In this episode of the Radio Ranch, host Roger Sayles dives into the complexities of April 15th, often referred to as the real April Fool's Day, due to its association with tax filings in the United States. Roger discusses the historical context of tax systems, the intricacies of the IRS, and shares personal anecdotes about dealing with tax issues. He also touches on the cultural and historical aspects of slavery, the influence of the Rothschild-Rockefeller axis, and the significance of voluntary servitude. Throughout the episode, Roger emphasizes the importance of understanding one's legal rights and the power dynamics at play in global financial systems.
Additionally, the episode features discussions on various topics such as the impact of tariffs, the role of the IRS in the U.S. economy, and the potential for systemic change under different political administrations. Roger also shares personal stories from his past, including his experiences in the radio industry and his interactions with notable figures. The episode concludes with a call to action for listeners to educate themselves and become proactive in understanding and asserting their rights in the face of complex legal and financial systems.
This Mirror Stream is brought to you in part by mymymyboost.com for support of the mitochondria like never before. A body trying to function with sluggish mitochondria is kinda like running an engine that's low on oil. It's not gonna work very well. It's also brought to you by PhatPhix, p h a t p h I x, dot com, and also iTero Planet for the terahertz frequency wand by Preif International. That's iTeroPlanet.com. Thank you, and welcome to the program. Forward moving and focused on freedom. You're listening to the Global Voice
[00:01:00] Unknown:
Radio Network. Hey now. Hey now. So would we. Today's big change world change today, isn't it? It's the as my buddy Ron Brown used to say, the real April Fool's Day is today for those who stand in line and stay up till midnight to get their little envelope posted there for the individuals representing Satan. So good morning on that one day of the year that makes people shiver, makes grown men pee their pants. April 15. Roger Sales, your host here at the Radio Ranch. We got April 15 figured out pretty good, I think, Paul. And, we'll find out more as we delve into today's two hours together. So good morning. We are assisted by other folks and other platforms and other organizations and to extend our reach and go all over El Mundo, the world, and, so we like to give them proper recognition and credit.
And, of course, the person to do that is one Paul Viner because he's the one that knows them all. Don't you?
[00:02:46] Unknown:
Maybe. Well, I think so.
[00:02:48] Unknown:
Okay. I would hope so. So too. You've performed in the past pretty adequately in this area.
[00:02:56] Unknown:
Okay. Well, there's that. Anyway okay. Well, thank you, Roger. We are on EurofolkRadio.com. Thanks to our buddy, pastor Eli James. We're also on Global Voice Radio Network, radio dot global voice radio dot net, and a bunch of platforms brought to us by the Net family of broadcast services. One zero six point nine WBOU FM Chicago, home network dot TV, freedom nation dot TV, go live TV, and stream life.tube. And we also have for the first hour, Tuesday through Friday, radiosoapbox.com. Thanks to our buddy, Paul, across the drink.
[00:03:45] Unknown:
Bloody right. Excellent.
[00:03:48] Unknown:
Yes. Bloody well right. Right. Right. Bloody well right. We're all our website is thematrixd0cs.com. The matrix, d 0 c s, Com. You can find the links to Eurofolk Radio, Global Voice Radio, and free conference call. You can join us live on the show. We've got room for about 950 more of you. That's a good one. Down. Bring popcorn. Please. Hurry. Lunch.
[00:04:15] Unknown:
Hurry.
[00:04:17] Unknown:
Yes. Hurry. Hurry. Hurry.
[00:04:20] Unknown:
They're probably in line at the post office. They don't know about us yet, Paul. But maybe one day Yeah. Probably not.
[00:04:28] Unknown:
Oh, yeah. I did wanna mention, this this archive, this program will be very easy to find on the, Podholm archives. It'll be very easy to find. It is the Radio Ranch April Fools edition
[00:04:45] Unknown:
with records for sale. There you go. Thank you, Ronnie. Ronnie would be proud. As one of my favorite people I've ever known, he's, of course, not with us anymore. But, boy, he was a close friend in all of this, and, we went through a lot of this together trying to skull this thing out when none of us understood anything. Like, many of you that come on here, and you really don't have any kind of a legal background, and then, you know, somehow you found us. And you come on here, and you get here this complex stuff, and your head's spinning. You go, what the hell is he talking about? What how could this work? You know? And we went through all that. And, I think I told the story that later on down the line, Ron, he was an insurance agent. That's why he, as I was talking about the other day, many insurance agents are in the patriot movement because they get these big residual checks, and they don't pay their taxes. And IRS, of course, the insurance company, and industry is is absolutely, excuse me, joined at the hip with IRS, Central Bank, all of them.
And so they don't have any problems stopping your residuals coming. And, that's attracted an awful lot of, insurance folks. And, boy, old Ronnie, he was really something and fought diligently, couldn't understand it, and then he got off and off the path and went doing other stuff. And, years later, when I found this, and finally came to understand it, and I called him. And I was telling him about it, and he he wanted to do it. You know? And so, he went to look for his affidavit, the five page one that we all filed with John and Glenn. He couldn't find it. And so he because we had filed it at the property records office there in Gwinnett Counties where he lived out in Northeast Atlanta.
And, he went to the property records office and found it and got a copy. And he said, Roger, you know, I went home to read it, and I understood everything perfectly. And that's that time period, I guess, going by where your mind kinda settles out some of the confusion. But, anyway, if any of you are in that situation today that are with us early on in your wake up career, that doesn't mean you're woke. It means you're waking up, and, you'll probably have those same feelings somewhere along the line. We've got several new students I know, and, and it it the the one thing that's hard for us that I've really been striving to overcome for many, many years is to simplify this where because of time and because normally it takes well, it takes you're some people calling on here that have been listening for two years.
Okay? Then just calling in for the first time or more. And just the way they've set it up and the way they've done this in your mind, it makes it very difficult for people, and it takes a little bit of time. And that's one of the downsides here that I've tried to overcome, and and get people up to speed as quick as possible. And it's still you can be in this for a while, I guess, and not really see the importance of it. And the importance of it is what we have here is the root power tap root of the Rothschild Rockefeller power axis.
Their power is putting this system in place and getting a a property right on you from birth that you agree with, so it's voluntary servitude. And then the, well, the most profitable business in history, slavery. They're the masters of it all the way back to Babylon all through the middle ages in Europe where the Jews were certain Jews were given, slave trading rights. And then I was watching something the other day about England and a guy named Morris, whose father was a merchant. And, he grew up he ended up being the head of the Bank of England, and he's the one that would give out his licenses for slave licenses. They couldn't bring the slaves onto the island of England, but they could do the triangle trade, Africa, The Bahamas up to the Northeast and back.
And, there you go. Many of the fortunes today were built on that slave trade two hundred years ago, because they would have approximately $20 and this is black slavery, of course. Not necessarily, and I'm talking about the black slavery here, but there was also Irish slavery. They probably got their Irish slaves cheaper, but they had approximately $20 in every, African black slave. And then they would sell you the average sale price was around 2,000. I guess if you were a good specimen, big bucking, linebacker type male or something, they'd get more for you. They, you know, examine your teeth and go through all that stuff. I don't know what the parameters were. We never have heard anybody hardly explore the fact that, cash?
I mean, average price 2,000 were these southern planners carrying around. They wanted to come buy five slaves. They carry around 10,000 or more in cash. I doubt it. Really? There weren't very many plantations that had huge amounts of black slaves. May a couple, very small percentage, but the others that own slaves own two or three maybe. And at those prices and in those conditions, they made the slaves part of the family. And so, there's a lot of misconceptions, but there had to be a lot of usurous financing of the slaves. So wherever you saw a slave market, you probably saw a bunch of Jewish bankers hanging around, be my my guest.
And don't forget, just like David Duke said, it it was so predominantly Jewish that on the Jewish holidays, Rosh Hashanah and Yom Kippur, that they the slave markets closed totally. So Mhmm. Anyway, that's what we're dealing with. We've been in captivity with these Babylonian bastards. They're using the same techniques, really, for and we're into our ninety second year now. And I'm hoping that people are we got the and out for your slavery. And if you'll just open your ears and wipe your mind clean of all the garbage they put in there, you you you you too can be free.
So there we are. Of course, this is a very symbolic day of that, the fifteenth. I've never I I may have read it or seen something years ago on why they why did they dictate today, April 15? And, the oh, what was the other question? I can't forget it. I forget it right now. Anyway, well and what's the significance of a ten forty? So the just two questions. I think I've seen the answer, but I forgot. It's been so long. So if any of y'all y'all have answers for that, love to hear it. So otherwise in that, Paul, did you, you you haven't dutifully filed your Jewish sheztar today, I trust? I think you're out of that system by now.
[00:12:13] Unknown:
No. No. Actually, I did not, and, I don't intend to. Okay. And, one thing about the slaves, they there were two kinds of slaves south of the Mason Dixon. There was the white Irish slaves, and they were, of course, treated like dirt. They were they they toiled in the fields and everything else. And then there were the black slaves. They paid a lot more for the black slaves, and those slaves were the ones that were more like family members.
[00:12:49] Unknown:
Yeah. Well, they were in the house.
[00:12:52] Unknown:
They worked in the house. They cooked the food. They minded the children. They Clean the made the beds. They cleaned the house. They were, more like family than property. As a matter of fact, I mean, there were a number of, Southern, plantation owners that, if they didn't have heirs to, pass the plantation onto, the slaves were freed when the person died.
[00:13:28] Unknown:
It doesn't surprise me at all. Well, there were very warm relationships between many of the blacks and the white owners. It's just I'm sure there are a few real ugly owners, you know, had to be. But I think as a majority, it's really overblown. If you wanna know who the the, vicious owners were, it was the slave, it was the ship captains in some of their hands. They they were the ones that really abused a lot of the slaves. Many of them died on the way over. And, yep, it's, they've been doing it since the beginning of time, you know. So, anyway, they still think it's their prerogative. They've got a I can enslave Eugene in their Talmud.
And, so they figured out a very, very slick way to do it. For the new people here, you may not have heard this. We can go over to Bitshoot. A couple years ago, we found an audio book over there, and it was written on voluntary servitude, this very type of situate situation we find ourselves in. And it was written in 1577. So if you wanna go to Bitshoot, you can put 1577 in, parentheses with a space and then another voluntary servitude. I'm sure it'll come up. But this isn't a new idea. Obviously, it's been floating around for a long time. That was, not too long after Columbus discovered America, so that a long time ago.
But, yep, pretty slick way they figured out to do it here, and they had to go through and do a lot of things. It took a lot of time, and I maintain that the civil war, the the the war of atrocities from the North inspired by these same bankers. I believe that the reason the Civil War was fought was to put these two amendments in the constitution so that they could control The US Eighty Years later in 1933. They knew how to do it at that point already. And, and and because that's American, they'll make it the the world's reserve currency and control the world through this mechanism of controlling Americans. And I I'm telling you, the more I think about that, the more I believe it's true. K?
So that's the slickness, our enemies have here and the ability to project long term and, plan these things to where they they don't get them on a timeline. They get them on an event line because they have to do something before the next event can can, be overcome. And I we mentioned it the other day talking with somebody about the tax situation as Michael maybe. If you look at the whole progress of events with the exception of starting the civil war, exacerbating it, and setting up this two these two statutes that it worked totally in tandem to enslave everybody.
But then the next series of events started in 1913, very bad year for the country, obviously. '13 being a magic number for them. So you can imagine when the year 1913 came along, they made as much hay as they could, which they did. But to to look at it was the order, what to look at. Because they've gotta set things up like a domino, you know, one of the people that set up those long domino things that do all those tricks and all that stuff and knock the dominoes down. It's gotta be set up like that. So the very first and most important thing they did was in April of twenty thirteen.
They, at least on the surface, ratified the thirteenth amendment. Now that's the taxing I mean, the sixteenth amendment. That's the taxing taxing amendment. And then they they didn't put the central bank in until the very end of the year. Now you would think logically, would you not, Paul, that they put the money this money thing, how they can create this fake money. Then that's the most important thing. You'd think you'd be first, wouldn't you?
