In this episode of the Radio Ranch, host Roger Sayles is joined by Brent Winters and a variety of guests to discuss a wide range of topics. The conversation kicks off with discussions about the Global Voice Radio Network and the various platforms the show is broadcasted on. The hosts and guests delve into the intricacies of the legal system, exploring the differences between common law and civil law, and the role of equity in the judicial process. Brent Winters shares insights from his comparative law course, emphasizing the importance of understanding the common law tradition.
The episode also touches on energy production in the United States, discussing the complexities of oil refining and the potential of alternative energy sources like thorium reactors. The conversation takes a turn towards societal issues, including the challenges of immigration and cultural integration, with a particular focus on the impact of religious and ethnic dynamics. The hosts and guests engage in a lively debate about the influence of Jewish communities in global politics, the historical context of religious conflicts, and the implications for modern society. Throughout the episode, the importance of understanding historical and legal contexts is highlighted as a means to navigate current challenges.
Forward moving and focused on freedom. You're listening to the Global Voice Radio Network. This MiraStream is brought to you in part by mymytobust.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 Fatfix, phatphix.com, and also iTero Planet for the terahertz frequency wand by Preif International. That's iteroplanet.com. Thank you, and welcome to the program.
[00:01:35] Unknown:
We as well, mister Alvin Lee. Thank you very much for always giving us this nice intro and those nice lyrics. So prophetic from almost fifty years ago. So we're gonna start the program this morning. It is the July 11, Roger Sales, and it's Friday, of course, which means mister Brent Winters is, here with us or maybe or he's gonna be here in a minute. And, it's Radio Ranch is, of course, the title of our little get together for personal reasons to me. And, so I see the lovely Francine did show up. We were commenting that she wasn't here yet in the Sprint's producer, I guess, you could say.
Morning, Franny. And Thank you very much. There you go. And, so we always, at this point in time, try and give the folks that help us extend our reach the credit and and and the thanks that they're due. And, of course, the guy that's always doing that because he's the one that knows who's with us today is mister Paul, our our engineer and producer. I guess you could say that. So, Paul, if you would step out, give him your piece, and, we will commence.
[00:02:47] Unknown:
Alright. Yes. We're on eurofolkradio.com. That, of course, is our flag flagship platform. Thanks to pastor Eli James. We're on Global Voice Radio Network at My Pet Project. I've been running off and on for over a decade now. We're on radiosoapbox.com. Thanks to buddy Paul across the Great.
[00:03:14] Unknown:
Great. Paul. Big Paul. English live.
[00:03:17] Unknown:
Yeah. Big Paul. Okay. Yeah. Alright. Fine.
[00:03:21] Unknown:
But he just called me Baldridge and put me back on his side here. You see, it doesn't automatically give an inference to you. It's just identifying him.
[00:03:32] Unknown:
Yeah. Well, it's little by omission, Raj. Okay. Okay. Anyway, okay. We're on our website is thematrixdocs.com where you'll also find the links to free conference call. You can join us live on this show. Yeah. Good morning, Raj. Love you too. Yeah. Good morning, Paul. Yeah.
[00:03:55] Unknown:
Big Garage, you could refer. How who did, mister Paul have on yesterday?
[00:04:00] Unknown:
The big Paul. I, oh, I forget his name. John, is an author, rather, quite prolific. It was a great show. Yeah. We had, we had some audio, some technical challenges with the audio.
[00:04:16] Unknown:
Yes. Yes. And,
[00:04:20] Unknown:
he he had microphone trouble with with I think he was using a laptop or something like that. But and, Paul does intend to have him on again, and, hopefully, they'll work the bugs out of that. Yeah. Cool. Alright.
[00:04:35] Unknown:
So you've written a number of books. Yes. Yes. Number of books. Number of books. I wish I like to write better. I just do not like to write. I really like to talk, though. So, let's see. I don't know if Brent's joined us or not. Yes. Brent has joined us, and I do wanna mention the morning. Mister Winters? You You got your horse hitched up there at the, hitching post.
[00:04:58] Unknown:
I What's that? Father?
[00:05:00] Unknown:
You got your horse hitched up at the hitching post.
[00:05:03] Unknown:
Oh, yeah. And, you know, when people show up on this show and they they make their presence known and we get to talking to them. Well Let's see if this works out. If somebody if somebody shows up and then disappears, sometimes I'll go looking for them. And I tracked one up down today that's disappeared on us, Roger. Is that right? Yeah. He ended up down South America. You saw him down there, then he was up in The States and then back where I'm from, and I found him again. And, he's I don't know if he'll say anything. He might be ticked off. Maybe that's why he left. I don't know. Probably will.
[00:05:44] Unknown:
He wouldn't be the first one.
[00:05:48] Unknown:
Anyway, I got Most likely
[00:05:50] Unknown:
won't be the last. Yeah. I got Cody here with me today. But Oh, Cody. Cody. Hey. Cody. Cody. Cody. Good
[00:06:00] Unknown:
morning. Hi, Jerry.
[00:06:02] Unknown:
Hey, buddy. I wanna thank you. I wanna thank you for that latest post publicly here that you sent me. And, since it was since you're here, I was gonna wait till tomorrow to play with this, but it's so significant. Since you're here, I might ask you to read them, one or two of them. Is that okay?
[00:06:23] Unknown:
Hey. Can you hear us?
[00:06:24] Unknown:
Yeah, man.
[00:06:26] Unknown:
Loud and clear. Actually shows muted on whatever he pulled up here, whatever software he's using. So Oh, no. But they got us. But I didn't hear what you said, Roger. Something that Cody posted.
[00:06:36] Unknown:
He posted sent me some messages last night with some, well, you know, these little things where they got the guy that said it there and what he said. Yeah. The the one that really struck me is the this is Cicero. Okay? Okay. This is Cicero, probably. And I I don't have a complete accounting, of course. But Cicero, to me, is one of the finest statesmen that's ever lived. Uh-huh. From his words. Yeah. And so this was, from Cicero a hundred years BC. So, would you would you quote that out here, Cody, for us and the one right under it, Lou Rockwell?
[00:07:16] Unknown:
Yeah. Let me find it real quick. Okay. I was trying to give Brent this new,
[00:07:22] Unknown:
little microphone we're using, and I don't know if it's connected or not. Well, microphone sounds pretty good. Brent sounds pretty good. Well, whatever microphone Okay. Go ahead. I got the second. Why don't I go on the other room? Cody Cody is doing a real good job of of, helping me out here, but,
[00:07:39] Unknown:
he'll find I think he knows where to find those boat, don't you? Oh, yeah. Oh, yeah. It's just on WhatsApp. He just sent them last night. Oh, I see. I was gonna pass him around. You don't know what I've been through this week, Brent. So you're you're kinda just finding out here. What'd you do, sir? Especially. Oh, hell. I pissed up pissed some people off, and they asked me to asked me to leave the Tuesday lunch group because I'm so offensive and toxic. Nope. Because I tell them the truth. Because I tell them the truth, and I always forget.
[00:08:10] Unknown:
Yeah. That reminds me of Go go ahead, Brent. No.
[00:08:15] Unknown:
You go ahead. I was just gonna say it's, you know, it's so biblical. It's almost scary. Okay? Really.
[00:08:21] Unknown:
So let me get this straight, Roger. Yeah. You're you're close, ex pass down there, the people you had known all this time, you had a propinquity with down there in South America. I thought I thought past tense. That's correct. They ask you not to come to their meetings anymore?
[00:08:38] Unknown:
Yep. Kinda something like that because I'm toxic, and I offend people because I talk about the Jews. And when politics come up and I always say, well, this is the Jews behind it, and I explain why if they'll let me. And, boy, you know, they just don't wanna hear
[00:08:54] Unknown:
it. No. People don't. That's absolutely true, and that's what, the other, personality behind this program, Paul English said. He can go into a gathering in somebody's home where people are in the kitchen. People always get food Or at the pub at the pub. Or at the pub. He said he can clear the place out in less than five, ten minutes, and he probably can try. And he doesn't try. He just himself. You know? That's right. No. It's true. And I I
[00:09:21] Unknown:
I'm I'm really not trying to have any kind of blasphemy here, Brent, please. Any bla One of Jesus' things was would you hate me because I tell you the truth? Yeah. Hey. Let me tell you, they will.
[00:09:35] Unknown:
Yeah. No. I I get what you're saying. Tucker Carlson did an interview with, senator Cruz not long ago. I saw it. I saw it. K. Yeah. And all Tucker was asking well, I think we talked about this last week. He was asked Cruz said, I went to the senate, to be the the foremost proponent of the state of Israel. He sure did. Yeah. Right out of his own mouth. Yeah. And, of course, I'm thinking, well, why? Why not be the foremost proponent of The United States? I don't wanna talk ugly about other countries unless it just they become our enemies. Some of them have. But right now, I just wanna talk positive about my own country. Right. I want to promote the welfare of my own country because if we go down, all these countries that we're supporting will go down too. We gotta take care of ourselves, and we've not done that. I just recently saw and I know you wanna get to this these things at Cody. Oh, look. We got two hours, man. Well, I wanna get to them too, but I won't be long. But I've been watching the US Supreme Court and, the courts in America and this is something I speak as testimony. In other words, my experience, I'm just relating my experiences.
The courts in America are suffering, suffering from lack of respect. Yes. And that's that's dangerous. Very dangerous. You know? It's not that we have to agree with them, but we do want them to follow decency and sensibility in some things, and we don't that dignity is gone in many ways. I've gone into the federal appellate courts, and I've had other lawyers tell me there's something wrong. There's just nothing there anymore. You can just feel it. And then, of course, I've had other lawyer friends that have withdrawn their membership of the bar, the US Supreme Court, because they didn't wanna be a part of what's going on, same sex marriage and other things like that. And then we have this Jackson. I don't call her a justice.
Jackson. And it's to the point now where the left wing wackos on the court are telling her to shut up. Yeah. I mean, and they don't under and and that she doesn't even have a grasp of the facts of the cases she's talking about. If she does, she doesn't show it. Well, that's important. But without without, without due process in the courts, and we're not getting it the way we ought to be, and this is up to the judges. The judges are products of the law schools. The law schools are failing us. They're not even teaching the fundamental common law courses in places like in places like Harvard Law School, the bellwether of all law schools in the country. They've withdrawn about twelve years ago, withdrawn teaching of the fundamental common law subjects.
Common law subjects, contracts, due process, called civil procedure, torts in favor of silliness, like international law. International law is just a matter of pure force. That's all it is. There is no law. There is it's the law of the jungle. There is a law. Yes. Yes. Yes. The law of force and violence is there, and it's important. And that's what we operate under, of course, and that's how we keep things in order. But getting back to Cody,
[00:12:56] Unknown:
I'm anxious to find out what he was saying. Yeah. Yeah. I'm it's good to good to hear you, Cody, too. Thank thank you, Roger. Yeah.
[00:13:04] Unknown:
To kind of, you know, what, Brent was saying there, you know, if we go back, we remember the judge there in New York was actually, what, Colombian born? And then I just DC.
[00:13:17] Unknown:
DC too. The all of them. There there was one Cody, the female. I can't remember her name. She was from Jamaica. And her brother and her father were so extreme that the communist party in Jamaica kicked them out.
[00:13:34] Unknown:
Yeah. Well, I was gonna add to that. So, you know, I think we really need a constitutional amendment to say that, you know, naturalized or first maybe first generation of naturalized, citizens are not allowed in in public, positions of power. You know? That needs to be let me finish this, Roger. They're Okay. Well, I came across a feed on x this morning about, this this judge that said that that immigration cannot pick them up at Home Depot, car washes, other locations. It's on the Right Angle News Network on Twitter, and she's either Ghanaian or her mother was Ghanaian. So, I mean, this this is an issue we're having. We need to seriously think about
[00:14:16] Unknown:
some constitutional amendment if these people are gonna be flawless. No. You can get that codified through because those are article three courts in this, and the the the the the Congress has total control over this. They can go in and defund them. They can do all kinds of stuff. They don't need a constitutional amendment. They just need a law passed as codified and and signed to my knowledge out. And Britt may know different. Okay? Well, they'd probably try to throw it out if it wasn't. I wanted to. We're like I wanted to go back. Cody, you and I have known each other three or four years now, something. We met through Brent.
[00:14:51] Unknown:
Right. Brent,
[00:14:52] Unknown:
Cody, contacted Brent about some problem he had. This Cody's married to an Ecuadorian gal who's a petroleum engineer, I believe. Susanna.
[00:15:02] Unknown:
That's right. And if anybody would accuse us of being racist, she is a native
[00:15:08] Unknown:
Ecuadorian, his wife. Sweet gal. Very smart. No. So, anyway, Brent's talking with Cody as a client, and Cody mentioned something about Ecuador. And he says, well, you ought to when you're down there, you ought to look up my buddy, Roger. Well, it turned out we lived about a mile from each other as the crow flies. And so I went up and had a nice, evening with Cody and Susanna. They fixed a nice dinner. She's a wonderful cook. And, and so Cody and I are talking and Cody's brand new to this. Okay. And he's going, well, can't, can't we get control of the governors?
[00:15:44] Unknown:
Can't pardon me? Is Katanji Brown a woman or a female? Quick question for doctor,
[00:15:50] Unknown:
Chipotle. Please. God. Can't you go away? Please. Can't you just leave us alone? I mean, honestly. I don't know who he's talking to, but I think I'm talking to this guy right here that always comes in here and disrupts crap. That's what I'm talking about. And you're entering this topic when I'm on a subject, you idiot, and coming in and breaking my chain of thought when the host is on instead of being polite, which I don't think you got one of those bones in your body. Okay? So anyway, Tony. Okay. So where where were we, Roger? We were at your house on the back porch, and we were just getting to know each other. You're brand new into the patriot movement. And you're going, well, can't we just go in and get all the governors elected or all these political solution things? I said, Cody, I know you're new, buddy, but, there there there probably is no political solution.
Okay? And then I said, who is to blame for all this? The Jews. And that I remember distinctly telling you about that for years. Oh, yeah. Yeah. I guess You've,
[00:16:53] Unknown:
been out around. Dude. But I think you did you really yeah. You kind of,
[00:16:58] Unknown:
solidified that thought. I I pull I pointed you in that direction here all these years. Now you know that this is right. Unfortunately, these idiots that, that I was dealing with over here at our lunch, they don't have that kind of a vision or an open mind. And so, anyway, here we are down the line. Cody and I, I haven't seen him in a while. I don't know when you and Suzanne are coming back down. But, anyway, we communicate back and forth. And last night after this happened earlier this week, Brent and Cody, I think I wrote you, Cody, of what has happened without any real details.
And, then, these things you sent me, yesterday popped up. So have you located that one that especially that one? That one is more important than all the others. I haven't listened to the Lysander Spooner yet. But this one right here, because of the significance of truly one of the greatest statesmen I've studied history a bit in the last thirty something years, And, Cicero has got to be one of the greatest statesmen that's ever walked the face of the earth. He was, back in Rome. He was a senator in Rome about a hundred years, before they, killed our, lord and savior, these same bunch.
And, so anyway, that's why this particularly caught my ear last night. Have you located it? Yeah. Can you
[00:18:23] Unknown:
read it, please?
[00:18:24] Unknown:
Marcus Tullius Cicero, January to forty three BC, said the Jews belong to a dark and repulsive force. One knows how numerous this click is, how they stick together, and what power they exercise through their unions. They are a nation of rascals and deceivers.
[00:18:48] Unknown:
There you go. That's, one of the foremost statesmen that's ever walked the face of the earth a hundred years before they murdered Christ. And I don't know what perspective you wanna put that in, but I hope it's a proper one. Go go ahead. Oh, just one other point about this.
[00:19:06] Unknown:
The Jewishness is not a race of men. Just to say it again, it's hard it's it's a change of what's been promoted. Jewishness is a religion. It's a religion. Like, Mormonism, Islam, it's a religion. And it's a religion that they stick to, and, of course, I don't agree to it because I'm a worshiper of Jesus Christ through his word. And so they hate him, and they say that we sometimes talk about Mary and, make the point that you shouldn't be having statues of Mary and praying to Mary, and that's unbiblical, of course. That's easy to see. But, it's they go too far the other way. They say Mary was a whore and a prostitute.
Yeah. And that Jesus Christ is the product. That's the Talmud teaches this, a product of an of a a union between a Roman soldier at the garrison close by and, prostitution, and that he is, as we speak, up to his chin in human sewage, boiling human sewage. That's what they their religion says about him. Oh, I've nothing I can do about that except to say, well, I don't have any fellowship with that point of view, so I just stay away from it. I had a lady ask me recently, well, what do you think about Israel? I said, I don't think about them much at all. I got my own business to take care of here. I don't want to malign them. I don't want to attack them. I wanna understand who they are and kinda move away. And I'm interested in my own country, and I'm interested in an intense way that comes back to the what people call the covenant of God, the trust settlement that God has established. So I don't wanna just bad mouth. I don't wanna bad mouth and attack other people unless they come after me and I I'm cornered. I may have to do something. In the meantime, I got plenty to keep me busy right here, and I've been at it for many decades in an intense way. And I'm getting smarter and more intense about my own country. And I would encourage all of you that are on the soil of of this country we call The United States to understand that God gave you this land, and he expects you to take care of it and not pollute it. And if you do, he'll vomit the land itself. He'll cause the land itself to vomit you out, all of us. Let's get serious here, friends. He quit screwing around.
This is a life and death situation. We don't have to be worried about it. God is sovereign. We just have to quietly go about our business as God tells us to go about it. And Jesus Christ is our authority, and he is the he has produced a Bible, a word. And that word is final, the court of last resort, from whose decision, from what's decision, that Jesus Christ decision, there is no appeal. The testimony of that he's given us, it's incontrovertible. It's unassailable, the reliability of the testimony. The manuscripts themselves are clear.
So let's get about it and quit messing around. But that's what I have done. That's my testimony about what I understand about it, what I'm to do. I'm not to be bothered by the distractors. All of the news, it's all centered as you people can see. They want us to focus on that obscure, part of the world on the other side that have that we have no national interest in. People say, well, what about the oil? We got more oil here and we know what to do with. Matter of fact, I know Cody through a series of providential circumstances because he's from North Dakota. And he ended up down here in my neck of the woods because he learned the oil business up there in the last boom, the largest oil reserve ever discovered in the world in North Dakota going up into Canada.
We have lots of oil. We have more oil than any country in the world. And then since then, we've discovered a reserve in West Texas bigger than that one. I've been down there and seen what's going on. It's uncanny. There's nobody lives in West Texas, by the way. There I didn't know anybody lived in North Dakota till I met Cody. I was the place on the map. Well, West Texas is even more so that way. I have discovered there are a few people. Cody told me the other day, he went to see his mother. Can I tell the story, Cody? Yeah. Yeah. He went to see his mother. She's getting older. She would move into one of these homes where they they can care for her a little better. And he's in there, and he finds out his mother's in this home with, Lawrence Welk's niece, Lawrence Welk.
His niece is in this home. She's over 90. Well, I'd forgotten that there there are two famous people I'd heard of that are from North Dakota. One of them is Lawrence Welk, and the other one is, shucks, she was one of those glamour babe from the seventies. She's some somewhere around Jamestown, I've got Wimbledon, but I can't remember her name. I have a relative that's from Wimbledon. Yeah. That's her. But I can't think what her name is. She was the policewoman at the television show. Yeah. All that stuff. Yeah. Yeah. She,
[00:23:56] Unknown:
oh, well, anyway There's some others like, well, the kid people
[00:24:00] Unknown:
he, Cody, talk right in the mic. Talk right in the mic. You're at Internet coaching.
[00:24:05] Unknown:
Selected a different this little wireless mic. So it must not be me. Got it on you. I see. Oh, Cody think it's working, though. Cody's got all the state of the art equipment. Oh, yeah. Oh, well, he's
[00:24:15] Unknown:
got a microphone hooked to both of it. I'm not sure it's working here. Well, I first Well, it is. It is. But you're just walking off. Sound like you were in a tin can there a minute ago. I'm gonna I need that. Oh, I guess.
[00:24:27] Unknown:
Well, he was yeah. He was with Mike. But anyway yeah. Go ahead. We're talking all famous people in North Dakota, but,
[00:24:34] Unknown:
where else were we going? I've got the George Lincoln Rockwell quote pulled up. Yeah. Well, go we'll read that one too. George Lincoln Rockwell. Sooner or later, the Jews will finally cross the borderline of American patients as they have done all throughout history. Yep. When they do, the reaction of the American white man will make the Jews get on their knees and pray to who? Adolf Hitler. There you go.
[00:25:02] Unknown:
There you go. They do it. It's throughout history. They've always done it.
[00:25:08] Unknown:
Well, again, to stress, it's a religious point of view, and religious affections, as Jonathan Edwards pointed out, are the springs of all human action. There's nothing that any man or woman ever does, that at bottom, you'll find that he or she is driven by a spirit of religion, either the true one or or the false one under a thousand different labels. And that we need to be aware of that. If you can make life, you're you'll get in trouble if you aren't. If you can make life, simple, reduce it to its its simplicity, one of the things that we can say is there are only two traditions of religion, law, and government in the world. Only two.
