing that. And these lawyers had no idea how to handle it. [01:22:05.480 --> 01:22:15.880] That was great fun. Okay. Keep us up to speed on how this goes. And good luck going after [01:22:15.880 --> 01:22:23.080] the governor. Thank you. Okay. Thank you, Mark. Now we're going to go to Joseph in Texas. Hello, [01:22:23.080 --> 01:22:29.720] Joseph. Why, Eddie? Now, should I call you Joseph or just old Joe? [01:22:29.720 --> 01:22:35.240] Anything you want to. I know somebody's talking to me. [01:22:38.600 --> 01:22:42.040] I know I met Joe. When was it I was down there? [01:22:44.360 --> 01:22:50.120] Oh, about ages ago. Yeah, ages. I don't even remember it's a long ago. [01:22:50.120 --> 01:22:58.520] In the Townsend House. I think you and Kent Man picked me up. We went to Kent Townsend. I got [01:22:58.520 --> 01:23:04.680] a video of that. I've been thinking about trying to find it so I can maybe have the date in there. [01:23:06.680 --> 01:23:08.360] Kent Man, is he still around? [01:23:09.640 --> 01:23:13.960] Yes, he is. It probably hasn't been a week since I talked to him. He's living in [01:23:13.960 --> 01:23:18.840] in Houston, I believe now. Oh, I hadn't heard from him in a long time. [01:23:18.840 --> 01:23:29.800] Okay. Where are we at today? Well, I sent you the majority of cases, [01:23:29.800 --> 01:23:34.440] I believe, from what I recall that I brought up last, not yesterday when I was talking with you. [01:23:35.240 --> 01:23:38.680] Yeah, I got your links. I hadn't had time to go through them yet. [01:23:38.680 --> 01:23:46.520] I've been buried up to my eyeballs in databases for the last couple of days. [01:23:48.840 --> 01:23:55.800] Well, I think you can read a book called Silent Weapons for Quiet Wars. I think what was that [01:23:55.800 --> 01:24:00.840] book written back in the 30s by the government had a plan about how the government tried to create [01:24:00.840 --> 01:24:09.000] an environment for a financial situation where both parents had to stay so busy working just to [01:24:09.000 --> 01:24:15.080] try to make ends meet so they could not watch what the government was doing. And I said, [01:24:15.960 --> 01:24:21.160] which you can download, somebody give me a copy of that book all probably 30 years ago, [01:24:21.160 --> 01:24:27.240] but as long as you can download it online now, just type in Silent Weapons for Quiet Wars. [01:24:27.240 --> 01:24:35.720] And that's exactly what we're seeing happening right now. And I expect, I expect, go ahead. [01:24:37.160 --> 01:24:40.440] So they were very efficient. They had broke down their plans. [01:24:41.160 --> 01:24:43.800] I said that's been one about 90 years ago at least. [01:24:47.080 --> 01:24:48.840] I believe that's when that book was written. [01:24:48.840 --> 01:24:55.800] So it's not new and we're seeing, well, we've seen it happen all along. [01:24:59.240 --> 01:25:02.760] We've been in a position where both parents have had to work in order to [01:25:03.560 --> 01:25:09.800] be able to support the kids that keeps us so busy. The job we're doing trying to wake people up, [01:25:11.160 --> 01:25:14.760] people just too busy. They just don't have time. [01:25:14.760 --> 01:25:19.560] Well, they don't have care anymore either. I mean, you know, that's like, [01:25:20.440 --> 01:25:25.480] you know, me and E.M.F. and Dirty Lake Christy by the AC voltage about a stretch that's putting [01:25:25.480 --> 01:25:30.840] on the human body, about a turmoil, the body is going through it. I've talked to folks who look [01:25:30.840 --> 01:25:35.720] like they cannot breathe without having that cell phone up against their head. You get a comment, [01:25:35.720 --> 01:25:41.560] oh well, got to die somehow. And then I was, well, I just saw you got no care whatsoever [01:25:41.560 --> 01:25:45.400] for family and friends because they're about to give up time to come visit you while you die in [01:25:45.400 --> 01:25:55.640] hospital cancer. I was watching a program. I like to watch programs that were made in foreign [01:25:55.640 --> 01:26:02.120] countries for foreign audiences. There was one made in Russia for Russian audiences and it gave [01:26:02.120 --> 01:26:09.800] me a view of how the Russian people really lived. And I came across one out of Poland [01:26:09.800 --> 01:26:17.000] and it was about these high tech guys who were solving crimes. And it took a