[00:17:39] Unknown:
I mean, wouldn't you? Yeah. You would think. And then you said 2013. That that was 1913,
[00:17:46] Unknown:
wasn't it? I meant 1913. I probably got I think I said Okay. Anyway, 1913, probably a mistake there. I thought I was lost in a time warp. Well, okay. Well, I wanna bring you back to reality here. It's my mistake. They put that sixteenth amendment in place first and then the seventeenth amendment in the summer that severed the state's interactions into the senate. Very important body. Don't forget the senate is the body that, it ratifies treaties for one thing. So in that day, the state, when they appointed the state legislature, appointed the senator, if they didn't like the way he was voting, they could recall his ass and put somebody else in there or they didn't want that. They wanted them elected popularly where they could influence the election with their money. And that's exactly what they did, and they didn't pass the Federal Reserve Act until, well, I think December 24 of that year. The important thing to notice out of all that, if you're new to this especially, is that that, the the tax, mechanism was passed first. And then if you go through the series of events, the last thing they did after overcoming Plessy versus Ferguson by getting Brown versus Board of Education through there, and sixty days later, boom, there's the 1954 revenue code, and we're still under it today.
Remember the other day, we were talking about all those regulations, how to trace back regulations and see if they're substantive or interpretive or whatever they are. Every one of them you ever trace back, it'll lend at $19.54. Bam. That code. Yep. So anyway, this next thing is very important, and it is, in the an end analysis, the critical element of their whole system, the way it works together. Larry, happy April Fool's Day.
[00:19:38] Unknown:
Yes. Happy day. I I'm gonna answer your question here. This is what AI says. April 15 has not always been the filing deadline. March 1 was the date specified by Congress in 1913. After the passage of the sixteenth Amendment, in 1918, Congress set the date to March 15 where it remained until the tax overhaul of 1954 when the date was again moved to April 15.
[00:20:14] Unknown:
Oh, there's always that '54 in there, isn't it?
[00:20:19] Unknown:
Exactly. Because you just messaged it, and there it is.
[00:20:22] Unknown:
I think it may be important to remember that back in those days that they they, swore in the new president in March. They didn't do it in January. They did it later on in the year in March, and that's why on March, Roosevelt had just been elected a couple of in inaugurated a couple of days before. That was one of the first things he did was March and start changing the goal so they could switch the financial system. Getting out the one thing they really had to do that's very important. Excuse me. They had to, get the gold settlement clauses out of all the contracts.
All contracts before them evidently had gold settlement clauses if you couldn't settle it in in gold dollars that represented gold, because back then it did, remember, then you would have a gold settlement clause where you have to settle the amount in gold. And I think that had to do with the seizing of the gold on the on March myself. It seems like they bankrupted the and there's speculation on my part. They bankrupted the country. They wouldn't have god. My stomach is acting up. I'm sure sorry. They didn't have anything to do with the stock market crash in '29. But in '33, they bankrupted the country in the bond market international bond market.
And so I'm sure with those bonds, they had a gold settlement clause in them, and so they just came in and took all the gold. If you had gold in a safety deposit box, they would when you went back, it it would have a Federal Reserve note in there representing the amount. So, I believe that's a really key component here. We're hardly ever gonna be able to find credible information on what happened because we know who we're dealing with and how they do things. But the best you can do is somewhat speculate and attach the dots on things that really do fit. And that little scenario I just put out there seems to fit. I've thought about it an or an inordinate amount over the years.
So, there you go. That's, what AI says about it. It wasn't always April 15. It was in March, etcetera, etcetera. But it's chiseled in stone now, Larry. The real April Fool's Day. Now, we were talking yesterday kicking some things around about people who had horror stories maybe that want to if you wanna share them, are you are they just too horrible for you to think about and reminisce on or or what? But if you've got any horror IRS stories, I'd certainly we'd like to hear them. Is anybody in that category that feels open enough to talk about your individuals representing Satan experience? No.
Alright. Well, I'll tell you one of mine. I had a lot of interaction with these boys. Showed up at my door one time out there in Cobb County. 1 of them one of the notorious local IRS guys was one of them. There's two of them, and it was early. And they they had I think I had shorts on. They said, what are your knees shaking for? And I said, well, I'm always nervous when I'm confronted by terrorists. So, anyway, I've had I've had some interesting experiences with these guys over the years. You know, a couple of meetings, you know, go in with somebody when they've been called in with their books and records. And you go in there and you start questioning the IRS code. We study all these codes and all those regulations and stuff, and we become quote quote, unquote experts. And we go in to confront the IRS, and we start hitting them with these codes, and they don't know one single thing about it.
They're just trained to come in and grab you by the heels and turn you upside down and start shaking you to see what they can shake out of you. That's what they're trained for. K? And so, the best one though, probably, and I've told that I I I neglected to tell it. Was it Saturday before last? Paul? I think it was when we covered the tax system. And by the way, if you're new and you didn't hear that, you wanna go back in the archives there on Saturday the second. Was it second, third, something like that? We on there.
Yeah. We did a show on the, the history of the tax system and how it developed and what it is and how it works and how they change the key components like tax court and stuff, over here on our side of the pond to, well, to protect the guilty. And, so, anyway, well, what happened to me was I had a nice house there in East Cobb County. I'd been in it for nineteen years, had, built up some equity. And so, a nice little bit of equity too, actually. And, so I decided to test the system and quit paying the mortgage. So a few months before I sold it, I had stopped paying the mortgage, and they had finally caught up with me.
And, there there's a number of states. I'm not sure how many have transferred over, but there's a number of states. I think there's 20 something at that time that are called nonjudicial foreclosure states. Do y'all know Larry, do you know what that is? Nonjudicial foreclosure? So he's probably delivering them to a package. That's where they can just sell your stuff on the courthouse steps. Right. Instead of going through a year to default, and this we're gonna put it on a docket and go through all the formal lengthy procedures. They shortened that in at least a number of states, and they said, well, all we have to do is, advertise it in the daily organ for, I think, three weeks, three consecutive weeks.
And on the fourth week, if you haven't taken care of it, then we're gonna sell it on the courthouse steps to the highest bidder. And that's called nonjudicial foreclosure, and that was, Georgia was a nonjudicial foreclosure state. So I pressed it to the envelope, and it was right. It ended up being around Labor Day weekend. So you got a three day weekend, and, and Monday, of course, is the holiday. And then Tuesday, my house is gonna be sold on the courthouse steps. And I get right up to that Friday before that weekend. You couldn't you couldn't press the envelope anymore, Paul.
And I did. Okay? And so cute little couple that had bought my house, they loved it. It was their little love nest, second marriage for both of them. It was a neat little house, I have to say. And, so they had, they'd had a previous bad experience before they found me, and I was doing for sale by owner because I'd had a real estate license for a little while. I knew a little bit about how to do that, and I was trying to squeeze every penny I could get out of the proceeds. And so, anyway, we come in big table, big long table, and, I was there. I had a I had a guy with me, and they were there. And I forget who else was in the room, but, you know, and I I've said it before. I think Julie, Julie's with us today. She probably knows this.
They say if anything goes wrong at the closing table, that the only thing you hear is the click of everyone's eyeballs as they all look over at you. And believe me, that happens. K? And so, we're sitting there at the big table, having a nice little talk before the attorney comes in and happened to be a friend of a really good friend of mine too. I didn't know that till later. So closing attorney comes in. Nice guy. And, he sits down. He looks over. I'm sitting right next to him. And, he looks over. He said, well, mister Sales, we need to check to the Internal Revenue Service for 35,000 and some change.
And that's when you heard everybody's eyes click as they look at you. And I had no other choice than to tell them to redo the paperwork and take that out of the proceeds. Well, I cut down my I cut down my profits pretty good, Paul, at Yes. At that stage. And, so he went in, and he he was as he was leaving, he said this is the key thing here. He said, you know, we went looking. There was another lien on there because I placed a foreign lien on there on a bogus company in line. In thinking that and I should have known better, really, in thinking that the usual procedure with liens is first in line in time. So if you filed your little mechanics lien against me on July and it was for the majority of what the proceeds would be, then the guy that had another egregious situation with me that filed his lien on July, well, yours would take precedent. You'd get all the money and he's left holding it back. Okay? That's the way it normally works.
But remember, these aren't lanes. They're notice in lanes. And so and they come from, statute staple. And if you listen to that tax lecture, that's where it came from. K? And so, anyway, he turns to me. He says, well, we looked all over for that company. We never could find it, but, you know, it really doesn't matter because, IRS goes to the head of the line. I don't know why, but they go to the head of the line. Well, they're from the closing attorney is the big question right there, isn't it? How does the IRS step ahead of the line in front of anybody and everybody even when they may have been the very last one. What makes them so privileged?
Because And, of course, that was is on you. On the body. As we evidenced and proved in that lecture on the tax system, this is a very special type of lien. It got the original document. It's called the Jewish sheatar. It as a Englishman said in the thirteen hundreds or whenever this was getting passed originally goes to time out of mind. So this is something that had extended previously in history a hell of a long time. So this is the instrument that's been used historically for debt collection, especially probably on taxes because it falls on you and you're the property now. And anything that comes into your hands from whatever source derived, there's a good IRS phrase, from whatever source derived is now applied to the debt.
And that stands until the debt is paid, and then the lien is lifted. So that's what we're dealing with. And, and I felt like, that day that somebody had kicked me in the groin, figured literally and figuratively, especially these creeps who I just despise. And, that was, the day that turned me and said, well, I'll get it back. And they I they, they really made a bad enemy out of me. You might agree because I've got their whole scheme now, and they can't say a damn thing about it. They have to stand mute. They'll they'll never convict themselves. They're not that kind even though they do it silently here.
But we got these bastards right by the shorthairs. Now I don't think, as I've said numerous times, I've I've never come across anybody in history that had these guys anywhere near as good as firmly and as negatively for their sake as we have them here. And that's why it becomes really important, especially the more that the Zionist influence becomes apparent under Trump. I just this makes me sick. Okay? But now we've got something that can stop that force. I've never seen anybody else have it. We got something that stops that force in its tracks and makes them stand silent. And as that gets further along, and they're probably going to try and get these hate laws into code and and and all that stuff and make it a quote unquote law.
But it's not going to apply to people like us. Excuse me. And that potentially gives them huge problems. K? So it may not have been that, and I don't know when the big guy is gonna play this card. I think at some point, he's gonna play it. And, I guess it just these situations keep building up and building up until and we keep getting stronger and stronger and stronger silently, slowly. But at that point in time, when this information comes forward in some sort of a critical situation, it could really be a game changer. So that's why I encourage all of you to continue to spread the word. Find the like minded people.
We may not can get Jeff Rents' attention, but I I can get yours and you can get somebody else's. So, and we keep growing. And the more we grow, no matter how slowly, the more formidable we become for these guys. K? So that's where we are, and that's what we've got on this important important day, seems like to me. So anybody got any comments or questions on all that? Damn, Paul. I must really be doing good.
[00:34:48] Unknown:
They're taking it all in.
[00:34:50] Unknown:
Okay. Well, if you missed the, tax lecture there a couple of Saturdays ago, I really would encourage you to go back. Nobody else in the world knows that information. It's not my research. That's John Glenn's. They turned all of this over to me as the little spoke spokesboy. Yes, Larry.
[00:35:11] Unknown:
Yeah. Do you really think, like, in your gut, do you really think that Trump is gonna be able to eliminate the IRS? Because my understanding about the IRS is they are the accountants slash collection agency for the bankruptcy. And so I guess it would be necessary to have them there along those lines.
[00:35:33] Unknown:
Well, it depends on how Trump prepare maybe proposes to be able to pay those same payments without having to apply the IRS. It may, it may be around in some capacity, but I don't but you get the Trump the tariffs paying the taxes, and they're not gonna have that responsibility anymore. So, yes, it may be around what capacity. I don't know. But, we didn't have taxes when we had tariffs from 1870 to 1913.