That's the law of the land, we call it our common law tradition. It's a Christian tradition. And the law of the city, the code of Justinian of the Roman Empire. There isn't anything else. You can go to the universities, and they'll they'll teach courses on, major world religions. They'll have anywhere from seven to 70, and you'll discuss them. And I've had people say, well, I've discovered all I have discovered and discovered the the tenants of all the religions of the world, and I've studied it. And I've come to this conclusion. And I just say to myself, well, you've missed the whole point. You're misled. You think you've discovered a lot of religions and you've just studied them. No. You haven't. You still only have discovered two, but the evil empire and the useful idiots thereof have gotten you to believe that there is there are many religions when there's really only two. But the false religion, the law of the city, the canon civil laws of Babylon, Rome, etcetera, Pergamos, the useful idiots of those religions and the useful idiots of the evil one himself have taken those religions, or taken that religion and divided it into many just to confuse. One of the one of the most confusing things a fellow can do is try to understand Babylonian religion. And all false religion, as the Bible says, is from Babylon.
And it's all fundamentally the same even though it it's like looking down at a at a you're in a forest, and I've been in the woods at home, and I can my dad was real good at this because he grew up, his my granddad ran a sawmill there at the home place, and and people bring their white oak and their red oak and their hackberry or what hard oaks and the hickory if they had it or even cherry and have them sawed up so they'd have lumber. We're working on a house now helping a guy. It's an old house back in our neck of the woods in the Wabash Valley, and all of the studs are hardwood. Now you don't see that anymore. Well, the reason for that, they're all pine now. They're soft stuff. But the reason for that is the old houses in this part of the world were built with lumber from people's property, and they'd take it to us. Usually, somebody around and have a sawmill, and they'd charge them a little bit. They'd haul the logs down, and they'd they'd saw it up. Aren't the barns we had at home, the house I grew up in, all of it. Even the siding on the barns was made of oak, if you can believe that. Massive oak oak boards were on the barn, and the timbers that held the barn up, they were pin and dowel barn. No nails in them, etcetera.
But we're working on one now that is, is that way. But the native the native material I forgot where I was going with all that, Roger. Well, you can tell me later. But the bottom line is all the well, here's what I was gonna say. Yeah. Although you can get get down in the woods with my father, he could identify all the trees. I I got pretty good. I was never good as him because I didn't work in a sawmill. But when you're down in the woods, you can identify the different trees pretty easily just looking at the bark and the leaves. Yeah. But when you're up on the hill looking down at the at the woods, it all looks like just the same thing, all green. Well, that's the view you need to have of false religion. When you're looking down, really, it's all the same thing. It is all the same. It fundamentally at the foundation, it's all the same. It it, and if you back off and get the big picture, you'll understand that. But if you start looking at the minutiae and you get your face stuck, your, leaf slammed into your face where all you can see is the veins of a leaf, you're gonna think that they're all different.
No. That's an analogy. I know it doesn't play out completely. Every analogy breaks down at some point. But just to make the point, there are only two possibilities. And I make this point also here, and I want people to come and listen. We're getting some traction with it. We teach law classes, and I try to teach law classes that, should have been taught in law school or that are no longer taught in the law schools, common law courses. I teach some that I was taught because I went to law school where they taught the common law courses, but there are a lot others they didn't teach. And we try to teach those too. And we've taught courses on the militia clauses of our constitution, the sheriff, the the posse of the sheriff, the the, course courses on evidence and contracts, but and trusts. We have those courses.
Those those have been, popular. But we're teaching a course now. We just started Thursday, Roger. I I want you to have to think Roger. I think you do.
[00:30:18] Unknown:
I do. I I get copies of that stuff. I saw it. And I just hadn't had a chance to listen to it yet. Sheriff Darleaf and I teach the courses,
[00:30:27] Unknown:
and we're teaching a course now, one I wanted to teach for years, called comparative law, comparing and contrasting the law of the land with the law of the city, the canon civil laws of Rome, our common law, compared and contrasted with the civil law. And there's no way to know what our common law is unless you compare and contrast it with this great antagonist on every continent and and every age, and that is the civil law, the law of the city of Babylon and its fundamental tenants. And that's what we're doing. Twelve weeks, we're trying to do there. Go to that website. You can see how to join that course, and when you do, you're helping us. Because as I get older, I'm in the course a whole lot less, and I'm trying to teach a whole lot more Because it seems to me that the truth of our common law tradition is not being passed on. Have we forgotten about without our common law tradition, we won't have any freedoms? We won't have any. Without our common law tradition, it is utterly impossible to really understand at all what our constitution of The United States is saying by the words and the phrases it's used. As justice Taft said, these words and phrases are couched in the language of our common law. And the men that drafted and ratified our constitution of The United States did so, breathing an atmosphere of our common law tradition. It was part of their lives. They didn't know anything else.
And they don't. This is how much we care about the law of the city, the code that governs every country in the world except the half dozen at most common law countries, and that code is the code of Justinian of the Roman Empire of the sixth century. That code originally written in Greek, never in the history of our in the history of the world has anybody ever translate that code into English? That's how much we care about it. There is one man, I think I'd mentioned this, from Wyoming. He was a German immigrant to Iowa. He wound up in Wyoming. And in the nineteen thirties, he decided he would try to translate it into English, but he didn't know Greek. So he decided he'd try to learn enough to do it. He'd never understood the Greek verbs at all.
So he just he saw a verb. He just translated any way he thought would fit the context, and he I'm not criticizing the man. He did what he could, but we don't need it. We've never needed it. But that that's not a translation. It never was published and never gained any traction, but that's the only time anybody has tried to translate it amazingly. Why? Because we don't care. That's why. And it served us well in this country. The laws of nature, the laws of nature, our common law tradition, and the laws of nature's god, the Bible. Those have served us well as fundamentals of our law. Well, that's what I I I try to push because that is the basis of our culture and everything that arises in American culture.
All of the possibilities of freedom we have, the fundamentals such as the jury, the separation of powers, these things are not contemplated in the rest of the world. That's what's important to us. So when we're talking about Judaism, Islam, we're talking about Talmudism, which is Judaism. We're if we're talking about Romanism, if we're talk any other false religion, those are the big upfront three we have in the world. We're talking about a threat, a serious threats Mhmm. To our freedom.
[00:33:39] Unknown:
But one thing in defense of the Arabs, at least Jesus Christ is is portrayed as a prophet in the Quran.
[00:33:46] Unknown:
He ain't boiling in no excrement up to his chin. Like this on. He is. I I yes. He is. That's right. Well, now that's because, Muhammad supposedly ran into a a Christian in the second century. His name started with an n, and he was, he was off base as to the who God is, but, he called himself a Christian. Was it Nestorius? I think yeah. It was Nestorius. And so Islam has always held that Jesus Christ is the second greatest prophet. Mhmm. Roger, I don't know which is worse. Saying Jesus Christ is up to his neck in excrement because he's an evil son about he's a bastard son of a hooker. That's what the Talmud, that's what Judaism says. Which is worse, that?
[00:34:33] Unknown:
Or saying Jesus Christ is playing second fiddle to somebody? Well, I think at least a positive recognition versus a negative one, I have to say, that that the Talmud's worse.
[00:34:44] Unknown:
Yes. And I see your point, but let's not forget, and this is my testimony on the matter, that's blasphemy of the worst sort. It's evil. It's demonic to say that Jesus Christ is second to anybody, and that's what they do. And that's why their religion is shot through with the evil and the the violence, And there is no the word love or any word resembling love resembling love is not mentioned in their holy writings anywhere. And that, of course, is the Quran and the traveler and those books. Uh-huh. Love is not part of their religion. The story They've got symbol. Yeah. They've got so much interbreeding
[00:35:21] Unknown:
in Belgium as they moved the migrants in there ten years or so ago. Mhmm. House for children with the the hospital for children with mental problems. We had a couple in there, and after the migrants got there, it's like hundreds. They've they've swamped the place with all this inbreeding
[00:35:41] Unknown:
and the results of it. Well, I understand that that I'm not speaking to you directly, Roger. I'm just saying we should understand that there is no commandments and statutes and judgments in Islam. The Quran doesn't have any. Their law is the life of Mohammed and how he conducted himself. It was pretty murderous and pretty insentuous and pretty much child molestation ring. But I wanna ask Cody something. Yeah. Sure.
[00:36:08] Unknown:
I got him right here. I can just Oh, yeah. You can reach out and touch him.
[00:36:12] Unknown:
Oh, yeah. I can punch him if I wanted to. I don't want to. He's a little taller. Suzanne Suzanne might ask you to do that. Well, Cody said two things to me yesterday when we were talking. And there were two ideas. One of them I thought was just dead wrong, but the other one had some merit. But, Cody, I don't remember what they were, but I remember that one had the second one you talked about mighta had some merit. And I said that's a good idea. What was it? Like, I think we talked about in general, you know, I said every generation
[00:36:43] Unknown:
should have a constitutional convention automatically. Otherwise, you're just a slave to your ancestors. And then you had said something to the effect that you didn't trust kind of the new generations or whatever. No. That I didn't like that idea. But what was it? What was it? The sec well, there's there's two kinda second related ones, and one would be anytime a court, you know, especially the supreme court would hear a case, especially involving rights of the people, gun laws, you know, any kind of civil rights, that you would let the judge, you know, let him write a more learned legal opinion, but he better be able to convince a jury to ratify that opinion.
So that would be one way that you know what? Some countries have constitutional courts that deal with some of this, but it's like anybody that's eating the king's bread. You know? There's always, you know, who are they really in, you know, gonna rule. If you receive If you receive the benefit, you owe the duty. Go ahead, Cody. Yeah. I just you know, that's an idea I wanted to put out there, you know. Who knows how long it might take, but, you know, that's one idea. Then then the other would be is if Washington DC represents the whole country, why on cases, you know, federal cases are they allowed to use only DC Juries when practically, you know, 99% of people are gonna be be or related to or at least their money is gonna be coming from, you know, the the DC, you know, overspending.
[00:38:10] Unknown:
So I think you should have to court jurors for any kind of federal cases. Now Cody's Cody's point about that was
[00:38:19] Unknown:
that most people in DC work for the government. Oh, absolutely. On a jury if you're in a criminal case. Exactly. Or they're related or, you know, they're making money from the government access. Right. Fun fact is is that DC has the wealthiest counties surrounding it in the country. You know? Yep. Yep. And it it's pretty atrocious when you think about it. Yeah. You know, Barnes comes out and says they need to clean out the whole DC
[00:38:41] Unknown:
judicial thing, period.
[00:38:43] Unknown:
But just get them out of there. And you've got a very good point there. So maybe Brent mind me. Didn't the Supreme Court used to go on a circuit? How did that work?
[00:38:53] Unknown:
Probably in the early days. In the early days. Supreme Court justices
[00:38:57] Unknown:
used to travel and set as district, as trial court judges in the federal courts Oh. Just when they were off, out of out of season, out of term Oh. They would travel. And by invitation on my case, when we appealed to the seventh circuit, Sandra Day O'Connor was called in to set on my case. Really? Yeah. Because they if they got a bad opinion or too bad to me, they wanted to give it the clout that wouldn't be challenged. That's what that boiled down to. Like, if you put a supreme court justice on an appellate court to rule against a defendant, that's what happened in this case, in my case, then the Supreme Court might be a little bit loathed to to try to overturn that because they're all friends, you see. Yeah. And the incestuous
[00:39:41] Unknown:
nature, the friends, the that them being friends is dangerous. I don't care how you cut it. I I for some reason, I was thinking the supreme court traveled. But either way, I mean They did. Well, the individual justice. The justices, but not the court. Yeah. I mean, basically, I don't even think it's right that all these federal judges just sit in DC all buddy, buddy. I mean, really, in theory, if we're gonna import jurors, why don't we import you know, why don't the federal judges go on a circuit and go to DC so they're a little bit less,
[00:40:08] Unknown:
that's the The woman I was telling you about, I can't remember her name, but from Jamaica, she's in sits in DC. This, all the DC judges are the ones that sent all the Jan six people up, totally illegally to me. Yeah. Maybe. Fraudulently. And I agree with Barnes. Why does DC needed why does DC need a circuit?
[00:40:30] Unknown:
Well, think about it with my my proposal. Okay? Most of those people pled because they knew they weren't gonna get a fair trial in DC. But if you knew that your jurors were gonna be pulled from the 50 states, and we got 20 some states that hold on, Roger. We got 20 some states that are open carry. So we know they're pretty conservative.
[00:40:51] Unknown:
I'd you know? I mean, I would take a gamble on that before I would, you know, take a gamble. It's not a bad idea, Cody. I'm not bashing your idea. Anything to change the status quo there of getting charged, tried, and and and in front of a, a a jury from DC. I Yeah. You there's just no reason. You shouldn't even go in there. You ought to plead out. Hold Paul's been trying to say something for five minutes, and it's a brisk conversation here. And, let let's let's mister engineer slip his foot in here if we could. Well, I think what I have has value because it because it's based in what you guys are talking about.
[00:41:27] Unknown:
DC could not pull a jury that could try or make any sort of a decision on anyone else in the country because that that's a violation of the jury of your peers. And the problem I mean, earlier in the program, I've been itching to get in here, but my doorbell keeps ringing. Earlier in the program, Brent mentioned that the judges have failed us. Well, no. The judges have not failed us. The law schools have failed us. They failed the judges because the law schools were acting at the behest and under the orders of the legislative bodies. It's the legislative bodies that are playing God, that are heading up the law of the city, and they have the judges hogtied.
So the only thing they can decide, the only thing they can talk about is a law of the city issue. They cannot touch they cannot touch the common law. They cannot they can't even get close to it. And these are things that I figured out this morning because I watched the first episode of the comparative law course, and I read the reading assignment and the difference between the common law, which is fixed and immutable because it's based in in in god's law and based on humans' inherent ability to even if they don't know the difference between right and wrong, even if they don't know the law, they have the capacity to learn the difference and then Well, I don't act accordingly. You.
[00:43:08] Unknown:
I wanna make an unashamed plug here for the course again. Apparently, you thought it was worthwhile to listen to and to read the assignment.
[00:43:17] Unknown:
Well well, of course, I did. As as a matter of fact, your analogy between, you know, looking down on a forest from a hillside, you can't identify what tree is which. You can't tell the difference between a soft maple or a hard maple. But you get down on the ground and you change your perspective, you change your point of view, the difference becomes crystal clear. You can tell by the bark. You can tell by the trunk. You can tell by the height of the tree, by the spread of the branches. You have all of the information you need to know because you changed your perspective,
[00:43:56] Unknown:
And that, I think, is what you were going for. When you said that you came to this conclusion this morning, the first thing I thought was, well, before you said you listened to the course and all, I thought, well, he changed it. When do I change my, position? When do I come to my conclusions? When I'm shaving sometimes. You know? You gotta stop and slow down whether you want to or not. So but then I looked at Paul's picture, and he was he he had a beard. So I don't know that he shaves. It coulda had to have been something else when they told us what it was. So that's good, Paul. I appreciate that. And, no, that's that's just my testimony. You read my testimony and my conclusions after many years, and you evaluated it. It has to be your own evaluation to be worthwhile, and I'm glad it works that way. Well, yeah, that's important. Now one thing you did mention was that it's the it's not the judge's fault, it's the legislator's fault. Well, of course, the judges are not bound by what the legislature says. They say they are. They'll even say it, and a lot of them even believe it. But in our common law tradition, the the powers of government, legislative, judicial, and executive are are separated and they're not bound to obey each other.
Nobody in that in that trilogy there, those three branches of government has any duty under our in our common law tradition or under our constitution, and our constitution is a brief of common law government, has a duty to obey the other one. So, I still put it back on the judges, but I put on the legislature too because the legislature doesn't have a clue what they're doing. I think that's a question. Or no. And the judges don't have a clue what they're doing because they go to the law school, but they're taught by professor. But the professors are educated. Yeah. Oh, they know a lot. Yes. Ever learning as the Bible says, but never able to come to a knowledge of the truth. You're gonna tell me these Supreme Court justices that think that men and women ought to get married and women and women and bump body parts and do all the things that, the lesbians and sodomites do. Do you think that that that they've ever come to a knowledge of the truth? And the answer is no. They can't. Of course not. Their their their mind is darkened. Oh, they can be very intricate. They can exercise logic. They can look like an intellectual. They can talk the talk of the Harvard of the Harvard crowd and the Yale crowd and all that. That's meaningless, and it'll bring the country down. But what If I justice and now this is an exaggeration.
Justice Jackson, who was a left wing justice on the Supreme Court, the last of the justices to serve on the Supreme Court and never went to law school. But he said that the problem and this has been a while back, of course. The problem in America and the legal profession is that from all the the the back then, it was boys, not girls, but all the men, all the young boys that get off the trains and go to the law schools, fewer and fewer fewer and fewer of them have the width of the manure of a barn on them. I I really believe that is a problem. I don't know that they're reversing it at this point. I mean, even where I come from, wherever I when I was growing up, all the boys were in the FFA and all the girls were in the Future Homemakers of America, FHA.
That all those lines are meaningless now. The confusion of the sexes is the bottom line of the change of all this and has destroyed our family farms, our agricultural tradition. By the way, our agricultural tradition is a common law tradition. There are only two fundamental traditions of agriculture in the world. The one of the law of the city, the the Roman Empire, the code of Justinian, the canon civil laws of Rome, and the common law agricultural tradition. And by the way, that reminded me, Paul, I ought to have a a short presentation on that because that's we don't call it the law of the land for nothing. It's all about the land. It's about the covenant of God, and the land figures into that. And the way we farm and the way we organize our production of raw materials is different than all the rest of the world. Yes. That's easy to see once you compare and contrast it. So thank you for bringing that up, Paul. Appreciate it. I I have one more point. May I
[00:48:00] Unknown:
may I respectfully disagree with you on one point?
[00:48:04] Unknown:
Of course, Paul.
[00:48:06] Unknown:
Well, thank you. Thank you so much. You talked about the separation of powers Uh-huh. When the the law of the city judges use, various things to make rulings, to decide what's right and wrong. They can use the constitutional, though my belief is they rarely do. Most of what they do is through statutory law. The statutory law comes from the legislators. They are the judges are only ruling based on the authority granted to them through legislation, through statutes, acts, and codes that they have shoved up the judge's barracks bag. So they the two are intrinsically linked, I believe.
[00:48:59] Unknown:
Well, I I get your point, and, obviously, that's not totally unreasonable, but I still say, statutes of the there's a separation of power that is absolute there, and the judges are not bound by statutes that they believe that they are fully convinced though, are contrary to our common law tradition. The legislators have a duty to pass legislation that is, consistent and consonant with our common law tradition. And, when they don't, it's up to the legislatures to say no. People have asked me to run for judge, where I'm from, and I I just can't do that. I know I can't do that. Why? Well, I'd be thrown off a bench in no time flat.
Because all these things I see them doing to criminal defendants that the legislature has told and the judges just go along with it, the judges want their retirement. They don't wanna get thrown off the fence, and the legislature does have the impeachment powers. See? Right. They do. Work.
[00:49:54] Unknown:
And the interesting thing, the criteria to impeach a judge Uh-huh. Is what immoral conduct or or questionable conduct. It's a very, very broad Well, they do it for impeachment. Yeah. And anything they wanna do it for. Crimes and misdemeanors. And there's no definition of that or constitutional. Well, it it just a not a good character. If I remember right, when I heard it, just that low a standard right there.
[00:50:17] Unknown:
Man, it yeah. Judges there's judges need a lot of them. Need we need to have a reality check here and impeachment and the brutality of it needs to happen real often real often. It's not
[00:50:31] Unknown:
I just wanted to I wanted to ask something. Hold on, Paul. Someone came in and asked about, Sheila Jackson earlier. I think that isn't that her first name? I don't remember. But, anyway, what it is, you know, she is Biden appoint her. Right? Here's the question. Was he operating and he do it, or this is was this this this this pen, assembly thing that anybody could? Now you know about that, Brent. No. They're trying to press that issue and, evidently,
[00:51:00] Unknown:
the the signatory pen. Oh, yeah. Yeah. Yeah. Yeah. Right.
[00:51:04] Unknown:
And they found that every time that it is used, there's gotta be an authorization from who commanded it. And they they don't wanna obviously, they don't wanna show them the authorizations. But could that right there bounce her at little ass off the court? And it could.
[00:51:22] Unknown:
Roger, if Cody's sitting here beside me, he's one of the more intelligent men I've met in life. And he is saying to me while you're talking, what's what's I was a little distracted, but I I you're talking about. So explain the signatory thing. You know the pen? Either go ahead. The pen that they found that was used to sign most of the executive orders and stuff? Oh, auto situation. Auto pen. Auto pen.
[00:51:49] Unknown:
Thank you, Joe. Well, they've gone into it. They've called the gal that did it up in front of congress, and she's like, oh, I don't know. Whatever. But they have found in digging deeper, of course, she doesn't wanna finger these bastards, that when the auto PIN is used, there has to be an authorization that's signed. And they're trying to get to those authorizations, and I don't think they've been able to yet. So the question is, Jackson was under this process. If she was under this process and that wasn't signed by Biden, she's up there illegally.
[00:52:22] Unknown:
Yeah.
[00:52:23] Unknown:
Yeah. No kidding. Well, when the other justice is correct, she need to shut her mouth and she doesn't have a clue what's going on,
[00:52:33] Unknown:
then we do need to be concerned and the congress needs that. And the other one, the one of the other ones, I can't remember which one. There are about three or two or three of them up there. She's evidently almost senile, walking around there and and and and, like, in what going into those mental stages of not not too much acuity. Now, Brent, also, I wanted to add, and I found this through very backdoor. And I don't know if we've ever talked about it on here before. It was out of a a speech by Louis d McFadden. And he was bringing up on the floor of the house how the American Association of Colleges and Law Schools had moved their annual convention in 1933.
They moved it to Chicago on New Year's Eve.
[00:53:19] Unknown:
Okay.
