In this episode of the Radio Ranch, host Roger Sayles navigates through a variety of topics, from personal anecdotes to broader discussions on political and economic issues. Roger shares a personal story about a hectic day involving computer troubles and a dental appointment, illustrating the challenges of everyday life. The conversation then shifts to technical difficulties with broadcasting and the intricacies of modern technology.
Roger and his guests delve into discussions about the state of the economy, referencing historical figures like Congressman Lewis T. McFadden and his speeches on the Federal Reserve. They explore the implications of executive orders and the role of federal judges, touching on the complexities of legal procedures and the importance of understanding jurisdiction.
The episode also covers the topic of health, with listeners sharing personal experiences and advice on maintaining well-being amidst challenging weather conditions. The conversation is peppered with humor and camaraderie, as participants share their thoughts and experiences.
Listeners are encouraged to engage with the content, ask questions, and explore the resources mentioned throughout the show, such as historical books and legal documents. The episode concludes with a reminder of the importance of staying informed and involved in discussions about freedom and governance.
This Mirror Stream is brought to you in part by mymymyboost.com for support of the mitochondria like never before. A body trying to function with sluggish mitochondria is kinda like running an engine that's low on oil. It's not gonna work very well. It's also brought to you by Fatphix, p h a t p h I x, dot com. Visceral fat is weighing your body down. It's causing sluggish response of your organs, and it's gotta go. It's gotta go. It's gotta get rid of it. You just gotta. And, also, iTero Planet for the terahertz frequency wand by Preif International.
That's iTeroPlanet.com. Thank you, and welcome to the program. Forward moving and focused on freedom. You're listening to the Global Voice Radio Network.
[00:01:56] Unknown:
That's two, Alvin. That's two. We're gonna make another stab at it. Although it is changing in a positive direction for a change, we're gonna make another stab at helping here on the Saturday edition, Sabado, if you wanna learn a little Spanish. And it is, wow. 22222225. Oh, a little ominous. My father would say '22, my favorite number. Roger Sales, Stan's son here, your host on the Radio Ranch, and it's the, as we said, Saturday edition. Those are usually a little bit different. And, we have a much abbreviated, cast of characters that, hooks on with us today, I believe. Paul, would you identify the folks that are with us on the Stabadot
[00:02:43] Unknown:
edition, please? I sure can. Good morning, Raj. Good morning, everybody. Yes. It is the Saddadot edition. Brighton Gipper. Ranch with Roger Sales. We have, a drastically I'm talking drastically abbreviated.
[00:03:04] Unknown:
Yeah. List of Yeah. They take the weekend off.
[00:03:08] Unknown:
We are going out on Global Voice Radio.
[00:03:14] Unknown:
Mhmm.
[00:03:15] Unknown:
That's it. That's it. Eurofolk Radio had a eurofolkradio.com had a server issue. Uh-oh. It actually hasn't been up for a few days, and it probably won't be up for a few more days.
[00:03:29] Unknown:
Uh-oh.
[00:03:30] Unknown:
If you wanna join us on the show, you can go to the matrixstocks.com, and you can join us via a free conference call. Or you can go to live.globalvoiceradio.net. The link to that is also on the website. And, if you type in manuallystream.eurofolkradio.com, you can hear the show there. Uh-huh. But there's there's actually no no website or no web page or no link to make it easy.
[00:04:04] Unknown:
Is this another little software glitchy?
[00:04:08] Unknown:
I don't know what it is. I mean, it's a server problem and, like, a a a server and website problem and, like, pieces were connecting.
[00:04:21] Unknown:
And Paula's working on it, but it's gonna take days to sort it out. Well, I know that's not an easy find and fix. I'm probably an easy fix, just not an easy find. But, well, we'll you still can get it by doing stream.eurofolkradio.com and by going live.globalvoiceradio. Wasn't that the other address you gave? Live.
[00:04:46] Unknown:
Yeah. Live.globalvoiceradio.net.
[00:04:50] Unknown:
Okay. .Net. Okay. Well, I guess we can't reach the people to tell them we're sorry, but, you know, these are the, unexpected events that happen in a technological society Yes. Like we are in. So good morning to you. I was just watching for first of all, boy, I had a hell of a day yesterday. Good lord almighty. I spent, like, almost $15 in taxi, fees, and that's pretty unusual down here when they're, like, a dollar or 2 of a a slap. I had my big computer down.
[00:05:21] Unknown:
Right.
[00:05:22] Unknown:
And so the desktop, it's got the sports module and stuff on it. I wanted it over the weekend. So I got up real early yesterday, took the computer down the computer shop, and all of a sudden when we get down there close to us, it's all this traffic. And and even the taxi driver goes, trafficker. Trafficker. And, it turns out there's another big wreck, two two damn semis over on the interstate, which is pretty close adjacent to the four lane that we were you go back and forth on a lot, and it was a mess. It was just a mellow of a hess. So I I get up there. The taxi driver's waiting. The shop didn't open yet because the owner of the shop is in the traffic jam. So finally, I I don't know what to do with the taxi driver, so you can either stay here or. You know? And he I paid him. He.
So ended up I the guy was forty five minutes late. So that's why I was hassle yesterday. I wanna leave it with him, and I okay. I'll come back at three. So did the show, went and had a nice lunch and little early. So I go, I'll go back down there, and, I'll go back down there a little early and pick it up because I had this dental appointment at 04:30. So everything's sandwiched between this dental surgery. And, so, I get back down there, and he hooks it up, brings the computer out, hooks it up to the monitor on the on the counter there, boots up just fine. I'm thrilled to death. I go out and hail me a taxi, and I come home and I hook it up. So I got about an hour and a half for the, for the dental appointment.
And I wanna do it in the daylight so I can see because it's challenging to get all those little USBs and stuff in the right holes for me. But easier with light, so I'm gonna come home and do that. Well, I come home and do it, and it won't boot up. It just comes up to the first screen, Asus. It won't go any further. I tried it three or four times. And now I've got enough time. They called and set my dental appointment back thirty minutes, which was very helpful. Thank you. And, so now I got enough time to run down there and just leave it with him. If it won't come on, then I'll leave it with him, and I won't have to get up Monday morning and go schlep it over there early. And so, anyway, I go over there. I catch him. It's still about four four ish, I guess. And, and he puts it up hooks it up to two monitors on both of them.
Starting it on, boots up, goes right past the BIOS page and all that. Well, it turned out, I brought it home, and all I hooked up, Paul, was the power cord and the monitor. And it booted up just fine. And then I went ahead and hooked up the Internet and all the rest of the stuff to it. But and then so I I oh, wow. Got that done. Right? So I'm gonna go up and get a catch a taxi over to my dental appointment. Well, I go up to where all the taxis hang out, and I can't get a taxi in thirty minutes. So I come back to the house. I go, I I I can't get a taxi. And I so, anyway, he ends up my dentist comes over with his children and picks me up. And, it's not too far from his office and go back. He's a really nice guy. He's got a great dental office there. And, got the dental stuff done, got the implant done. It's not even hardly sore today.