[00:36:09] Unknown:
Right. And, I haven't heard anything recently. Have you, Roger? It was, like, a couple of, well, maybe month and a half, two months ago when when Trump came out saying he wants to impose no taxes on anyone making less than a hundred and 50,000 a year. He doesn't wanna, tax overtime. And there's a couple of other things in there, tips. Tips for a while. Heard anything since.
[00:36:35] Unknown:
Yeah. Well, I mean, you guys guys got a little bit on his plate, Larry, so give him a little elbow room. I mean, they've only dumped all the problems on the world on his desk pretty much. You'll hear more. I did hear the other day, they're there's they're floating a get rid of daylight savings time bill or executive order or something already. I don't know if any of y'all heard that, but something's gonna happen with daylight savings time. Now the question is, which side is it gonna fall on? When they stop it, is it gonna fall on the savings time side, or is it gonna fall on standard time side? I don't know. K? So, anyway, I haven't heard any standard.
Pardon me? It would have to. It it would have to be a standard. Well, you would think you'd think it would, but the you don't know. Just speculating. Larry, I have not heard him talk about it either, but I'm sure we will. K?
[00:37:32] Unknown:
Oh, we're on standard time right now. Right?
[00:37:36] Unknown:
No. No. We're on savings time now. Spring forward. You get an extra hour in the you lose an hour, in other words, in the spring. Fall back, you fall back, and it gives you that hour back. So we're into savings time right now. It was instituted originally for the summer season to, you know, some politician saying that I I I'm gonna give you an hour or more, an hour or more daylight a day. And, he shifts it around, and then you got more time with the family. The sun doesn't set till evening and, you know, eight, eight thirty in some places, I guess. And you've got that extra time in the afternoon. So those people it's those people that go, well, that's real nice and good, and we enjoy it. But I don't wanna have to be taking my kids to school when it's still dark.
See? And, so it it those are the two factions that you're playing against each other. As Trump said, unfortunately, it's about a fifty fifty deal. So it's hard for him to make a decision when it's fifty fifty. But, evidently, there's something working there. I saw it alluded to the other day. I'm not a student of it. But, anyway, that looks like it's in the works. Back to our little tax session here. Anybody? Nobody in the audience has got any questions or comments or stories on IRS? I I really find that hard to believe. Paul, I'm gobsmacked.
I'm gobsmacked, Paul. Yes, Larry. Ungobsmack
[00:39:09] Unknown:
me, would you? Yeah. I read this to William, the other day on the after show, and I got this information from Mark Levin. He used to fill in for Rush Limbaugh. And he said,
[00:39:21] Unknown:
he had a role. He's Sean. He's Sean's big buddy.
[00:39:25] Unknown:
Yeah. Yeah. And he knows a lot about the constitution, of course, but, he did a he did a little history lesson on tariffs since that's the talk of the town right now. And he said, from the founding of our country until 1913, there was no income tax that that was or, there was no income tax. There was a temporary income tax during the civil war Right. But that was ruled unconstitutional. And then he said from the No. It was. I'm just telling you.
[00:39:59] Unknown:
Well, I'm just telling you, Levin doesn't know everything. The one that was ruled unconstitutional was Farmers versus Pollock Savings and Loan at the end of the century. But that it could it had to be legal because the only ones that paid it were government employees when Lincoln was in. If you receive the benefit working for the federal government, you owe the duty. I don't believe it was ever declared unconstitutional. Sorry, mister Levin. Go ahead.
[00:40:28] Unknown:
Right. And then the second thing he said was from the founding until nineteen thirteen, ninety five percent of the federal government was funded by tariffs at a rate of about 20% overall. And then he went on to talk about that there is two major industrial revolutions between between this time. The first one was 1750 to 1850, and the second one was eighteen fifty to nineteen thirteen. And there was no income tax until the sixteenth amendment came along. Anyway, I just thought that was interesting.
[00:41:07] Unknown:
Yep. I believe that's pretty true. I don't think mister Levin is quite correct on his facts there, but I could be wrong. I mean, he is a Jew lawyer, by the way. He's pretty good when he's fairly conservative, but when it comes to these Israel issues, he's all on board. I always thought originally when he got up there and got pretty close with Sean that he was, Sean's Mossad handler, myself. He may be. Don't know. You know, do you Larry, I didn't I've I've had a personal relationship with Sean. I don't know. I haven't told that story in a while. I you probably haven't heard it, have you?
[00:41:48] Unknown:
Yeah. I heard it, but I forgot it. But go ahead.
[00:41:51] Unknown:
Well, I was, I was when Sean, he he the boy wonder. You know? He had gotten into college radio when he was in college in California. And then I believe his first job in radio was over in Huntsville, Alabama at a big 50,000 watt day timer they've got over there called W A A Y. They used to play music because they were, you know, I recall on them occasionally. I believe they were just a day timer, though, which meant they go off the air at sundown. And so, anyway, that was his first job. He was hired by a guy named, I don't remember what his name. Anyway, he was a he was a Jewish guy, and he hired Sean, over to W A A Y, and he worked there for a couple of years. And then he went Neil Bortz, who you've heard me talk about on here before. I don't know how many of you know who Neil Bortz is. He was a syndicated radio broadcaster out of the Cox main facility there in Atlanta, WSB.
And so he had been at the other competing talk station in town was WGST is the call letters. And WGST was where Bortz was. Well, Bortz had started he was an attorney too. And, gone he went to Woodrow Wilson Law School, which is one of these off law schools, but he was a practicing attorney. And, he'd call in to another station there in Atlanta all the time called WRNG, and it was nicknamed Ring Radio. And so Bortz would call in a lot as a passionate caller. And so one day, they gave him a job as a host. Well, he worked at Ring there for a few years, gathered up a pretty large local following, very conservative.
And, then he moved over to WGST. And, he was there for a number of years. And then WSB hired him to come over to the Cox chain. And, I I guess they were even planning early on to syndicate him, which means they're gonna put him on a bunch of radio stations around the country. And so in those types of situations, when you have a host that has a popular local following and he moved from one station to the other station in town, there's a thing called a no compete clause, which many of those contracts would contain. And it says if you change to a competing station in the same market, you can't be on the air for six months. That was his.
And so, he was off the air for six months in the change. And in that period of time is when WGST hired Sean. Only one other radio job, and they hired him, brought him to the big city. And, he follows boards, and boards can't compete because he's got a no compete clause. For six months, he can't be on the air in Atlanta. And so, it was the new kid in town, and we had our, little group, our Citizens for Constitutional Georgia. And we would always call into boards. We're always aware of him. And, and so when Sean comes over, we go, well, here here's a new guy in town. You know? So we'll try and hook up with him. Well, I I called on some topic and left a message for him.
And, so he, it's all fine and good while I'm sitting home on a Sunday, and I'm doing something dealing with radio that I used to teach called Arbitron Diaries. And I don't know if y'all know about this, probably not, many of you. But this is the way that radio stations and TV stations charge for their advertisers. And there's a couple of companies, I think they merged. Now Nielsen used to be the TV company and Arbitron, ARB, was the radio one. And so this company would come into a market like Atlanta, and they go around to the stations. They say, how many of you wanna pay us this money here? And and you can be included and have your call letters included in this survey.
And then your salespeople can use the survey numbers to go out and sell the radio station. So that's the way it worked. And so, I used to teach that in my radio broadcasting class. The whole process, how it happened, how the phone call, and what happens. Well, anyway, I was sitting there one day and the phone calls. Phone rings and and we're we're doing a survey. It's the Arbitron, rating survey. We're doing a, a survey of radio stations in your area. Would you care to participate? And I said, yeah. And, so I already knew that they would give you up to six diaries because that's what I teach the students. And they said, how many people in your household? I said, six. So I got six diaries. And then you're supposed to keep it on a regular basis on the through the ratings period. Well, there's a little book, and it's got the day and the hours, and you listen to what station at what hours. And what I was planning on doing was short cheating them a little bit and putting in WWCR as the main station I listen to all the time. Well, that's, the Worldwide Christian Radio shortwave station up in Nashville.
And so, they sent me six diaries. I didn't do it like I was supposed to, and it was getting close to the day I'm supposed to turn them all in, or else they don't count and they don't give you a dollar. They were gonna give me 6 whole dollars for that. And so I'm sitting there on one Sunday filling out all these different diaries, and the phone rings Sunday. And, hey, Roger. This is Sean Hannity. Sean. Wow. I said, Sean, you'll never believe what I'm doing. And he goes, what? What? I said, I'm filling out ARB diaries. And he goes, write me in. Write me in.
And so, so, he later told me the next day, he went into the station, and and he's walking down the hall going, I got a listener with six diaries. Yeah. Yeah. And he said the the the boss yanked him into his office. You shut that up right now. We're gonna get kicked out of the whole damn survey if that gets out. Out. So, anyway, that's how Sean and I met. Okay? And and so we became here he is new to the industry relatively. And and here I am, the old savvy pro, been in radio, spun hit records, worked for record companies, called on some of the highest known, best known radio people in the country as they came through Atlanta, top 10 markets. So, anyway, he couldn't get enough of me. And Sean and I became pretty good friends. I I went over to his house a few times, saw his dog Snowball, and, all that stuff. He lived out there fairly close to me in Roswell.
And, then even after he here's the here's the reason Sean made it so big. Well, obviously, he's got talent. That might be debatable, some of you. But, but his his agent is Russ Limbaugh's brother. So that's how they found him. That's his meteoric, rise to success. Well, they started yanking him up to New York every few weeks to be on these obscure weekend cable shows so they could test his ratings and his audience appeal. Well, he got the job at New York, and he went up there and he was, first of all, on Hannity and Combs. Him and Combs had a show as adversarial. You all might remember Combs was a liberal.
Hannity was a conservative. And, and he also had that slot on WABC. They had big, big slot for him still on that WABC syndicated nationally now. And I was so thrilled to know that I had a a nice warm relationship with well, somebody that was nationally syndicated and pretty famous even, initially, really. And then he got off on this Zionist stuff. So one day in Atlanta, I'm sitting there on a Sunday. He'd been in New York six months or something. And, again, the phone rang, and it was Sean. He said, hey, Roger. How are you doing? I said, Sean, why aren't you out with the family? It's Sunday. He says, no, man. I'm working harder than I've ever worked my whole life in doing show prep, reading everything you could read, all that. But, Sean back then was a really nice guy, and he's gotten too popular, too big, too influenced by CIA and and and Jewish sources.
He like Putin, he had some neighbors when he was young that were very nice Jewish people and and and took care of him and and and were really nice to him. So he's got that predilection there and that, feeling from when he was young. And from what I've read, the same thing Putin has. He had some, a Jewish couple that was very, very nice to him in the apartment building he grew up in. So, anyway, that's the story I know about it, and that's how I met Sean. And, we haven't, of course, communicated in years. But should you call into his show or have the opportunity, you can tell him about the professor because that's what he called me, and, that's what he knows me as. And, that, is my relationship with Sean Hannity for whatever it's worth.
Interesting how I came across some of these guys along the way, you know, like him. And, I also got to meet when I was in I was out of the record business. I guess I was still teaching, but I got to get to meet this guy, named Bill Drake, who most of you have probably never even heard of. K? But he's dead now. His real name was Philip Yarborough. And, Bill literally influenced everyone on the globe because he's the guy that came up with the top 40 format and made it popular where it steamrolled across all the radio stations in the in the fifties and sixties. And, he was a old recluse and, literally used to have record company presidents bowin' at his feet. He, what happened with Bill is he, got into radio. He's from a little town outside Albany.
And so, when he was a kid, he had one of those little I don't know how many of y'all did. I remember them. Some of you may. The little spindle 45 player where you'd stack a bunch of 40 fives on the spindle, and it would play each one of them. The subsequent record would drop down and play it, and then the needle had moved back and dropped down. Well, he had one of those, and he would, announce he'd lay on the floor when he was, like, five, six years old and announce records. Well, he ended up as they played, he ended up in Atlanta. Atlanta is a terrible AM market because it's got so much granite close to the surface like Stone Mountain out to the East of Atlanta.