[00:53:20] Unknown:
Alright. And so he got up in the house and and was talking about it. And and because at that convention, a little Jew, as McFadden put it, a little Jew, a a Jacob Frank, I believe, or something Frank, from the Department of Agriculture, got up and gave a speech called experimental jurisprudence and the new deal. Now I I I looked that up, and I was doing shows with Al Attis back then. And I sent it to Al, And he said, Roger, that's the most damning piece of paper I've ever seen put out by the government. Experimental jurisprudence in the New Deal.
So if they have the power to move the annual convention to Chicago on New Year's Eve so that no one would be there to hear this speech? Do you think they have the power? And I know this is a rhetorical question. Do you think they have the power to control the curriculums at law schools? And that's what I think has happened over the last hundred years.
[00:54:23] Unknown:
Well, the the curriculum that I was talking about where they did away with the common law courses began at Harvard. The curriculum changed. And it was done at the behest of the dean of the school who now sets on the Supreme Court of the United States. Now that should be a wake up call to say to us, well, there's something wrong here. They're very, very, very wrong. Very wrong.
[00:54:45] Unknown:
How convenient.
[00:54:47] Unknown:
What's that? Yeah. How convenient. Yeah. The powers that be are doing that. They're they're orchestrating it, and, they got away with it. And it's all bought guard, and they think that they're being innovative and all that. No. They're not. They're dogs returning to their own vomit. And pigs, after you wash them, run them right back to the waller. And the waller is made of manure. Go ahead, Cody. Were,
[00:55:13] Unknown:
administrative courts, so that was part of the new deal. Right? Was that part of that curriculum? Well, we didn't we didn't have agencies until the New Deal in 1933.
[00:55:23] Unknown:
The first, evidently, that that I can find, the very first regulations, Cody, were in the bank holiday in 1933 when, as it says in blacks, the secretary of the treasury closed the banks for five days. And when they, opened up, they were under regulations issued by the secretary of the treasury. Only problem is there was not a secretary of the treasury before March ninth of thirty three. There was a treasurer, but not a secretary of the treasury. And, there were no regulations because there were no administrative things going on. There were no agencies or anything else. I believe those are probably the first regulations issued when they switched the system.
[00:56:02] Unknown:
Yeah. The sit the change was to what we call administrative regulatory law, and Cody and I were talking about this very thing yesterday. Just to give you an example, and I've told him some of my experiences. After I got out of politics, I represented people that were oil producers and oil drillers. And I I found out that no matter what happens in the oil field, and this is what Cody, of course, is interested in, no matter what happens in the oil field, you gotta take your case to the, Department of Mines and Minerals oil and gas division, which is under the authority of the governor. It's not a judicial branch tribunal. It's not a court.
You take it to them, and in that tribunal, the common law rules of evidence, they don't have to apply them if they don't want. And if you appeal from that tribunal because you don't like the decision, you go to a regular court in the county where the state capital is. You gotta travel to the state capital. You can't do it where the oil well is, and that's a violation of our common law tradition because minerals like oil, gas, and coal, and whatever, those are land rights. They're land rights. And it's axiomatic in our common law tradition that land is a local matter and goes to a local court. Now you can't file a deed on a piece of land at the state capital. That's not the way our common law tradition works. Yep. We do that locally. So you have to go up there. And then if you appeal, you can't present any evidence in the circuit court in the state capital county. That's not already a record. Yeah. You gotta do it at the administrative court board. But worse than that, here here here is the real abuse. A criminal
[00:57:46] Unknown:
may only have to pay 10% well, now Illinois, I think, has gotten rid of that, but a criminal may pay 10% bond, for example. They will make me pay a 100% of the fine before I can even appeal it. To the to the to the administrative yeah. No. To a court with a judge that has a black robe. No. No. To the administrative
[00:58:04] Unknown:
court. But also then you by the time you go to the the real court with a black robe, judge, then you he's got all the money. Everything's on their side. Possession is nine Yeah. Nine chance to the water. Yeah. That's the fact of the matter. It's like IRS. They require the same thing. Yeah. Yeah. Well, you look at you know, what the big complaint during the founding was,
[00:58:23] Unknown:
what, pulling them all the way to to England. Okay. That's a little bit worse scenario, but it not much different if the courthouse is thirty minutes away and I have to go three hours up to Springfield. And then it's also not, you know, not just that I have you know, I mean, you're gonna end up wanting to hire an attorney up there, which more likely is in bed with the local politics
[00:58:42] Unknown:
Yeah. Because you don't wanna pay three hours. So something's gotta be done. I was talking to Brent if, you know, maybe it's better to sue in federal courts. Gotta be some kind of a violation here, but, you know, save revolution. Who knows if this will change? Yeah. And I see that. And that's just one example. Oil and gas is one example. But then there's also IRS. Those are administrative courts. That means they're under the authority of the executive branch, the president of The United States or the governor of your state. And by and large, that didn't happen until Roosevelt. And the the Supreme Court of the United States persistently struck down the administrative court idea until this justice Jackson I told you a while ago who was a supporter of Roosevelt, the one that said the problem with the law is in America that, there are no more it's all city law. There's no there's no men going to law school from the countryside who have a different point of view about life. In other words, a productive instead of consumptive idea. There are only two kind of people in the world, Roger. There's the accountable crowd and the unaccountable crowd. K. The unaccountable crowd are the people that work for the government.
Unaccountable? Yeah. When I say unaccountable, they don't produce anything. They take. They take. Everything they get, they take, and they rule. And they're not accountable to those who pay their wages, see. And you can cut it any way you want. You say, well, Brent, you're against all government. Well, listen. I'm not gonna get rid of government. Don't worry about my attitude getting rid of government and anarchy. That's not gonna happen. There are two there are two indispensable functions of government. One is national defense, and the other one is justice in the courts.
And the militia this is our common law tradition. The militia, the militiamen, fills those two duties. Number one, armed defense of the country. Second, that's in defense of the land, and second is defense of the law of the land by serving on the jury. That's the two duties of the militiamen. And that's fundamentally without that mindset, we won't have freedom very long, and productivity will go by the wayside as it is in California,
[01:00:49] Unknown:
the most productive agricultural state in the country Would They're trying to put them out of business. Go ahead, man. Did you hear what happened this morning? Yeah. Hold on, Joe. I wanna ask Brent if he's heard of this morning's news.
[01:01:00] Unknown:
Yeah. We don't. Go ahead.
[01:01:03] Unknown:
The, home ho Homan has, sent in, I don't know how many, Blackhawk helicopters and landed in all the marijuana fields in California. And what have they found there? Underage children, mining the fields. That just broke this morning. That's about all I know. I saw a little video of it, but Homan's going after the marijuana growers in California. So there you go.
[01:01:27] Unknown:
Oh. Sorry, Joe.
[01:01:29] Unknown:
What's that? What's was Joe was Joe gonna say something, Roger? He was, and I just wanted to get that in before I forgot it. So, Joe, go ahead.
[01:01:38] Unknown:
It was it was just a quick comment and support of the common law in The US Of America, that this is one of the few countries in the world that the minerals underlying a parcel of land. Run with the land. Those with run with the land. Now they can be separated and have been separated in many cases, but that's the support of the common law. We're the one of the very few countries in the world that that has that.
[01:02:14] Unknown:
I I think I've told I've told Brent the story in Argentina. I'm that some, you know, a bunch of Anglo what they call Anglo Argentinians down there. Their grandfathers helped build the railroad and the family stayed. One of them was a mining engineer, and he sold dynamite to the mines. And he told me personally that only 17% of the Andes in the Argentine side have been explored because there's no incentive because you got no mineral rights.
[01:02:41] Unknown:
Well, let me let me speaking of South America, which I know you're intimately knowledgeable, Roger, but I wanna ask I'm into I've got a lot. I've been down here sixteen, seventeen years, something like that. Yeah. And I I that's why I wanna I got you and Cody here. I'm gonna ask Cody because his he's involved in mineral production, and his wife is a geologist from Ecuador. And that's how he met her up in North Dakota. She was working up there. But I wanna ask Cody what he knows, if anything, about minerals in Ecuador, who owns the minerals under the ground in Ecuador before they're found?
And then who has them? The government. The government. Yeah. Okay.
[01:03:23] Unknown:
The government is all the way, and then you gotta get permission. Alright. Well Even on gravel and such. Now the gravel's a bit easier to get that concession, but yeah.
[01:03:31] Unknown:
Cody's leaving out a very important element. The Indian tribes say they own that land. And there's a lot of conflict, especially on gold. There's part of the country that's got gold in it and battling with the Indians. Okay? They they illegally bind it. You know? I'm sure the government has to turn a little bit of a blind eye to that. But yeah. Yeah. But in America,
[01:03:53] Unknown:
and this is, an important point of mineral law even around here. When when it comes to oil and gas, the owner it's just like hunting, game. The owner is the one that bags the valuables. Once you bagged oil, it's yours. Right. Given all other things in a lot of Capture, I think, is a legal term. Right? Yeah. That's it. The law of capture. And that's part of our common law tradition that goes back for centuries. Even in England, when it came to wild game before the Normans got there Mhmm. And in fishing. Yeah. Once you capture fish, this is part of our common law tradition. It's the law of I'm glad you said that word. Yeah. That's and that that gets the point real quick. So when you're drilling for oil, it belongs to whoever captures it as long as it's their land. And then there are the questions of oil migration across property. I know you've had those problems you've had to have. And the same thing with following veins of gold or silver, who how far can you follow them? Right. And our common law has dealt with all that and we and coal.
How far we have a place here in, on the Ohio River. The fluoride mines down there were the only place for decades where fluoride was produced, and fluoride is necessary as a flux for the production of steel. And steel in America, of course, was, one of our great, great products, and we couldn't make it without that fluoride. Well, that fluoride mine on the North Side of the Ohio River, they followed that that vein of fluoride under the Ohio River into Kentucky.
[01:05:25] Unknown:
Boom.
[01:05:26] Unknown:
Well, that kicked off that. And quite a ways, by the way. Of course, the fluoride company was mine, and they didn't wanna say anything about it. They knew how far they were. They had to be on the river, had to be in Kentucky. And, so finally, Kentucky found out about it or surmised it, but it went into the courts. And just like in the gold mines in California, the jurisdiction didn't change in the law. Common law has been this way for centuries. Once you find a vein of valuable minerals, you're entitled to file it or follow it to the center of the earth and across the world and under China. Where it'll lead you? But then but then you come to the problem. This is how things can get complicated.
Like, in California, this really happened in the, the 16 to one mine. It's the oldest deep mine gold mine in California. It's still operating, by the way. And I've been down in that mine, and I've been taken to the place where this happened. Okay. Very deep. But two two, miners were following the same vein from opposite directions, and they met. And then the question is, who gets to keep going? See? Whoever started first, probably. Of course. Started first. Well, they the courts this is all common law stuff, and and they just went back to the the 10 binders, the law of, the 10 binders in England, in Cornwall, and it had to do you can go read about the the law of the apex of the of the vein and how that works. Of course, by that time, they're both following they can't apex
[01:06:55] Unknown:
of the vein. What how does that have to do with the law? Well,
[01:06:58] Unknown:
to say first, if they're both following the vein from two different directions, there's no sense in going forward. You you because if you went forward, it's all mined out either way. Yeah. It's expanded. Yeah. So they've met in the middle. But if they come to a if one guy comes to an apex in the vein that's the the larger going up, the vein goes up then comes back down, that apex can serve as a boundary between mineral rights given certain conditions, and that gets more complicated after that. But over the centuries, we've come to prop you know, the minor's courts. Just look get on the Internet and look up minor's courts. You'll find a lot about it. The minor's courts in America and in the in the oil and gas fields too, this really happened.
Those were the courts that were there, for example, in California, Nevada, and some other place in the coal mining regions before any government was there. And they had their own territorial jurisdiction. They empaneled their own courts. They had criminal and noncriminal jurisdiction. And some of those districts, I've been out I worked in, Arizona. Some of those districts are still there. And in Nevada, there's still Jural entities that the government recognizes, the mining districts that the What's that word? Jural? Jural. Jural. Yeah. Jural, j u r l. Jural. Okay. A Jural entity is an entity that has legal significance. For example, a county is a Jural entity. A city that or a a village that's incorporated with the state is a Jural entity.
A water district, if they if they've got a corporation incorporation from the sovereign, the state government, that's a journal entity. And, anything like and the mining districts are now that too in some states, the the old mining states. But here's that brings up another question. And you brought this up yesterday, Cody. Cody, should, Trump be setting aside another quarter of the so so called federal government land for mining and and, timber, and should it be sold off?
[01:08:59] Unknown:
You brought that up. Well, I said, you know, instead of selling it off, let's homestead. Let's be fair and give it away as long as people maintain it like the old homestead laws. You know? There's a lot lot of people in, living paycheck to paycheck right now. What they say, almost 70 of people are, you know.
[01:09:17] Unknown:
Anyway, they'll never do it, but that was a thought. That's not a bad one. I I get the point too. And why I keep saying, like I'd say I think I said last week, what belongs to everybody belongs to nobody, and nobody's gonna take care of it. And nobody has taken care of this land that the feds could claim they own. 70 69 to 70% of the state of Nevada, the feds claim they own that land.
[01:09:38] Unknown:
Yeah. I mean, most people nowadays probably wouldn't be able to take care of more than 10 acres anyway. Yeah. It'd probably be enough for people to do homesteading and have orchards or whatever. But here's the problem. Part of the country. Orchards are good. Yeah. But if the land is not profitable,
[01:09:52] Unknown:
no matter who owns it, they're not gonna take care of it. The reason people take care of land because they can make a profit. Yep. Now I have seen one of the things that wiped us out early on, Roger, are are getting rid of the beaver. The beaver Oh, yeah. Absolutely. Beaver. And the beaver were they they, by the millions of those critters, make the deserts verdant. Mhmm. God made it that way. And now beaver being reintroduced in, arid areas of Nevada, and they're producing because of the dams they make, in these creeks in Ripley. They're producing
[01:10:27] Unknown:
verdant areas. And you can go to the Internet. I've I've followed up on this. Few of the tree tube customers out in Nevada. I kinda wondered because it's pretty arid, and I I didn't look at the map where they're at. Oh, by the way, do you wanna give a plug for your business? Let's plug the tree tube. So I I am now a distributor for, Tree Pro. So if you've got a seedling tree that you wanna protect, not only protect from deer, it's the cheapest way to protect from deer browse, but it'll it's actually a greenhouse for your tree. It's, about a five inch wide tube, and they're in various heights. And it will increase the the rate of growth of probably three times. I would admit. I think it's a simple thing, but it lets the light in. Yeah. And while also protect because around I know around here, the deer will eat young tree. Absolutely. Destroy it. Yep. You can't stop. You can't I mean, I and I learned it the hard way, you know, when I first got into my orchard, and I thought, okay. You know, the the forest is a half a mile away. They won't bother me. Well, shit. That was wrong. You know? I mean, I've got some cherry trees that just won't grow because I didn't protect them last year. And then last fall, I became a distributor, and it's been going really good. A lot of local, hunters, you know, that have big game plots by hundreds of these at a time, and then I'd sell them on Amazon and on our website, furion.com, furi0n.com, furi0n.com.
If anybody, needs them, we'll be happy to help. And we have a a split style that's good for a bushier tree or a big, you know, big tall tree that you wanna protect from, you know, the deer horns, the deer rubbing they call it. And then other critters that tear up trees too. Oh, oaks. And these wild rodents don't break. Yeah. Yeah. And they and they'll just strip tree and kill it. Yeah. And then also I meant Goats. Goats. Yeah. Go ahead. Sorry?
[01:12:15] Unknown:
Joe? They work. They work, and they also prevent, the sun from scalding the trunks on younger trees.
[01:12:24] Unknown:
Yep. Well, thank you, Joe. We use
[01:12:27] Unknown:
we use use them
[01:12:29] Unknown:
Go ahead, Joe.
[01:12:30] Unknown:
For a lot of years, and they worked. Yeah. That's all I had. I just comment that they worked. Thank you. Hey, Jeff. Yeah. Our
[01:12:39] Unknown:
ours are ours are from recycled, milk jug. They're actually industrial industrial recycled, so they've actually never been consumer recycled. But when these these milk plants have misruns, they're not allowed to regrind the plastics being food. So that's that's where the plastic is recycled from that. But then they put a they double up on the UV inhibitors, so we're about a seven to nine year lifespan depending on what part of the maybe even ten, depending on what part of the country you're on with the extra UV, you know, inhibitors. So Question. Check it out if you get you know, don't make a mistake and put some little seedlings in where you got a bunch of deer there. You're just gonna waste years of, production.
[01:13:21] Unknown:
We want boat. How short Go ahead. How short do they come in?
[01:13:26] Unknown:
Yeah. Yeah. Well, we've got them 18 inches, but, honestly, you're gonna you really need a five footer for deer unless you're in, you know, maybe Texas where you've got some small deer you might be able to get by with a 48 incher. You you know. But we've got you know, depending on how you're doing it, some people may wanna upgrade, you know, to to a wire, you know, fence later. You know, if you got an apple tree that's really getting bushed out, so you might, you know, start with the three footer. Just, you know, whatever you want. Test them delight.
[01:13:52] Unknown:
Alright. Test them delayed.
[01:13:54] Unknown:
Yeah. That well, that's kinda what I'm thinking because, one of our, one of our ranch hands, had, broccoli days ago, but doesn't have it anymore because he has deer.
[01:14:09] Unknown:
But the deer you gotta look at it this way. The deer have a less of a cancer risk.
[01:14:14] Unknown:
There you go. Joe, are you still there? Joe? Oh, Joe's here. Yes. I am. Well, Joe, near on the border, I think you're well, Oklahoma, Kansas area down in there. Are are the wild hogs taken over in Oklahoma like they're in Texas?
[01:14:33] Unknown:
We have there's been a few, a very few killed around here, but you can go south, probably 50 miles, 60 miles, and they just have quite a presence. And they are a
[01:14:54] Unknown:
Where's he at?
[01:14:56] Unknown:
Major, major nuisance.
[01:14:58] Unknown:
They're almost a catastrophe.
[01:15:00] Unknown:
Where are you at in Oklahoma? The the North Carolina in the yet?
[01:15:05] Unknown:
The state is far beyond my I've tried to keep people from hunting them and night. Oh, okay. Not hunting them at night is the most, efficient way of taking them out. Yep. Yep. But, they couldn't get the legislature. Nobody could get the legislature to hear the remedy or partial remedy of taking care of the wild hogs until they started getting into the yards and people's houses in Norman or, Edmond, Oklahoma, which is the per capita wealthiest city in the state of Oklahoma. And when they started rooting around, tearing up people's yards up there, there it's open season on them twenty four hours a day, seven days a week.
[01:15:59] Unknown:
Yeah. That's that's interesting. They would have been If I may very few.
[01:16:04] Unknown:
Hold on. I said, Chris, is that Chris wanting to get in here?
[01:16:08] Unknown:
It's Samuel. I just wanted to guide him in and say that you could put all the above at least around here. You could put all the above ground protection you want around a a new planted tree. But if you don't do the root system as well, you're still gonna be disappointed. Because here, the gophers, the voles, the moles, they'll chew up and eat your root system,
[01:16:32] Unknown:
giving you a victory. Did you hear about these marijuana raids out there? Were they around you up in Northern California?
[01:16:40] Unknown:
We've got growers in the area. I haven't heard any helicopters, but, a lot of these guys register with the sheriff's department.
[01:16:47] Unknown:
Uh-huh. Well, I think that's what they are after. I think they are after the renegade ones because these are the ones who are using the child child labor and stuff.
[01:16:55] Unknown:
So okay. Just a minute. Our guys around here are above board, so to speak.
[01:17:00] Unknown:
Yep. We That's saying that's saying stuff out. We gotta have a special prosecutor. Gotta be Tom Fenton.
[01:17:07] Unknown:
Oh, Fenton. What's he doing? I know he's doing some FOIA stuff.
[01:17:12] Unknown:
And then Roger.
[01:17:14] Unknown:
Nobody complained about this. I'm sorry. I just I I thought I was I thought I was muted. Roger. Okay. Who said Roger? I did. He Maxine said Bannon is hitting hard on.
[01:17:26] Unknown:
I'll go away. I'm sorry. I'll No. Go ahead, Joe. What did she say? Joe, go ahead. Go ahead.
[01:17:33] Unknown:
Well, she was listening to Bannon this morning, and he's hitting over two hours worth on the Epstein deal. Oh, yeah. And he said we need to appoint appoint Tom Fenton as the special prosecutor.
[01:17:51] Unknown:
Good. Fat chance on that. I'll tell you who's also kicking up a lot of sand internally on this is the, Leopiloma Luma, that really aggressive little female Yes. From from Florida. And she wants a special prosecutor for Jerry Epstein. She called for it yesterday. She You think you're gonna give it to her? She was on Oh, okay. Maybe program this morning, Max. I said Yep. Okay. We're gonna I think we're gonna appoint Rob Rosenstein as the, special prosecutor. How about that, Joe?
[01:18:21] Unknown:
Well, let's let's talk about something more important than a bunch of pedophiles.
[01:18:26] Unknown:
Let's talk about hog. Well, I had a question. Well, I had a question for Brent. It's got a whole bunch of importance, Brent. I'm just joking, Roger. I just like to talk about pigs, but we can do that. I know. But, man, this this Epstein thing Yeah. It ain't going away, and and it's gonna get bigger and bigger, and they're gonna have to address it. And they can't. They can't. Now somebody was saying Roger alright. Hold on. Somebody was saying Roger, Samuel I would be here first.
[01:18:54] Unknown:
Samuel first. Then Dave.
[01:18:57] Unknown:
Yeah. Brent, I wanted to know if you're familiar with a professor by the name of Jay Smith who talks a lot about Islam and Mohammed.