while before I [01:26:17.000 --> 01:26:25.960] realized what I was seeing. That whole series, not one time did I see a single person put a phone [01:26:25.960 --> 01:26:36.760] to their ear. Everybody used earbuds. Right. I was thinking these guys know something, [01:26:36.760 --> 01:26:43.640] know something we don't, that the American people don't. Not one in the whole program, [01:26:43.640 --> 01:26:49.800] not one person put a phone to their ear. Well, I think them earbuds probably work. I really do. [01:26:52.520 --> 01:26:56.840] How so? And that gets to your head 24 seven more left. [01:26:56.840 --> 01:27:07.320] Yeah, but the power it takes to move the diaphragm in that earbud is really, really minuscule. [01:27:08.280 --> 01:27:14.920] And the transmission power is a lot lower too because all it has to do is reach to the nearby [01:27:14.920 --> 01:27:22.520] device instead of basically yelling to the tower down the road. Most of these are plugged in. [01:27:22.520 --> 01:27:28.840] They weren't even Bluetooth. It doesn't matter. Yeah, there's the only [01:27:30.120 --> 01:27:34.360] EMF in there. It's what's moving that tiny little diaphragm and that's almost nothing. [01:27:35.640 --> 01:27:40.840] Well, how do you go? You get a lot more of that from the spark plug wires on your cars. [01:27:42.040 --> 01:27:46.120] Well, how do you know? I'm an electrical engineer, that's what I do. [01:27:46.120 --> 01:27:52.760] And I used to have thoughts similar to that. But since then I bought gauges where I can measure. [01:27:54.040 --> 01:28:01.800] And I mean, sometimes I'm really shocked because I don't know if you know there's a store in Houston [01:28:01.800 --> 01:28:08.840] called Frye. It's an electrical store. Oh yeah, we got them all over. I carried one of my gauges [01:28:08.840 --> 01:28:15.240] in there to measure EMF and I was shocked at how little it was picking up and you had to go to [01:28:15.240 --> 01:28:23.480] Walmart in the restroom. And I was shocked at how high the exposure was in there. It's what I'm [01:28:23.480 --> 01:28:29.960] getting at places that I would think you'd be exposed to the most you're not. And that places [01:28:29.960 --> 01:28:33.640] you shouldn't be exposed to much, according to my gauge, you're supposed to have a lot. [01:28:35.000 --> 01:28:42.680] That is surprising. Do you have an idea of what it is that's throwing up all that power? [01:28:42.680 --> 01:28:52.120] Uh, improper wiring would be my guess, which I, you know, I, you know, [01:28:52.120 --> 01:28:59.560] there's a man Lloyd Burl puts on a seminar every now and then called EMF Health Summit. [01:29:01.480 --> 01:29:07.000] And I think I started studying and had an EMF before he did for me listening to it. [01:29:07.000 --> 01:29:16.440] But he had guests from all over the world that I, you know, I think are super informed on some of [01:29:16.440 --> 01:29:25.800] this stuff. And so I've, from listening to him, I think I've learned some stuff that he understand. [01:29:25.800 --> 01:29:32.200] Well, wait a minute. The electrical wiring in Walmart would all be metal and [01:29:32.200 --> 01:29:37.240] cased and grounded. That metal enclosure should act as a Faraday screen. [01:29:37.960 --> 01:29:40.920] How would you know? That's what I do. [01:29:42.600 --> 01:29:52.280] What is? Any grounded metal case will absorb a EMF electromagnetic frequency [01:29:53.000 --> 01:29:59.640] in the air. And if it's not grounded, it'll re-radiate it. But if it's grounded, it'll just drop. [01:29:59.640 --> 01:30:05.880] Sorry, soft drink lovers. Even diet drinks can make you fat. [01:30:05.880 --> 01:30:11.160] A new study shows that diet soda drinkers gain much more weight than people who avoid the stuff. [01:30:11.160 --> 01:30:16.200] I've got your camera at all, Brett, and I'll be back in a moment with the scoop on supposedly skinny sodas. [01:30:16.840 --> 01:30:22.360] Privacy is under attack. When you give up data about yourself, you'll never get it back again. [01:30:22.360 --> 01:30:27.160] And once your privacy is gone, you'll find your freedoms will start to vanish too. [01:30:27.160 --> 01:30:32.440] So protect your rights. Say no to surveillance and keep your information to yourself. [01:30:32.440 --> 01:30:37.080] Privacy. It's worth hanging on to. This public service announcement is brought to you by [01:30:37.080 --> 