And, so that makes it the signal doesn't go very far usually. And so, what, what they did was he moved on and ended up at a huge chain called RFO, and and the, RKO. Excuse me. RKO, which is the big AM station in Boston up there. Dan and the Boston people know it, WRKO. And it was the flagship of the RKO chain. The k in RKO stood for Kennedy, by the way. And they got into movies and all kinds of stuff. Well, they had back then, they could only have six AM stations, and they had six premier AM stations at RKO, KLIF in Dallas, WHBQ in Memphis, One of the stations in Minneapolis, CLIF, KLIF out in Los Angeles, and another one. They had six of those, and he was the chain PD program director.
And so is that in that capacity is when he came up with the, idea of, the top 40 system. And so he perfected it and put it in effect at the six RKO stations, and they all became so popular that everybody else in the country started doing it. So that's where that came from. And then right in the early sixties, there was an FCC regulation called the FCC twenty eighty twenty split programming rule, I think. And and what it was was an FCC rule. FM had come along in the late forties. Most of the powerful AM owners had just gone ahead and acquired an FM station for their call letters. So it'd be WHBQ AM FM.
And but they were simulcasting what the AM was doing because there was a severe lack of programming for FM even though it was high high fidelity, much better. But there weren't enough receivers out there. So there that's probably when Paul was back putting together his Heath kit, AM or FM receiver. See? You could buy a little kit from Heath kit and put it together and get FM, which my father did, by the way. And so, anyway, at a point, they got to the point where they're saying, FM, if it's ever going to realize its potential here of this wonderful alternative signal, we've gotta go in and and and in in towns of over a hundred thousand or 200,000, I don't remember. It's been many years, That if you had one of these AM FM deals, then you had to pay play it was a fifty fifty split programming rule. That's what it was. And if you were in that situation and you had that FM, you had to play original music at least 50% of the broadcast day. You could simulcast the rest.
And so this is where Bill Drake founded a company called Drake Chenault. It's still around today. And that was one of the very early, like, oh, like, the the music people that play you the music in in elevators and stuff. But he was like that. And so what he went around all the FM stations in the country in that situation and would sell them a whole tape bank of tape recorders and all this prerecorded music on there. And all they had to do was kick in that whole automation system, and they had their twelve hours. And they were under FCC regulations, and they were doing it right. So that was where he really made a big name, and he became the person that was responsible for getting records on a lot of radio stations at one time. And so that's where the radio record company come presidents come bow at his feet.
And he was a big, big friend of Elvis. Him and Elvis were big buddies, and Roy Orbison were big buddies. I remember the I was at home with him the day Roy Orbison died, and he he cried all afternoon long. They were very good friends. And, and so when he go to he he told me I heard a bunch of these stories. I can't relate them on the air, but he was big friends with Elvis. And so when Elvis was gonna play in Las Vegas, he'd say, Bill, I'm gonna be in Las Vegas, and they'd get, these adjoining rooms. And Elvis and Bill Drake would have hot and cold running women going through there. Okay? And, I I can't tell you the stories.
But, anyway, hell of a guy. I met him just purely I don't even no. It's so weird because my best friend at home in Panama City was the general manager of one of the TV stations. And so he calls me one afternoon. He goes, Roger, you'll never believe who I met last night at a party. I said, who? Who, Rob? And he goes, Bill Drake. Not the Bill Drake in Panama City. He's just Roger. He lives in Panama City now. Well, I got in the car and came home that weekend to get out there and meet him. You know? The guy's a legend in radio. Most of you probably wouldn't know who he was. Okay? But he had sold Drake Chenault. He was carrying the paper, and, and he was in retirement. And then right there at the last, they reneged on the paper on the payments, and he had to go back and take over the company.
So he's dead now, unfortunately, but that was one of the highlights of people that I've met in the broadcast industry because that guy was a giant. Not only that, he was six feet eight inches tall too. So, anyway, Paul, it looks like we're about to hear the whistler here and, say I do bye bye to,
[00:59:08] Unknown:
you know about six seconds.
[00:59:10] Unknown:
Six seconds? I knew you. Y'all laugh. Well, how's that for timing? Oh. Take over, Paul. I've been talking a lot.
[00:59:17] Unknown:
Alright. Well, I thought it was six seconds. Turns out it was two seconds. Oh, well. So, thank you for joining us. +1 0690 and radiosoapbox.com. Follow us into the second hour by going to eurofolkradio.com and or Global Voice Radio Network. You can also go to the matrixstocks.com, grab the FCC link, and join us live on the show. Come on down and tell us your IRS horror story. Yeah. Please. I really blew I really blew the timing on that. I thought it was six seconds. Turned out to be two. By that much.
[01:00:04] Unknown:
That much. Well, okay. That's alright, Paul. We'll forgive you as we go into dive into the second hour here. So, yes, that was my horror story. And, oh oh, by the way, I forgot to tell you about my house closing, which I've told you before, was that, later on after that incident, it really had an effect on me too. After that incident, I got a letter from the bastards, and they they said, well, you only owed us 30,000, which I didn't owe them anything. I didn't have any tax obligations. They had, hypothecated that up to 30,000.
And, they said, well, you only owed us 30,000, but we took an additional $5,000 for taxes we think you're gonna owe in the future. The audacity of the bastards. Right, Paul? So, I could have, at that point, because the tax had been paid, had been taken. Now I could have gone back into court and probably taken them to court and possibly have gotten that 5,000 back. But I was so glad to have these bastards out of my life that I just let them have it. Okay? I was tired of dealing with them. I didn't wanna fight anymore. And I just said, well, that's alright. I'll get it out of you one way or another.
And here we are today, and everybody that I helped get through this process and pull themselves out of the IRS system, I take a dollar off what they owe me. And, boy, I got penalties and interest too. K? So if that debt will never be paid, and, and I'm gonna continue to see how many people we can pull out of their little slave system until it doesn't exist anymore. And they are exposed. Hey, you kite bastards. We got got you cold. You got no wiggle room. K? It's just a matter of time, boys and girls. Jewish Jews and Jewesses. It's just a matter of time until your ass is exposed to the hilt.
And hopefully hopefully, people will hunt you with dogs, really big ones.
[01:02:30] Unknown:
Yeah. Sounds like a cause, so much damage. Sheldon, do you got something to add?
[01:02:38] Unknown:
Well, yeah. Yeah. I got a story. I can't make it short. It's an IRS story if anybody wants to hear it.
[01:02:45] Unknown:
We got fifty eight minutes left.
[01:02:50] Unknown:
Okay. There's two despicable people on in this country. The first is draft dodgers, and the second are tax evaders. I gotta set the story up in 1988. I just got off the Constellation fishing boat, and the airport in this little island was the size of a seven eleven. They had just two ticket counters. And I go up there, and here's a short little guy there, and he's you know, it's the kinda counter where when you get your stuff, you can slide down kinda like a bank and still work on your stuff. So I go up there and say, yeah. I'm mister so and so. I'm need to go back down to Seattle and so forth. And you know how, Roger, when you when you're serious with another man, you grab him just a smidge above the elbow joint, and you you chauffeur him off. You know what I mean? Right. Yeah. Well, I got my ticket, and, he goes, mister so and so grabs me by the elbow, the elbow, and he goes, Robert Schultz, department of treasure, and he whips out his little badge like you see on TV. And I go, oh, shit. I knew what it was about.
I just got a 50% draw on my season. I had 18 large on me, and I go, uh-oh. Here comes the cavity search. You know? So we go over to the corner of the airport, and he goes, you owe us, all this money. And, I didn't say a word. I wasn't gonna hand over what I had. And so he ends up flying back with me on the same airplane. And it's all because I back when I wasn't into this, I I got a form my hands on a form, and I clicked exempt for some stupid reason. Well, that set up all kinds of flags. So best fast track, I get downtown to America here, and this is '88. And I'm having the first of three back operations.
And in the middle of that, I get three liens that went to the county. Well, at that time, I was basically judgment proof. That was the beginning of my one of my downfalls. And, I got a word of diminished capacity, which means, you know, you can't do a lot of work. So I let the liens run out, and then I started getting phone calls and letters again. And this woman said, well, you know, you owe us money, and now it's went from 20 something to $80,000. You've got penalty and interest for this, half decade. And I'm going, So I said, well, I'm in uncollectible status now. I can't work. Well, prove that to us because I'm thinking, well, here we go back to the thing about I'm exempt.
And they sent me a letter then and said, well, you can only be exempt if you're a a student or you're this or all our criteria. What's your version of that? And I never answered that letter. So I sent her in everything from the hospital, including pictures of my back because I was really tight with my physician. And, he, gave him my best camera at the time, and he I'm opened up, and he's got all these frames. So I sent those in. And time goes by, and I'm thinking, you know, I'm worrying. So three, four months later, I get this call, and she goes, well, we're gonna place you in something called uncollectible status.
Right. We know we've analyzed your situation. You know it's all true. Now when you start to get gainful employment again, you you let us know all that information. And I'm going, yep. That's gonna happen. So I never really got a job that was on the system that they could see. You know? And for anybody that's interested, well, I never had to pay anything. There was this little program called right to work, which is for tax people. And if you make over so much, then they start taking taxes out of your money. But for the first year or three years or whatever it takes to reach that ceiling, you file, they don't take a drop of money out of you. And I made sure that I never exceeded that amount.
But something aside from that, anybody that wants a house out there before they start cutting all these programs, and this is real. I've done it. In 02/2008, I bought a house with the assistance of the USDA, had this program called rural development. You need about $1,500 for their system. They put the down payment on. They pay all the property taxes for a period of three years. And I ended up moving that after the three years, doubled my money because I bought it in 02/2008 at the bottom. You know what they say, buy low, sell high. Sure. Stole that, and there was no I'm looking for the word here. What's it called? Capital gains. Oh. Capital gains.
Roger, sir. There was no, capital gains on that doubling my money of $70,000, so they've completely left me alone since '88. Yeah. Okay.
[01:08:00] Unknown:
So you're still in the you're you're still in the uncollectible file, probably. Go ahead.
[01:08:06] Unknown:
You know, well, that's it. I'm done. Yes. I didn't mean to clear the room, but I'm still uncollectible. And That's okay.
[01:08:13] Unknown:
Yeah. Story. Hard to believe, but it happened. Yeah. No. I the stuff falls through the cracks with these people all the time. So I understand how that happened and how it's not normally probably rectified, but congratulations on that. And that's a good deal, Sheldon. Okay? Who else Oh, I wanna do grad
[01:08:33] Unknown:
ahead, sir.
[01:08:34] Unknown:
No. Go ahead and finish with you on to congratulate what?
[01:08:38] Unknown:
Oh, I I thought I heard a third party in there. I I just wanna thank you again inadvertently for me sticking the the pace and going the distance to following through after Ralph's demise that you came in there, and thank you for helping me, sir.
[01:08:54] Unknown:
Well, you're very welcome. You know, the tax issue is not necessarily my my my my best issue. But, but it's important because it's an important part of the whole big picture there. So anybody else got any good IRS stories for us today on the other day? There's somebody with is that Tom? Tom. Is that Tom? Tom, that sounds like me. That's
[01:09:19] Unknown:
me.
[01:09:20] Unknown:
In the flesh. Hey, bud. Yeah. I'm sure you got some IRS horror stories.
[01:09:26] Unknown:
Let me get let me get off let me get off my headset here. So, when the guy the fellow that was just talking about being uncollectible, did you know that you can bankrupt taxes, penalties, and interest?
[01:09:42] Unknown:
I I don't know that I know it holds them at bay. I I I don't know. Well, the the uncollectible
[01:09:50] Unknown:
yeah. If you if you can get put your if you can get yourself into uncollectible status for three years Right. Right. You can you can file bankruptcy for all your past taxes. I did it I did it for, like, a quarter million
[01:10:02] Unknown:
Really?