[01:19:06] Unknown:
No. Uh-uh. I may have heard him, but I don't recall.
[01:19:11] Unknown:
He's been he was originally born. He's an American now, but he was born in India. He's very familiar with Islam. He's been with that culture for forty years. He says I I I I I hate, Islam, and I love the Muslims. He basically is saying in his lectures, they have the evidence that Mohammed, the Quran, and Mecca didn't exist at the time of Mohammed.
[01:19:46] Unknown:
Oh, I yeah. And I have And there's no real proof? Yeah.
[01:19:49] Unknown:
Yeah. You know, come proof proof proof of any of this until really around the the year of January.
[01:19:56] Unknown:
Yeah. No. I now that I think of you're mentioning that that, subject about, the historical lie, I have seen this guy. I have seen. I've listened to him. I've forgotten his name, but now it's coming back to me. I don't know a lot about him, but I have heard him talk, and there seemed to be credibility of what he's saying. I know this. I know this. When it comes to Babylonian religion, that's what Islam is. It's like Romanism, Judaism. When it comes to that, the chief tool of the author of false religion is the lie the lie about who Jesus Christ is. See, Islam lies about who Jesus Christ is. Islam denies the evidence of who he is in favor of a lie. And they like the lie. Yeah. But As Roger points out, their eyes eyes are darkened, and they love the lie.
That's the in the sovereignty of God. Go ahead. You're gonna say something. Go ahead.
[01:20:59] Unknown:
Yeah. He says they actually early on borrowed from the Bible. He's saying that at the time when the name Mohammed was first written down, they didn't have the vowel marks and it actually was taken from a title out of the Old Testament that he said is mentioned, like, 12 times in the Old Testament. What is You take the ball marks off off of Mohammed, you get that title. That was basically a title for somebody like Jesus.
[01:21:33] Unknown:
What what title is that?
[01:21:36] Unknown:
I I've been trying to remember it, and it's killing me. I'll I'll relook at his, lecture, and I'll find out what it is. Okay. But, yes, he's saying that when you take the take the vowel marks, which they didn't have at the time they say he lived, you get this Old Testament title, not Mohammed. It's it's a total different pronunciation.
[01:22:03] Unknown:
Oh. That's one of his evidences. I haven't got a clue what that'd be and can't imagine not have heard of it or not having not heard of it before, but I continue to discover that a lot of things I don't know.
[01:22:17] Unknown:
Yeah. I'll find out. I'm I'm sorry that I don't have that information. I knew it would be important, and I just couldn't come up with it in my mind. I I do need it. I'll I'll
[01:22:26] Unknown:
It's called the Alzheimer's disease. Right. Okay, Dave. Dave. This is coach Dave now. We've given him a title. Coach Dave.
[01:22:38] Unknown:
Hey. Good morning, everybody. So in Michigan here, I got a couple of things, Rogin. Michigan, back probably in 2000 and maybe around o May. My buddy had me up north here in, the Northern Lower Peninsula about Midway Rose City area. We were driving by a, a buck pole. Okay? Those things are pretty tall to hang a buck, you know, from its feet, you know, up at the top of the pole and then, you know, so his rack stays off the ground. Right? There was a there was a a a pig hanging on that pole. And I said, what is that? He goes, that's a that's a wild hog. And it it was 12 feet long if it was 10 feet. I mean, it was huge. He said we had we got open season in Michigan on wild hogs. You know, open season like Joe said, twenty four seven, seven days a week, three sixty five. I had no idea that we had a hog problem in Michigan, but, yeah, they're they're all they're all over the country.
And then another thing, last night on John b Wells Caravan to Midnight, he interviewed this guy. I heard him a couple times on there now. He was an investigative journalist, and, man, he Wells played a video of a murdered victim of Epstein's who said that the body they took out of the prison was Hillary Rodham Clinton's brother.
[01:24:18] Unknown:
Roger. His name is his name is Roger Clinton.
[01:24:23] Unknown:
Yes. Look. No. Roger Rodham.
[01:24:27] Unknown:
Okay. Rodham. Correct.
[01:24:29] Unknown:
Yeah. Rodham. And and, and Epstein walked out the back door of that place and got in a a government, SUV, blacked out window, and, and left. And and she's been murdered. I don't know. But she was one of the victims of Epstein Island, and she was trained, you know, by Epstein to, you know, for these men, when she was a young girl. And, it it is riveting. You should hear this guy talking about, Qatar and the he was there in Qatar, and he left. And and the people there were, like, almost like slaves that worked for, you know, wherever they were. I can't remember all the details of Palace or something. And, Trump was there. And, I'm telling you, this guy damns Trump, man, big time, and he is he is an investigative journalist, and he's got all the freaking locks to the door with the skeletons in them. Every day that goes by, I'm a little more disappointed and disillusioned with mister Trump.
[01:25:37] Unknown:
The obviously, they've got him in the crosshairs on this, on this Epstein thing. They can't go forward. They can't give any kind of details because it's CIA, MI six, and and Mossad altogether. It bring the whole damn thing down. That's why they're having to do this. Brent, I found out some other stuff this week that you really shocked me. His, chief of staff, Susie Wiles. Uh-huh. You know anything about her? No. No. You know that she was the, ran the, BB Netanyahu campaign in Israel in 2020?
[01:26:10] Unknown:
Now who's she work for now? She's Trump's chief of staff. Oh, that gal. Yeah.
[01:26:16] Unknown:
She, was associated with the Likud party. She lived in Israel. There was another piece I forgot, but that came out this week. So, just clearly shows you a little more of the definition there. But this Epstein thing is a big deal. Did you happen to see him try and deflect it the other day in the cabinet meeting there? Uh-huh. Yeah. You you saw that? Oh, no. This guy for. We've been talking about him for years. We got all this other well, the reason they're bringing it up, Trump, is because your base wants answers.
[01:26:51] Unknown:
Okay. I got an idea. If you give them answers, the more you're gonna lose support in for the Republican party as we go. I got an idea, Roger. I got an idea. My comment. Go ahead, Brent. This this is and this is genius. It has to be. You know, this whole pig thing can cut two ways.
[01:27:08] Unknown:
These pigs Where is he going? Well,
[01:27:11] Unknown:
they're already running the Islamic people out of Texas. I've heard that. No people. Yeah. Some Islamic guy move in next door, and the guy will just he'll just start a big hog herd. It doesn't take but a few months.
[01:27:26] Unknown:
It doesn't take It takes for rent. It's gonna be a big business in Texas. Oh, right. Put the treats here. To Texas. Ox for rent.
[01:27:34] Unknown:
Well, big husbandry.
[01:27:37] Unknown:
Let's get let's get to the bottom line here. A gestation of a hog is right at three months, and they'll average anywhere from and I've seen them. We had it happen to us. 23 pigs per litter. They'll average, 10 or 12. The profitability of hogs is big because they produce so rapidly like rats. Right. A a hog, a sow goes into gestation about every three months, and they'll their gestation is three months three months, three weeks, and three days. So they can have two and maybe even three litters a year is enough. How long are you Big letters. Big letters too. And it yeah. And here's the other thing that makes them profitable, and that's why their people grow because they'll get the market weight two twenty in six months. For real? Yeah. For each animal.
Six months. So that so this hog business thing may cut both ways for us in a good way. And although they're an open sea open season on them, the truth is this open season is not putting a dent in the population. Nah. Nah. It's just it's just target practice, and it's fun, but it does produce. Some people like to eat them. So I'm not saying you should eat them, but if you're starving, it's sure it's it's food, and that's that's biblical if you're starving. Well You know what the what the girls are doing in Germany?
[01:28:56] Unknown:
What? I don't know. I think I told you this. What? They're just the pigs are taking them out because they can't go out and would not get raped without them.
[01:29:04] Unknown:
Oh, I see. They got pet pigs. They take around. Exactly.
[01:29:08] Unknown:
So, yeah, it's kind of a new thing. I yeah. Yeah. Oh, so we need to get back to them. We're we're we're behind the ball. We better get news. We should. Yeah. We we pray Well, there's a new business for you, Cody.
[01:29:19] Unknown:
In praise in praise in praise of pigs. God's creatures, even if they're dirty like pigs, they have a use to drive false religion in your land.
[01:29:32] Unknown:
That's just fantastic.
[01:29:34] Unknown:
Instead of notice you notice in The United States, we don't quite have the problem with the Muslim rate gains. Now I don't know if that's, you know, less Muslims or if that's because they know we've got the second amendment a little bit more easy access.
[01:29:49] Unknown:
Well, you've heard Cody. I don't know the answer to that. Paul, you're trying struggling to get in here. What do you got? Yeah. It it is difficult. You gotta struggle you gotta struggle to get into this conversation today.
[01:30:01] Unknown:
K. And I have control of the mute button. What's up with Trident?
[01:30:06] Unknown:
We do that on purpose. Because Dane said a little higher too, I know. Yeah.
[01:30:12] Unknown:
Yeah. Well, I don't know. You know, you gotta get a word in edgewise. Yeah. In Germany, the the the term PP no longer means, Perspomeranian. Now it's Perspiglet.
[01:30:29] Unknown:
Okay. I was wondering, are they carrying grown pigs or these little baby pigs? No. Little baby pigs. Oh,
[01:30:35] Unknown:
those. Oh, good for them. Little baby pigs. They're actually bred. They're bred to be small. They're bred to be Yeah. Yeah. Pets
[01:30:44] Unknown:
and stuff. Yeah. Well, you wanna give somebody a get somebody that looks surprised at you. One time, we were back when I first got married, we were farrowing pigs. And, back then, if you had runts you always had runts and a litter, and the runts, they fight for those for the tip. And if they the little ones, if they're not heavier, they'll get shoved off the end and they'll die. You got 10 or 12 pigs. That's quite a crowd to be nursing. You know? So we'd always take the runts. We clip the the teeth are sharp when they're born. We clip the teeth on all the other ones to eliminate some of that. Then we'd take the runts in the house, and we'd put them in a cardboard box by the stove and feed them with a bottle till they got up heavy enough to compete for milk. And, so we had one. And my missus Brent, I call her, she had, gotten out of nursing school. She knew how to sew sew critters up or I meant, but she was had their sutures, and we'd have problems with them. And she'd take care of them, and she'd nurse them. And then she got you know how girls are. Things have to look nice, so she got a little bonnet to put on one of them.
And then and then she started cutting diapers in half because we had little babies and she started putting diapers on this little pig. This guy had run around the house. They he thought he owned the place. And I'd be laying on the floor trying to rest in front of the stove and he'd come over thinking I was his mother, I suppose, and then he'd start looking for a tit going up and down my legs. You know? Well, finally, we've got in the car. I said she wanted to take we're going to the store. She wanted to take the pig with us. So I said, just reach over there and and hold him in your arms, and we pull up here at the stoplight and, just lift him up so the people beside us can see your little baby.
Yeah. It was fun for a while. But getting back to pigs, where
[01:32:37] Unknown:
Hey, Brent. You know what you know what Jim Ramey used to say? When he bring an animal home, he say, I gotta get it out of here before she names it. If it gets a name, it's face.
[01:32:47] Unknown:
That has well, that's that old mothering instinct, it's good stuff. But, anyway, it's pigs are useful for many things. And one of them is killing rattlesnakes, by the way. I'm trying to think of the good things about them. Killing rattlesnakes, they they're not really bothered by them much. I suppose it has to do with the lard that they carry under their skin. You know? Gets rid of that stuff or stores it till it dissipates. And also, it gets rid of, Islamicist.
[01:33:17] Unknown:
Thank you, Robbie.
[01:33:18] Unknown:
How how many how many litters of pigs do you think? Grant? One second. Hold hold
[01:33:32] Unknown:
hold hold hold hold hold hold hold hold hold hold hold hold hold hold hold hold hold hold hold hold hold hold hold Yeah. Oh, hold on. We'll get you in a second. We go to federal prison, go to federal prison if you do that, but it would be fun to watch. Yeah. Who wants to say something? I don't know. Who yes, sir. Now? Yeah. This is Christian. This is Christian. Hey, Christian. How are you doing, man?
[01:33:58] Unknown:
Oh, man. This is so interesting. I don't even wanna get in Edgewise, but I just wanna ask Brent while they're going by this about his class. I I wanna get in that class, and, I was just wondering how to do that. And if it was I don't have a computer. Is there gonna be any way I can listen to it by some way on a
[01:34:20] Unknown:
Do you have a cell phone, iPhone? Yes. Yes, sir. Okay. Here's my request to you. Go to the website commonlawyer.com commonlawyer.com. Go to the contact button. Email Joy, j o y, and ask her for well, you you gotta you join up the class. Go to the website. Join up the class. Ask her how, to use the cell phone. If you don't know, my guess is it's very simple. Probably, she'll just send you a link, and you can get on your iPhone just like a computer and click on that link, and you'll be able to listen and maybe even watch it. I don't know. It doesn't you don't have to watch it. I'm I'm the guy you would watch because I got the camera on me, but you can listen. And when you do that, Chris Christian, when you do that, you'll support me in what I do, and that's what I want. And I everything that we have there is for a on the website of the books I've written, the my translation of the Bible with the footnotes and all that, and other books about the common law tradition, the right to remain silent, the jury, all the things that are there, the militia clauses of our constitution.
Those are those are sent to people in appreciation of a donation sent to people in appreciation of a donation. Paul made the point or somebody out there teaching that course on trusts, and, he's charging a thousand dollars a pop. And we're not charging that kind of money. We're not charging anything. It's an appreciation of a donation of a certain amount or more. We want people to donate to what we're doing because if you don't, you don't, you miss out on a blessing. And what I mean to say is, if you think that what we're saying is worthwhile and you don't support it, if you don't if you, muzzle the ox that treads out the grain as the Bible says, you miss out on God's benefit. That's what God tells us.
And so I don't I don't say that I don't say that with any hesitation at all. That's what the Bible teaches, and I'm bound to say what the Bible says. But that's up to you. It's not up to me. But if you do that and and Paul can tell you about this or Joy can. If you get 10 or more together or 12 or whatever it is, ask them. It's an appreciation of a much less donation. Let me read what, information I've been sent here just now by, the people that helped me. It doesn't have to be an iPhone, number one. Any cell phone will work. Great. Yeah? Go to commonlawyer.
[01:37:05] Unknown:
Got an Android. Yeah.
[01:37:09] Unknown:
Getting into it. Let him finish, Christian. Yeah. Thanks, Christian. That and that's what, this says here. And go to the end of court page. If you have problems, you wanna say, will this work with that? Please, email from the contact page on commonlawyer.com. Christian, thanks. Hope you can join us.
[01:37:28] Unknown:
Hey, Brent. And not only that, Chris well, yeah. Go ahead.
[01:37:32] Unknown:
Okay. In consideration that he only has an iPhone, there there is, reading assignments. See if you can figure out a a package price for the comparative law course and a hard copy of excellence of the common law. I think that would be much help much helpful in not reading it on a screen five inches tall.
[01:37:59] Unknown:
And that's the comparative context, excellence of the common law, and we're not reading the whole thing. It's 958 pages, but the assignments, this is at the the idea of, Joy, and I she presented it to me, and it's a good idea. I liked it. I said, yeah. Let's do that. The particular chapter, chapter five, we're breaking that down to about a dozen pages or so, per week. Not a lot, but it is a lot because the information is gets right down to the bottom. And I credit other people for what I know and what I've written. I didn't just write this out of the blue. I as I say, my favorite quote is he who never quotes is never quoted.
And so I quote a lot of people, and my everything I know, I got from somebody else. But I repeat it, and then I apply it to my own testimony, my own experiences over the years, and I see that it's true. And it becomes my my testimony of what's true, but at the same time, I'm not the first one to have noticed it. And I don't say it as well as some other people have said it. This is nothing new. None of this is new. I tell people I never say anything new. They're not there has been nothing said that has not been said before, but I do read and I do experience it. I do watch it and all the things that I've learned from the laws of nature, our common law tradition over the decades and the laws of nature's God, the Bible, the more and more I live, the more and more I see those truths that I've known, some of them since I was a boy, played out, and then they become real to me. They become a conviction once I experience them, and, I want that for other people too. Listen.
If your chief purpose in life is to do the will of your father in heaven according to those two volumes, the first unwritten, our common law tradition, and the second written, the Bible. If that's your chief drive in life and if God makes that your driving force, then life becomes not more than tolerable. It becomes enjoyable. And that's what Jesus Christ meant when he said, my my food my food is to do the will, the law. The will of the sovereign is law. My food is to the to do the will of him that sent me. If you'd rather do what god says than eat, and you just eat so you can keep doing what god says you know, some people live to eat and other people eat to live. Mhmm. If you get to the point you eat to live and once life becomes enjoyable.
So I put that out for consideration, but the only way you're gonna do that is to know what he said because the knowing of it, the knowing of what god wants, his law, is the power of the spirit of God, the handle that the spirit of God uses to impel you, impel you. I love that word, impel. That's what happens. That's the way the Bible presents it, to impel you to intrepid deeds. There will be no intrepidity in your life without the word of God in your culture and getting embedded in your mind. When I say intrepid, I mean bold action, not not arrogant action, not domineering action. No. No. No. But bold, innovative action.
There is no other source. That's why the revelation of God is indispensable to the wealth of a nation, the wealth of a people, the wealth of family, the enjoyment of life. Well, back to you, Roger. Thanks. Gosh.
[01:41:25] Unknown:
One one one thing. What
[01:41:27] Unknown:
one thing, sir?
[01:41:30] Unknown:
Is Joyce Joyce email is what?
[01:41:33] Unknown:
No. Go to the contact button.
[01:41:35] Unknown:
The contact button at the website, I can give it. Common lawyer dot com. Go ahead. Go ahead. Somebody said something. Email is
[01:41:46] Unknown:
send the email to nchurch,[email protected], and Joy will get it.
[01:41:54] Unknown:
Okay. If you get that, Christian, in church, that's two n's, I n n, church at common lawyer dot com. Okay? And anybody else in the office? Okay. Christian, do we get you there? Yes, sir. Thank you so much. God bless. Well, listen. Once you get in, there's a whole bunch of other series that he's done over, lord knows how many years now, but, really, a lot of things you very well may be interested in. Okay? Almost a year of of lessons on the Magna Carta. Alright? And and and, the militia with sheriff Darr and, there's a lot of other series on there that very well might interest you. Okay, Christian?
[01:42:35] Unknown:
And others. Hello. Thank you so much. Much. Hello. This is Chris in California.
[01:42:39] Unknown:
I knew you were trying to get in there. Hey, Chris.
[01:42:44] Unknown:
Yeah. Well, I wanna take this course, coming up. Well, I I haven't looked on on the website yet. I've been going through a lot of stuff. You know? But, is this gonna be, like, every day of the week at a specific time on online?
[01:43:00] Unknown:
All that information is on the website. I'll repeat it here as well. I'll repeat it here as well, though. Thank you for asking. It's 08:00 California time on Thursday mornings. Okay. 08:00 California time, you're in Palmdale, apparently. Yes. Oh, yeah. Yep. Uh-huh. And so that would be 10:00 central, 09:00 mountain, and that would be 11:00 Eastern. And then you can extrapolate it out from there to, England and Britain and The Netherlands and South Africa and Australia and New Zealand. I'd have to go look to see what it is there. Alaska, of course, and Hawaii.
But we want you to come. You know, there's a there's a rejuvenation of our common law tradition in the place where our common law tradition, as far as we can tell, appears to have arisen, or at least it's the first place we see it in any meaningful way, and that's in the among the tribes on the North Of Europe in the North Of Europe. There's a rejuvenation of interest in it. I have a friend. He's retired now. He's a professor in Boston, a law professor at the law school, and he's a strong proponent of our common law tradition. And every summer for years, he went to Germany and taught the common law, and they're interested to know. The Americans don't seem that interested, he said.
But he realizes how important it is to the perpetuation of our our our lifestyle, our thinking. Our common law is not a list of laws. It is a way of life. A way of life that governs every life and govern it will govern your life because Jesus Christ said, I am the way. He didn't say I'm a list of laws. It's a course you get on, the course of our common law, the course of due process. That's what it is. Back to you, Roger.
[01:45:01] Unknown:
Wow. Well, I just Chris, I get your question answered? Oh, I'll get you. I forgot. I forgot. Oh, Chris. On that a bit. I'll I'll go to the website and, get it going. Okay. Thank you, sir. I just wanna make sure you get your question answered. Okay?
[01:45:17] Unknown:
I got a connection. We got we're a little bit busy because, on the July 3, I got out of the hospital. Yeah. You know, from You're right. From getting t boned. Yep. And then on the July 4, a third of my house burned out.
[01:45:35] Unknown:
So, well, happy Independence Day.
[01:45:38] Unknown:
Jesus. It's okay.
[01:45:40] Unknown:
I know. It's alright. It's, it'll work out. You're just like We don't have any insurance, but we'll do it. Okay. Well, I just like me getting kicked out of this bunch here. Well, it's it's it's to be in. That's Spanish for it's okay. K? I don't wanna be where I'm not wanted. And and and if they don't want me, it's not I'm not all of them. It's just a small little group of hyenas that don't know their they well, they don't have a love of the truth. That's exactly it. So I'll I'll go on and everything will be alright. You know? But, it's their loss and, they'll suffer. We're all where we are because of choices we've made, doctor Laura Schlessinger. I totally have found that to be 100%
[01:46:20] Unknown:
true. Hey, Roges. We're all where we are
[01:46:23] Unknown:
because of choices we have made. It's the government
[01:46:27] Unknown:
we deserve.