I've suffered no backlashes or anything, so that's pretty good. And, here we are. But what what a hell of a day, man. Just back and forth, back and forth, fighting traffic everywhere. Then Friday afternoon traffic, and it's just one thing or another. So, anyway, got made it. Everything's cool. Computer's up. My sanity's back. My temper's down, and, here we are, Paul. Cool. Hang on. Why would that happen?
[00:09:05] Unknown:
I've, gee, I don't know. A device plugged in to the wrong port confused the, No. The the computer at the power on self test. There was there was some issue with the peripheral. Oh, sure.
[00:09:19] Unknown:
Self test. Now I I I I would leave it there with the Asus screen up for, you know, good forty five seconds or a minute or more, and it just never would go forward to the bios page and the continuation of the boot up. But, anyway, I've got a solution if any of you have that problem. I had a computer guy say anytime you're gonna boot up the computer, always, pull out the extra hard drives and all that stuff. That may have been part of it. Don't know. But we're back up and working, and that's pretty good. So Uh-huh. Well,
[00:09:49] Unknown:
I actually did have, I had somebody scare me up this morning. Paul, are you still there? You still monitoring?
[00:10:01] Unknown:
Paul, was that Paul English?
[00:10:03] Unknown:
Yeah. Yeah. Can you hear him, Raj? Yeah. No. You can't hear him?
[00:10:10] Unknown:
No. We'd love to would love to, though, if he's speaking. Okay.
[00:10:15] Unknown:
Let me see.
[00:10:18] Unknown:
Let me let me figure out why, why this channel is There's just all this technical living in the modern world, you just about gotta be an IT specialist, and far, far from all of us are IT specialists.
[00:10:32] Unknown:
Right.
[00:10:32] Unknown:
So Okay. Yeah.
[00:10:34] Unknown:
Are you still trying to pipe him through here? Yeah. I'm still trying to pipe him through. Okay.
[00:10:40] Unknown:
Well, while you're doing that, we're waiting for Paul. I'll, dribble, just a little bit. I was watching, catching up because with all that activity yesterday, obviously, I didn't see any of the the Infowars stuff. So, I was starting on Owen's show this morning and, got to just as we were going on the air, I got to see the swearing for Kash Patel and the first hour leading up, in in the hour of their of his three hour program. And going into some detail and things I had not heard before on what they're finding. And it's truly repulsive.
K? And, I e and I didn't hear this up until this morning. Excuse me. I e in the EPA. And I know Paul's over there trying to hit hit hit a right button. So I can't use him as a sounding board here, but, EPA, they found 2,000,000,000 for Stacey Abrams Climate Club.
[00:11:43] Unknown:
Really?
[00:11:45] Unknown:
2,000,000,000. Yeah. Let's put that in perspective. That's 200,000 million dollars.
[00:11:52] Unknown:
Wow.
[00:11:53] Unknown:
K? Or or 200,000
[00:11:56] Unknown:
to blues.
[00:11:58] Unknown:
Or or babble. 200,000 babble bucks. However you wanna classify it. They found that fat. She's the female equivalent of Fat Albert. K? And, she's just an absolute commie bitch. Her her her sister is a federal judge down there that Obama appointed, Mark.
[00:12:20] Unknown:
So I still disparage Fat Albert. He was one of my
[00:12:23] Unknown:
childhood I'm sorry. Well, I'm sorry. I hate to I hate to diminish your memories. Fat Albert. I tarnish him. Show. You're disparaging him. I am. Well, I can do that. Here's my show. I I think she's I think she's a hog. And, as you know, she probably still hadn't said she didn't win that governor's race eight years ago. So so, anyway, anyway, $22,000,000,000. Oh, there's something oh, woah. Woah. We got a feedback. Echoes feedback. Mister English, are you there? Uh-oh. Hey. Welcome, Mark. You and Straw?
[00:13:03] Unknown:
Yeah. Good to be here. Mark Paul caps. Does your name in all capital letters does not convey jurisdiction?
[00:13:10] Unknown:
That does not. Well, there's Joan. She's got a question already. I hadn't even asked for him yet. Yes, ma'am. I don't know why and how Georgians put up with Stacy Abrams. I just don't under Well, they hadn't elected her to any position. What do you want him to do? Hang her? She'd probably break the hangman's rope, for god's sakes. I know there was a guy that called her, the well, he called her what I just called her, the female equivalent of Fat Albert, and she sued his ass and got a whole bunch of money out of it, I think. Seems like. Guy from Chattanooga or something.
Anyway, they're finding that a $20,000,000,000 that the EPA had stashed in those eight different accounts that they don't know who owns the accounts yet, I don't think. Wow. All that. But the good news is Kash Patel is sworn in and for the heavy hitters, around the president's table, All those pretty important cabinet positions are filled with extremely competent people.
[00:14:15] Unknown:
Yeah. It appears. K. Well, they were given cash or really run for his money. They're trying to catch him up every which way they could.
[00:14:25] Unknown:
You should see this, swearing ceremony, Mark. The audience went nuts after he got sworn in. I mean, they they couldn't hardly shut him up. And He's a rock star. I'm telling you. He is unbelievable. He's got a very bright future. And I'll tell you who else does. It's Tulsi Gabbard. You know, they're already talking and floating the idea of JD Vance and Tulsi Gabbard in four years. That's a powerful ticket right there. Yes. It would be. Uh-huh. So, anyway, lots of things happening. And, I'm I'm sorry I couldn't stay on top of it yesterday, but just the nature of one schedule. So the good news is is my implant.
I don't even hardly feel it. There's no pain or anything this morning. It wasn't very bad surgery. Well, it was a upper jaw implant. I got two of those. He'd done one previously. This was wrapping up the agreement on these two. And, but the bad part was because there had been so much bone erosion there on the top, jaw that he had to put bone in there. I don't know if you know what they do these days, their mark on this, but they, I guess, he had a a a little implement, a drill like that round attachment you have for a drill that drills a perfect hole in the door so you can put a door handle in. I think it must have been something like that. And, and he did it in two places and then had to put all that cadaver bone and stitches and all kinds of stuff in. That would that hadn't me down for about three days. K? Yep. But then put put an implant in, that's about a year ago almost, and sticking this little implant in isn't it's like nothing. You know? Biggest the biggest problem was the injection you get at first. You know? It hurts more than anything else, really. Yeah.
So, so, anyway, got that behind me. And, I don't know when we'll finish it out on the upper, but then we got a whole lower jaw to deal with, and that's gonna be a little more serious. So we'll see. Cross that bridge when we get to it. But, everything's going pretty well. I'm in good shape. Feel good. And for a man of 76 years old, I'm in amazingly good condition. So rest your little beating hearts that Roger's not gonna drop off on the side of the road. And I try my best at my age not to make stupid decisions anymore. I've made a number of those along the lines as we all have. So I'm, in a pretty good spot here. Hope you are. We're here to discuss your freedom.
Don't know if you're new or not. The show's really for the new people. And this particular, edition, the Sabado, Saturday edition is, for the new folks that are gainfully employed, and, can't ask questions. So if there are any of you out there, please don't be shy. We, you know, with my with my teeth situation, I won't bite you. We might gum you a little bit, but you'll be alright. Okay? You'll live through it. And that's pretty rare. So, anyway, that's where we are. Anybody, new with questions, you can speak up now. We're, we'd love to hear from you, meet you, find out where you're from, and what part of the country anyway, and, how you found us. Those are the questions I always like.