[01:10:03] Unknown:
Years ago. Yeah. I know. Because I kept going to attorneys, and they said, oh, you can't do that. You can't do that. Yeah. You can't. Oh, no. You can't do that yet. And I finally found an attorney that said, oh, yeah. You're right. So if you're in a pickle and you need to get rid of stuff like that, you can do it. At least at least that's the way it was. And I don't know whether they've changed anything since then. But, I do know Tom Schramm. Have to be uncollectible. You gotta give them three years to try to collect the money.
[01:10:31] Unknown:
Okay. My old buddy, Tom Schramm, when he first started crossing paths with him, he had a real high end, cash flow job. He do you know what K Kalin is? Clay, Kalin Clay? It's a white clay. It's a white clay. They use a lot in paint and it's got a lot of other uses and there's a big strip of it that runs right through Middle Georgia. And a bunch of them farmers all of a sudden became overnight millionaires. Okay? Because of kaolin. And, Tom worked for a guy who's sole proprietor that dealt in Kalin. And so he was always man, I mean, we were we were poor church mice, and Tom had come in with a wallet full of hundred dollar bills, you know, because he just got paid. He did very well back then.
And, so anyway now I forgot telling you about Tom, what I was gonna tell you. He, he got into tax problems with him. And, so what he did was went and he was still married, had two girls. And, he went and filed for bankruptcy because you can keep them at abeyance there. And so his question in bankruptcy was who's the party of interest? Who do I owe this to? And they don't wanna tell you it's the International Monetary Fund, so they don't tell you anything. And so he had them at bay there in that situation for a pretty good while, and then his wife decided she wanted a divorce. And he had to pull out a bankruptcy because of that.
And, buddy, the minute he pulled out of bankruptcy, hey. There are two condors landed on him. But he was, Tom was a hell of a fighter. I'll give him that. I don't know that he ever won anything, but, he was a hell of a combatant. As we have, there's some great combatants in our in our movement here that just get pissed off because of principle and go attack these people, as you all know. I don't discourage them. What about George Gordon? Yeah. George Gordon and call Gordon Call and all those people, you know, that have sacrificed up to now. But, that's why I don't encourage y'all to go into court and be that way. If you wanna do it, it's fine with me. I'm not gonna tell you not to. But I think most people don't know what's in store for them when they choose that path.
But, boy, it's a rocky road. K? So, anyway, that's another one. Tom, you've been doing alright lately?
[01:13:17] Unknown:
Yeah. Hanging in there. Yeah. Just, Okay.
[01:13:21] Unknown:
Trying to get this frigging fibromyalgia crap under control, but, it's, you know other than that, I'm, you know Have you,
[01:13:28] Unknown:
have you tried, have you tried any of this methylene blue? No. I was looking at it. In fact, I saw it on, so I would I would highly suggest you go get a bottle of that from Alex and try that, and it may just take care of that. That's what it does. It straightens out your, that those little energy things in your cells. Yeah. Little mitochondria.
[01:13:51] Unknown:
And I got my doctor working on it. I got my doctor looking into it.
[01:13:56] Unknown:
Okay. Well, I haven't heard, you know, and he's That's that's that's my wife, the doctor. Oh, the doctor. She's the doctor. Well, you know, Jones has been really he stumbled into this real high octane stuff about him. Yeah. I saw his commercial. That's why I was around. Something like that. Well, I hadn't heard any doctors come out and say anything against it. I I hadn't heard anybody that called in and said, you suck got me to buy this stuff, and it did this. There there's some people, rare people it doesn't work on for whatever reason, but, the everything seems to be great. I'm doing real well using it, so I like it, and, it makes me feel better. And if you've got those types of problems associated with fibromyalgia, evidently, that's one of the main things it does is to get the toxins out of that and straighten that back out. So, something you might wanna try, Tom.
[01:14:48] Unknown:
Yep. Yep. Yeah. We're looking at it.
[01:14:51] Unknown:
Okay. Good deal. Alright. Cool. How long you got? Okay. Who else has got something to add to today's, real April Fool's Day show?
[01:15:02] Unknown:
I would have something to say about the taxes, but it's Passover, Roger, so they left me alone.
[01:15:09] Unknown:
Well, they didn't leave the governor of Pennsylvania alone, Dan. He tried to burn his house down. I didn't hear about that. Mister Shapiro? Mister Shapiro? You didn't hear about that? No. Well, they were having a Passover service at his home of some sort. I thought he was a homosexual, but I don't know. They said him and the family, and somebody broke in there and almost burned his whole house down.
[01:15:32] Unknown:
Oh my.
[01:15:34] Unknown:
There was another one. Get this. There's another, Pennsylvania judge. She's a magistrate judge, ten years. She had a boyfriend that moved in with her about a year or so ago and wanted to move out, and she shot him in the head. She just got convicted of that. Thank god. There there was another big immigration judge, the top immigration judge in England that was recently caught with her own slave girl? Did you know that? No. I mean, they yeah. Those these are true stories. I mean, these people are just wacko. K? I mean, what what was the most serious charge Jesus had to throw at them? Hypocrites.
Oh, you hypocrites. Good lord. Are they hypocrites?
[01:16:23] Unknown:
That Shapiro thing was a hoax. It was a setup. He needs name recognition. They want that Jew to be president. I I thought I asked you to go listen to somebody else. We didn't say please.
[01:16:36] Unknown:
I don't have to say please with you. As many people as you've offended around here? Damn. I don't know. I didn't hear about anything. May have been a hoax. May not. I don't know. I just know the house burnt down. They've got somebody in custody. But I know her eyeballing. He wasn't a Trump reporter. He hold on, Dan. He wasn't a Trump supporter, and he wasn't a Democrat, I don't think. So, anyway, they got their problems. Guy looked like a born in the wool Satanist. What was your comment, Dan?
[01:17:10] Unknown:
Well, just that I know they've been I know they've been eyeballing the presidency to be occupied by someone of the Jewish persuasion. Hasn't happened yet that I'm aware of. So maybe that is a recognition ploy. Oh, boy. Yeah. It's bad. It's it's it's one of these days, Roger. As long as we stay asleep as Americans, someone's gonna take over that office too. But I think we're waking up, my brother, because the silence on this call about tax problems is very telling. It's a good day. Yeah.
[01:17:43] Unknown:
Yeah. Used to be everybody had tax problems. So Right. Well, the IRS is a little bit behind the eight ball. You know? I mentioned a couple of times the situation in the system is that when they collect those taxes and then if they pay the bondholders and the debts and they pay about a third of it goes to pay the debt, a third of it goes to, administrative costs, building salaries, etcetera, and a third of it is uncollectible. So those are the three areas they have identified. So, when they pay the bondholders off and they take any excess that's left over and they give it to the treasury.
And I think I told y'all, saw the article about six, eight months ago. 2023 was the first time since the system was instituted. That would be March the ninth of nineteen thirty three, be the first time they didn't have a check for the treasury. And they speculated that the reason for that was the previous year, '22, was the big COVID years, '21 and '22, when people weren't going to work and everything else. And about a third of the people that normally would file didn't file. And that's why they didn't have enough money to give any for the first time to the treasury.
So they may still be in that condition. They probably won't. Well, if they are, they wouldn't wanna put that information out, obviously.
[01:19:15] Unknown:
No. Of course not.
[01:19:17] Unknown:
So anyway and I don't know if the I haven't heard that the thing with, Shapiro was a hoax, but we know that these people do that all the time. You know, they're the ones that paint a swastika on the door and then go, oh, look. The antisemites painted a swastika.
[01:19:34] Unknown:
Looks like they did with the truckers. You know? Just like they did every time. Man. They they they were like the Paul Revere, man. They they sounded the first real organized alarm in a way. It was I love those guys. Yep. So proud of them.
[01:19:51] Unknown:
Yep. And, and and and the little jerk that was up there and the way they were treated and everything that's going on right now. I guess that the vote in Canada is, what, a week away or a month away or something. They're very close to seeing if Kearney gets, gets elected now and takes, old Castro Junior's place, Trudeau.
[01:20:13] Unknown:
Is is Pauley here that that guy? That's pretty common sense. Is he he's running against them, I sure hope. I recall. Yeah. But yeah. The but with the name that nobody can pronounce. Yeah. Yeah. Yeah. Yeah. I I love him. I mean, I like what he I like his style. So, hopefully, Canada wakes up enough. They've been punished enough. There should be enough awake people. Like, you know, like, what happened here? You would you would think. I think they've been drinking too much mole since Blue Label That's funny.
[01:20:41] Unknown:
Up there. So I know one thing. I rode off Canada when they when they fired Don Cherry. Do you know who he he is?
[01:20:50] Unknown:
I'm not familiar with that name.
[01:20:52] Unknown:
Well, you're not a big hockey fan, obviously. Oh, right. Nope. Don Cherry was the guy that would do hockey night in Canada every week, and he was all he's very flamboyant. And he was always wearing these real colorful outfits, sport coats and stuff. Almost outlandish, really. And, yeah, they got rid of him because as he talked against something. I don't remember if it was the truckers or what, but all he had to do was open his mouthful in time and he was gone. But he was ultra conservative, Don Cherry. Some of you probably remember him. When they fired him, I knew it was over.
So, anyway, we'll see what happens with our friends up to the north there.
[01:21:35] Unknown:
I know a lot of people I'm gonna I'm gonna dial into that. That's for sure.
[01:21:39] Unknown:
Yeah. I think Alberta would love to secede from Canada. There is a I heard Viva Fry, going over it this week because he was asked by Barnes or or somebody in the audience. They're sending an I'm of, was there a procedure to succeed? And there is. But the final step is you gotta go back to the people running the country and ask them permission. So you can imagine that's not going anywhere, especially a mineral rich province like Alberta
[01:22:12] Unknown:
with tires and choose they want to, Roger.
[01:22:16] Unknown:
Yeah. I guess. Want to. It won't matter. Well, they might fight it. We'll see. Anyway, there's all kinds of rocky roads coming up ahead with this stuff, and Trump's, you know, how many how many countries was it that have come to Trump to to make a deal? A 60 or a 90?
[01:22:36] Unknown:
Something like that. Yeah. It's it's it's over a hundred now.
[01:22:40] Unknown:
It I mean, unbelievable. Gotcha. And and what does that tell you? That tells you that those countries are also sick of the China oriented world too. So this is gonna change. China's got huge problem. They got big problems. They got all kinds of debt. They've instead of they did tell their people to buy gold and silver to have, but they also got them to invest in all this real estate they call tofu buildings.
[01:23:09] Unknown:
Are you familiar with tofu buildings, Dan? Those are the ones that they just drop afterwards. Right?
[01:23:15] Unknown:
Yeah. Or you can take your yeah. Here's a here's a a concrete wall, and you take your finger and dig into it. Right? Because the quality is so cheap. Oh, well, you know, here's why that happens. I heard back when we got into COVID, I got very interested in China, and there was a, an epic times backed program over on YouTube called China in focus, I think was the name of it. Still have it, but it's abbreviated. And they would cover a lot of this stuff. You'd see actual videos of people doing that with these tofu things. Well, what they do is if you've got a contract you make a contract with the Chinese Communist Party to build some of these buildings. Right, Dan?
Yep. And so what they do is they pay you the the whole amount of the contract. And then you steal 10%, and you find somebody else to contract to build it. And they sign up with you. You give them that money, those funds less 10%, and then they steal 10%. And then they go find somebody to build it. And you go through a couple of people till the last guy at the bottom doesn't have enough funds left to build anything but tofu buildings. So it's a structure and a problem in the structure in China and the way they operate. These people, I would I would say it again, folks. If you really wanna know about China, go online. You can find it. It's available.
It's a book called Things That Are Dark. Ways, excuse me, Ways That Are Dark. It was written by a guy, I believe, Ralph Ralph Townsend, who was a two time ambassador over there. This was back in the nineteen thirties before the communist revolution in '48. And you will get an insight into China and its culture history that will shock you as it did me. Roger, what's It's just these these people's culture. Do what now?