[01:46:28] Unknown:
Yeah. Yeah. Yeah. Absolutely. They're letting them sneak in here in Hoodwink because although they've done a real good job at it, they're they're they're the best in the world and in history at deceit. You heard it from Cicero a hundred years before Christ, just today in that quote. Yes, Paul.
[01:46:45] Unknown:
A couple of things. Chris, anybody that wants to take that course, I am not able to sit in on the course when it's live because, of course, it the course is exactly opposite the Radio Ranch program on Thursday. Right. But, I checked my email this morning, and the course materials were there. They the supporting, materials, the copy of the book, and all this all this stuff, plus the link to the episode yesterday was right there. So, last night, I started watching it at, like, midnight, and I said, no. There's no way I can get through this midnight. So I went to bed, and I woke up at 06:00 this morning, and I dove right into it before my coffee was even done. So, if you don't have the the ability to do it live, you will get the canned materials, as early as a day later, and you'll be able to hit the ground running that way.
[01:47:52] Unknown:
So Okay, Paul. Paul, thank you for bringing that up. And we didn't plan this, but it's nice of all of you and, Paul, especially because you've been listening that I I think it's important or I wouldn't be doing it. I'm I'm a patriot. I wanna get this information out. But, Paul, tell me your impression, if you would, of sheriff Darr's contribution to what we're saying. I've always thought that his contribution was indispensable, and he's kind enough to come on. He's a sheriff, been a sheriff for over twenty years up in Michigan. Is there anything anything that he did that helped there in that presentation?
[01:48:31] Unknown:
Well, the only thing I can say about sheriff Darr is some of the things that he said. He is, the quintessential is that the right word that I'm looking for? The quintessential law enforcement, officer because, he can enforce the law without denying the rights of the people. He he gave an example on the first episode. You know, if if he runs a it it is his job to guide people in following the law. And in doing so, one of the ways he likes to do it is if he, comes across a speeding teenager, instead of giving the kid a ticket, what he'll do is he'll give him his business card and instruct that teenager that if sheriff Darr does not receive a phone call from one of his parents within twenty four or forty eight hours, that sheriff Darr will show up on his doorstep and will write him a ticket in front of his parents.
[01:49:44] Unknown:
And he's fantastic.
[01:49:45] Unknown:
And he has gotten so many so many, thank yous from the parents of young drivers saying, you know, we know you don't work for the insurance companies, but thank you so much for protecting my insurance rates and keeping them from going up because my son was stupid. Yeah. He don't work for the insurance company.
[01:50:05] Unknown:
And I he said that. Thank you, Paul. He said that in response to my question. I said, sheriff Dyer, you've been a sheriff for over twenty years. Tell us about how you've learned to finely tune your ability to enforce law. And that was one of the examples he gave, and I'll bet there's a 100 others that he could give to. But that was invaluable to me too, and it's that's the attitude we need. He it's a Discretion. Discretion. Yeah. He and that's the point we made in this course on the sheriff, and he helped me with that. A law enforcement officer, a police officer has no discretion.
The law binds an administrative officer. He's part of the administrative state. The law binds him to enforce transgressions of the letter of the law. But a sheriff is not under that same duty in our common law tradition. He is bound to exercise discretion how and whether he wants to, enforce a crossing of the law's line. And I having been a prosecutor for a brief period of time in a rural county back home, one of my mentors, an old fellow that's gone now, he said, Brent, don't ever forget that when you're there, that you can, have just as much effect in some cases by not enforcing the law directly as you in other words, by not bringing a criminal accusation as you can in bringing a criminal accusation.
And you have to try it. He said you say to somebody, well, I'm not gonna bring a criminal accusation. A prosecutor has discretion too. See? Discretion's an important part of freedom. You don't they don't have that in other countries. That's part of our common law tradition is discretion. But the of the government. But if you say to somebody, I'm not gonna prosecute you for what just happened if nobody got hurt. You know? But if it happens again, I probably will. And by doing that, I discovered it is true, people will learn the lesson sometimes, not always. But why not give them? And, we had judges at home that would say that constantly.
I'm gonna I'm gonna gonna give you a second chance on this one. I'm not gonna carry this through. And sometimes the the message comes home because it was a close call to jail. Well, those are the kinds of things. Not always true, but sometimes is. But sheriff Dara's worked for over twenty years. No wonder. No wonder. He keeps getting reelected. See?
[01:52:28] Unknown:
Yeah. Absolutely.
[01:52:30] Unknown:
Because like it is. Okay. So to answer your question Can I make a comment about sheriff Darr? Once one second. To to answer your question, everything that he added, had value. He didn't add something every time that you called on him. Yeah. But what he did add absolutely had value and worked to clarify what you had said earlier or reinforce what you had said earlier.
[01:52:58] Unknown:
So that's that's that's to do it doesn't mean that Sheriff Gard doesn't have problems. It means that he's right headed. He's going down the right road in the right direction. I'm sure he's making mistakes as he goes. I I don't that's part of the human condition. But, go ahead. Somebody Are the are the trio of witches still after him up there? Oh, yeah. Oh, yeah. Yeah. But he's, he's proven to be, unprosecutable so far, uninvited.
[01:53:30] Unknown:
I I would think he's got Teflon all over him.
[01:53:33] Unknown:
Yeah.
[01:53:34] Unknown:
Yeah. Might I suggest that you guys get an apprentice for him, you know? You start opening it up to some other sheriffs that either knows or whatever just to kinda Not a bad idea. To spread and get these other guys listening in and make
[01:53:50] Unknown:
educate them a little bit. Cody, we got a guy right here from Michigan that might could could help in a Blatt, Dave?
[01:53:57] Unknown:
Yes, sir. Dave and the thumb here. I'm I live on the opposite side of the state of, sheriff Darris County, But I gotta tell you, he is the longest elected sheriff in in Michigan history. And, I've never met him, but I know of him through our Michigan assembly. And there's guys in our assembly that, you know, are they maybe might be considered anarchists, but they've worked with him and, and kinda taught him, you know, because he wasn't always there with this common law stuff. And some of our guys have worked with him for a long time and and, brought him around to that side of the of the equation. And, he is a great guy, and the people love him. So If you find somebody that might be a printer,
[01:54:49] Unknown:
candidate, shove them over there, Dave. Shove them that way.
[01:54:53] Unknown:
Absolutely.
[01:54:55] Unknown:
Dave, when you say your guys, what do you mean? What some kind of a law group, militia group? What do you mean?
[01:55:02] Unknown:
Well, we have an assembly of men and women. We call it a a journal assembly. And, these guys it started in 2010 where, three men, one of them was a navy seal, a colonel, and, the other guys were just law guys, you know, not lawyers, but they one guy, Joe Belton, he's the only one left. They're all dead. But Joe Belton actually taught law to lawyers, corporate law. He is he is brilliant. And what they did was they figured out that when in in, 1861, when the South got up and left, the Congress, they did not they went sign die, and they didn't reconvene, you know, with a date.
And so everything that happened after that date was, you know, really null and void. And these guys reconvened the the government and, you know, we hold, you know, elections and seats, in the, you know, side of the government waiting for the rest of the states to come along and do the same thing. And, you know, anyway, they they've been working with sheriff Darr for a long time. I don't know exactly when they they met up with him, probably sometime soon after that start in 2010.
[01:56:31] Unknown:
You're doing the same thing John Ainsworth did in North Carolina. You formed, he formed North Carolina State. Instead of the state of North Carolina, it was going Brent for twenty years or more. Yep. They elected he was secretary of state. They elected all their officials and did all the stuff officially. And to my knowledge, never had any backlash from North Carolina about it. So that sounds basically what, like, you guys are doing, Dave.
[01:56:57] Unknown:
Yeah. Hey, Raj. Yep.
[01:56:59] Unknown:
Yes. Paul? Yes.
[01:57:01] Unknown:
We've got about three minutes to, to the Whistler. So I'm gonna talk about commonlawyer.com and Brent Allen Winters. Check out the comparative law course. Go to commonlawyer.com and look at all of the courses that he's got in the can and the stuff that he's planned and and the books that he's written. It's, it's an absolute must. Go to commonlawyer.com. And, also, catch Brent here with Roger on the Radio Ranch every Friday. They've only missed a few due to unforeseen circumstances many years. Catch Brent Winters and Roger Sales here on the Radio Ranch, Fridays, from 11AM eastern to 1PM eastern, if not longer. That is Brent Allen Winters and commonlawyer.com. Go there. Check out the comparative law course. I've only taken one class, and I intend to take every one of the rest of them. So take it from me.
Thanks.
[01:58:05] Unknown:
Oh, also, I'd like to say that if you don't have a church home, you might want to pop over to the website and to follow the directions to the two hours that Francine and Brent do to Sunday from, well, I guess now it's ten to twelve. You know, my time zone's changed. So and, anyway, it's in the morning. Everything will be there. And, delightful service. You get Brent's stories and all that kind of stuff and, going through the bible on Saturdays or, so Brent's very active. He's quite prolific, and, I don't know how the man sleeps.
[01:58:39] Unknown:
Yeah. If if I if I might add, I would encourage everybody to go listen to Lysander Spooner, The Constitution of No Authority. It make you think. Yeah. I will listen to that. Just listen to it. It gets a little long. It kinda repeats in different eloquent ways. But,
[01:58:58] Unknown:
anyway, we really quite a guy, Lysander Spooner.
[01:59:01] Unknown:
Yeah. And his and by the way, his breaking down of the words of Magna Carta, about the jury, trial by jury are indispensable. Back to you, Roger, and thank you, Paul, and thank you all the ones that commented. It's all makes it, we're all richer for all the comments you're making. Man, what a what a really, really good
[01:59:26] Unknown:
good conversational show today, the whole way through on important subjects and topics with multi people weighing in. Thank all of you for the contributions. And Brent, as always, I I've come to the conclusion you can't do a bad radio show with Brent Winters. I don't I don't think it's possible. K? So, anyway, always, we we we love you and we look forward to these days and so does the audience. And Brent will look for you and Franny next, next Friday, I guess. We'll see what happens in the next couple of days, man. There's so many important things flying around. So, I know you don't you spend your time on other things, not catching up and keeping up with that, but next Friday, we'll fill you in on what you missed. Okay?
So Okay, Roger. This is Jerry Epstein thing is is really a problem for them.
[02:00:19] Unknown:
K?
[02:00:20] Unknown:
And they can't get rid of it. Here's the Jews backing themselves into a corner. They're in a corner right now. K? And, so if anybody isn't aware, you just ask them. Do you believe Jerry Epstein didn't have any clients? A client list wasn't involved in espionage and there was absolutely no blackmailer.
[02:00:41] Unknown:
In jail, but they're gonna You really think that?
[02:00:44] Unknown:
If you do, I don't want I I see you later. You're either lying or settled, totally naive. I don't wanna have anything to do with you. K? So that's a good card for us. Thank you, Brent. Thank you, Franny. Thank you all. Have a great day. God bless you. Cody, great to see you, man. Thanks. We're gonna go eat barbecue, Roger. I think you should, and I'm gonna be jealous as heck.
[02:01:08] Unknown:
Brisket, Roger. Brisket.
[02:01:10] Unknown:
Oh, please. You're killing me. Compliment Bring me some down, Cody, whenever the hell you and Suzanne are coming. So, we'll see y'all go go fill your belly, and thank you so much. Thanks for those things, Cody. Keep Thank you, guys. Keep feeding them to me. We will do it. Thanks, Roger. Alright, buddy. There they go. Off to a barbecue on Sajellis. I can't I got an idea that Paul kinda touched on with the with the pigs
[02:01:39] Unknown:
in Washington DC, and Brent said, we'll go to prison. But, you know, I think I got a way around that. We could, get some stunt drivers, you know, driving these, cattle pod four hogs, in semi trucks at in in DC and all these, Mohammedan strongholds all over the country and, have some jackknife rollovers and release the hogs. What do you think? It's all accident.
[02:02:11] Unknown:
What do you think would happen if you took that idea full of these little hogs and go let them all loose in Dearborn, Michigan?
[02:02:20] Unknown:
Well, I don't think I oh, boy. I don't think we're gonna have to plan this. I think in the providence of God, it's happening like I would have never guessed it would happen. Hogs are everywhere according to the testimony we've received today from Michigan, cleaned down to Texas, California, and in the Eastern Southeastern states as well.
[02:02:42] Unknown:
Well, they got a big deal north, out by where our buddy Jeff lives, North of Dallas, Fort Worth. They they got some huge nationwide thing where they bought the land, and they're trying to make it a nationwide mosque and all that stuff. And it's very controversial, and I don't keep up with it, but I know what's going on. Well and they're having by the way, the this,
[02:03:04] Unknown:
problem with hogs is just as bad in South America as it is here. But, of course, the problem comes with it. They're destroying crops. In South America, they've they've, come up with some really innovative ways to stop them from destroying their crops. If we could do that yeah. If we could and they have down there, we could use some of their ideas, I think. We because they're growing soybeans, down there like mad too. Yeah. Oh, you're talking probably about further south than where I am. I think it'd be Argentina.
[02:03:29] Unknown:
Argentina is almost all soybeans where the pompas used to be. True. True enough. Or the most European country in the world is Argentina. You tell me. It is. Europe will never be Europe again, and Argentina is about the the the last place.
[02:03:45] Unknown:
Yeah.
[02:03:46] Unknown:
Well, thank you all for Alright. You guys go get some of that good brisket, man. You're just killing me. Well, think of you, Roger. Alright. There was somebody that had a question for Brent.
[02:03:58] Unknown:
Yeah. Question about ecclesiastical trust versus, common law trust.
[02:04:03] Unknown:
Brent, are you still there? What? Yeah. I'm here. Okay. All trusts all trusts, like all false religions, are fundamentally the same, whether it's put to an ecclesiastic purpose or a non ecclesiastic purpose, whatever purpose, asset protection, substitute for probate, all of them are fundamentally the same. And what I notice people miss is they get into all the differences, this kinda trust that, but hardly does anybody say, now wait a minute. This is what a trust is. It has three fundamentals. If it doesn't have these three fundamentals, these three words of certainty as our common law says, well, I don't care what it looks like and how fancy it looks and how many pages it has. You don't have a trust. The first thing I do when I get a trust documented, I just look I just take all those paper people send me, and I look for those three things. If I can't find those three things, I just send them back and say, you don't even have a trust. You paid a lot of money for nothing.
And that often happens. And there are a lot of trust promoters out there that are making more money than I ever thought of making. People won't pay a lawyer to do a trust, but they'll pay a promoter who tells them that tells them a lot of lies. I've seen that a lot. And I've defended people in federal court, dozens, by the way, and and that are before the grand jury that had trust that weren't trust at all and were being prosecuted because they misused what they had. It's too bad. It's too bad, but that's what happens. Everybody's grown up, makes their own decisions, but all I can do is give you my testimony.
And I've helped people that have been robbed by these trust promoters. Many of them are talking about common law trust, patriotic trust, ecclesiastic trust, blah blah blah, ad infinitum ad nauseam. It just come down to simple fundamentals. Now I understand also that I've talked to a lot of lawyers and judges. Most of them don't have a clue about trust. Some do. And a lawyer won't know much about a trust unless he's making money with one, then he'll have reason to try to understand it. But most people don't do trust work. Some do. Some understand it. Yes. But judges often don't, but they can learn. And that's why lawyers are in court is to help the judge. That's why they're there, to help them the judge and help their client. You help the judge by informing him of what the law is. There's no way he's gonna know it all. That'd be like having a doctor that knows everything about medicine. That's impossible. Of course, it's impossible. That's why they focus on different things. Well, lawyers are that way too. But a trust is a trust is a trust.
It's a common law arrangement. It's not an entity. It's not a corporate entity. No. No. It's a common law arrangement of persons and property, as Maitland says, the most fruitful the most fruitful product of the wedding of law and equity together under law. What is law? That's short for our common law. What a it doesn't exist anywhere in the world but in common law countries. The rest of South America, Europe, the communist have never recognized what we have in our common law tradition called the trust. Only in the English speaking countries, of which there are very few, oh, people speak English, but I'm talking about England, Ireland, Wales, Cornwall, Scotland, Canada, United States, New Zealand, Australia, Tasmania, and the Cook Islands.
Make it simple. England and her colonies and former colonies, they're not that many, but that's where the trust is recognized. And the rest of the world is under the code of Justinian in its various forms, including Islamic countries, although they don't have the written code the written code, they're Babylonian, and they follow the fundamentals of that code. And that's what we're talking about in this course. How do you know the difference? And if you don't know the difference, and most people don't, then you don't know what you're defending. What are you defending here in America? You're defending our way of life on the land the lord our god has given us in trust. He has entrusted it to us under the terms of a common law trust, and that's what the bible is. It is everything in it is about land, and everything's about the entrusted property and the arrangement god has made, and the three certainties of the common law trust are there and played out in tremendous detail in the Bible.
This is Brent Allen at common lawyer dot com. Go to the website and join us. Go ahead, Paul. Was that you, Paul?
[02:08:20] Unknown:
Yes. And, I do wanna promote one more time the, Radio Ranch Trust Group. Send an email to me, p g b I e n e r. It's pg,uh,[email protected] with the word trust in the subject line, and I will put you on the list. And I'll be sending out a bulk email to everyone with instructions on how to go to commonlawyer.com and sign up for the trust as part of the group. Now I've got a couple of questions for Brent on trust. I know somebody that has, property, and, they're having a little difficulty with their children, and they want to set up a trust for their property so the beneficiaries are the grandchildren.
So first question is, can there be multiple beneficiaries? And second of all, in the successor trustee, can, would it be safe or not so safe to have one of her children named as a successor trustee in the event that something happens to her?
[02:09:35] Unknown:
The answer is correct. As and I'm not speaking any particular instance, but just to say, yes. That's the beauty of a trust. It's not under the constraints of the government. It's not a corporate entity. Oh, it's under the cons yes. It's under constraints of law. Our common law dictates what you can do and not do, and it's very clear. And the body of law we have about trust is centuries old. And in each state now, there's a body of law in in The United States with the exception of Louisiana. Louisiana doesn't recognize the trust like Quebec and Canada doesn't recognize the trust because these are not common law jurisdictions. They have their what they call under the Roman civil law, the Code of Justinian, they have what they call the canon laws, the fide commissum, the commission of trust. But it's not a common law trust. It's a different arrangement. It has to do with passing property, but not the trust.
So you all those things you're mentioning, in general, not speaking to any I'm not giving legal advice. That's what I'm trying to say. Not speaking to any particular situation, but all those things can be drafted into the document, plus more things than I could talk to and talk about and two to in a trust course. That's why it's sometimes good. Oh, the developments have gotten better for the trust in America, and the separate jurisdictions of our our our separate states. Yeah. The answer to those questions is in general, yes. Well, thank you.
Okay. Can I get a quick question in for Brent?
[02:11:05] Unknown:
Go ahead.
[02:11:08] Unknown:
Okay. Brent, as far as I know, there's no constitutional requirements whatsoever for Supreme Court judges. Our question is, are there any actual educational requirements other than maybe a bar membership for any judge's position in America? No. There's no there's not even a requirement that you'd be a lawyer or be educated as a lawyer. There's no requirement you have any formal education. There's no requirement that you, have practiced law. There's no requirement that you went to an Ivy League school. There's none of that. No. No. The president of The United States has authority to nominate whoever he wants. I've worked for a I work for a professor, and I was in law school that had when he got out of Cornell Law School, he went to an Ivy League school. When he got out, he, got a clerkship, which is a coveted position for a federal judge. Mhmm. This federal judge was a federal judge in New Mexico.
He had never been to college. He had never been to law school. He had never practiced law. He had never had a law license. And he was a federal judge. Harry Truman had appointed him. The guy told me he did a good job. He said he got all of his laws from all of his law on cases from corpus juris sugundum. Of course, he depended heavily on his clerks. He understood everything he could. He knew what the common sense of the matter was, and he'd tell them how he wanted them to rule. Because our constitution of The United States does not give those kind of qualifications for judges, at the trial level, the appellate level, or the Supreme Court of the United States.
The our in our common law tradition, lawyers are privately governed, not by the government. Mhmm. In our common law tradition, lawyers are privately governed. That's what they call the bar association, for example. They're it's a self governing group. It's historically, at common law, there were three professions. Three. Well, what's the definition of a profession? It's a self governing group. There was medicine law and military service, and those three are still substantially self governing groups. And there are they subject to other laws? Well, yes. Personally, they're subject to other laws. But as to the practice of law or the practice of medicine or the you go to you get court martialed in the military, they don't just invite people come in from the outside that aren't military men to sit in judgment of the court martial. No. They're self governing. That's that's the way it is with lawyers. They're self governed by lawyers. And any deviation from that, by the way, is going to destroy our common law tradition for many reasons. You can read about it in the book. These things have developed over centuries. Our common law tradition started in England in in its present form. It's always been around. But lawyers, what we call common lawyers, they began because the William the Conqueror, when he conquered England, began to appoint Roman priests from France as judges in England.
Well, a Roman priest is a a lawyer of the canon civil laws of Rome. That's what he is. The bible is not his final rule. His final rule is the code of Justin input to an ecclesiastic purpose, called the canon law, same as the civil law. We call it canon civil laws, law of the city. It's all the same, the mother city of Rome. Well, he was putting them in positions of power. And finally, people in the Saxons, especially, they were conquered by the Normans. They said, good grief. If we don't do something to change this, we're gonna lose our common law. And so they formed private secret organizations of men who could speak both the Norman French and the Anglo Saxon tongue, English.