01:30:44.520] StartPage.com, the private search engine alternative to Google, Yahoo, and Bing. Start over with StartPage. [01:30:45.880 --> 01:30:50.920] Artificial sweeteners cut the calories and help you lose weight, right? Wrong. [01:30:50.920 --> 01:30:55.960] Researchers at UT San Antonio followed hundreds of diet soda drinkers for nearly a decade. [01:30:55.960 --> 01:31:01.160] They found that regularly drinking diet soda expanded people's waistlines five times more [01:31:01.160 --> 01:31:06.200] than no soda at all. The study's authors say artificial sweeteners triggered the appetite, [01:31:06.200 --> 01:31:11.720] but unlike regular sugars, don't deliver anything to squelch it. Waking up hunger without satisfying [01:31:11.720 --> 01:31:17.080] it leads to cravings, which can result in a larger overall calorie intake. So use natural [01:31:17.080 --> 01:31:21.640] sweeteners to maintain a healthy weight, and if you need to shed some pounds, avoid the sweet stuff [01:31:21.640 --> 01:31:27.000] altogether and drink water instead. I'm Dr. Catherine Albrecht. More news and information [01:31:27.000 --> 01:31:35.000] at CatherineAlbrecht.com. This is Building 7, a 47-story skyscraper that fell on the afternoon [01:31:35.000 --> 01:31:39.960] of September 11. The government says that fire brought it down. However, 1,500 architects [01:31:39.960 --> 01:31:44.920] and engineers have concluded it was a controlled demolition. Over 6,000 of my fellow service members [01:31:44.920 --> 01:31:49.640] have given their lives. Thousands of my fellow force responders have died. I'm not a conspiracy [01:31:49.640 --> 01:31:53.160] theorist. I'm a structural engineer. I'm a New York City correction officer. I'm an Air Force [01:31:53.160 --> 01:31:58.120] pilot. I'm the father who lost his son. We are Americans, and we deserve the truth. Go to [01:31:58.120 --> 01:32:05.160] RememberBuilding7.org today. Rule of Law Radio is proud to offer the Rule of Law Traffic Seminar. [01:32:05.160 --> 01:32:08.920] In today's America, we live in an us against them society, and if we the people are ever going to [01:32:08.920 --> 01:32:13.160] have a free society, then we're going to have to stand and defend our own rights. Among those [01:32:13.160 --> 01:32:16.680] rights are the right to travel freely from place to place, the right to act in our own private [01:32:16.680 --> 01:32:20.920] capacity, and most importantly, the right to due process of law. Traffic courts afford us the [01:32:20.920 --> 01:32:25.480] least expensive opportunity to learn how to enforce and preserve our rights through due process. [01:32:25.480 --> 01:32:29.480] Former Sheriff's Deputy Eddie Craig in conjunction with Rule of Law Radio has put together the most [01:32:29.480 --> 01:32:33.560] comprehensive teaching tool available that will help you understand what due process is and how [01:32:33.560 --> 01:32:37.720] to hold courts to the rule of law. You can get your own copy of this valuable material by going [01:32:37.720 --> 01:32:42.440] to ruleoflawradio.com and ordering your copy today. By ordering now, you'll receive a copy of Eddie's [01:32:42.440 --> 01:32:47.160] book The Texas Transportation Code, The Law Versus the Lie, video and audio of the original 2009 [01:32:47.160 --> 01:32:51.000] seminar. Hundreds of research documents and other useful resource material. Learn how to [01:32:51.000 --> 01:32:54.920] fight for your rights with the help of this material from ruleoflawradio.com. Order your [01:32:54.920 --> 01:32:58.520] copy today and together we can have the free society we all want and deserve. [01:32:58.520 --> 01:33:08.520] Looking for some truth? You found it. LogosRadioNetwork.com. [01:33:28.520 --> 01:33:48.680] Okay, we are back. Randy Kelton, Brett Fountain, Rule of Law Radio, and we're talking about [01:33:48.680 --> 01:34:00.840] Faraday screens. Before we went to microsurface, we had vacuum tubes. Brett, I'm getting a lot of [01:34:00.840 --> 01:34:07.240] noise. We had vacuum tubes and you see a lot of those vacuum tubes with a little metal screen [01:34:07.240 --> 01:34:14.920] around them. That's because the tubes were so sensitive that any EMF from one of the other [01:34:14.920 --> 01:34:25.720] tubes passing this tube would change the frequency of actually the impedance inside the components [01:34:25.720 --> 01:34:32.840] in that tube. So we