[01:25:18] Unknown:
What's the chance, that this that the Federal Reserve cartel, the banking cartel on the planet is now eyeballing China as because that's what they do. They're country killers. They eat up a country over a hundred years or seventy or whatever, and then they move on, or they keep them and they move on. And it just feels like they're ready to let go of, you know, United States. Not let go of, but, like, relegate and move on to make. They're the ones that decide who the world power is so far.
[01:25:51] Unknown:
Well, this was supposed right. Well, this was supposed to be China's century, and this Trump thing with the tariffs has got them all out of shape over there because they're in such a bad position. You know? They've got you you you've heard of Evergrande? I think that's the name of it, Evergrande?
[01:26:10] Unknown:
I think so.
[01:26:11] Unknown:
It's a huge, huge construction company over there Okay. That is that is totally upside down and bankrupt. They're the owner of a lot of these tofu villages. And the the Chinese have decided in the bankruptcy that if you were a Chinese holder of investor, you get one tenth of what you invested back. But if you're a foreigner, you get nothing. Makes sense. Way if we have a altercation with them over there over any kind of intellectual property rights or theft or anything, we don't have access to the Chinese courts. Nope. So, so it's really a bad situation. They're in bad trouble. And what Trump did is basically tipped their boat over to one side and said, let's get some water coming in over the side there.
[01:27:06] Unknown:
And, they sure did. Everyone thought it was bad. They're trying to they hold the debt. They're in the driver's seat. They're stored in not.
[01:27:14] Unknown:
No. They're not. In fact No. In fact, Dan, I you may not have heard this story. I mentioned it. I mentioned the article the other day. The very first piece of documentation I ever found on this, I'd I'd seen Phil Marsh speak. I'd been alerted by my Russian Jewish friend, my dear friend, dear friend, Stan Bravi, who had immigrated over you like this, Dan. They'd given him a control of some small hospital. He was a psychiatrist over there. They'd given him control of a small hospital, and he turned it into a showcase. You know? And then they gave him another larger size market, same thing. He did the same thing. And they, were about to move him to Saint Petersburg to one of the biggest hospitals in the country to see if he could straighten it out, and he decided to immigrate.
So he was able somehow to immigrate. And he went to New York City and started driving a cab, a Russian psychiatrist who didn't speak a word of English. You can imagine
[01:28:20] Unknown:
that scene. He would he had a beautiful That says a lot. He says a lot. He has Well, it does. It says a lot about him. Important, but he knew his age would be numbered if he wasn't used to it or whatever the case was.
[01:28:31] Unknown:
Well, he gets a blind date with this lovely, lovely Jewish gal and proposes to her on the first date. They stayed married, had two children. He's just a wonderful, wonderful guy, very close friend. And, so Stan, knowing about all this, we didn't know anything about it. We were all doing MLM stuff together. You know? And he was a he's the best recruiter I've ever seen in network marketing. And so, with his psychiatry skills, he just go up and talk to anybody. You know? And so, it got to the point where when he heard through his circle that there was some kind of a tax meeting in town, he'd call us. He called me. Him and I were good friends, and he'd go, Roger. Roger, there's a tax meeting in town. And so the first one I went to, and it was Phil Marsh. I don't know how many of you if that name rings a bell for you, Phil Marsh or not.
He was that organization called the pilot society back in the nineties, eighties even, I guess. And, and he coined the phrase untaxing. So he would untax you. And so he had been going along for years touring the country. Even had him on Stone Phillips or Geraldo Rivera one night on Friday night on ABC for, like, an hour talking about this stuff. And see what what I've come to understand, if you don't have the wrong the right information, man, they'll just let you go for as long as as as they to a point where they think they can throw a broad net over and get everybody involved with you. And so, that's the way they do things. Well, I had heard about a tax meeting. I went with Phil Marsh.
I bought his book, and I picked up a bunch of free stuff. And then reading his book, I'd learned about all these other things or at least a little bit. And so when Stan called again, he goes, this is Roger. Roger. There's a text meeting in town. I said, well, Stan, who is it? He goes, I don't know. It's this guy named Benson. Well, I read in Phil Marsh's book about Bill Benson and the law that never was. You know about that, Dan? Nope.
[01:30:46] Unknown:
Dan, we got a really educate edging and keeping you up here. I am. I'm very narrow and focused, Roger. That makes me a little bit of what I do know, but it's just it's the hermit in me. I I sit and study. Well, we're gonna try and broaden your background a little bit where you have accurate base. Yeah. You should know that. I don't know half the thing, more than half the things you references. Right. But I understand all the materials.
[01:31:08] Unknown:
That would Good. Bill Benson was a employee of the Illinois tax state taxing service. And while he was in their employee, a career, I guess, saw saw, some of this stuff and became very curious. When he retired, he, he had gotten to know a guy named Red Beckman. You probably don't know who he is either. He was one of the progenies of our movement, by the way, Red Beckman. He's dead now, unfortunately. And so, Red and he had a benefactor, and the flew them all over The US to every state that was a state in 1913 when the sixteenth amendment was ratified, seventeenth.
And so they would go to every state. They'd go down into the archives, and they got all of the congressional paperwork and got it notarized and certified. And what they eventually found was supposed to be two thirds of a state's ratifying amendment.
[01:32:13] Unknown:
Three quarters, I thought.
[01:32:15] Unknown:
Okay. Could be three quarters, two thirds, right, in that area. Let's see. You probably know more neither. So, anyway, what they found was that none of them, not one properly ratified the amendment. When the amendment goes to the state to be ratified, what, Dan?
[01:32:31] Unknown:
Well, yeah. I mean, that's what Taft wasn't Taft was the president at the time. He was before. Yeah. I'm
[01:32:38] Unknown:
yeah. I I don't remember if Wilson was Taft president or Wilson No. President at the
[01:32:45] Unknown:
time of that Wilson didn't come in yet. I I'm pretty sure.
[01:32:49] Unknown:
It was No. They had to. I think they got Wilson to sign it that year at at Christmas, the Federal Reserve Act. So I think that must have been his first year, probably 1912. I don't know speculation regardless.
[01:33:05] Unknown:
Taft. Taft wrote the legislative intent for that, and he just said, given that, the Supreme Court has, taken from us, a a a right we thought we had, I hereby, urge Congress to to pass the amendment in Congress. I mean, that's not an amendment. Amendment requires the states to Right. Pass this amendment in Congress to lay a tax upon Congress. Okay. I'm I okay. Well, it could have been. A de facto thing. You know? It's Alright. Ours.
[01:33:39] Unknown:
Well, regardless, let's see if I can pick up where I was here. What was I talking about before we got off on that? I had seen Phil Marsh. I'd read his book. He there's a tax meeting in town. He said it's a guy named Benson. And I said, oh, it must be Bill Benson that wrote The Law That Never Was. I had already read about him. And so I couldn't wait to go over. It was on the other side of a town. The other one was real close to my house. This was on the other side of town by the infamous Spaghetti Junction, if any of you have been through that part of Atlanta. And, I go over there, and it wasn't Bill Benson. It's this little short portly guy named Bill, named John Benson, who nobody had ever heard of and very diminutive little guy, very quiet, soft spoken, and until he got on stage, and then he became a damn monster, a teacher. And, so that's where I got clued into this, was through that same guy, the second call. There's a tax meeting in town. I went to see I thought Bill Benson and ended up meeting John Benson and Glenn Amborn.
And like me with many of you, that weekend changed my life. K? That's why I'm here at my it totally reoriented my entire life, and it's been reoriented ever since. And I couldn't be more pleased as many of you are. And I've had several of you get a hold of me and say things like, thank you. You changed my life. And that that's what I'm trying to do with people because I know how it's not me. It's the information that's doing it.
[01:35:24] Unknown:
So, anyway,
[01:35:26] Unknown:
I'm very grateful. I hope you are too. And if you're new to this and you've been working on stuff before, you're you're so you're something very special about each and every one of you because you're here. I agree. I agree. And I can't put my finger on it except that you're truth seekers, and the Lord tells us over there in the Old Testament that, for they have not a love of the truth, I'll send them strong delusion. They'll believe a lie. And by golly, I think you'll all of you will agree, especially if you've talked to people about this, that they're under strong delusion and they've been sent a gigantic lie. And they still believe it.
[01:36:05] Unknown:
They do.
[01:36:06] Unknown:
And you can't pull it out of them with a 20 mule team borax team.
[01:36:13] Unknown:
Nope.
[01:36:15] Unknown:
So all you can do is pray for them and and hope that, they get touched and plant the seed and maybe it'll germinate at some point. You don't want to fight with them. You don't want to estrange relationships. You you don't want to do all that stuff. It's easier to pull a rope than to push a rope. What you're doing is putting out provocative facts that counter their, their beliefs and see if it rings a bell and and, rim and and and rings with them. That's all we do. And if it doesn't, you know, you know, poke for you, but but we wanna find as many of these remnant type personalities as we possibly find and talk to them because we don't have to have everybody here. We get enough of a percentage. Remember, it's only 3%.
The people want to fight King George to found our country. Everybody else wanted to be loyal to him. So we don't need an awful lot, but we gotta have some. And the more formidable we become, the more people that file this paperwork and study the material and make it a lifestyle, then we become totally unbeatable, folks.
[01:37:27] Unknown:
To the committed goes the victory. It's always been that way. Yep. Usually, it works out that way. I mean, look what the Mujahideen did to Russia. Horsesh against tanks. I mean, how do you do that? And they
[01:37:41] Unknown:
supplied with, with SAM missiles from the CIA?
[01:37:45] Unknown:
Yeah. They were supplied, but still, they were they were not a superior force by any stretch. No. They were just kind of Although the guerrilla force I mean,
[01:37:55] Unknown:
you you know our people, Dan, at first, we didn't have a lot of soldiers. And No. So we had a few, and they were fighting a guerrilla war. They'd hide off. The Brits would march down the road in their little tight formation, and they'd sit off in the woods and attack them as a guerrilla force. But what really started happening and and you probably don't know this. I'm probably some of the audience stuff. Men many of the continental army. You know what King George did? He was from, I guess, the province of Hesse or something over there in Germany, and there have been three three generations of Germans on the German throne at that point. George one, two, and three. In in George one and two's reign, Dan, I wonder if you knew this, that they spoke German in London in the court.
It was George the third, we thought. Well, yeah. He he's the first one that started speaking English, George the third. And so, we only lost by one vote in our country that German was our language. There were so many Germans over here. Alright? And so what happened was as they came over, the, the prince George the third went and got a bunch of mercenaries from Hess called Hessians. And they came over as mercenaries and fought in with the British in the civil war. Well, the Hessians had blue coats, not red coats. And so they they came from Germany where they never had a chance, an opportunity to own land. And so what the colonists said was if you'll come fight with us, we'll make you free and we'll give you land.
And so the Hessians, never even dreaming of having that situation would defect. Except when they get off to fight in the woods in this guerilla type war, their blue coats stuck, stuck out like a sore thumb. And so they would turn their coats inside out so it would have a drab effect. And that, Dan, is where the word turncoats comes from.
[01:40:12] Unknown:
No way. Yep. I I always wondered what that was.
[01:40:16] Unknown:
Yep. Turncoat. That's where it came from, and a lot of those folks stayed and fought and got land, and probably their generations are still here.
[01:40:25] Unknown:
You know?
[01:40:26] Unknown:
But, yeah, there's a bunch of very interesting stories in the in the, or in the beginnings of our country. That's one of them.
[01:40:34] Unknown:
Most races that endure have a story behind it. That's what I've been respond.
[01:40:39] Unknown:
Yeah. So anybody in the audience got any comments or questions? You're a mighty quiet bunch here on talk on tax day. You just sit tight, Dan. You're, mighty quiet on tax day here, the real April Fool's Day. You're a little too quiet. Did you have to pay too much this year? You're pissed off at yourself because you haven't gone through the process and become alleviated yourself with any taxing responsibilities. Boy, hell, I might have to take one of Farris' calls, and then y'all k. Right. Sure. Well, good. Julie, you saved me. Yes. You saved us. No. This is this is Nancy. Nancy.