And they would go into court and argue for the Saxons who couldn't speak the Norman French of these French judges, and you had to speak it or they couldn't understand what you were saying. So it all happened because Saxons, Anglo Saxons, and Anglo Danes, the Danes were part of that, the Vikings that invaded England, they said, we want to, pervert, serve our common law tradition, right to trial by jury, the militia of our common law, the right to remain silent, the right to freedom of speech, all of those things are ancient. The militia, very important part of that, and the the jury being one of the functions of the militia, the grand jury and also the trial jury.
So they said, we gotta do something. So they began doing that because they could speak both tongues. And even when you go into court today, it's fascinating in, in, in America. We use a lot of words that are Norman French words like petition, de jure, de facto. Those are all Norman French words from the French tongue that are Latin based. There are there are dozens of them. Look at my the book, Common Excellence of the Common Law. I've got a whole chapter on Norman French and all these words that we love to mispronounce as American lawyers. They love to mispronounce it, but take particular delight in mispronouncing French words, but we know what they mean. I'm learning more all the time, but we use those because that's what the Roman judges, the Roman priest, they ended up encasing our common law tradition. The word parliament is a Norman French word, parlay, French word, a place where people discuss things, parliament.
So that that's very much that's how the French crept into our language, but that's how our common law tradition started, and that was done privately. The the people that were bilingual like that, they did that privately. And then they formed private ends of court to train common lawyers, to train men in the common law so they could also and they became very powerful. And today, even in England, you can't practice law in the courts unless you're a graduate of one of those ends of court. That's the way it is. And that tradition with different terminology has come to America. Bar associations, as much as people hate them, and I see why they do. For example, the American Bar Association is dead on arrival.
Less than 14% of lawyers belong to the American Bar Association, the ABA. Why? Because they're left wing wackos. You go look at their, who runs them, it's all there are no it's not a cross section of America. Let's put it that way. Yeah. Yeah. And it's it's not a cross section of between men and women. It's run by women. And it's just not what it there's no dignity in it. It's all that's gone. So the bar associations aren't, aren't powerful. I have said well, I have no sense saying that. I there's a million things I could say, but just say this. For all the complaints that people have about lawyers, many of them are deserved. Yes. But without that, without the common law tradition, the private practice of law, we'd be in a hellish mess, a hellish mess. Worse, as bad as it is, the rest of the world still thinks we look pretty good and they're still trying to get here. Yeah. And we are better off. There's no question because of our common law tradition. Go ahead, Roger. No. I'm just agreeing with you, Brent. One more thing.
Brent, when you say that most important attribute a judge can have would be not necessarily a knowledge of law, but in acute sense of right and wrong. Well, that's one way of putting it. But, no, I wouldn't say that. I'll tell you why. Because your sense of right and wrong, my sense of right and wrong, my life has taught me that in our flesh, our sense of right and wrong in 80% of the cases is the opposite of what the Bible says. I've seen that over and over and over. That's not it. No. No. No. There's an enlightenment that comes with this, but the two requirements of a judge, a magistrate, an office holder, but a judge we're talking about in America, Magna Carta, whose chief drafter was Stephen Langton.
Stephen Langton was the foremost Old Testament commentator of his day. That was back in the December. He was a biblicist to the nth degree. He's the man that gave us our chapter divisions to our Bibles that we still use today. He's the one that drafted Magna Carta, the chief drafter. And he drafted in Magna Carta the conditions, the requirements of being a judge in our common law tradition. Number one, that you know the law. Well, what does that mean? That didn't mean you know about the law. That means you know it. There's a difference between knowing about a woman you're courting and knowing her when you get her behind closed doors for a number of years. Now you know her. And then it's a lifetime process to get to know a woman as you men know, to get to know her. And you don't know about her anymore. You know her. I know missus Brent. I know her. And I'll tell her what she's gonna do next because I know her so well. And she tells me, by the way, what I'm gonna do next because I see the patterns. She sees the patterns.
We operate like two men in a three legged race. We used to have three legged races when I was growing up. You do that, Roger? Yeah. I've seen it. Well, you get together. It's like putting each man puts his foot in we used to put him in our feet in gunnysacks. You put your left foot in or your no. Yeah. You put your left foot in. I put my right foot in. We put our hands on each other's shoulders, and then we race. My brother and I would win all those races. I don't know why. We get a rhythm going where we were in step, and we just smoke down through the down through the the clover field, and other people will be left behind. But most people fall down or you tie your legs together. You can do that. That's what it means to know the other fellow. Well, to know the common law, this is no small thing because the, after the ends of court were formed, the lawyers, the common lawyers called themselves slaves slaves of the law.
They were enslaved to the law. They're not enslaved to the government. They're not enslaved to the court. They're not enslaved to anything. Their lives are enslaved to what? Our common law tradition, true law. And the Bible is the court of last resort was for them the court of last resort to the common law tradition from whose decision there is no appeal. They knew both. I've read extensively, and I've got chapters in my book about it. I'm just giving you my testimony of what I've discovered about them. I do not know anything except what I've read or what somebody's told me or what I've seen to back it up and the law. It should be the law should be the dominating force, the true law of every man's life. And that's why Blackstone he says that in the beginning of his commentaries.
I take the same position. I think he's right. I'm quoting him. You see? He who never quotes is never quoted. I'm quoting him. That's his testimony. I'm I'm quoting Jesus Christ. That's his testimony. Well, I think that's a good idea. And there's no higher calling, and there is no greater calling to a man that he know the law. Number two, that's the number one that's requirement. The number two requirement Magna Carta gives us or observes. It it just observes it and hands it over. That's what our common law is, is an observation of the way things are, and they are not going to change. That's what law is.
The second requirement is that you mean to observe it well. I'm quoting Magna Carta. Here I go quoting again that you know the law, Magna Carta, not know about it, know it. Second, that you mean to observe it well. There are a lot of folk that know about the law and they know a lot, but they don't know it. How do you know the law? I'll tell you. There's only one way to know the true law. You first learn about it, and then you do it. And then you practice it. You obey it year after year after year in different circumstances and situations and different applications of that same first principle. Then you know it. You know it better and better and better. Go ahead. Somebody said something.
[02:22:40] Unknown:
Thank you, brother. The first thing that, God commanded when he appointed a king of Israel was to know the law and carry out his justice.
[02:22:51] Unknown:
Good point. And this way you start doing that, and according to the same thing you said about the kings of Israel, their first job was to copy out copy out all the written revelation of God that they had at that time. Copy it out by hand, and that's the copy that the king was to use for the rest of his life. And that was the motivation, by the way, for the winterized translation of the Bible. I wanted to write it down myself, the whole thing. So I would know it. That's the first step to know it, to know about it rather. And the second step is then to know it. How do you do that? By obeying it. You can't know a woman. You can't know a woman unless you obey the law of the woman. You're never going to have children unless you figure out what she requires so you can seduce her into that into doing that.
Men, that's reality. That's law. You can't just go to a woman, do anything you want, not be nice to her and expect her to bury your children. You gotta follow the law of the woman. She who must be obeyed obeyed. But what they thought that that that Saw the BBC that BBC that BBC, series called, Grumple and that lawyer, and he he called his wife,
[02:24:10] Unknown:
she who must be obeyed. Yeah. I had a neighbor that did that too. He was a kid.
[02:24:15] Unknown:
Well, that's the way it is with the law, and the law becomes your soulmate. Is there there's not any, as I said, not any higher calling, but to know the law and the only way to do it, first, you gotta know about it. You gotta learn it. Second, you will and God will impale you. If you know about it, get it in your brain. He will impale you to do it. That's the kind of things we talk about. So please come and join us. You wanna be part of the solution, not part of the problem. That's what you need to do. Yep. Yep. Yep. Rick, I wanted to ask. Did I
[02:24:44] Unknown:
speak to Hold on, Murr. You ever heard of, the you the Dred Scott decision? Yes. I know you have. It's a rhetorical question. The guy that wrote that was a, the head chief justice named Roger Taney. I believe he's from South Carolina. Uh-huh. And he was the chief justice of the Supreme Court for twenty years, and he never went to law school.
[02:25:07] Unknown:
And at that time, to bring up the rest of our presentation today, he was setting by invitation as a district court trial judge when he wrote it, although he was on the Supreme Court of the United States. Really? Well, I didn't know that.
[02:25:19] Unknown:
Yep. Thank you, Brent. You guys go eat lunch. Okay. See you. See you, Cody. Thanks for dropping by. Do it more. Okay.
[02:25:28] Unknown:
Hold on. Murr's got something for you. Go ahead. Murr. I thought she dropped I cut her into the table off. I thought she quit, and she's Yeah. Well, we did too, and she keeps coming back.
[02:25:39] Unknown:
Oh my. I keep lurking. I'm lurking over on the Pod Home. Yeah. But I had to get in here because you said, three words. Well, first, to quote Jim Ram who would like to quote, if mama ain't happy, ain't nobody happy. That's for sure. So yeah. Yeah. So the three words that must be in a trust, what were they, please?
[02:26:01] Unknown:
Well, Murr, I wish you would go take that course. Will you can you do that? I'm just afraid that would happen. Yeah. But you just said the three words. I was just curious. I'd like to know what those three key words. I And I'm glad you asked, but, Murr, I want you to take that course because I major on that on that trust course at commonlawyer.com.
[02:26:24] Unknown:
Yeah. Mhmm. And Brent's philosophy is like Shelley. You talked about today,
[02:26:30] Unknown:
out of North Dakota. That was Angie Dickinson. Angeline,
[02:26:34] Unknown:
Brown, actually, was right. Thank you, Murr. There you go. Yeah. Murr, Brent is adhering to an old show business. Concepts says always leave them clapping.
[02:26:46] Unknown:
Yeah. Yeah. Homer, thank you. You know, that is important.
[02:26:53] Unknown:
Yeah. Yeah. Larry, are you not gonna hang Brandon up for another twenty, thirty minutes, are you?
[02:27:00] Unknown:
On a silver bond. No. No. I just want him to elaborate briefly on a statement he made three weeks ago, and you are even curious about it. Equity acts against persons. Law acts against things. Can you expand on that a little bit, Brent, please?
[02:27:18] Unknown:
When when a court gives a when a court gives a divorce decree or a child custody decree decree or an injunction, that acts against the person. That's equity jurisdiction. It commands a person. But in law, if you get a contract, a law or contract, for example, is debt. That's what it is, debt. Duty arises from law. Debt arises from contract. When you win a contract case, somebody owes you something, that's the end of it unless you file to enforce the judgment against the person. You do that in equity. You don't do that law. The law case is over. Law acts against property, but you might have to do it in equity, I should say. But, yeah, law acts against property, and equity acts against the person. Equity is an extra extra the our law our common law calls it an extraordinary remedy.
Equity only applies where law provides no remedy. Equity, the maxim of our common law is equity follows law. Equity gives tremendous power to the judge. And in most states now, judges will put on their law hat until they see that law doesn't work. There is no remedy. And at the request of the parties, then they'll put on their equity hat, and they'll provide an what we call an equitable remedy. And that is a personal remedy. Child custody is an equity. Equity governs matters of trust, divorce, separation, child custody, injunctions, estates, and trusts.
That's all in the equity jurisdiction. There is no jury in equity. Equity does not include the jury unless in some states, it seems to, like in Texas, thus by act of the legislature, the courts allow it. They do agree with the legislature in that point on that point, and so they allow it. But equity is one of the four intrusions in our common law tradition of the law of the city principles, and it is justified if it's kept to the proper jurisdiction. The four jurisdictions are equity, martial law, admiralty law, and administrative law.
All of those are fundamentally martial law. Administrative law is a matter of the executive branch, the commands of the executive, which the president or the of The United States or the governor of your state. They command those that work for them. That's equity. The administrative agencies, the military, the armed forces, that's executive orders, orders from the executive to those that work for him in that branch. That's administrative law. That's martial law. That's admiralty law. Equity is what courts use, judges use, or courts use when they're when they find no remedy at law, at common law. When common law doesn't provide a remedy, inevitably inevitably, things will arise from the flux of human existence and the relationships between men will bob forth some set of facts nobody's ever seen before. And the law, we can't find anything in law in our in our past that applies. That's true and it will always be true. That's why legislation is dangerous. If you've got a code, the code of Justinian, the canon civil laws of Rome, Justinian and all the them that use that and the pope of Rome and the patriarch of the Eastern church, etcetera, they say, here's the law. It covers everything. Anything that's not that says is not a part of this, we'll we'll pound the square pegs into the round holes and vice versa. This code is final.
Well, that's not our common law tradition. Our common law is you can pass all the legislation you want. The jury is final. And they may reject what the legislature says. Right? They may say, well, we don't even want that. We're not even gonna pay attention to it. They'll apply it to the law. They'll reject the law. They'll govern the law and the facts. That's our common law tradition. These are the kinds of things we're talking about in this course. Just get on the road, friends, get on the road, get on the way, the course of our common law, and let's get going down the same road. Maybe you are already on that road. I hope you are. If we're on the same road, let's learn more about it, and let's keep going. And that's what makes us part of the solution and not the problem.
[02:31:52] Unknown:
There you go. Brent, you're eating lunch. No more questions.
[02:31:55] Unknown:
No. Thank you, Roger. I better go eat that brisket. I've got one more if Cody's here yet.
[02:32:01] Unknown:
Well, I'll tell you what, Roger. You people are unbelievable.
[02:32:05] Unknown:
I'm gonna check with Cody. Cody here?
[02:32:07] Unknown:
Not much. You want Cody?
[02:32:10] Unknown:
I'm not here. We're both oilmen because I have an oil question that's been bothering me for quite a long time.
[02:32:16] Unknown:
Okay.
[02:32:18] Unknown:
Yeah. I I saw a piece that's about, our our oil production and refining in this country. And according to this piece, all our refineries are set up, I hope I'm using the right terms here, for heavy or high sulfur crude. Okay? Yet the country produces lighter grades. So why, if that's true, are we set up for heavy crude for refinement when that's not what we bring out of the ground in this country?
[02:32:48] Unknown:
Well, that was the historical well, more probably more recently, the historical importing. You know, as we imported more,
[02:32:57] Unknown:
it was heavier oil from Venezuela, Saudi Arabia. Venezuela. Trees That's some of the heaviest sulfur crude in the world. Ain't that right?
[02:33:04] Unknown:
Yeah. And, so now, you know, I mean, they're they're converting and all, and they're mixing and all that kind of stuff, but they also will export it because the lighter crude can actually help some of those countries, you know, thin theirs down. I know there's issues like even in Ecuador where it's so heavy that they have to bring in some distillates just to get the pipelines working a little easier just to kinda dilute it. Otherwise, they gotta heat it up so much. It just depends, you know. So that that's why they're you're seeing, you know, doesn't make any sense. We technically don't produce all the oil that we use. I think we're producing 12,000,000 barrels a day, and we need 16 or 18.
On a BTU basis, we are producing more than we need, but not on a crude oil basis. And, but that's why so it doesn't make sense in theory when you look at it that you're exporting oil, but it does from the standpoint, like, you're mentioning the, you know, comp the refining capacities and all that.
[02:34:03] Unknown:
Yeah. I I the the best I could get out of it, Cody, was that at one point, when we were on better terms with Venezuela, we were refining a lot of their oil, and then we were exporting our lighter crudes because we could get top dollar for them.
[02:34:20] Unknown:
Yeah. I I'm not sure. I don't think I mean, it it it who knows? But, I mean, that's that was kinda your question is why are, you know, why are the refineries set up for heavy? So that's kind of the historical. It's easier to to produce lighter oil. It's easier to refine lighter oil, but, I'm assuming now that they found so much light oil, they're probably, you know, switching these refineries a little bit. But heavier oil is actually cheaper to to buy, so they may they may prefer to export and import, you know, play that game. It just depends on what the economics are.
[02:34:55] Unknown:
Go to lunch.
[02:34:56] Unknown:
Thanks, guys. Okay. See you, guys. Adios.
[02:35:00] Unknown:
Okay. In the end analysis, it's all about the Benjamins. How many you get to keep and how many you have to spend. Okay.
[02:35:07] Unknown:
What about the morning? Hey, Jaime. And California is trying to shut down its refineries. Go go figure.
[02:35:14] Unknown:
Wouldn't then surprise me if 20 Morgan dollars. I heard you can use 20 Morgan dollars to shut shut down any court case because they they can't adjudicate silver. That's a common law question right there. No. No. No. Don't don't count on that.
[02:35:30] Unknown:
You hear a lot of stuff about the patriot community. You hear a lot of stuff like that in the patriot community. Go try and put it into action. So, anyway, anybody got anything else for me here today?
[02:35:44] Unknown:
One more thing. Yeah. That,
[02:35:46] Unknown:
Supreme Court justice Jackson, her name's Ketanji Brown. Oh, okay. Ketanji Brown Jackson. That's right. Yeah. I just can't get all the Ebonics stuff down. Brent keeps trying to teach me, but I'm a slow learner.
[02:36:00] Unknown:
Irish name.
[02:36:02] Unknown:
Okay. Hi, John. Yeah. There's Joan. Yes, ma'am.
[02:36:06] Unknown:
Okay. So if United States has more oil than anyone else Oh, you're asking me? Country. Oh, shit. I'm asking whoever can know the answer right now on this who's listening. Are are are we why are are we still getting oil from other countries? And if so, why if United States has more than any other country?
[02:36:29] Unknown:
I thought we just talked about that. What was the idea? We the oil we have is lighter and is worth more, and our refineries are set up to refine the cheap stuff that's heavy sulfur. So it's it's dollars and cents. It's the bottom line. But
[02:36:48] Unknown:
but during during Trump's first administration, we were even exporting. We were energy efficient. And director Hoffman can tell you out out there in Las Vegas, premium gas was a dollar 89 a gallon. Yeah. So this is akin to turning over the money changer stables. Well, we've got that even start new wars either. So
[02:37:12] Unknown:
My understanding, ANWR up there in Northern Alaska that they have plugged you decades ago is a is sweet, crude like, and there's just mammoth amounts of it up there. They're not touching it.
[02:37:26] Unknown:
K? The other thing that piece got into, Roger, is that, we have some old archaic laws about shipping our old oil around the country, and it's so prohibitive that it's it's less expensive to take an import from, say, Saudi Arabia, say, into the East Coast than it is to put it on our own ships and get it there. Could be. Very well could be. Everything's screwed up. Everything's
[02:37:51] Unknown:
skewed. So these damn Jew bastards can control these big markets. They're the ones that own what's called the seven sisters. Those are the seven major oil companies in the world. And all this is for whatever they're where they can make the most profit or pull some kind of a deal. That's what it's all about right there.
[02:38:10] Unknown:
Mhmm. And Hugo Chavez offered, yeah, Hugo Chavez offered,
[02:38:15] Unknown:
Citgo to for heating oil on the East Coast when it was so expensive, and, of course, they eventually just canceled him out. Yeah. And you you can argue about the stuff at the bottom, but you can't talk about the folks that are pulling the strings at the top in most situations. We can talk about them here. They're scared as hell of us. K? We got to know
[02:38:36] Unknown:
pulling the strings. They were pulling the strings from the beginning. Alexander Hamilton was a Jew. And he left the,
[02:38:43] Unknown:
in Benjamin I know. We know. Five
[02:38:47] Unknown:
five times to go to New York, but we don't know who they were. This is the thing. We know they're there, but they stay behind the waist.
[02:38:55] Unknown:
Very Roger. Deceitful and very clandestine. Yes, Larry.
[02:39:01] Unknown:
Yeah. Did you know, there's articles out there that are saying we have the ability to create gas from thin air?
[02:39:10] Unknown:
Well, I know you can, get get hydrogen out of water. They they've got it to a point where you could take and this is about to be hitting the market, next couple of years. You can take one glass of water and power a 100,000 homes for a winner. One glass of water.
[02:39:31] Unknown:
Well, this, process that I'm talking about involves direct air capture, DAC, of carbon dioxide followed by water electrolysis to produce hydrogen and then a reverse water gas shift reaction to combine them into what they call syngas, s y n g a s. Pretty interesting.
[02:39:57] Unknown:
Okay. Yeah. There's all kinds of cut, you know, cutting edge technologies in these areas of energy, particularly, where we literally could have free energy, and they don't want that because then they can't charge you for it. It all always goes back to these guys setting up this system after 1933 that always inhibits us, and it always benefits them. That's what's going on. K? So that's why I call them out. I don't mind calling them out. They're thieves, liars, murderers, and, as we know, slavers. Okay? So you can call me anything you want, you sly son of a bitches, Satan's bitches, but I'm gonna answer with, is that right, slaver? Well, I'm an antisemite. Is that right, slaver?
Okay. See, that's why they can't handle this information. They don't know what to do with us. The best thing we can do, honestly, for the whole world, the future of the planet, is to spread this message right here, just like your life depended on it because it might. Okay? So, anyway, anybody got anything else for me? We'll be back tomorrow, obviously. Nobody's got anything for me. Okay. Great show today with Brent. It was an excellent, very brisk conversation, the whole thing, and, it was just a good show. So, tickled to death to be able to convene with you fine people, at at at well, at six days a week, but certainly today with Brent.
So, we'll see you tomorrow, some of you, most of you, few of you, whatever.
[02:41:34] Unknown:
We'll be here. Me and Paul.
[02:41:38] Unknown:
Yeah. Me and my n g. Me and my n g. Okay? Alright. I'll I'll see y'all tomorrow. Love all of you. Ciao.
[02:41:48] Unknown:
Ciao.
[02:41:50] Unknown:
I think. Ciao, I think.
[02:41:52] Unknown:
Find the button.
[02:41:54] Unknown:
Well, I Thank you, Raj. Got this Zoom thing up here. Right? Oh. Yeah. Okay.