So here we are. I guess Paul is still working on Paul. Well, that sounds a little redundant, doesn't it? Well, it'd be wonderful if mister English would come join us today, if Paul can get that fixed out. Mark, you've been doing you've been away for a few days. You you alright?
[00:17:58] Unknown:
Yeah. Feeling better? I mean, we're just doing great. Yeah. I feel, you know, getting better and stronger every day. And,
[00:18:04] Unknown:
you know, I just got a a full plate. I'm spending a lot of plates and trying to catch up at the same time. So You've been upset for you've been off the air and upset and in a precarious position for over a month now. Isn't it? Five weeks?
[00:18:18] Unknown:
Six weeks? Something like that? Well, yeah. Then a little bit before that, you know, I didn't realize how how bad I was in December. I was really, you know, kinda struggling and and so but, yeah. I've I've, you know, feeling I thought I was gonna have to
[00:18:35] Unknown:
thought I was gonna have to fly up there and administer last rites or something. Yeah. No. Not quite that bad, but,
[00:18:42] Unknown:
you know, thankfully, I got some good doctors, and we got things straightened out and headed in the right direction. I feel really good.
[00:18:51] Unknown:
I tell you what, you sounded like crap there for a little bit when I spoke with you. So we're glad to see you get that behind you.
[00:18:57] Unknown:
Yeah. I had a lot of suggestion too. I kinda picked up a sinus infection about that same time that I was in the hospital. So and I don't know if it was something that was going around, because all the nurses were talking about some kind of crud going around. So Yeah. Anyway, and then I think some of the medication they put me on kinda, you know, exacerbates that. So that's my big word of the day, exacerbates. Well, okay. Good. Our, our good, student the word of the day. Back in here.
[00:19:29] Unknown:
Oh, extra x extra establishment may do canarianism. What's the longest word in the in the language? Oh my god. I forgot. It it's a long word. Yeah. Joan, were you trying to get something in there, sweetie? Please come forward and tell us. I mean I mean could Mark tell us what kind of medication
[00:19:48] Unknown:
he was on?
[00:19:50] Unknown:
It's really not necessary. I got it. I appreciate your your interest though. Well, Julie, Julie had I've got I've got health professionals and I have very knowledgeable natural health professionals. One who's a personal friend and a certified naturopath. So I'm pretty covered in that department. I'm pretty knowledgeable myself. So Alright. I just, doing good. Well, I can give you I know everybody wants to give me I know everybody wants to give me advice, but Yeah. I got over to the home. Pretty well mapped out. Yeah. I think you got an arm around it by now.
[00:20:30] Unknown:
I had to start taking three days of yep. I had to start taking three days of lots of prayers. You know? I appreciate that. We sent some we sent some towards you. I had to start just a few minutes ago to take the first of a three days series of antibiotics, which I I don't like taking antibiotics.
[00:20:49] Unknown:
Okay?
[00:20:50] Unknown:
No. I wish I'd had some good colloidal silver, and I told him I didn't. Last the first one, they he gave me some kind of monster penicillin, and I took it for seven or ten days. And my my bowel tract has been messed up for almost a year over that. And so I don't like doing that, and, I capitulated. I'll do three days. At least I know the way to get back now, and we'll see. But I just don't like I don't like doctors. I like this guy. He's a great guy. He's got a wonderful family and wife, and he's just a nice guy. Both and I should plug that a little bit for him. His name is doctor Martin. We would say Martin. In in Spanish, it's Martin because you pronounce i's or e's.
But if any of you, we had somebody down here recently for a month on a on a well, a a medical, a medical trip, basically, to come down and get a couple of root canals and, the other work that she needed done on her teeth and, considerably cheaper than The US, I can promise you. So if you ever if that's a problem of yours and that might offer you a solution, you can explore it a little bit. You can, ask any questions here. You can contact Jack and, just a really good dentist, real high-tech, and, uses all the modern stuff and, very, well, we we were getting ready to have the surgery. You know that light they have above you above you shines in your mouth. And and right before the surgery, he was he took something. I could see it, and he wrapped it around one of the handles. It's got two handles on that each side.
And I said, well, you know, doctor Martin, what are you doing there? And he goes, oh, before an operation, we take aluminum foil and wrap it over that so I can handle the light, and there's less chance of anything getting on me. They're they're very I mean, he's just a really meticulous guy. Does great work. So if any of you have that problem, we could solve it for you should you wanna come down and visit. So so does anybody else have anything they're dying to bring up today or wanna discuss?
[00:22:56] Unknown:
Well, hey, Brock. I finally got the right buttons pushed.
[00:22:59] Unknown:
Okay. Well, hold on. Okay. Dropped out. Oh, man. I know sooner had all the right buttons pushed in his spirit. So Well, tell him to come back. Okay. We we miss him. Oh, I We'd love to speak with him. And, he certainly got an open invitation. In the meantime, while you're doing that, there's a guy in the background that said, hey, Roger. They're a a little distant voice of sorts. Who is that? Yeah.
[00:23:24] Unknown:
Yeah, Roger. I'm in a really confusing. This is Paul from Kentucky.
[00:23:29] Unknown:
Okay. Hey, Paul.
[00:23:32] Unknown:
Hey. Something ironic just happened, about a week or so ago. About a week ago, one of my drivers I'm in the freight expedite business, and, one of my drivers came down with pneumonia. And in the midst of him coming down with pneumonia, I had another driver come down with pneumonia. Well, the first driver got admitted to the hospital, and then he was diagnosed with congestive heart failure. And, they brought hospice in Thursday and, I mean, Wednesday, and he left this Thursday.
[00:24:11] Unknown:
Wow.
[00:24:12] Unknown:
So and then the other driver had and then the other driver has developed some kind of viral disease. I mean, not viral disease, but viral infection. And, so please, it's kinda wild. It's like it's almost like COVID again with pneumonia. I'm doing my best like Mark. I've got some natural herbals and things that, I'm taking to try to keep my health up to par, but we've got some pretty crazy weather here in the Midwest. And, I guess these guys are not taking real good care of themselves. So or it's just their time, you know, but, well, the other guy is still with us, but he's not doing very well. So Well, I hope he turns around. You know, we're having a,
[00:25:04] Unknown:
I guess, of course, I'm not up there, but you're having a little more of a severe winter than you've had in a few years, aren't you?
[00:25:10] Unknown:
It's kinda what I hear. Yesterday, I got caught in a whiteout. Well, two of us did. We were going to the same place, which is, Wyoming, Michigan. And I see. We both got caught in that mess. We were about two hours behind each other. Right. Well, I know that can be wild driving. That can be treacherous.
[00:25:29] Unknown:
Well, we're at the front end of a global solar minimum, of course. And, I don't know if you guys remember, Paul. You weren't hanging around last year, but, you know, I've got connections in Argentina from living down there. And last winter for them was the coldest winter in one hundred and twenty five years or more. And, I I said, I wonder if the Northern Hemisphere is gonna have a severe winter, opposite their severe winter, and it appears like you are having it. So, that I'm sure could be part of the reason so many people are sick. For whatever reason, that cold weather exacerbates that.