would put a metal screen around it and then ground the screen. The EMF would [01:34:32.840 --> 01:34:43.080] radiate and hit that metal and when an electromotive force passes a conductor, it will induce a [01:34:43.080 --> 01:34:51.640] current in the conductor. That's how the generators and alternators work and it also absorbs the EMF [01:34:51.640 --> 01:34:59.480] force and if it's grounded, it will shunt it to ground. If it's not grounded, then it'll radiate [01:34:59.480 --> 01:35:09.880] back out. So all of the wire and what I was wondering, Joe, is what on earth is going on in [01:35:09.880 --> 01:35:15.880] there in Walmart because all of that big heavy wiring they're having there, that's all in [01:35:16.520 --> 01:35:20.040] metal conduit and all that metal conduit is grounded to the metal building. [01:35:20.840 --> 01:35:26.520] Something has to be throwing up some serious juice. What the heck would it be? [01:35:27.960 --> 01:35:34.360] Well, what do you know about dirty electricity? Well, you know, dirty electricity, it can be dirty, [01:35:34.360 --> 01:35:40.680] but if it's in a metal casing, it can't get out. Well, okay, what I get in that, [01:35:42.040 --> 01:35:51.400] what I talk about poorly wired, connections are not secure. They're sparky. That's like a house I [01:35:51.400 --> 01:35:57.800] used to rent years ago before I started studying in this stuff. I was having problems and come to [01:35:57.800 --> 01:36:03.400] find out in the breaker box, wires were just shoved up and you know, you got a screw to tighten it [01:36:03.400 --> 01:36:10.280] down, but they were not tightened down. They were just in there flopping around. Yeah, over years, [01:36:10.280 --> 01:36:17.640] even if you tighten them down, the power passing through those connections will corrode them and [01:36:17.640 --> 01:36:25.000] they'll loosen up and yes, that'll throw some juice out. Right. And I mean, that's what I'm saying. [01:36:25.000 --> 01:36:35.240] There's so many things that can be done improperly and I ain't a professional, but from my perspective. [01:36:36.200 --> 01:36:42.040] The reason I asked that question is I'm wondering, have they got something else going on in there? [01:36:44.120 --> 01:36:52.040] What is Walmart using in terms of security and theft prevention? [01:36:52.040 --> 01:36:59.080] And I know they have cameras all over, but what do they have transmitting in there [01:36:59.800 --> 01:37:06.440] that would throw up a lot of EMF? Mostly those are metal buildings and the metal building itself [01:37:06.440 --> 01:37:15.160] acts like a fair discreet. So what I'm thinking is wherever this junk is coming from, it's coming [01:37:15.160 --> 01:37:24.040] from inside Walmart. There used to be a big old boot store across from the local Walmart. [01:37:24.040 --> 01:37:31.240] And I mean, I was really shocked just walking around in that store how much my gaze was showing [01:37:31.240 --> 01:37:46.520] out exposed to EMF. And so I tried just about everyone in that store again. Coolers, air conditioners, big motors, those [01:37:46.520 --> 01:37:52.200] things that throw out a lot of juice. How much I was exposed to in that whole store, it seemed like. [01:37:52.200 --> 01:38:01.320] Let me need to get one of those. This is what Joe's been working on forever. [01:38:02.280 --> 01:38:07.960] You used to work in a prison and you were right under some high power lines. Will you tell about [01:38:07.960 --> 01:38:20.200] that? Okay, well, you can go to ahealththeenvironment.org. I was on Fox News years ago. That presentation [01:38:20.200 --> 01:38:29.800] is on ahealththeenvironment.org. It's less than seven minutes. And back then, I was [01:38:32.360 --> 01:38:43.560] just kind of learning on EMF. And so, you know, like what I stated on that interview on Fox News, [01:38:43.560 --> 01:38:47.640] I carried a gauge up there. I mean, I started getting sick beyond imagination. [01:38:47.640 --> 01:38:53.240] And when I looked at just by the grace of my Creator, I stumbled across the hazard EMF [01:38:53.880 --> 01:39:01.720] power lines. And I carried a gauge up there. And when I stood on the side of the picket close [01:39:01.720 --> 01:39:07.640] to the big cable, according to my gauge, I'd exposed to about 100 milligollars EMF. [01:39:08.440 --> 01:39:13.960] I walked about 12, 13 foot away as far as I could in that