[01:41:21] Unknown:
Hey, girl.
[01:41:23] Unknown:
Hey. Hello. I haven't heard from you in a while.
[01:41:26] Unknown:
No. I've been listening. I've been lurking.
[01:41:29] Unknown:
You've been lurking. Okay. I wanted to ask you, Nancy. Did you know Suzanne's your younger sister. Right?
[01:41:36] Unknown:
That is right.
[01:41:38] Unknown:
Did you know that she was one of our pinup girls?
[01:41:43] Unknown:
Well, I didn't know that.
[01:41:45] Unknown:
So Yeah. Well, back in the day when Tom Schram was with me, he traveled all the time because he's in his chemical business. And so we had a number of of, females listening. And so if we had one, and we did have two actually, and Tom, when he was traveling in their area, would go take him out to dinner. We had to get a personal, a personal relationship going with them before they were approved, approved to be what we were trying to do was, do a calendar of all the Radio Ranch girls. And, so we just never got more than two, though. So it was an abbreviated year, but your sis your sister was one of them, and the other was Lauren that's joined us a couple of times here lately. So it was Lauren and Suzanne that were the, Radio Ranch pinups.
How about that?
[01:42:34] Unknown:
Well, you just I did not know that. So I'll have to I don't know if she I'm not I didn't look to see if she's listening live right now, but, I'll have to, I'll have to let Dean know that that he's married to a pinup girl, a talented girl.
[01:42:53] Unknown:
Absolutely. Of some renown.
[01:42:57] Unknown:
Yeah. Well, I was gonna say that people some people might be filling out their ten forty n r's, but,
[01:43:05] Unknown:
Well, they might. For 20. They might.
[01:43:08] Unknown:
I'm not doing that. I'm still wait I'm still waiting on my twenty twenty.
[01:43:15] Unknown:
You know, and we we we dived into that. Did you hear the guy with the report the other day on talking to his tax adviser? I guess you can call the IRS so you get a tax advisor on your problem or something. And he called this real bitchy old woman. And she kept saying, you're going to jail. You're going to jail. And she said, we've got a hundred thousand of these things sitting back there, and we don't have the money to pay them.
[01:43:46] Unknown:
So I just But that's that's that's
[01:43:49] Unknown:
that's hearsay. I don't remember which day it was recently. Okay? But that was the story. Missed that one. Okay. That was a story we've got now on this revocation of election. I had an email about it, and Mark came on Saturday and talked about it a bit because he's the one that's handling that. And, we of the of the people that have filed returns and paid their funds for the three previous years, we have not been successful at getting that those funds back. And it may be because like what this lady said. Don't know. Speculation, but hearsay.
But maybe accurate. I could I could see where it's accurate. The ones we have been successful at were people like yourself, Ewer, and, and our other friend, Jerry, who had had owed it but had not paid it. And then they went back and filed an NR and got we got those back. But it's the other ones that have gone in. You got to amend the return and see if you can get back the previous three. We haven't been very successful on that to this point, unfortunately. And it's getting to the point where March got so much other stuff going. He just doesn't have the time. We haven't had the success, and we're gonna wait and see what happens with that, I think, before we do that for anybody else. But, anyway, that's not what you called about and came in and joined us for, Nancy. What do you have for us?
[01:45:13] Unknown:
Well, actually, it's kind of related to that. Actually, I'm I'm still waiting for my 2020 amended return if that will ever get refunded. But I I had filled out my Virginia. I did this the, sent in the Virginia nonresident, return for 2021 since I that was the last year that I, I had not filed state income taxes since I got fired from my state job in '21. No. Yeah. So but I it was funny because I watched pay month, month to payday a little bit, a little after I had sent that in. And when in the video, he said he mentioned Virginia when what Virginia was one of the worst states to try to do this credit stuff with.
Oh, oh my god.
[01:46:07] Unknown:
Just your luck.
[01:46:09] Unknown:
I know. But I haven't there's been no peep. There's been no response. Although, I I plan on calling in, to check on it. And and I know that now the last thing that I had checked on, my federal for 2020, it shows on my tackle transcript that they when they received it. Because I sent it in originally with in the same envelope with my 2021, but they said that they lost it or they didn't have it. So I resent that in December. And so they they have on the updated transcript online that they received it and that it's being processed. And then the last time I called, the the agent said that it had been forwarded to a special unit.
But I haven't received anything. And, you know, I've not received anything.
[01:47:04] Unknown:
No. All all I can say is no.
[01:47:07] Unknown:
Yeah. Yeah. Because I paid the tax. Yeah.
[01:47:11] Unknown:
So, Alright. Well, keep us in the loop on that.
[01:47:15] Unknown:
Well, my my housemate my housemate, who's, my music music partner, I won't mention his name, but he has not, well, anyway, he got an I r IRS notice that, he he had not filed for 2023. He actually hasn't filed since 02/2017. But and I said, well, do you wanna become a national? I would recommend that you become a national. I
[01:47:43] Unknown:
don't know how retro well, on that situation now, I don't know how retroactive this is. I think they tend not to mess with you, but I can't guarantee that. So he got a, we haven't received your tax return for the year 2023. If you've already sent this in, please disregard it. Was it that letter? Yeah. Yeah. That's that's a confirmatory writing. How when did he get it?
[01:48:08] Unknown:
This past week.
[01:48:11] Unknown:
I would have him draft some kind of draft some kind of reply and send it back to him.
[01:48:18] Unknown:
I don't know what Yeah.
[01:48:19] Unknown:
To tell you on that, but but that's if you don't reply to that within ten days, it is considered a contract, I believe. And that means they're on to you and that they can go back and and and they got a file going on, you didn't answer, etcetera, etcetera. I don't really know what to tell you to do, but he's a little I think he might be a little late for being a national, but you could throw it up the flagpole and see who salutes.
[01:48:50] Unknown:
Well yeah. And that that's a good reminder about the confirmatory writing, and I'll bring that up to him. But also my thinking that if he does choose to go forward, to become a national, at least but that's in his quarter his record, administrative record, and he's I would think that he's no longer as low hanging fruit as other people.
[01:49:17] Unknown:
Might be because they always run the risk if they do come after him of of exposing this to more people. I I think that's a strong deterrent for them, but I I just think that. I can't prove it.
[01:49:31] Unknown:
Yes. I and I agree with you. That's but that's my thinking in terms of that he's not that kinda makes him less low hanging fruit. And if it's in his quarter for in his administrative record, they could not prevent it from being brought up in court, which they would not wanna do. So, you know, he's he's made his choices. He either will or he won't, but I'll I'll pass along the information about the confirmatory writing, and I may draft something up for him. And I am Okay. I have been helping some people with a couple people have come to me about revocation of election. They they don't really need the the the standard for what, getting Mark's assistance.
And I guide them through a process of education. I'm a bit of my father was our our father was a a chief petty officer in the navy. Right. And, so he was a bit of a hard ass. And Yes. As you might guess, I probably take after him.
[01:50:35] Unknown:
Well, I In some ways at some time. I Right? Listen. I come from an air force family. I know the an officer. I know exactly the same thing. Have you ever seen the movie, The Great Santini?
[01:50:48] Unknown:
Oh, yeah. Yeah.
[01:50:50] Unknown:
That was my
[01:50:54] Unknown:
life. I'm trying to remember the the name of the lead actor because I I he was the the The Duvall. I think it was one of Duvall's early Robert. Robert Duvall. Robert Duvall.
[01:51:05] Unknown:
Right. Yeah. It was a very good movie. Later renamed it the Ace. So if any of you really wanna see a good entertaining movie that either the great Santini or the Ace. And, with Robert Duval, it's about he was a marine corps jet jockey, and it was from the life of the family growing up in that environment. And when I saw that movie, I said, well, hell, hell. There's my life. It just unrolled right in front of me.
[01:51:36] Unknown:
That's a good reminder because I've only watched that once, but it was a very good movie. So that would be It's a good movie. It's a real good movie. Yeah.
[01:51:44] Unknown:
Probably from the eighties or something. But, anyway, he went on late. You know what he did later? He went down there to Buenos Aires and filmed that big tango movie down there. Stayed down there, danced a lot of tango and stuff, I guess. Robert Vaughn. Yeah.
[01:52:02] Unknown:
Yeah. I knew that he was that he loved tango. I think
[01:52:06] Unknown:
I've seen something about that. Tango is so cool. It's really cool. It's not a dance. It's a lifestyle, and it's very cool. K? So it's also very difficult, actually, Do you really have to practice at it? But, I I was getting pretty good at it. I did it for a few years down there, and, even my instructors were complimenting me. And then and then she came along, and so I didn't do too much dancing after that. I Dean loves to dance. He he's a ballroom dancer. So I'll have to Who's that? Dean does? Oh, man. He'd love dance. Tango. It's just a really cool dance, tango is.
So, like I said, it's not just a dance. It's a lifestyle. You start hanging around tango people. You start listening to tango music. You start dancing like tango people dress, and it's just a whole environment. It's a whole lifestyle. Very cool. So, anyway, I was glad I got that experience, and I enjoyed dancing tango. And it's such a sexy little dance. You know? But, regardless so what what Dean Fanson, that's good. He's a ballroom dancer. That's good. Is Suzanne dancing with him a little? Does he take Well, they've been very busy.
[01:53:24] Unknown:
They've they had they had they had an area in their their previous house. They've moved into a newer house, and they're selling the old one now. So they're very preoccupied. But, yes, they had an area where they could, rehearse. But I don't know how much dancing they're doing right now because by the end of the day, they're very busy with everything that they're, taking care of.
[01:53:46] Unknown:
Right. So that came up on one of Paul English's shows recently, and he was talking about it and how how that was really some sort of a fabric in the old days of weaving that society together, whether it was square dancing or Arthur Murray ballroom dancing or whatever. There's a there's some real social values and characteristics that come out of that. They're they're very accurate, I think. And we don't do too much of that. Now we get out there and, do what they call down here, Cumbia, and you just get out and shake your ass. You know? But not too much not too much of expertise behind that, although some people are better at it than others.
So, anyway, I enjoyed it. It was a real neat part of my life down there. I really liked it. So
[01:54:34] Unknown:
but Well, and as Yes, ma'am. With regards to that about dance formal dancing like that, my single most, wonderful memory of that time, not tango, I, you know, that I'm a singer, so when I was in my twenties, I did also some German Oktoberfest singing with a little group. An army band, actually, they were in the army band at Fort Monroe and then they had their little combo that I was their young hot thing, singing. And we would do, Rosa Munda, you know, during October. But one of the places we went to, the German club in on the peninsula, this bearded German guy, it was during a song that I was not singing, and he came up and asked me to dance. And so I was waltzed around the floor and it was so wonderful to, and I it was easy to follow him. But someone who knows what they're doing and can guide you, and you can just kind of surrender.
That's not true of all dance, steps, of course. But in this case, it's such a great memory. So at least I have that touchstone of, structured dance.
[01:55:53] Unknown:
Well, that's the way it is in tango. You know? Everybody looks at the female because she's the one that's twirling and rubbing her legs on you and all that stuff. Right? But it's the man that tells her to do all that stuff. And you just kinda sit there, but you gotta guide her with your hands and stuff. It's very difficult. That it doesn't come easy. It takes takes a little time.
[01:56:16] Unknown:
And, as in as being kind of a type a female, I had no problem problem surrendering to someone who knew what they were doing.
[01:56:27] Unknown:
Right. Right. That's very cool. Yeah. And, I don't we don't we don't have much of a nightlife here at all. The younger people do, but I'm a little too old for all that chicanery. But, it's it's different, but there's just very little light nightlife here, at least for us gringos. So, anyway, that's alright with me at sixty seventy six years old. I'm pretty pretty spent by that time of the day. So, anything else, Nancy? We're approaching the close of the program here on Tuesday, the relay company.
[01:57:06] Unknown:
I'll come back tomorrow or the next day because I do have a follow-up on, your favorite topic traffic stuff or just my and my DM my DMV visit, but, I'll I'll save that for another time.