And, sorry for your loss, and hopefully, the other guy will pull through, Paul.
[00:26:10] Unknown:
Well, and you brought up a couple great points my other driver the other day called me when we're caught in this whiteout and of course the winds blowing in the roads are icy So it's literally pushing our semis like like we're on set you like we're sales on ice skates, you know, yeah, so where the wind goes, you know, yep, and he says man, he says they talk about this global warming. He says, I wish you'd get a little warmer. It was like six degrees, but I think maybe another contribution to all this sickness is, you know, one day it'll be 60 degrees and sunny and the next day it'll be six degrees and snowy and I see it right here.
[00:26:49] Unknown:
You know? Yep. So Yep. That's it. I certainly had your share that with y'all. We're. Thank you. But we are definitely Also con
[00:26:57] Unknown:
yeah. And I'll confuse you a little more because we have Paul on here and then English Paul. Now you got Kentucky Paul. Well, you're gonna have me you're gonna have me calling him big balls again if you keep that up.
[00:27:11] Unknown:
I yield. Thank you, guys. Thank you, Paul. But it is a, we are I'm gonna get you in a second, mister d. We are in the front end of a, global solar minimum that's established. And it's, you can track it actually back through the centuries and see when, the last time was, and that's where we are. And it might get cold. I don't know. Depending on your age, you might not see much of it like your drivers there, Paul. But, that is, what's happening. And as they've said for the last number of years, Tom, trust the science. Trust the science, Tom. Would you please?
[00:27:48] Unknown:
Trust the science. Yeah. Right. You know, all the years that I worked in Center City, Philadelphia, the filthy, despicable areas that I was in, like, KNA, you know, Kensington. You've heard I'm sure most people have heard of the Kensington area No. Of Philadelphia. Kensington, they call it the that's where all these that's where all these drug addicts hang out. You know, they're all stooped over, you know, hanging out, shooting heroin and just just despicable, disgusting areas of Philadelphia where working, you know, because I worked in the hospitals and doctors' offices. And all those years, all the years that I have been working down there, not once did I ever catch anything because my wife always loaded me up with stuff, you know, every day. Here. Take all this. You know, it could've been arsenic for all I know.
Here. Take these and, you know, we go to if we would have had a doctor's appointment at a hospital or something, she would give me these things to take. We take them ahead of time, things you you rub up your nose. Never been I I can't remember the last time I said I mean, it's been years and years and years since I've been sick. And, it's, I don't know. Yeah. I don't know whether I was said I've got a really good immune system or she just keeps us healthy, but neither one of us have been sick. I, we haven't had a I was in Philadelphia. No vaccine vaccine in forty five years since he died. Well, that's probably why. Thing I'm swallowing clue. I'm sure that's a contributing
[00:29:19] Unknown:
element to that. I was in Philadelphia once, and I've I feel like WC Fields, you know, about it. So if you remember some of his Oh, wait. Kid, you bother me. I'm gonna I'm gonna I'm gonna I you you might ought to be in Philadelphia. You know?
[00:29:36] Unknown:
Whatever all his stuff was. Well, Automan Automan Hospital in Center City was probably one of the worst hospitals down there. I mean, just people, you know, standing in in line because they're everybody's sick and there's so much so much, you know, very few doctors and all the welfare and all that crap. But, but I I wanted to tell you something about your computer. You said you mentioned when you said you had an external hard drive connected? Yes, sir. Yes, sir. Okay. Have you tried to reboot it with every all the peripherals hooked up since you brought it back? I have not. I have not. Okay. Well, when you reboot it, or if you lose power and it shuts off, you may end up with the same problem.
But if you've got some kind of external hard drive on there, go into the BIOS and turn off boot from USB, because something's trying to boot to, something that shouldn't be booting instead of your main hard drive. Yeah. If it if it does it again when it start if you do get that if you get that issue again and it starts to boot and it won't boot, then reboot it. And as soon as you see it starting to boot, tap f 12, and that will put you into the boot screen that where you can select the boot option and just make sure you select the main boot the main, drive. So Okay.
[00:30:57] Unknown:
Otherwise, you gotta you gotta unplug all the extra peripherals. Right. Right. Each time. Plug in one item at a time, and then reboot until you find it. Well, I I I probably do that than the earlier one because all that technical crap is usually you know, here's what I find in my lifetime. When I try and go and do something like that, being the novice that I am, I go in and screw something up that's even more complex. So I try not to do those things, quite frankly. But, yeah, I can't If I had a
[00:31:27] Unknown:
Well, if you if you have an external drive hooked up, just unplug it or turn the power until you're actually gonna use it. Yep. I'm sure just probably the drive
[00:31:37] Unknown:
problem. I I agree with you. I agree with you there, Tom. Hopefully, I won't have to deal with it or whatever. But now I know how to get around it, so we'll be alright. Thank you though for your suggestion. And if I could get a computer whiz over here, I'd have them do it, but we'll see.
[00:31:58] Unknown:
So otherwise, now you're doing good. Computer whiz because I've been doing it for forty years.
[00:32:03] Unknown:
Oh, there are two or three people trying to talk. We can't have that. You've been doing it for a long time. Okay. Well, maybe I'll yank your chain if I have problems with it again. Who is the other fellow who's trying to say something there?
[00:32:15] Unknown:
This is Mark. I was concurring with Tom. I mean, I've been building my own computers since, like, what, 9293. Until it got so cheap, I just buy one unless I really need something custom made. But I think I think Tom's exactly right. If you try booting it up with your external drive and you don't go on through, then it's trying to boot from that USB drive. So
[00:32:41] Unknown:
then you just disconnect and try booting again. Yeah. The funny thing is it wasn't doing that before, but it's doing it now. Now what he did do is put in a new, what what do you call it, AC adapter? No. A new, fan power power supply. So I don't know if that's having any effect on or not. But, anyway, it's straight down. I know how to get it one way or the other. And if I can't get it one way or the other, I'll call one of you too. So, there you go. Anybody else in the audience? Anybody got any questions or comments on some of the things that are happening or what we normally talk about? And that's what we're all here for today is for that. So I hate to get too far a field from that, but, without trying to see it. Interesting
[00:33:23] Unknown:
question, Robert. Okay. Alright. From Nancy.
[00:33:27] Unknown:
Okay. Nancy Ott. About, Nancy or or. Virginia Virginia Nancy.
[00:33:36] Unknown:
I just I think it's I just call him Nancy. She knows who she is. Okay.
[00:33:40] Unknown:
Okay.
[00:33:43] Unknown:
Typically, don't like to use people's last names unless they Yeah. Have used it on the show before. But anyway She has, but that's okay. Okay. So Nancy sent me an email asking about the, revocation of election and Weiss Paris and the revocation election on the nationalstatus.com website. That's Dave and Kaye in Alabama. Wonderful website. Lots of good information. They even got a tremendous search engine that you can use. But they also provide a a, revocation of election document. And they're both notarized. And so Nancy was wanting to know, is it required that you notarize those? Or I mean, those have been set up as an affidavit. And so she was asking about my one page at, revocation of election, which we reserve for our tax clients.
And, we don't we don't notarize that. And on top of that, when it comes to the IRS requirement for revoking the election on a subchapter s corporation. They don't require a notarization.