picket. It dropped down to about [01:39:13.960 --> 01:39:21.480] 10 milligollars. So it drops rather speedily. But if you're totally unaware, you know, you're [01:39:21.480 --> 01:39:26.440] standing right where you exposed a massive amount. And over time, from what I've studied, [01:39:26.440 --> 01:39:32.520] just accumulating the body, doing harm the whole time until your body just gets where you're so [01:39:32.520 --> 01:39:39.320] sensitive beyond imagination. It is unimaginable. You know, I got to where I was getting really [01:39:39.320 --> 01:39:43.880] sick and crippled. You know, but normally, you know, there at the end, you know, it's kind of like, [01:39:43.880 --> 01:39:49.720] say, weren't six straight days on a picket. And you know, even in my sixth day, it was bothering me. [01:39:49.720 --> 01:39:54.520] But then I got to where it on my first day, it was bothering me. It was hurting me so bad. You [01:39:54.520 --> 01:40:03.880] know, I was gotten so sensitive to it. But then again, I got a doctor that I started going to. [01:40:03.880 --> 01:40:11.800] And I got, there's a book by Samuel Millham on dirty electricity, which I try to share with [01:40:11.800 --> 01:40:19.560] just about all doctors I go to. And I've got a gauge and measure of dirty electricity. [01:40:24.040 --> 01:40:27.480] I think it's grab, stretcher, filter, something like that. But anyhow, [01:40:27.480 --> 01:40:36.600] you know, so I carried a gauge with me into where I was going to the doctor. And I mean, [01:40:36.600 --> 01:40:42.760] I plugged it into one of the wall outlets and the gauge I had at the time would go up to 2000. [01:40:43.320 --> 01:40:47.800] Just how high it would measure on dirty electricity. And from what I've studied, [01:40:47.800 --> 01:40:51.720] you wanted it down below 30 if possible. You wanted it down to nothing. But still, [01:40:51.720 --> 01:40:57.800] you know, like allegedly 30 was something you could possibly tolerate by getting too much [01:40:57.800 --> 01:41:06.040] dead. My, that 2000 measure, but would not, you know, it was worse than that. So I went [01:41:06.040 --> 01:41:11.400] bought another gauge, you would measure up to 20,000. And it was what I recall it was just a little [01:41:11.400 --> 01:41:20.360] over 2000. But I mean, I've rented different places. I have my health gold band. I get [01:41:20.360 --> 01:41:27.720] I got those gauges where I can measure. I cut, you know, if I have real high body AC voltage, [01:41:27.720 --> 01:41:34.840] I find out how to cut that down. That makes a major health improvement. Same way with dirty [01:41:34.840 --> 01:41:42.680] electricity. Same way with EMF. You know, I find out where the problem is and try to cut down on [01:41:42.680 --> 01:41:50.360] it as much as possible. What are you calling dirty electricity? I'm thinking of a signal, [01:41:50.360 --> 01:41:56.600] super superhector, deemed over the 60 cycle signal. But from what you're talking about, [01:41:56.600 --> 01:42:03.640] you're talking about something else. Well, I'm talking about on the 60 cycle, probably for the [01:42:03.640 --> 01:42:08.280] EMF, but dirty electricity, like I said, they're all kind of related. They're all coming from [01:42:08.280 --> 01:42:18.120] electricity. But if you go to that a healthy environment dot org, there's a try to think [01:42:18.120 --> 01:42:24.920] there's an article in there by Samuel Milham about students and instructors having health [01:42:24.920 --> 01:42:33.160] problems in public schools in California due to EMF. No, dirty electricity. And there's a [01:42:33.160 --> 01:42:43.000] professor trying to think his name. I've got him on there. And he pretty much talks mostly about [01:42:43.000 --> 01:42:50.120] how it affects dairy farmers. But then again, he shows how do the water lines underneath the house [01:42:50.120 --> 01:42:55.480] that caused them to be exposed to it in his living quarters. He shows how you can go about measuring [01:42:55.480 --> 01:43:08.600] it. And I mean, it is just really unimaginable how much he knows and at the same time how much [01:43:08.600 --> 01:43:15.240] denial there is. Like I said, from fall 2008 issue, American Trial Lawyer's Magazine, which I've got [01:43:15.240 --> 01:43:21.640] on that website, say the EMF, worst and asbestos and tobacco combined, hasn't been noticed since [01:43:21.640 --> 01:43:31.560] 