[01:57:20] Unknown:
Okay. We probably don't have the time to get into that right now. Thank you, Nancy. We'll look forward to hearing that. We'll hear look forward to hearing that story. So anybody else got got something in, like, a minute or two that you wanna bring forward that you haven't been able to? Sure. I'm sure. I'm glad you. There's a is that Gary?
[01:57:39] Unknown:
Yes. It is.
[01:57:41] Unknown:
Hey, Gary. You sound great, man.
[01:57:43] Unknown:
Well, thank you. Hey. I want everybody to know that you don't draft, David. Oh, you're clipping, Gary. From the IRS.
[01:58:02] Unknown:
Okay. Gary, you're clipping, man, and you cut out just now.
[01:58:10] Unknown:
Okay. Because they don't wanna touch you. They don't want you in court or nothing like that.
[01:58:18] Unknown:
Yeah. I think he's saying get your paperwork in because they're not gonna mess with you if you have it in. And I'd like to think that. I can't guarantee it, but that's kinda my suspicion. Also, you got a real terrible connection, Gary.
[01:58:36] Unknown:
Alright.
[01:58:37] Unknown:
Alright, buddy. Thanks for checking in. You sound great. That's good news for us. Roger. Yes. Larry.
[01:58:44] Unknown:
Larry. Yeah. I'm not sure I agree with the, student on Saturday who's who was talking to some lady and and saying that the the Department of the Treasury is running out of money. Here's an article that comes out of USA Today. With the clock ticking on tax season, the IRS is reminding Americans that April 15 is also their last chance to file a past due return and receive a refund for tax year 2021. Some 1,100,000 Americans who didn't file a federal income tax return for 2021 are collectively missing out on 1,025,000,000.000 in unclaimed refunds according to the IRS.
[01:59:32] Unknown:
Okay. Well, then they might. If that's unclaimed, they might your tag those. They they can't get rid of them unless the claims get finished or something. I don't know. Could be. All I know is that's what somebody called in and said, Saturday, we tell you that's hearsay. And if you wanna believe it, great. And if you wanna be skeptical, that's alright too. Thank you, Larry. And, there's our little whistler, little cowboy at the old corral. Thank you, Harry Nilsson, for that excellent whistler. And then I believe we should hear the, the sounds of freedom there with Crosby, Zills, and Nash. Regardless, thanks for joining us today. Even if you didn't have anything to add and you wanted to absorb all the stuff we talk about, that's fine.
And, we're glad you're along anyway. And, if you're one of those people that have been lurking for as we've had several people lately that have lurked for years here. And, we, we encourage you to try and come forward and say hello. If you got questions, we can try to answer them. I think we get get them answered most of the time. So, anyway, we'll be back tomorrow on the day after the real April Fool's Day on Wednesday, the sixteenth. But, of course, you wanna go see all the people that stand in line at the local post office, go laugh at them. Mhmm. And, otherwise, we'll be back tomorrow, and I encourage y'all to have a good day, and we'll see you soon.
Thank you. Hey, Roger. Hey, Roger. Okay. Yeah. That's better, Gary. Yeah. I think we're off. Hold on. Yeah. I was switching towers.
[02:01:16] Unknown:
No switching towers. Remember, I'm in the mountains, so I know.
[02:01:21] Unknown:
Spot. Yeah. We didn't get down on you or anything. Just said you got poor reception. You're better now, though. What did you have to say to the people?
[02:01:31] Unknown:
Well, Roger, the it's just the fact that nobody should wait. No matter what their situation is, they should not wait on putting their affidavit in. It doesn't matter. It's gonna help you in whatever situation you find yourself in with the IRS.
[02:01:49] Unknown:
That's probably true. I encourage people if you want to file the affidavit. You know, some people wait till they, you know, could they know they can defend their position, and that's kind of the way I tell people. And that's fine if you wanna do that. Otherwise, like Gary said, go ahead and file it, but make a commitment to yourself that you're gonna learn the information and follow through on it. That's where I would encourage people to file early. Okay? But, yeah, I understand. Thank you. Gary, you're sounding real good, man. That's good news. You feeling better?
[02:02:23] Unknown:
Feeling a lot better.
[02:02:25] Unknown:
I'm back to work. Have you tried any of this methylene blue, Gary? No. I haven't tried any of that, Roger. You might wanna look into it, man. Seriously. K? So, what, Paul?
[02:02:40] Unknown:
I've got my blood pressure down to one sixty over about 97. So, that's a lot better than two thirty over one forty.
[02:02:49] Unknown:
I'm sure it is. Yep. Oh, sure. It is. And they're probably overjoyed to see it diminishing like that.
[02:02:56] Unknown:
Oh, they're still freaking out about one sixty. They want it down to one thirty.
[02:03:01] Unknown:
Yeah. Well, I don't I'm sure. Well, you might wanna ask them about this methylene butte. It's, involved in all kinds of medical procedures. And although I think it works more on the mitochondria, it might have something to do with your blood pressure. You might at least ask them about it, Gary.
[02:03:18] Unknown:
I will do that. Thank you.
[02:03:21] Unknown:
Okay, buddy.
[02:03:22] Unknown:
Do hello, Well, I'll just have a look up look up EDTA. Look up EDTA and heavy metal detox, on see if there's any correlation between that and heavy metal toxicity. I know that there's a correlation between that and, plaque buildup and cholesterol. I know there is a connection there, but I've I've got a comment about what Gary said about filing the affidavit. They're not gonna take out a full page ad or do 30 on prime time network news saying, well, Gary filed an affidavit. Gary filed an affidavit. Now it's a piece of paper that's gonna go in your administrative file at the secretary of state's office, and it will never see the light of day until you actually need it and bring it up. So it's kinda like insurance. It's an affidavit.
It's, it's one page, one signature, one stamp. Get on the stick, get it done. It's at least there if you need it.
[02:04:38] Unknown:
But don't do that unless you're commit to yourself that you'll learn the information and get your arms around it to a point where you can defend your position as well as teach others. So try and make that commitment to yourself. Because if you don't, nothing changes. Nothing changes. The world's not gonna change. You've got to be the change here. And the only way that happens is when you internalize the information. There was a guy trying to say something to Paul a second ago. We are the change. Yes. May start a whole new music thing. Who is the fellow that was trying to say something?
[02:05:13] Unknown:
I have I would like to know about the methylene blue. Is what is it called? Methylene blue?
[02:05:20] Unknown:
Yes. Methylene blue. It's an of the world's first inorganic substance. It was developed by the Germans back in 1870. So it's been around for a long time. And, this stuff is well, it's just got miraculous results in your body. Okay? And it mainly seems to concentrate on mitochondria, which is the energy engine of the cell. And there are many or there are at least some Northern Europeans that have problems with their mitochondria, and methylene blue seems to straighten that out. It gives you almost instant energy. It's very smooth. It's not like caffeinated in, and and that I haven't heard anybody except some people theorize on some negatives, but Jones has been advertising it for, gosh, at least a month or six weeks now. And not one person, not one of his doctors, and he's got the best doctors in the country on the show occasionally. None of them have said anything negative about it. You can order some from him, and he has real, real ultra concentrated methylene blue.
So if you if you order some, be careful how you use it. Don't do too much at first because of that concentration. It's evidently real strong. So, and you might not do it every day with that high strength stuff. You may not do it, but every third day or something. K? But it's called methylene blue, and, InfoWars has got the best in the country from the main people that do it for doctors. It's used in cancer therapies. It's used in in in medical stuff when they want to stain part of the body, for instance, so they can see some tissue. It's used in that.
I do know a couple of things here that are very provocative. One is that it's the only known antidote for, cyanide poisoning. That's kinda interesting. And, also, it helps with, carbon dioxide poisoning, and it will help turn that around too. So it's got some very unique qualities. Look into it. See what you think. But I encourage everybody to try it. K?
[02:07:46] Unknown:
Thank you.
[02:07:47] Unknown:
You're welcome. Is that Chris it was Chris I was talking to. Chris, go over to check out you go over to is he he sells it on the, the alexjonesstore.com, and, it's not very expensive, even this high concentrated stuff. We've got some down here that comes out of Columbia, and, the, the doc that I buy it from charges $10 a bottle for it. It. Pretty ridiculous. Cheap. I don't think it's at that concentrated level that the stuff Joan sells is, and I hope I'm gonna be able to get some from him. Maybe it'd be Nancy's sister, Suzanne, that brings it down here to me. We'll see. But, yeah, I I really encourage you to at least look into it, Chris. Okay?
[02:08:35] Unknown:
Yeah. We will. Thank you.
[02:08:37] Unknown:
Yes. You're welcome, man. And Jones is advertising the hell out of it over there, and it's been a real smash hit with his audience. And as I said, not one negative have I heard. He does say check with your physician before you start using it. But, there's doesn't seem to be, if very, very few negative responses. None that I've heard of again. So anybody else? Thanks, Chris. I think you'll like it though, buddy. So, who else has got something?
[02:09:08] Unknown:
Roger, I have a question.
[02:09:11] Unknown:
Okay. Where have you been for the last two hour? Where have you been for the last two hours?
[02:09:17] Unknown:
Go ahead. I was on I was on, since you're a dancer and you're into origins of sayings, where did the saying to cut a rug come from? Do you have the the origins on that?
[02:09:31] Unknown:
Well, I don't know that. I I I just don't. So Okay. Do you? Do you? No. No. I don't. I I figured you would be the source. Well, no. I've I've heard the saying, but I I don't know its, its origin. So, unless anybody else has got and I don't dance anymore. The the reason is is because I had that accident down there, and the the guy that helped me that spoke English was also a tango instructor. And he said, you're gonna come come dance tango, and that's how I got to doing it. But I sure did enjoy it. It was a nice experience. So don't think boy, don't think you should have it. You're watching those people that it's easy because dancing tango is not easy. K?
[02:10:19] Unknown:
Have a good lunch, sir.
[02:10:21] Unknown:
Thank you. Gonna go join the expats here. See what kind of garbage they have to talk about today. And, I will see y'all on, Wednesday, the day after. So everybody have a good day, a pretty good show today, I thought, and, thanks for listening and putting up with me and hearing my stories. And, we may have some more tomorrow. So hopefully see you tomorrow. Love all of you. Ciao.
[02:10:45] Unknown:
Thank you very much.
[02:10:49] Unknown:
Bon appetit. And, sketch rang the dinner bell. Thanks for joining us for the Radio Ranch with Roger Sales on eurofolkradio.com and radio.globalvoiceradio.net. First hour of the program, we're also on additional platforms, +1 0690 and streamlife.tube. Those platforms drop off at the top of the first hour. But we're happy that they're with us in at least the first half of the show. More information on the topics discussed, you can go to the matrixdocs.com. You can find links to free conference call. Join us live on the show. We've got room for about a thousand of you. And you can also find the links for Eurofolken Global Voice. You can also find archives.
You can find archives going back seven or eight years, six and a half or seven years, and then some on the cast box archives link. And archives going back three years, if not more, on the, GBN on Pod Home link or the Global Voice Network Pod Home link. That's it for me. I'm out of here. I also have things to do today, and the rooms will be open. Hang around, enjoy, and have a great day. Thanks. We'll catch you back here tomorrow, 11AM eastern on the Radio Ranch with Roger Sales.
[02:12:27] Unknown:
Bye now. Blasting the voice of freedom worldwide, you're listening to the Global Voice Radio Network.
[02:12:34] Unknown:
Bye bye,
[02:12:35] Unknown:
Have fun storming the castle.
Introduction and April 15 Discussion
Personal Stories and Legal Background
Historical Context of Slavery and Taxation
Tax System and Historical Amendments
Personal IRS Experiences
IRS System and Legal Challenges
Historical Tariffs and Income Tax
Radio Industry Stories
Second Hour Introduction
Current Political Climate and IRS Discussion
Historical Insights and Personal Reflections
Listener Interactions and Closing Remarks