[00:35:02] Unknown:
Okay. Mister Signerson.
[00:35:04] Unknown:
Oh, I mean it. I don't think it's really required. But that affidavit, it's a lot of I mean, there's 13 pages of stuff in there. And, man, really read through that. Make sure that's what you wanna say. Because remember, if an affidavit, if that's under penalty of perjury, whatever you put into that, you know, could be potentially used again. They making sure you that's all correct.
[00:35:28] Unknown:
I agree. And we I got a Genoa guy that went through that, studied it for quite a bit, didn't know what we know, and went ahead and went through the revocation of election process. And now the IRS is all over his ass, and he called me. Yeah. Because he had never done the secretary of state thing. Didn't know about it. You know? And so he's calling me and asked me he's having to pay an attorney's fifteen, twenty thousand dollars. You know? He goes, I don't have that kind of money. And, so I said, well, sorry. Sorry.
You know, same trap that John and Glenn fell into. Was somebody else trying to say something there a second ago? I thought I heard another voice. No? Okay. Paul, you you hadn't been able to scare Paul up again, it sounds like. I was hoping we get to speak with him a little bit today about what's going on over there. Boy, they got a mellow of a hess over there with this guy, Shaw what's his name? Schwarmer? Stormer?
[00:36:32] Unknown:
No. Schwarmer, I think, is the way you said it.
[00:36:35] Unknown:
He is a he he is a dick with ears, that boy. I I mean. K? He he he has got to be one of the worst national leaders we've seen in a while, sitting especially over England for god's sakes with their history and tradition. And you could see what the Jews have done to them. It's like, Britannoscan now. And, what did I hear? There's 650,000 people that moved out of England, and that's this approximately the size of Glasgow. So they have lost an entire city's population since this all started.
[00:37:13] Unknown:
Well, did you hear what happened in Maryland?
[00:37:16] Unknown:
I don't think I did. What happened? Oh, man. This is Von,
[00:37:21] Unknown:
oh, what's that guy's name? Nick Freitas? He's a hello?
[00:37:28] Unknown:
You got some Nick, Fuentes?
[00:37:30] Unknown:
Fuentes? Is that what you're talking about? He's the guy that bashes all the the Jews all the time, I think. Fuentes. No. No. No. He this is it's not Fuentes. It's it's like Freitas.
[00:37:42] Unknown:
Okay. He's a a legislator out of North Carolina.
[00:37:46] Unknown:
I did. Oh, okay. No. I'm thinking of a different one. Go ahead. His former military,
[00:37:51] Unknown:
extremely sharp. And he was talking about how Maryland raised the taxes on the wealthy, like, an additional 6% on top of what they're already paying just because they could. And all the wealthy people are leaving and their tax coffers went down, the more people are getting unemployed because these millionaires and their businesses are leaving Maryland. Yep. And it really hit them hard. So Yep. California's
[00:38:24] Unknown:
saying well, you vote with your feet. Get yourself out from these jurisdictions that are doing that pulling that crap. My god. Look at look at all the people that have left California. You know, and, of course, I know everybody's always heard, but it's a fact you cannot get a U Haul vehicle to leave California because there isn't any. Nobody's moving in to bring them to take out.
[00:38:50] Unknown:
Right. Yep. Matter of fact, there are people who make money driving U Hauls back to California.
[00:38:58] Unknown:
Is that is that right? Well, I hadn't heard that. But find a need and fill it. There you go. Did you happen to yes, ma'am. Well, there's that Julie. Hey, girl. I think Hi, Mark.
[00:39:10] Unknown:
Yeah. It's me. I wanted to make you guys laugh this morning. The, the newspaper said the Californification of Maryland with governor Westmore.
[00:39:22] Unknown:
Well, will they take that Can they change Raskin to get his Jew ass out of there? God, that guy just I I I just wanna throw things at the monitor when he's on.
[00:39:33] Unknown:
You know, in, in 02/2010, they've raised the income tax rate 6.2% for those making more than a million and more than a thousand of them no longer filed returns in the state and Maryland as a result, this is all the way back in 2010, collected 250,000,000 less from taxpayers in that bracket than it did before the increase. So I can't imagine what's gonna happen now.
[00:40:00] Unknown:
Wow. Well, I don't know. Mister maybe mister Trump will step in and do something. We'll see. The, interesting thing, did any of you see him talking to the governors yesterday? They had a got that governor annual governor's meeting, I guess, and Trump spoke to him. Any any of you see you see that, Mark? Any video of it? No. I I did not see that. Well, he's talking about, everything that they've done and, pulling the men out of women's sports and the governor of Maine, some liberal gal, goes, we're not gonna do that. We're gonna follow federal law. And he goes, I am federal law. And if you don't do it, we will stop all federal funds coming to your state. She said, we'll take you to court. He goes, great. Please do it. We'll look forward to it. That's funny.
Never raised his voice. Never nothing. Just nailed her little liberal. But, yes, someone is speaking from afar.
[00:40:57] Unknown:
Yeah. Paul Taylor. Are you is it hard to hear me?
[00:41:02] Unknown:
Well, yeah. You're pretty you sound very distant. Yeah.
[00:41:05] Unknown:
Oh, well, I'll call back in.
[00:41:08] Unknown:
Well, you can do that. We can hear you. I mean, it's not we can't hear you. You just sound distant. I was gonna
[00:41:14] Unknown:
I was gonna edify your your statement a few minutes ago. I have a dedicated run that goes to DC. It's medical supplies. And depending on the load, depends on what vehicle we use. And, a few years back, I invested in a brand new 26 foot straight truck. And well, not brand new, but pretty close to new. Anyways, it's turned out that they need trucks down in that area, Maryland, DC area so bad that it's cheaper for me to rent a truck, let my driver drive it there, and fly them home than it is to drive my own truck there and back. And so I ended up selling my truck. But you were talking about people getting paid to do that.
I can send them there cheaper in a rental truck. But now if I was coming from Maryland this way, I would have to take a second mortgage out on my house to rent a truck.
[00:42:17] Unknown:
Okay. Well, don't do that. So, don't Interesting. Well, they're just everything's out, you know, out of sync all over the country because of what these creeps have done for so long. And, but the good news is is Cash Patel is now sworn in and people are going, why aren't these people being prosecuted? Well, hell, man. How much can this guy do in his first month? He didn't even have the person in to the capacity of the head of the FBI till yesterday afternoon. So, give him a little bit of a chance. I think you're gonna see a a dynamic set of results coming our way in all kinds of fields that are really important to us. I know Trump was talking to the governors about the, autism thing. What? Twenty years ago, one out of twenty thousand or thirty thousand was autistic.
Now it's one out of thirty mark. And he's going, well, what is it? Are Are we spraying something we're spraying that other countries aren't? Well, there could be a lot of that. That's not an out of line speculation because we allow them to spray all kinds of crap on these crops that no none of the European countries allow them to do it even as bad as they are over there. So big changes coming. I I mean, I'm so thrilled. I'll get you in a second, Mark. I just wanna say, I honestly never believed I'd see this day in my lifetime. So I'm I'm I'm quite thrilled about it. What was your comment?