1928, worse than asbestos and tobacco combined. I believe he's found all that fall 2008 issue [01:43:31.560 --> 01:43:38.760] American Trial Lawyer's Magazine, which I've got on that website. Okay, hang on. About to go to our [01:43:38.760 --> 01:43:48.360] sponsors. I'm having problems with understanding how EMF can get this strong and grounded line. [01:43:48.360 --> 01:43:52.840] So I want to talk about that when I come back. Randy Kelton, Brett Fountain, Real Law Radio, [01:43:53.560 --> 01:43:54.600] we'll be right back. [01:44:00.360 --> 01:44:06.280] Through advances in technology, our lives have greatly improved, except in the area of nutrition. [01:44:06.280 --> 01:44:11.160] People feed their pets better than they feed themselves. And it's time we changed all that. [01:44:11.160 --> 01:44:17.480] Our primary defense against aging and disease in this toxic environment is good nutrition. [01:44:17.480 --> 01:44:22.280] In a world where natural foods have been irradiated, adulterated and mutilated, [01:44:22.280 --> 01:44:28.440] young Jevity can provide the nutrients you need. 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Randy Kelfam, Brett Fountain, rule of law radio, and we're talking to Joe in [01:47:00.200 --> 01:47:06.440] Texas and I've always had problems with a lot of this because my understanding of electricity, [01:47:07.720 --> 01:47:15.640] if you have a pipe in the ground, it's grounded. I mean, that's what it means. The earth is the [01:47:15.640 --> 01:47:22.360] largest sink, electromagnetic sink. The whole planet is an electromagnetic sink. [01:47:23.800 --> 01:47:35.560] And we have evolved in a electromagnetic soup. So I really don't understand how [01:47:37.480 --> 01:47:42.760] what little bit we're producing relative to what we're in from the cosmos all the time [01:47:42.760 --> 01:47:48.760] is so much more problematic. Do you have any? [01:47:49.800 --> 01:48:00.200] Earth is synthetic, man-made, AC, electric. But EMF is EMF, however we produce it. [01:48:01.000 --> 01:48:07.560] The frequency that we have chosen, I believe, is a main contributor. From what I've studied, [01:48:07.560 --> 01:48:15.800] the frequency we use is so similar to the body frequency, it causes inter- and then [01:48:15.800 --> 01:48:23.160] truss cellular communication problems. From what I've studied, the earth is EMF, [01:48:23.160 --> 01:48:30.840] nature's EMF is something we probably could not live without. But the synthetic EMF is [01:48:30.840 --> 01:48:37.800] causing horrendous amounts of problems. Okay, that does make sense. Have you heard of rife machines? [01:48:39.000 --> 01:48:46.360] Yes. And for those you don't know, a rife machine, it produces frequencies and what they found that [01:48:47.000 --> 01:48:56.600] if they inject a current at a certain frequency, it will cause certain viruses or bacteria to just [01:48:56.600 --> 01:49:05.160] disintegrate and explode. And that's what the rife machine does, is whatever issue that you have, [01:49:05.160 --> 01:49:14.120] they'll set the machine to address that issue. So while it can have this deadly effect on viruses [01:49:14.120 --> 01:49:22.360] and bacteria and other contagions, I guess it follows that it could have a bad effect on humans. [01:49:22.360 --> 01:49:31.320] And cells that we want to keep instead of kills. But it takes a particular frequency [01:49:32.120 --> 01:49:39.400] to damage a particular thing you want damaged. And talking about that, I believe Jerry Tinnit, [01:49:39.400 --> 01:49:44.280] a doctor in Dallas, has some real good teachings on that today. [01:49:44.280 --> 01:49:54.280] Okay, do you have a site with this information on it where our listeners can go and study this [01:49:54.280 --> 01:50:02.520] information? Well, I got told you a healthbyenvironment.org, which a friend of mine put together to do [01:50:02.520 --> 01:50:07.960] my inability to work on calculators more or less. I had to have somebody help me, but [01:50:07.960 --> 01:50:14.600] a lot of us there, but I got some stuff that I'll mail you with some more stuff. But like I said, [01:50:14.600 --> 01:50:25.400] it's just type in EMS and miscarriage and EMS and autism. Lucy Sanford was a, well, I say was, [01:50:25.400 --> 01:50:32.440] based on B, a real estate agent in Canada, and she allegedly would just make it horrendous some [01:50:32.440 --> 01:50:39.960] of