[02:42:00] Unknown:
I can, I can still was an eyewitness?
[02:42:03] Unknown:
Ciao. Ciao.
[02:42:06] Unknown:
Thank you.
[02:42:08] Unknown:
Please stop the share. She's responding to that. Should've put your screen back to normal, Raj. Oh, it did. He actually hung up.
[02:42:21] Unknown:
Alright. Well Just just,
[02:42:25] Unknown:
responding to Roger on Patriot Mythology. That was a testimony of a guy that basically took a color copy of 20 Morgan silver dollars, made a, silver certificate, sent it to the judge, judge responded to him as trustee, shut down the, these are traffic cases, which would be like civil civil fines just because they they can't adjudicate silver based on the structure of the fourteenth amendment. So it fits perfectly with the logic of what we go at with nationality. I yield.
[02:42:55] Unknown:
Okay. And, where did you see that?
[02:43:01] Unknown:
Where can you see that? On that private stash, one of the one of the videos. I think you downloaded from Rumble probably. But,
[02:43:10] Unknown:
yeah. But but there's old old timey guy who did it. There's a soup there's a soup of a thousand videos that are, like, three hours long. Nobody nobody in their right mind without an absolute, high school graduating class of people to sit there and listen for things could actually get through that with us without a snowball's chance in hell's chance.
[02:43:36] Unknown:
I mean If you ever build a house or do something, you do everything in pieces. So you gotta you gotta be patient with your health, with your awe, with your building, whatever you're doing, you know, with your relationships, you know, so you need to also one piece at a time, you know. So we don't have to eat the whole five hours at once. And I go I go over them and I take notes on them and stuff like that. Plus there there are documents that are attached too, so that's helpful. But, no, you it's I think it's it is a stream of consciousness, and you gotta but when somebody says something like that that they did, I think it's worth noting, you know, so I yield. Right.
[02:44:14] Unknown:
Yeah. If you can find it afterwards. Oh, that's just my thing.
[02:44:31] Unknown:
IT is a lot like that. Right? You take a project one. My my son's in that, you know, web design, all that kind of stuff. So they break down projects to use project management tools, stuff like that. So I think that's what we're about. You know? I I mean, we're taking it from the earliest project management, which is, hey. Here's your affidavit to the secretary of state, and that's that's one piece of the puzzle. But it's not a magic it's not a magic pill for law or anything else. Just a starting point. Yep.
[02:45:03] Unknown:
Mhmm.
[02:45:12] Unknown:
I just wanted to mention, Roscoe Pound, who was considered one of the most important jurist on legal theory from and throughout the twentieth century. He's born right after the civil war, and he was a proponent of equity. But by the time he gets to and he wrote four books on it. The fourth book by the end of his, career was The Decadence of Equity and the rigidity of it and how it had lost its course in his opinion in law and became more rigid than the common law, and it didn't take into, understanding the changes in the society through the industrial revolution, etcetera. So do you wanna really read about equity and get a feeling for it and what had happened to it? I suggest Roscoe Pound.
[02:46:31] Unknown:
I'm with you. The courts are not where we're supposed to be. We're not supposed to be in those courts. So that's where, you know, the abatement that we talk about and then also this potential tool of the 20 silver dollars where you you tell me, hey. I'm putting in my I'm putting in my, my silver bond here, baby. You know? Well You do you do you dedicate with Christ's law, not with, not with the super structure of the fourteenth.
[02:46:57] Unknown:
Well, like like Brent wants to sort of say that, you know, equity was put in there to give these judges more latitude to rule in a fair manner. And it's contract law. Well, what the country did is turn everything into a contract. So you got nowhere's to go now in a a contract in a court of equity because, if you put gas in your tank, it's a contract. And you can be held in in in their jurisdiction because of it. That's what Pound's talking about. He he says it it just it it went from something that he supported to give a judge more latitude to something that's so inflexible, it doesn't it's worse it was stiffer than the common law, and that's where we are.
[02:47:49] Unknown:
Would you would you call that adhesion contracts kinda? Yes. Basic. Mhmm. Yep.
[02:47:55] Unknown:
And they tricked us out of the common law more into equity and destroyed the common law. The common law is not enforced because what is there and they talk about procedure. Well, that procedure is not even lawful. So
[02:48:24] Unknown:
Hello?
[02:48:44] Unknown:
I'm trying to find it.
[02:49:03] Unknown:
Those boys open
[02:49:07] Unknown:
Thinking maybe it was walking through Walmart, but
[02:49:10] Unknown:
Sort of destroyed my point that equity in here is not our friend.
[02:49:17] Unknown:
You you you said it with emphasis there.
[02:49:21] Unknown:
Equity is sort of like the Patriot Act. Sounds nice. But what does it really do? 670-4953.
[02:49:29] Unknown:
Again, that's 989670.
[02:49:37] Unknown:
That's why I'm a little dubious about trust. I think as Nash as state citizens, we should be able to be able to do without them, and we should write our own documents telling the world what our wishes are, whether it's a will of, you know, where our inheritance go, how our property is is viewed, etcetera, etcetera.
[02:50:05] Unknown:
Yeah. And with you, it's like we're not accountants. Why are we filling out IRS forms or sending them anything? You know, we're not let them do the accounting. Well, I'm not an IRS agent.
[02:50:15] Unknown:
So Or using UCC. I mean, that's that's their stuff. That's not Yep. You know, that that's how you get, jurisdiction for putting gas in your tank.
[02:50:28] Unknown:
Why couldn't he tell me those three words? He wants you to take the course. I know that, but that's stupid. I won't take it just for that reason. Yeah. That was slack.
[02:50:40] Unknown:
You know, Merv, that first piece I sent you on Jay Smith, I think, has the thing on Mohammed and the punctuation, which puts it back into the bible as a title, not a name. I'm pretty sure I'll have to I'll have to relook at that one. I think it's the the first one I sent you on Islam.
[02:51:01] Unknown:
Did you see the email I sent you during the show? Yeah. I don't think that was it. I I read it a little bit. Just go to Isaiah 42, and there's a lot of different things in there. So that they claim refer to him, refer to Mohammed. Yeah. Well, that's their claim, which is yeah. Yeah. Yeah. But there's also, debunking in it too. So no. Any any servant is is talking about Christ in the Bible. You know? Well, if you listen if you listen to Jay Smith there, he's basically saying,
[02:51:33] Unknown:
she met this woman who knew 15 of the old ancient languages. She could read them and write them. And in her research of the time of Muhammad, which is around June, there is no reference in those old languages and any document she has ever read that refer to Mohammed, that refer to Mecca, or that refer to the Quran. But, if you go to Jerusalem and Jesus Christ and, you know, and the Bible, of course, it's voluminous. He's making a point that this whole thing was built on an empire that became very big, the Arab Muslims, and they did not have the equivalent of their enemies like the Byzantine Empire at the time where they had a book, a prophet, and a savior, etcetera.
So they created Mohammed to compete.
[02:52:42] Unknown:
Well, let's say they mutated. Alright? There's only one creator. We're throwing that word around an awful lot lately. Well, you get my point. He's Oh, yeah. Yeah. I get the point. I get the point. But you guys are book and the man were made up.
[02:52:57] Unknown:
And they didn't even have all the series and everything together until the year January. Right. But the thing first two hundred years, there's almost nothing. The first mention of Muhammad is sixty years after he died.
[02:53:14] Unknown:
And they do admit to their practices, which included, the one child he married at age seven, but he did the right thing and didn't have sex with the child until she was nine.
[02:53:26] Unknown:
You know what the Muslims say, Jay Smith, with this argument? And then he's been beaten almost to death by these people. But he he says that, they make the argument. Well, it proves he was a real man and that he was a really old compared to Jesus Christ, he was a warrior and he was a man and even though he sinned, he overcame it all, etcetera, etcetera. That's their argument about all that. Well, it's baloney like all of it. It's either Christ or or not Christ. So Anyway, it he's worth looking to because that was the first time I I I've ever heard so much evidence towards the fact that the guy was just made up.
[02:54:11] Unknown:
Well, if he was or wasn't, and there's a fact that he may be Jewish and he had an older Jewish wife and all all this crap. And like I said, I don't know if I wanna invest any of my time. You know, time's unlimited. Come on. Well, if you wanna convert a Muslim, it would be good to know. Well, I don't know any Muslims that I wanna convert. If that arises, I might look into it. But, Okay. Alright. I mean, realistically here, you know? In a nutshell, it's Christ or not Christ. Jesus Christ, you're either a believer in him or you're a nonbeliever. People don't want to hear this, but that's the facts, Jack. That's one one of the incredible points that Jay Smith makes is that Smith anyway? Joseph Smith? Is that a Mormon? What the heck?
[02:55:02] Unknown:
No. J a y Smith.
[02:55:04] Unknown:
Oh, okay. Whatever.
[02:55:07] Unknown:
Yeah. Well, if you yeah. He he was basically saying they had to borrow their Quran from somewheres, and he said if you do really do the research, most of it's about Jesus Christ in the Bible.
[02:55:21] Unknown:
Mhmm. Yeah. First, be not deceived.
[02:55:28] Unknown:
Anyway. From Mohammed to oil today, you know?
[02:55:38] Unknown:
You out?
[02:55:41] Unknown:
Yeah.
[02:55:42] Unknown:
Hey. I'm sorry. I I didn't catch on. What about my the answer about my oil question. But is the unite do you know is The United States getting oil from other countries?
[02:55:57] Unknown:
Yeah. I from what I understand, not so much today, but the bulk of our oil we used to refine came out of Venezuela, which was very high sulfur, high heavy crude. And so that would sort of make up why we have some of those but those refineries like that in in in areas close to there, like in Louisiana and Texas and stuff. But this whole country is set up for heavy crude according to that article that I saw, which made me wonder why are we all set up for heavy crude when most of the oil we produce is light?
[02:56:35] Unknown:
And what is this article? Who wrote that? Is that dependable?
[02:56:40] Unknown:
I don't know. It's been a long time since I reviewed it.
[02:56:45] Unknown:
Comment? Yeah. Yes. With regard to what you're saying, Samuel, don't forget about the Canadian tar sands. Remember the the big pipeline, the big ruckus that were the Indians were having about it with the pipeline coming from Canada, going through Montana, the Dakotas, Nebraska, Kansas, down to Cushing, Oklahoma. Cushing, Oklahoma has the largest petroleum distribution system in the world. There's more storage there than anywhere. And, you know, that pipeline was put on hold. Warren Buffett's rail line continues to haul tar sand crude to that terminal in Cushing, as I understand.
[02:57:57] Unknown:
So so if United States has the lightweight oil, why why doesn't The United States have the lightweight refining equipment and using you and where you and why aren't we using US oil? I'm trying to connect better. Understand. Thank you.
[02:58:25] Unknown:
Yeah. I guess above all our paved grades.
[02:58:28] Unknown:
Well, I think really what they're doing is they're getting this this high sulfur heavy crude at a price that makes it worth them refining it, and then we take our expensive lighter crudes and sell it. So like Paul said, bottom line, there's more money in them doing it that way, probably as companies, but when it comes to this country, it's probably not good for us who are filling our gas tanks up.
[02:59:05] Unknown:
Mhmm. So selling our lighter weight oil to over there, wherever over there is, another other country, and then and then bringing in there and dipping in their heavy oil. That that makes us more a win a win win more for The US than breakeven? It's more it's more of a moneymaker for US instead of us doing our own?
[02:59:42] Unknown:
Yeah. I would assume that they can keep the oil prices higher by doing this and manipulating the price more so unless instead of just refining our stuff here and selling it to us But like Cody says, we can we can send our light crude out to places like Venezuela just to send it down so they can move it through a pipeline.
[03:00:09] Unknown:
Okay. Thank you.
[03:00:14] Unknown:
So, this article, it's trustworthy. It says, although Venezuela is more often associated with heavy sour crude, the country also possesses reserves of light sweet crude, particularly in areas like the Maricibo Basin. However, the political and economic challenges facing Venezuela have limited the development and production of these resources. It's an article from last year.
[03:00:39] Unknown:
Yeah. That's what happens to you when The US cuts you off.
[03:00:44] Unknown:
Yeah. The point I'm making though is it's not, you know, one country have one type.
[03:00:50] Unknown:
Yeah. Well, they're not allowing them to develop their lighter field is what it what you just said
[03:00:57] Unknown:
because they cut them off. They don't have the money to do it. Yes. I think they have in the past. Yeah. That they're again with Hugo Chavez. Alright?
[03:01:21] Unknown:
In California is which doesn't allow any offshore drilling, which has minimal amount of oil fields in the South. They're pretty much pumped down and, they're they're making it so difficult for the refineries to exist. The refineries are saying we're gonna pack up and leave. There is no oil pipeline even coming into the state to supply us with that resource. It's their bullshit idea that everything's gonna go alternative, and it's so wrong headed. I mean, talk about it in economic disaster, California is working on another one.
[03:02:15] Unknown:
So it would be better for all the people in the in America, all the regular folks, if United if America did you use and refine their own light oil, and then it would be better for the people who live in America when they buy their gas and oil. It would be better. Right?
[03:02:46] Unknown:
I I would think so. But it's not as good for the oil men to make money. And if the oil men aren't happy, then, you know, they're not gonna pull the stuff out of the ground either. So it's a sort of a catch 22. I mean, they wanna make as much money as they can, and I guess that's what they're up to.
[03:03:08] Unknown:
Mhmm.
[03:03:11] Unknown:
Comment?
[03:03:12] Unknown:
Yeah. Yeah.
[03:03:16] Unknown:
Try to look through another window at this issue. It's not so much oil production anymore as it is natural gas production.
[03:03:31] Unknown:
I was just reading that.
[03:03:35] Unknown:
Murr, I will send you a link. I don't know how to put anything in the chat, but I will email it to you and you can put it in the chat.
[03:03:44] Unknown:
Okay. And
[03:03:46] Unknown:
just to just across the state line into Kansas, you know, less than a 100 miles, two natural gas generating systems are going or gas fired systems are going to be built in the near future. 1,800,000,000.0 for the two. I'll send that to you. It's a real short read. It's from Oklahoma Energy today. It came this month. So I'll send that to you, and you can share it with the other folks if you like.
[03:04:22] Unknown:
Yeah. Please do. Thank you. Yeah. Joe, Joe, I once heard that the Northern Slope oil fields up there, when they first drilled them, the there was so much natural gas. It was a nuisance, and they used seven forty seven jet engines to force it back underground to keep it out of their way.
[03:04:51] Unknown:
Woah. Oh, what state has the largest gas producing operations? And does Texas and Oklahoma or Kansas have the most? Oklahoma,
[03:05:14] Unknown:
the Dakotas. There's a lot of gas production in the Dakotas. And that's what the the they're going after more now is gas than they are oil. Yeah. Because gas natural gas is basically a non pollutant when it burns.
[03:05:36] Unknown:
It's a it's another thing, Joe, that California is shutting down. In fact, I think it's already ten years ago that San Francisco doesn't have any gas appliances allowed, and Sacramento is doing the same thing. They're eliminating all the natural gas appliances, hot water heaters, ranges, etcetera like that. And there everything's being pushed to electric, which we already don't have enough electric to cover the needs of the people.
[03:06:01] Unknown:
Okay. So that only goes to show that they are delivering this natural gas to be fired in the generation plant electrical generation plants. It's a diversion diversion of that natural gas from the consumer to the wholesaler. That's just my thoughts. That's my immediate response to that.
[03:06:27] Unknown:
I I don't think it's that logical in California. I think they're just plain stupid.
[03:06:43] Unknown:
Joe, those places you named, Texas, Dakotas, and I think you said Kansas, Are those also the places that have the most oil drilling wells? Texas?
[03:06:55] Unknown:
Well, both. Both. Bear with me just a minute. I wanna find that article.
[03:07:08] Unknown:
I just put one, from Forbes in the, chat room too. And, they talk about how much oil they produce. It's, actually, you're talking about petroleum. Note how it's defined. Crude oil is one category of petroleum. Another is condensate. This is what Joe's talking about, I believe. This refers
[03:07:33] Unknown:
Con condensate is a byproduct to gas production.
[03:07:37] Unknown:
Right. Well, I'll just read the rest of this short paragraph. This refers to light liquid hydrocarbons that are recovered from natural gas that is often associated with the oil production. These liquids are mostly pentane and heavier hydrocarbons, and they are added to crude oil at some stage of processing, which could be the refining stage. High yield. I would
[03:08:00] Unknown:
agree with you.
[03:08:03] Unknown:
Thank you.
[03:08:05] Unknown:
Bear with me. I'm still looking for that. Well, here's one article here. I'll I'll briefly read it. Mach Natural Resources LP announced that's limited partnership announced it has entered in two separate definitive agreements, one to acquire certain oil and gas assets some from Sabsonal Energy and another acquire entities knowing owning oil and gas assets managed by IKEV Energy. They come buying consideration for both transaction is approximately 1,300,000,000.0, such subject to customary terms and conditions. But that isn't what I wanna do. They send out a lot of information on this website, and Sometimes it took takes a while to find what you're looking for.
Feds appeal Dakota access pipeline ruling. A federal judge's decision to award North Dakota $28,000,000 in damages for the executive branch's response to the Dakota Access Pipeline protest is being appealed by the US justice department. North Dakota sued the government in 2019 claiming that the Army Corps of Engineers had unlawfully allowed protesters of the Dakota access pipeline to use this plan at the state's expense. Ohio forces data centers to pay now this is a good one. Ohio forces data centers to pay for 85% of their electric power needs.
I will here. Just a minute. Let me okay. I'm gonna forward that to
[03:10:33] Unknown:
Mer.
[03:10:39] Unknown:
I just sent you that one about Ohio Murr and not we're post that. That's a really good article.
[03:10:47] Unknown:
Okay.
[03:10:49] Unknown:
And that's the the way we need to be looking at it. This is a good deal for the consumer because these energy companies or data companies are forcing the this electrical production off on everyone, whether you use it or not. Here's that other one.
[03:11:22] Unknown:
Forward.
[03:11:57] Unknown:
I was surprised to see that, Pennsylvania and West Virginia have some of the biggest shale because of the marsh shell is, shale field, which has got more natural gas in it than they say anywhere in the country.
[03:12:13] Unknown:
Yes. But with regard to that, you're talking about shale. I read another article the other day on this Oklahoma Energy Today, And the person who made wrote this article says the, shale oil in the Rockies is about depleted. And with the price of oil, what it is, the rig counts are way down and, you know, crude oils at very low prices, but you don't see that much of a reduction in the process of gasoline or diesel. And, Murray, you should have got received two emails.
[03:13:14] Unknown:
Oh, okay. Yeah. I tried to open this one. Oh, there it is. So the, MACH Natural Resources LP announces 1,300,000,000.0 in acquisitions in the Permian Basin. Is that the one? And so
[03:13:34] Unknown:
That's not the one that I may have
[03:13:38] Unknown:
Read the title. There's there's several there's several in this, thing you sent. Okay. Then scroll. Yeah. Which one?
[03:13:46] Unknown:
Scroll down to the, one with the about the gas fired, generating plants in Kansas, $1,800,000,000.
[03:14:06] Unknown:
Now is this the first email you sent? Well,
[03:14:11] Unknown:
there there's several articles. I I tried to send you two different articles, but apparently, they get different.
[03:14:20] Unknown:
Here it is. Here it is. 1800000000.0 in new energy centers approved in Kansas. Is that it? Yeah.
[03:14:27] Unknown:
Okay.
[03:14:39] Unknown:
I could text it to you a lot easier or not. I can email it because the text I don't have text. Sorry. No no cell. I know. It's it's an extension. For a long I've known that for a long time, Murr.
[03:14:52] Unknown:
Yep. Don't have one. Don't want one. I'm not trying to sway your convenience. Oh, I know you're not. I'm just stating that.
[03:15:05] Unknown:
Did everyone get their nigger Bibles last night?
[03:15:09] Unknown:
Yes. Yes. I did.
[03:15:11] Unknown:
And thank you. I'm trying to make some sense of that.
[03:15:17] Unknown:
Okay. I see you send it separately in the second email. Yeah. Mhmm.
[03:15:25] Unknown:
And I thank you, and that's something that I'm gonna have to ruminate on, Brent.
[03:15:32] Unknown:
I won't be able to say n word a whole bunch during one of my shows one of these days.
[03:15:37] Unknown:
Well, I was nine years old when that thing came out, so I didn't understand it at the time.
[03:15:44] Unknown:
Your your mother did.
[03:15:48] Unknown:
I guess.
[03:15:51] Unknown:
It's a difference in being a Negro and a nigger. Big difference.
[03:16:01] Unknown:
Still no passes for you.
[03:16:06] Unknown:
Except I'm out of reach. So
[03:16:09] Unknown:
Mhmm.
[03:16:11] Unknown:
Hold that thought. White trash can be niggas too then. See? Or niggas can be white trash. I guess depends on how you wanna categorize people and put them in their boxes.
[03:16:26] Unknown:
Myself, I consider it more a station in life than race.
[03:16:31] Unknown:
Yeah. That's what I'm basically saying. Yeah. Yeah. It's almost almost a caste system.
[03:16:37] Unknown:
But you you can't why is it there's so few people can see that angle?
[03:16:44] Unknown:
Mhmm.
[03:16:47] Unknown:
And then that whole thing with the with the girl calling the little boy that well, he was being one. He was stealing from her. Where were his adults? No one even brings that up. You know? And then we have the Somali blind, and I can see it. Yeah. Right. And then the Somali, they're filming it, and and he was a child molester. He'd been arrested. He's the one trying to, you know, get her to repeat it, you know, get there in the heat of the moment and get a hot clickbait video. But meanwhile, we don't hear anything about the murderer that comes in there and stabs the kid in the chest and kills him. I don't care what color you are. That's that's just murder.