[00:43:48] Unknown:
Oh, that's pretty well established that that's tied to vaccines, the MMR, the m m measles, and the rheumatoid. And when they know that was they introduced that vaccine in Japan, and their autism rates started going up too. Yeah. So the government broke up those shots instead of giving them all in one shot. They spaced them out with three shots and their autism rates started declining again.
[00:44:16] Unknown:
And then it's turn around and started it back. Well, it's something to do, it seems with the what they call the adjuvants. Is that the term? I believe it is the things that they're putting in there to help, like, kick start stuff. Mercury. Do you know? You may not. It came up at lunch the other day that my Canadian friends were not aware of it. SV 40 was in the, COVID shot. That's probably where a lot of those cancers are coming from. That's simian virus forty that they found in the original polio vaccines. Simeon is monkey.
They were running it through monkey kidneys for something. And, one of the gals who was a researcher detected it and reported it, and they defunded her. K. Back in the fifties. So it obviously is the shots and but we never you ever hear a peanut allergies when you're growing up? I never heard of that in my whole life.
[00:45:13] Unknown:
K? Oh, no. Not when I was growing up.
[00:45:17] Unknown:
Yeah. No. Now why? Because they put a peanut adjuvant in the damn vaccines.
[00:45:22] Unknown:
Well, same thing with eggs. They had a lot of people that were a lot of kids that were allergic to eggs and found out that they were using something from the eggs to create the vaccine.
[00:45:33] Unknown:
Oh, man. I hope they uncover these bastards. Did you see Trump in, introduced Borla? There was a black had a meeting of blacks at the White House or something. I don't remember what it was. But, yeah, room full of them. And, he introduced Albert Borla and immediately broke out into boos. Vocal for about thirty, forty seconds or more. And, Trump was kinda chuckling up there on the podium. It almost looked like he did it on purpose. Anyway, there's some, there's some big stuff coming down the track. We get this this cadre of folks up there, this amount of dedication. And the thing is, is they're getting such inspiration for what they're doing, from the people.
Well, you know, the, the the feedback from the people for Trump and now I mean, really, you should hear that roomful of people when, they finished to confirming Cash Patel yesterday. They couldn't get them to stop clapping and yelling. So, great things ahead. I believe it's gonna be really exciting to have a talk show that discusses stuff. Of course, it doesn't really generally apply to us, but it is now because it's moving back in our direction. And, what we've got here is we've got the Trump card they don't have, and they can't say a damn thing about it. Even Trump Trump couldn't write an executive order of trumping what we do, even if he wanted to. And I got a feel if he knew what was going on here, he wouldn't want to.
But, it's pretty exciting, and we're still in the game. We may be between innings right now, kinda. The seventh seventh inning stretch or something, Mark, I think is what we're in. But, but we're in the game, and we got something real value. We got a, we got a pitch that no other pitcher in the league's got. K? Yeah. And, so it'll be interesting when we can pull it out and whip it over the plate for them. Yep. Just waiting. Hurry, Lord. Please.
[00:47:38] Unknown:
Exciting times, man. I mean, it's just, you know, I really don't see the feds backing down from their overreach, you know. They may be trimming the government down, and there's certain certain departments like the Department of Education that's gonna go, I mean, it's just totally not needed. A lot of these other departments and, you know, that overreach is is is gotta stop.
[00:48:05] Unknown:
There is one sad element here to me. Because once after all these years, once I finally get the key to beating the IRS and Trump and them are about to get rid of them. K? Mhmm. And, it takes away one of our good hold cards because that's a good card to play on people. So that's gonna change our game a little bit, but it'll be overall a blessing to have that bunch of bandits and thieves out looking for a job. Well He's already fired some of them.
[00:48:38] Unknown:
Well, if they do away with the taxes, the personal income tax, realize that the the US government over the past four years is bringing in almost 2 and a quarter trillion dollars a year from personal income tax. So they've really got to offset that. I don't know if they can really do that. You know, I it's gonna be interesting. I mean, they're in there cutting like crazy. And I saw that Elon got him a new chainsaw.
[00:49:11] Unknown:
Yeah. Saw that. Or the goal goal plated thing thingy that the chain goes around?
[00:49:20] Unknown:
Yeah. Well, they had the the president from Argentina standing behind him up there. Malou. Oh, was Malou up there? Okay. I think so. I think so. At least that's what it looked like unless they superimposed him. Ah. You know? My my
[00:49:37] Unknown:
buddy wrote me a note the other day and said, I think Malou's on his last legs. I don't know why he didn't explain it, but, I I still hadn't been able to figure that guy out. K? I I just you can't you can't take do what? Go ahead. No. Just to say, you know what he was before he got into this politics thing. Right?
[00:50:02] Unknown:
No. I didn't know anything about it. He was an Austrian economics
[00:50:05] Unknown:
professor. Really? Austrian economics is real economics based on real money. And the very first thing he does when he gets elected is to yank him out of bricks and turn to the Federal Reserve. He wants to go. I've I've heard he's Jewish. That it's Melusdin or something. He's gone to Israel already. He wants to learn Hebrew. He goes to the Wailing Wall. When he went to New York for the first time, the first place he went, Mark, was Rabbi Schneerson's grave. So I I to me, I'm the jury's out on this guy.
[00:50:41] Unknown:
Okay? Yeah. That's really, really strange.
[00:50:45] Unknown:
That sounds very contradictory, to me from the well, from an Austrian economics teacher. And then he not only yanks them out of bricks, but he attaches them to the biggest bandits in the damn world, the Federal Reserve on a total Kinzian scheme.
[00:51:01] Unknown:
Yep.
[00:51:02] Unknown:
Pretty weird. Anyway, we'll see about him. I you know, Argentina is such a nice place, and I I had some good friends down there, and I really enjoyed living there. It was a, overall, it's a wonderful place. It's very European, probably more European than Europe will ever be again. And, it's just a great place, you know, and except for the politics and the financial. And that's what drives people out of there, you know. So anyway, it's I I hope they get some stability. They've got an unbelievable amount of resources there. They've never even been touched. I have one of our there's a bunch of what they call Anglo Argentanians down there, and many of them were, family members of men that went over to help build the first railroad, Rothschild project, obviously, and got land and stayed. You know? And, so one of the guys that was one of these was an engineer mining engineer, and he sold dynamite to the, mines in the Andes.
And he told me personally, Mark, that only 17% of the Andes been explored. Yeah. I mean, that's just shocking. My my other Anglo Argentinian buddy had a beautiful family home that he's inherited, and he's gone through some rough times. He's turned it into a bed and breakfast. In fact, you can go look at it if you want. It's called Andy's Lands, I think it's plural,.com on the Internet and see some picture of Michael's beautiful old home. The bricks, the interior part of that home was brick, and those bricks were bought brought over from Germany, like, over a hundred years ago or something. It's a cool place, you know, beautiful gardens and all that kind of stuff.
And, Michael had somebody stay in there that was Brit. He's Brit. Actually, Scottish. But, he had a friend, a guy that was staying in the bed and breakfast there, and he was coming up from South Argentina, I think. There's a lot of oil and stuff down south of where we were. And, he said, you know, we found a veritable mountain of silver. He said, just the whole damn mountain. And he said, the problem is that down there, they have to do Argentina owns all the resources. So they've got to not only negotiate with the provincial government, with the country government. And he said it just got to be they wanted such a big cut that we just walked away.