the money she was touching outstanding. It's in real estate, but then her health just went [01:50:39.960 --> 01:50:44.920] to crumbling on her beyond imagination. Of course, you know, making all that money, [01:50:44.920 --> 01:50:50.200] she could afford going to apparently go to all kinds of doctors and she was talking about how [01:50:50.200 --> 01:50:53.640] them doctors just finally started down. Well, we just can't figure out what it is. There's [01:50:53.640 --> 01:50:59.080] something got to be all in your head and said, whatever doctors come to Dallas, I mean, come to [01:50:59.080 --> 01:51:07.000] Texas to study on electrohypersensitivity. I believe something like that. She said that doctor come [01:51:07.000 --> 01:51:17.880] back and told her, I think I got it figured out is new fangled disease called electrohypersensitivity. [01:51:18.520 --> 01:51:26.200] And so apparently by her becoming aware of what the problem was called, you know, [01:51:26.200 --> 01:51:31.240] she was able to regain her health to, you know, kind of like myself. You know, I mean, [01:51:31.240 --> 01:51:39.000] it is unimaginable how bad my health got. But then when I finally come across what was probably [01:51:39.000 --> 01:51:45.560] causing it to where I could cut down on my exposure, you know, my health started improving. [01:51:45.560 --> 01:51:50.840] But that's, you know, but I couldn't work at the same place I was working, even though [01:51:50.840 --> 01:51:58.680] the doctor I was going sent them a written statement requesting they work me somewhere I [01:51:58.680 --> 01:52:05.960] would not be exposed to so much. And they refused to do that. So I just, you know, I just showed [01:52:05.960 --> 01:52:11.000] how crooked they are because I believe that's an absolute violation of American Rediscibility Act. [01:52:14.120 --> 01:52:19.400] Certainly sounds like it if you have a verified diagnosis. [01:52:19.400 --> 01:52:24.280] Well, yeah, but from what I understand, the American Rediscibility Act, you don't even, [01:52:24.280 --> 01:52:28.120] doctor does not have to state that. You just have to state it. And then if [01:52:29.720 --> 01:52:35.640] practical, they're required to work you somewhere else. But the doctor sent it to them. [01:52:35.640 --> 01:52:37.480] And it's like, so what? Take care of this. [01:52:41.960 --> 01:52:45.800] You have to sue them. And that's, that's where we come in. [01:52:45.800 --> 01:52:50.280] And we can show you how to make them care more than less. [01:52:53.080 --> 01:52:57.800] Okay. Well, for those of you who are listening to this, who are interested in this, [01:52:57.800 --> 01:53:02.840] go to a healthy environment.org. And look in. [01:53:02.840 --> 01:53:10.040] You know, like I said, I told you about Lucy Sanford, but AndrewAMarino.com. [01:53:10.040 --> 01:53:15.720] I mean, he's one of the early ones I started studying with. He was taught by Robert O. Becker, [01:53:15.720 --> 01:53:20.520] with one of his instructors. Robert O. Becker, from what I understand, is no longer with us. [01:53:21.720 --> 01:53:27.720] But AndrewAMarino, when he was a PhD in New York back in the 70s, from what I understand, [01:53:27.720 --> 01:53:33.880] he first started becoming aware of the health problems. And from what I understand, [01:53:33.880 --> 01:53:38.120] he started trying to expose all these health problems. He was getting grants from the government [01:53:38.120 --> 01:53:43.160] doing study and research. And he started having grants taken away and grants tonight. [01:53:44.120 --> 01:53:51.960] It is my belief he is currently a professor in Louisiana. You can go to AndrewAMarino.com [01:53:51.960 --> 01:53:54.440] and get a, you know, he's got a bunch of information there. [01:53:56.840 --> 01:54:05.000] Will you craft an email with these, these references in it? And anybody who's interested, [01:54:05.000 --> 01:54:08.680] if you will send me a request, I will forward the email to you. [01:54:09.720 --> 01:54:15.080] I will be more than glad to, because I got stuff I try to pass out just everywhere I go. [01:54:16.600 --> 01:54:21.160] Well, good. Get that to me, and we will get it out to anybody who wants to see it. [01:54:22.920 --> 01:54:26.760] Well, I'll be glad to, because you know, I've been to Austin, I've been to City Hall, [01:54:26.760 --> 01:54:31.080] all that did, reinforced