And then they complained because his father showed up at the press conference. He didn't do anything but stand there. They had a fit. And he gets a house. The murderer gets a house. It's like rewarding the behavior. I don't care who you are. You don't reward bad behavior. Put them on the chain gang. Labor is the only value, so use it.
[03:18:38] Unknown:
Hey, Mer. Hey, Mer.
[03:18:44] Unknown:
Yes, ma'am.
[03:18:45] Unknown:
Are you saying that the man who was with the blonde woman that called the little boy that name because he the little other boy was taking her the blonde woman's son's toy or whatever.
[03:19:05] Unknown:
He was digging stuff out of her bag.
[03:19:08] Unknown:
Yeah. But was it the man who was talking the bad man who was talking to her? He's the one who stabbed a a boy in the town? No. No. No. Separate incident.
[03:19:18] Unknown:
Oh, okay. Metcalfe. Remember? Before that. And it's all hushed up. He just raised a bunch of money and give the guy a house. Yeah. Oh, that nigga did stab the kid in the heart. He shows up where he doesn't belong and pulls out a knife out of his bag and shoves it up in the heart of this young fella. Why? I mean, how how is that justifiable? I don't care who you are.
[03:19:57] Unknown:
Dave and the thumb. Dave.
[03:20:06] Unknown:
Hi, Joan.
[03:20:08] Unknown:
Hi. Did you see the email I sent you on July 3 a week ago?
[03:20:20] Unknown:
You know, my wife forwarded that to me, and I I said yes. And she told me to get back to you, but I don't
[03:20:26] Unknown:
I don't have your number.
[03:20:30] Unknown:
Yeah. Those protocols for that that child you said the child was, having epileptic seizures. Is that right?
[03:20:40] Unknown:
Yeah.
[03:20:41] Unknown:
Three years old?
[03:20:43] Unknown:
I I can't remember if I said three or four.
[03:20:46] Unknown:
Okay. And what else is going on in there? He's is it a he or a she? A boy. And he's on meds?
[03:20:55] Unknown:
He he's on some meds and one or two meds two two meds, I think. And he he's had all the, Republic. He's in a daycare Yeah. And, all those shots that are are necessary to be in a daycare. He's had all of those.
[03:21:12] Unknown:
Right. And the seizures, he just started. Right?
[03:21:17] Unknown:
No. That that I thought of a question. That's important. I haven't answered that question yet. I thought of it later.
[03:21:26] Unknown:
Yeah. Because that's important because doc says if if you're, you know, if you have epilepsy, you're born with it. If if you have seizures later on in life, you know what? Then that's a seizure disorder and doc doesn't say it, but I say it, it's from vaccines. Because my daughter was vaccine damaged and she had seizures that they said were epilepsy and they weren't, and they're gone. And, you know, she drives, you know, I mean, I don't she don't drive. She travels, you know, with a permission slip, but they told her she would never, you know, get a license. Never be able to drive a car.
And, well, she does.
[03:22:13] Unknown:
Okay. And but she was vaccine injured at at what age?
[03:22:21] Unknown:
You know, it's hard to say, but, sometime between Thank you. You know, before school started and, you know, she had all her vaccines and and, she struggled in school. She learned to read, you know, before kindergarten, but she struggled in school and, they said she had this and she had that and we took her to some neurologist and he said, no, she don't have that. She's got epilepsy and and he drew a birthday cake on a piece of paper and he and he wrote down three words like balloon, baboon and something else and bubbles and, and he he said repeat these words after me after I tell you to start blowing those birthday candles out on that picture of the cake. She starts blowing and she has a freaking she she starts hyperventilating.
Right? He didn't he he knew what he was doing And he said, look. She's having one now. And, you know, we're bedazzled young parents and, anyway, we let him put her on drugs and she was on them for ten, twelve years. And, then we figured it out and got her on nutrition and weaned her off and she hasn't had a seizure since. And the the the side effects of those drugs are seizures. So, yeah, they're they're they're evil. They're evil.
[03:24:09] Unknown:
If I may You may. May I interrupt the conversation for just a moment? Certainly. I I sent I sent a another email to my regarding coal fired.
[03:24:27] Unknown:
Yeah. I'm reading it now.
[03:24:29] Unknown:
Well well You might wanna send put that in the chat, and that might give,
[03:24:36] Unknown:
The first the first article there. Right? Confusion over coal fired plan exemptions in Oklahoma. Because,
[03:24:43] Unknown:
you know, they are already in the process, and several of them have already been removed from coal fired generation to gas fired generation. So that part of what's happening in the energy industry. So you might wanna share that with the folks. Yep. Doing it right now.
[03:25:10] Unknown:
And that, Joe, that gas fired, you know, that that they used to use natural gas just to light the coal. And then when it took off, they shut the gas off. Now the gas runs twenty four seven, three sixty five, and it's like, duh.
[03:25:25] Unknown:
Let's see. I don't know what the situation is in the last seven or eight years. But prior to that, it had been, I think, during the Carter administration was a glass gas fired, electrical generation plant built in The United States. And that was because of the coal lobby in Washington. See all that these the, plants in Oklahoma that were running off of coal, that all came out of Wyoming. Big, huge, long coal trains.
[03:26:09] Unknown:
Let me see if my voice will hold up here. I'll read, and let me get it. Go ahead. Let me get it straightened up. I I'm just I'm just trying to throw some information out
[03:26:18] Unknown:
that hopefully helps fill some voids in what you know.
[03:26:23] Unknown:
It's a short article. I'll go ahead and read it so Dave and everybody can get it. Please do. At least two of the reported seven coal plants cited by some environmental groups as being granted EPA exemptions by the Trump administration no longer use coal, and a third is in the process of abandoning its use. One is the Goodyear Tire and Rubber Company plant in Lawton, and the other is a soon to be defunct Michelin tire plant in Ardmore. Goodyear officials explained to Hillary Hilary Communications that they were looking into the claims after some environmental organizations filed suit claiming seven coal plants in Oklahoma were exempted.
The Goodyear plant has been getting its power for several years from public service company of Oklahoma. Inciting the Goodyear plant site on an accompanying map, the Environmental Defense Fund, one of the environmental groups that filed suit over the exemptions claimed it was among those granted exemptions. The EDF also pointed to the Michelin tire plant in Ardmore, but the plant is closing. The US Environmental Protection Agency released the at list, I think it means a list, of operators and their plants. Among them were let let me scroll down here to my cursor. Among them were Western Farmers Electric Cooperative affected facility source, Hugo Generating Station. That's h u u n I t.
And Oklahoma Gas and Electric affected facility source, Sooner unit one, Sooner unit two, Muskogee Unit Six, River Valley Commons Stack C S 1. A Grand River Dam Authority project was also cited on the EDF map, but the GRDA started replacing its last coal fired unit in Choteau, I guess, C H O T E A U, two years ago as it switched from coal to natural gas. The foreign Choteau. Choteau? Okay. I thought maybe because, you know, they're both pronounced that way. Right? The French ending there, which means water. The 410,000,000 project was reported by the frontier in 2023.
That's the end of that. Jerry Bonin. Yeah. So they're they're claiming things that aren't true, you know, because they can benefit from it. And it won't try to do lawsuits and all kind of stuff. It's such crazy mixed up bunch of greedy bastards.
[03:29:10] Unknown:
Thank you for reading that, Murr. Yeah. It appeared to me that if it doesn't,
[03:29:15] Unknown:
benefit the oil business, it's verboten. Like, China is not that way. They're, pursuing thorium, and we were the leaders of that. And the technology to get there, the Chinese borrowed from us. But we just won't do it. That's gonna be the death of us in time because we're being left behind.
[03:29:47] Unknown:
Well, remember one of the things that has there's two things that set in my mind that have really hurt nuclear power production, and that's the Three Mile Island incident, and there was never a release or a meltdown. And the other one was the Cairns Silkwood deal down at the Kerr McGee, processing plant in Crescent, Oklahoma, which is just north of Oklahoma City, fifteen, twenty miles. And, you'll notice when was it? Last fall or last winter, There was a big production, Leastways on Oklahoma City news, ABC news, several segments of called Silkwood. And there was a movie called Silkwood.
[03:30:48] Unknown:
You know? Yep. And there was there was also, the China Syndrome, we remember, came out just at TMI too. And, you know,
[03:30:56] Unknown:
I've never seen the movie Silkwood, and now I caught a few of the episodes on the newscast about Silkwood, the recent findings or whatever, scuttlebutt. But this, in my opinion, this was all to put fear in people's minds. In fact, I got acquainted with a a lady who worked at that facility in Crescent, Oklahoma. And, she's quite wealthy woman now, but she said that there will never be a nuclear power plant in Oklahoma. And that was back in the winter, And that has all changed because that's gonna happen, and it's gonna happen to other places too. And I have heard talk about and I made mention of this last winter to where these different data centers, and this is what Ohio, I think, is trying to push, is that if you want the big capacity electrical usage, you're gonna have to pony up and put up the money to generate it yourself, and you do that with micronuclear power plants.
Module mic modular nuclear power plants. And they set them on they set them on-site, and you power your own business right off that, device.
[03:32:32] Unknown:
Yeah. I think the old computer
[03:32:35] Unknown:
think about and ruminate on what may be coming.
[03:32:39] Unknown:
Yeah. I don't know how much is released. There's stuff that's released. Bob Nichols follows that and, your ads this week. And, I haven't seen them released lately. I haven't checked the site. But, they release this stuff, at night and on weekends. You know? But, I mean, if it's all that bad, you know, there's something else going on here. And with every news report, if you've seen Trump in the group or whatever, you gotta have that young guy with the nuclear football strapped to his arm. You know, it's like, oh, there it is. You know? Gotta be able to blow up the world in an instant.
[03:33:23] Unknown:
Yeah. I worked in the nuclear industry, and I would be against that old technology. They should have never built one of them. But the reason they didn't pursue thorium and they went for the plants we do have is because you couldn't make a bomb with a thorium plant. That's exactly correct, Samuel.
[03:33:44] Unknown:
Exactly correct. And it ain't easy to make a bomb even with these nuclear plants. A lot of this is just a bunch of fearmongering.
[03:33:54] Unknown:
I agree.
[03:33:59] Unknown:
The the the cool thing about the thorium is it doesn't have this waste product, and it doesn't destroy I mean, that whole thing, if you look at
[03:34:17] Unknown:
the
[03:34:20] Unknown:
And that whole thing, if you look at the pictures of Fukushima, they had one of those plants completely tore apart and shut down. The dome was off. Everything was taken apart in order to refill it. It's it's insanity compared to thorium. Cost and the hazards, I mean, were being left behind.
[03:34:44] Unknown:
From what I've read, Samuel, is that the thorium reactor, what little waste it does generate can be cycled back into the fueling cycle.
[03:34:58] Unknown:
Well, that was the deal with the nuclear pants plants to begin with. Remember?
[03:35:02] Unknown:
They were thorium plants,
[03:35:05] Unknown:
Myrrh. Oh, were they? Okay.
[03:35:08] Unknown:
Initially, they were thorium plants, but they couldn't make a bomb with thorium. They had to have uranium.
[03:35:15] Unknown:
Who was the guy that ate some of it? I'm showing you how it wasn't you know? I forget, forget his name.
[03:35:25] Unknown:
And I'm just telling you my perspective and how I understand it. Mhmm. I'm not saying this is gospel, but what reading I've done, you know
[03:35:35] Unknown:
If you ever go on and watch some of these vloggers, these big they have a really big fall following that travel around and, this one, it's, the channel on YouTube is sabbatical, Tommy sabbatical. And he lived in China for six years, and they go all over the place, but, they've been doing Asia a lot. And and everywhere they go in Asia, it's not at all what we're told. And the people are friendly. Right? Nobody steals anything. You can rent a, you know, a motorbike, whatever, and leave your helmet on it and your water bottle and whatever else. Nobody steals anything. They're finding that way all over Asia.
[03:36:16] Unknown:
Murr, that's the way it is where I live.
[03:36:19] Unknown:
Mhmm.
[03:36:21] Unknown:
Except we have a pentance of dopers that's coming out of the cities and causing problems.
[03:36:38] Unknown:
Yeah. Especially meth heads. Yeah. The Chinese have severe punishment for somebody who steals. But we don't.
[03:36:46] Unknown:
I have a neighbor that had the tractor and planter, had over $250,000 worth of damage done. So I'm by meth heads trying to steal diesel out of out of each tractor.
[03:36:59] Unknown:
Yep. We're we're a land of no justice anymore.
[03:37:01] Unknown:
And that's what the demons like the best. You know? Jerry Marcinski pointing out that, they they want them to do meth, these, people that are afflicted. And that's what it is. It's demons. They knew the asylums back in biblical times. Christ didn't you know, he cast demons out so that the disciples, they didn't put them block them up somewhere. We give permission. You know? There again. Christ for these demons.
[03:37:35] Unknown:
Now when I go to Home Depot, if I wanna buy a 15 foot piece of copper wire, I've gotta wait for a guy who doesn't exist in the in the Home Depot to unlock the, steel cages they have around that piece of wire because the wisdom of this, government was to let people steal up to a thousand dollars a day without any punishment.
[03:38:03] Unknown:
Yeah. 951. Right?
[03:38:06] Unknown:
And the people in in in I couldn't believe that. And I asked a manager at my Home Depot. He says, oh, yeah. They come in every night just before 09:00 before we close, like, fifteen minutes or half hour before. They load up their basket, and they walk right out.
[03:38:23] Unknown:
I mean,
[03:38:25] Unknown:
what a bunch of BS. You know?
[03:38:28] Unknown:
What a joke. No law. No morals.
[03:38:33] Unknown:
Samuel, I think he was telling you to do your shopping at quarter to nine.
[03:38:39] Unknown:
Yeah. If I was that kind of person, that would be exactly what I do. Right?
[03:38:46] Unknown:
I remember reading there was one, one store, you know, right after they passed that that, they put a a what was it? A higher price tag on it. So it was too high. You know, everything was priced just above that amount so people wouldn't steal it. But if when you bring it up to the counter, then they give you the real price.
[03:39:08] Unknown:
Yeah. There's there's they there's more than a retail price for things.
[03:39:12] Unknown:
Mhmm.
[03:39:18] Unknown:
Oh, I know. I mean, if you if you look at what the the some of the I mean, there's so many basic things like plumbing things. I can't even buy at Home Depot anymore because they're so outrageously priced. I mean, my mom and pop stores used to be way more efficient than what they are now. But, of course, they had been destroyed by all these big chains.
[03:39:53] Unknown:
Pretty interesting how the, Amish, though, will get into all these different types of businesses, you know, and building and stuff and stuff you need. And, I remember I got a bunch of panels from them when I had had the van still. Packed it in there so tight. You know, I had to pull the driver's seat up to the steering wheel, but it was still better than trying to strap it on top.
[03:40:18] Unknown:
I I think I had a client, and he needed a, I needed a few feet of wiring to I had to move an electrical, power switch for him in the house, and it, was wired with, fourteen three, which is three conductors and a ground for a two way switch. And I went into Home Depot to buy a 15 foot pool of that stuff, and it was, like, $50.
[03:40:47] Unknown:
Yeah.
[03:40:48] Unknown:
I was like, what? I can't do that to my client for, like, a couple of feet. You know? So I he had some fourteen two, so I just took that and pulled another conductor out of, out of the rest of it and made my four wire piece, taped it up with some electrical tape, and called it good because I I couldn't justify charging him $50 for that role.
[03:41:12] Unknown:
So why did we so why did we put, on the hit list for tariffs where most of our copper comes from? Yeah. Go figure.
[03:41:31] Unknown:
I took Chile down a while ago, and guess what? Jeffrey Sachs, the shock doctor, was in on that. So when he started coming around and being interviewed by Cucker, I thought, uh-oh. It's America's turn. I don't care what he says, and you can find him saying a 180 degree things. Alright? As is typical. No. It's just not trustworthy, but you see what they're up to. He he gave a little talk there in front of the, Security Council UN that China is heading for, like, twenty minutes, fold his little hands and chatter away. And and their Jew World Order rolls on.
[03:42:18] Unknown:
And there's also which doesn't come up very often. I haven't followed it for a while because, looks like James McKinney sort of rolled off of that Wednesday position on John Moore Show.
[03:42:29] Unknown:
Yeah. But he has he has, shortwave on Thursdays. I always forget to check it out, you know, which you can pick up online, apparently. And he, also is on, I think it's once a month on rent.
[03:42:42] Unknown:
He has his wing generator, which he claims, and I believe, that can supply tremendous amounts of power. He says four big wind generators like that in the San Francisco Bay could take care of all of the needs of San Francisco.
[03:43:00] Unknown:
Yeah. They specifically designed for where they are, each one of them. Yeah. Well, you need wind. That's a given. Oh, right. Right. But I'm just saying, you know, whether it's some small on a hilltop or like you're saying out in the you know? They do it do it all very precisely. Yeah. I think it's probably a really good idea. And they don't chew up the birds. Right. They don't have to be it would have to be deiced.
[03:43:30] Unknown:
Right. And they're scalable. I mean Right. These three blade things, I mean, most of them don't even live their life out. And in general, it takes more energy to build one than they ever produce in their lifetime.
[03:43:51] Unknown:
But we have federal subsidies. Exactly.
[03:43:55] Unknown:
And then there's all the electromagnetic frequency, you know, they're in cow pastures and stuff.
[03:44:03] Unknown:
What what I've read is that the oil and gas, giants wanted to suck all of the all of the excess money out of alternative and stick it where the where it would never really make a difference or never really impact their world. And that's exactly what they promoted. Things like wind generation.
[03:44:27] Unknown:
I know. We're all suckered into it. Oh, look. It looks like big pinwheels. Yeah. Yeah. I was I was enamored with that for a little while. We took a trip to, Canada. I I wanted to see that. I was like, okay. I saw it. Never mind. It's not worth it. You know? But they have a whole bunch in the one valley coming down the hill.
[03:44:52] Unknown:
I I wish I had more wind because I've got one of my own designed, which is like a, a vertical, blade. And I also did a scale version of McKinney's that I would like to build for myself. But, my version has doesn't have a a 90 degree gearbox needed in it, which is a lot cheaper for me to build, but I just don't have enough wind to justify one. But in winter, when I do have more when the storms are up and I've got less solar, it would fill that gap during that period of time, which if I ever get around to it, I'm gonna build one.
[03:46:02] Unknown:
There used to be this guy who worked at our local tractor supplies. His name was Tommy, and he was a he was a jack of all trades. He was a retired CEO of some kind of company, and, you know, he was just filling up his time. You know? His wife still works, so he wanted to be out. And and he said he he made these little, like, wooden nickels for his employees, and it and it said round to it. And then anytime he'd ask his guys, you know, to do something, they'd say, yeah. As soon as I get around to it, and he'd throw him one of them. And
[03:46:39] Unknown:
I have one of those, Dave. I have one of those.
[03:46:46] Unknown:
Yep. Pretty neat.
[03:46:50] Unknown:
Right now, it's 92 degrees outside, and it's 76 degrees inside. My swamp cooler's running, and it draws about two watts. Nice.
[03:47:01] Unknown:
So, Samuel, is there wind up above your trees?
[03:47:06] Unknown:
I'd have to get pretty high, and then that's the problem. And the other thing with wind power is your tower costs more than your generator. Right. Right. I'm sorry. I said two watts, two amps.
[03:47:24] Unknown:
Two amps. That's nice.
[03:47:30] Unknown:
About an amp to run the fan and about an amp, less than an amp to or an amp and a half to run the fan and about a half an amp to run the water pump. That's it.
[03:47:42] Unknown:
You know?
[03:47:48] Unknown:
But you gotta have the low humidity to to make swamp coolers work, which is about 27 right now.
[03:48:07] Unknown:
Ours is a 100. It's been raining all day.
[03:48:10] Unknown:
Oh, Jesus. Yeah. I remember those Wisconsin days where it was a 100 degrees and a 100% humidity. Didn't need a shower.
[03:48:27] Unknown:
Yeah. Open air sauna.
[03:50:02] Unknown:
We'll see you all tomorrow. Have a good one.
[03:50:05] Unknown:
You too.
[03:50:06] Unknown:
Thanks.
[03:50:32] Unknown:
Okay. Well, everybody's done. Let's take this thing offline seeing as the stream is still running. Thanks so much for joining us for the Radio Ranch Friday edition with Roger Sales and Brent Allen Winters on eurofolkradio.com, Global Voice Radio Network, and radiosoapbox.com. Our website is thematrixdocs.com. That is the matrixd0cs.com. On there, you will find links to the live streams, downloadables, exhibits, interviews, and the links to free conference calls so you can join us live on the show. Thank you so much for being with us. We can't wait to see you back here again for the Radio Ranch with Roger Sales, Monday through Saturday, 11AM to 1PM eastern.
Bye now. Blasting the voice of freedom worldwide, you're listening to the Global Voice Radio Network.
[03:51:47] Unknown:
Bye bye, boys. Have fun storming the castle.
Introduction and Setting the Stage
Technical Challenges and Audio Issues
Cicero's Historical Perspective
Discussion on US Supreme Court and Legal Education
Constitutional Amendments and Public Positions
Religious Perspectives and Historical Context
Common Law Tradition and Legal Education
Comparative Law Course Overview
Oil and Gas Industry Insights
Judicial System and Legal Reforms
Trusts and Legal Structures
Energy Policies and Environmental Concerns
Cultural and Religious Discussions
Listener Questions and Interactive Session
Closing Remarks and Future Directions