So there there's resource just resource rich Argentina does. Nice place. Enjoyed living there. Only time I've really lived ever in a very dry climate like Tucson. They compared where I where we lived to Tucson a lot. And, man, I liked it. It was real nice. So, anyway to Yep. It's it's just really they resonates with me real well, and I hate humidity. And, Ecuador's kinda the same. We got a lot more elevation here, but, no bugs. You know, where we are, there's no bugs, no snakes. Occasionally, somebody will report seeing a a spider or something. But you can leave your windows open with the lights on at night. And they might get these little microscopic bugs that fly in, but there's nothing like it being the South.
Oh, turn the wind a light on at night with no screen. You'd be inundated with every kind of bug and all. Yeah? For sure. So, anyway, it's nice. It's good living down here in my I wish Argentina well. I really do. It's a nice place, and they got some nice people down there. Yep. I said, I was dancing
[00:54:54] Unknown:
trouble. It's until they can stabilize their currency Oh, yeah. Oh. Get their government out of their interference and Yeah.
[00:55:03] Unknown:
The the financial situation is a nightmare. I I could sit here and tell you what I had to do to get money into Argentina, and that was Yeah. Probably the main reason I left. Okay? But one night, I was we were dancing tango, in that period of time and having practices and stuff because you do that because it's, hell, it ain't tango is not easy. Okay? And, so we were having one of those one night. It was a very nice, elderly, older Argentine couple there. And, they didn't speak any English, but they were curious about me. When you get Americans down there, they're they're always they're foreigners, I should say. They're always very curious about what draws you down there, make one you don't wanna live there. And so they were kinda asking me that, and and I was telling them how much I liked Argentina, you know. And I the guy goes, Argentina is a wonderful country.
It's just too bad it's so full of Argentinians. So for whatever that's worth, where else can we go? Go on. Somebody in the audience must have something they wanna ask or comment on or get us going in some direction you'd like to hear some social intercourse on or something like that.
[00:56:21] Unknown:
Bricks?
[00:56:22] Unknown:
Bricks. I think bricks may be bad. Joan, I hate to say it. I think I think Trump has killed bricks.
[00:56:33] Unknown:
Yeah.
[00:56:35] Unknown:
But the good news is if we're gonna move over and have fifty or hundred year bonds backed by gold, we may be edging toward the BRIC's direction, which is good because that's honest weights and measures. And and, of course, what we've been under is dishonest weights and measures. So, any move in that direction by Trump is is really welcome. And, at least by me, I would think by us. And, there's rumors. There are actually rumors out there floating that he's gonna revalue gold, and that's what all this gold activity is about right now. Now wouldn't that be nice?
But revalue to what? Well, it have to be fairly substantial revaluation, I would think. I don't know if 20 to 35 like they did black in last century with Roosevelt. I would think that's a 78% of rise in the price of gold. They have 20 before March after the confiscation. They revalued it shortly thereafter to 32. 30 two or '35. Thirty '2, I think. So that's a that's pretty large evalu reevaluation right there. But the realities of it, as we've said before, I mean, I heard Jim Sinclair say this, when he was working with Halter, And, he's a guy that well, he knew where the skeletons were buried. K? And he said, because what you're trying to do is take the amount of floating paper or floating fiat and then take the amount of established gold and then do a a division there and find out what the price per ounce is, the real price per ounce.
And Jim Sinclair said a hundred and $85,000 an ounce. That's not me saying it. And he's gone now, but that guy knew where they these skeletons were buried. He's the guy that Paul Volcker hired back in 1982 or '81 after Reagan got in to unwind the Hunt Brothers silver position. This guy knows where the skeletons are buried. K? So, anyway, well, for whatever that's worth, I'd love to see a nice reevaluation, and it sure helped me out a lot, to solve a couple of problems that are out there floating around. So, anyway, yes, the gold situation is very interesting. It'd be a well, it went up to twentieth. Two days ago, it went up from the largest refiner in the world. But on gold, it was only $3.50 an ounce.
And two in a ratio to 3,000, that's not a very big ratio. But in silver, it was $3.50 an ounce too, and that's 10% of the price of silver went up Thursday from the world's largest refinery. I I would imagine the others will follow if they haven't already, quite frankly. So, well, if we had Chicago on, we'd about be ready to pull Paul out and tell him goodbye, but we don't have him on today. So anybody else got something they'd like to discuss? I mean, I can sit here and reel off things off my head probably, but I'd rather not do that. I'd rather have a discussion with some of you nice folks.
[00:59:56] Unknown:
Comment? Yeah.
[00:59:58] Unknown:
Yes, sir. Please.
[01:00:00] Unknown:
Yeah. Hey, Roger. Wayne out of Texas. Wayne.
[01:00:03] Unknown:
Hey, man. How are you?
[01:00:05] Unknown:
We're freezing, man. We got some of that good Yankee weather down here. It's everybody's moving pretty slow.
[01:00:10] Unknown:
Uh-oh. Global solar environment.
[01:00:13] Unknown:
Oh, yeah. Hey. Quick question for you. In the after show yesterday, Brent was talking, and he he made a comment I thought was interesting. And is that to the effect that he doesn't, show a lot of credence for the smallest state versus capital s and not it's not a critic critic of what he said or whatever. But I saw it was interesting. That was his approach. And, I know we talk about the difference between small s versus capital s. And and looking in Black's Law, every time I know when I see small s, I'm relating to the term du jour, which means legitimate and constitutional.
Whereas in the capital s, you know, I could think along the lines of statutory, color of law, you know, illegitimate government, but it's governed by force. And I think it would probably help a lot of the newer folks especially and maybe some of the older ones just to go over this distinction because, somebody new seeing or hearing the term small s could be kind of weird, you know. It's just what's what's the smallest state and I thought it might be a good subject to bring up to get the ball rolling.
[01:01:20] Unknown:
We could we we could certainly talk about it. And if it came up with anybody I was talking with, I'd take them over to travel.state.gov and, show them the certificate of noncitizen nationality, and they're out of the INS since from, section eight of the code, I believe. They've got both illustrated there, of course, with the statement, national has total allegiance to a small less state. Well, that's very that's very damn important because write down a couple of paragraphs, they name off the federal states, and they're all capitalized. So certainly right there internally at the state department, it means something. You know, Brent, and I don't ever confront him on these things, but he's he's got some different things. You know, one time we were talking about the bankruptcy, and he goes, nah. No. The US never bankrupted. I've never seen anything this, that, and the other. And I go, well, you know, Brent, I got a page here out of the speech of congressman Lewis g McFadden, who was the head, had been a former banker in his previous career, was the head of the House Banking Committee because they had one back then.
And, out of a page, out of the congressional record with him stating The United States is bankrupt. The English auditors are in the treasury, and there's 21 French limousines waiting outside. And Brent comes back and goes, well, he's a politician. He's just saying, well, no. McFadden wasn't just a politician. He was an exceptional statesman. Buttressed by the fact, I've mentioned on here before as I started researching the guy, amazing guy, a a true statesman, one probably one of the better ones that I've ever stumbled on that have served, our country in the congress.