my belief, talking to them, pathetic, you stupid public services, [01:54:31.080 --> 01:54:37.000] absolutely waste of time. I tend to agree. I have a question about this, Joseph. [01:54:37.800 --> 01:54:43.080] Will it make, well, if you're hypersensitive to EMF, will it make you old and ugly? [01:54:46.920 --> 01:54:50.680] I was just wondering. It will drastically speed it up. [01:54:52.920 --> 01:54:57.640] It will. Well, did it, did it help when you got away from it? [01:54:57.640 --> 01:55:01.160] When you laugh fast or fast, you can't get old. [01:55:04.360 --> 01:55:10.200] Okay. Thank you very much, Joe. And if you're ever up in the Dallas area, give me a call. [01:55:12.120 --> 01:55:18.360] All right. Well, I had something, you know, that I've talked to at the rent at the grocery store [01:55:18.360 --> 01:55:24.360] when I started sharing this. She wanted me to go to one of our youngers that was living in Dallas, [01:55:24.360 --> 01:55:31.640] just with my gages and misery. Well, if you do that, holler at me and I'll meet you in Dallas [01:55:31.640 --> 01:55:40.520] and buy you dinner. Well, I'll tell you what, you know, when I got into study with Lucy Sanford, [01:55:40.520 --> 01:55:49.160] there's a group called a building biologist that studied, they're allegedly experts on [01:55:49.160 --> 01:55:56.440] several things. EMF, dirty electric, the body AC voltage just being, you know, some of the things [01:55:56.440 --> 01:56:03.160] they're really experienced experts on. Good. Get us links to all of those. [01:56:07.400 --> 01:56:12.840] Okay. We need to move on, Joe. Thank you, Joe. Well, I enjoyed it and I just kind of hope you [01:56:12.840 --> 01:56:19.720] get to talk to them about the court rules. I thank you. But like we dressed yesterday, but I didn't [01:56:19.720 --> 01:56:30.440] have time to go through them. Okay. Okay. Thank you, Joe. Okay. Now, now we're going to go to [01:56:31.240 --> 01:56:34.360] Ted in California. Hello, Ted. Where have you been? [01:56:36.200 --> 01:56:42.680] Happy New Year, Dr. Kelton. And I've been taking care of my mom so I know that you'll sign the [01:56:42.680 --> 01:56:50.360] excuse. Yeah, my mom just took a turn for the worst and I wound up having to go back to Tennessee [01:56:50.360 --> 01:57:00.280] to take care of her. We're in the same boat. As for the previous caller, I agree with him. It's [01:57:00.280 --> 01:57:07.720] a serious problem. I actually gave up this office I had where I was working because of the problems [01:57:07.720 --> 01:57:15.000] with Wi-Fi. Not only was it making me sick, there was a lawyer in the office a lot older than me, [01:57:15.000 --> 01:57:27.480] so totally different person and wide difference in ages. And this guy is one of those older guys [01:57:27.480 --> 01:57:33.560] that's always been healthy as a horse, never had any problems ever, ever. And all of a sudden, [01:57:33.560 --> 01:57:41.960] we started getting sick in the office and we thought first that it was the people upstairs [01:57:42.520 --> 01:57:50.120] and the chemicals they were using up there. But the symptoms were just, it would come on within [01:57:50.120 --> 01:57:55.640] five minutes of coming into the office and sitting down at the computer. And you get a brain fog. [01:57:55.640 --> 01:58:04.200] I just got to the point where you're... I've heard you talk about this before. I'm sorry, [01:58:04.200 --> 01:58:10.120] go ahead. My music came on a little early. Well, I just wanted to confirm it and then I wanted to [01:58:10.120 --> 01:58:17.320] move on with the subject. Okay, I seem to recall you talking about this before. The problem you had [01:58:17.320 --> 01:58:26.760] with... Okay, we've got 30 seconds. When we come back, I'm going to ask were you able to find a [01:58:26.760 --> 01:58:34.600] solution that didn't involve just leaving all together? Okay, hang on. Randy Kelton, Brett [01:58:34.600 --> 01:58:41.320] Fountain, Wheel of Our Radio, our call in number 512-646-1984. We've got a couple slots on the [01:58:41.320 --> 01:58:51.480] board. Tina, I see you there. We'll get to you next. We'll be right back. The Bible remains [01:58:51.480 --> 01:58:56.920] the most popular book in the world, yet countless readers are frustrated because they struggle to [01:58:56.920 --> 01:59:03.240] understand it. 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