And, old McFadden, the last time he ran, they tried to kill him four times. They finally got him with poison on the last time at a dinner or at the Waldorf Astoria in New York. And, but the last time he ran, he was nominated by the Republicans, the Democrats, and the populist parties. All three parties nominated the same guy. Has anybody ever heard of something like that happening before? I haven't. Not even close. So he he was exceptional, and that is if you're really one of those people that's hungry and wants to just take in the history and the background and verify all this for yourself, We've got that book up on the website. I'm not sure where Paul has it.
It's, PDF. If not, you might can find some place that sells it, out of the pope folks that sell off off track kind of publications. I've been trying to think of the the one where I bought that my copy from, which, you know, listen. That's how important I think that book is. I've still got my original copy with it. I've slept in around South America for sixteen years. K? And it's 31 speeches. Pardon me? Wayne, was it? I agree.
[01:04:37] Unknown:
Mhmm. Yeah.
[01:04:38] Unknown:
It's got 30. Have you read it, the book, Wayne?
[01:04:41] Unknown:
No. Sure haven't. I haven't I've pulled that up and take start taking a look at it. Well, you're you're probably better than myself because I I saw some of those speeches
[01:04:50] Unknown:
when I first started studying Phil Marsh's book and stumbled into all this. And his speeches were stuff like, well, the Jews have all the gold and the Gentiles have all the paper. Well, I pretty easy to decipher that. So I thought he's pretty right on and started I ordered his book. So his book referred to here's what when I got Phil Marsh's book, very first meeting I went to, he handed out some free stuff there. But he had written a book and I don't remember this place. His, organization was called the Pilot Society.
And he had written a book and I just don't remember the name of it. But, anyway, I purchased it, and read it. And every time he would reference a source, like, for information, I'd highlight it and write him a letter. Say, please send me your your list of books or whatever it was. And that's pre Internet when we had to do that kind of stuff. Well, one of them was this. I saw McFadden. I saw he had a book, and I ordered it. And I was totally green, Wayne. And so it's a lot of, well, it's a lot of technical financial stuff, and this guy was the president of a bank and the head of the house banking committee. So he obviously knew his stuff. And I would just read through there. There'd be things I'd stumble on, and I didn't understand, and I didn't. I'll read through and just pick try and pick up the thing later rather than stop and go research and sidetrack myself.
But, boy, there's some really interesting speeches in that book. One of them is about the entire founding of the Bank of International Settlements because that's in the time frame when they founded that. It was another, another speech when he was talking about how Ford They were trying to get Ford to get in the contract with the federal government, and Ford wouldn't do it. And he's talking about how they are proposing that men can sign away their constitutional rights. Well, I'm a shame on McFadden for saying that, but constitutional rights thing. But, because the only constitutional rights there are under the fourteenth amendment, they're called civil rights.
So anyway but little little things like that, you see where people have made those mistakes over the years. But then at the end of that, he says, they're building a Machiavellian feudal system. Right over the target. K? Bingo. So if yep. If you're one of those people that really wants to have that kind of input, knowledge, and exposure, that is an excellent, excellent resource. The 31 collective speeches of William t McFadden. And you read that, and you'll have, probably similar respect for him that I do. Back then, see, there weren't any what they call special orders. When you see your congressman or somebody up there talking and there's nobody behind him in the well there, that's called special orders.
And those are for their constituents to let them know they're doing something. So they get up there and do that, and and it's just really for the constituents. But if they type it out like it's for everybody, and there's nobody in the damn room when he's going over it. Well, it wasn't like that back then with with the representative McFadden. He'd say things, and they'd they'll break the lineage the the language of applause, applause, applause. So he was kinda getting the same type of applause on a lot of these speeches that, Kash Patel was getting yesterday after his confirmation.
Anyway, great resource. Highly encourage you if you are of that ilk and wanna read that, in that section of time, very formative all around the bankruptcy. That's quite a good resource. So for what it is, it's just a buffer what you're saying, Roger. Hold on. Let Wayne let Wayne finish. Yeah. Yeah. Go ahead, Wayne.
[01:08:43] Unknown:
Yeah. Just a buffer on, what you were saying, in section one zero one a 21 of the document you referenced, the phrase is the term national small n means a person owing permanent allegiance to a state small estate. Whereas a little further down, section one zero one a 36, exactly as you said the term state, capital s, includes District of Columbia, Puerto Rico, Guam, Virgin Islands. So there's your delineation right there, Bea, of both,
[01:09:13] Unknown:
subjects, you know? Well, I'm I'm not gonna argue I'm not gonna argue with the state department. Are you, Wayne? Nope. I mean, not over this. Yes. Who's the other fellow that was trying to say something? Well, this is Roger or somebody else. Oh, good. Well, now hold on. Hold on. I got two people mark. That was you. And I think this Paul again, right?
[01:09:34] Unknown:
Go ahead, Paul. But let me go ahead. Go ahead, Paul. Yeah. And I've got some exciting research on the smallest state that I think will put a pretty little bow on this. But go ahead I yield and it will. Okay, go ahead, Paul.
[01:09:50] Unknown:
Okay, number one, do I sound better now?
[01:09:53] Unknown:
Yeah. A little bit closer. Yeah.
[01:09:56] Unknown:
Okay. Okay. Good. I had to climb to the top of the telephone pole like green ain't it?
[01:10:01] Unknown:
It sounds pretty No. I It's probably pretty Hey. I It's probably pretty cold up there, Paul. You better get your long johns on.
[01:10:08] Unknown:
Tell them we said hello.
[01:10:10] Unknown:
Yeah. Right. Right. Hey, Mark, if you wanna go ahead, I know what I need to say and it might take just a few minutes because it's kind of a tongue teaser. So go ahead.
[01:10:20] Unknown:
Okay. Thank you, Paul. You're welcome. I don't know if the listeners are familiar with Gavin from California. This is his research. And I I double checked it and it's spot on. We had talked, Gavin and I, about, like, you know, this definition and and people have just got bent out of shape over this definition of a small s state. So we started thinking, you know, that that particular definition was passed back in 1940. So what did they do back there to to look at definitions? One of them versus Black's law, But the other dictionary that they use, and this would be right out on the congressional floor.
It's about a gosh. It's almost like it's definitely over a foot thick. And it's Webster's University's dictionary unabridged book of 1940. I found it on eBay, got it delivered to my door for $35. Wow. And it's in decent condition. I won't say it's like new. Of course, it's from 1940. So when when you look at that, and I'll read you off the definitions, or I'll give you an idea. I won't read every one of them off because they got various ones. So they got a small s state, and they got a condition, a rank, a mode of living, the power wielded by government. Then they get to number five.
This definition falls squarely on what we've talked about with a small s state. One of the commonwealths or bodies politic, which together make up a Federal Republic, which stand in certain specified relations with the central or national government, and as regards internal affairs, are more or less independent used especially of those which combine to form The United States Of America. Okay. And then they go on to give the current appellations or the nicknames applied to the states to the union and to their respective. Natives will be found in the following list. So they give the original, abbreviations for the states like Alabama was a l a.
Capital a, lowercase l, lowercase a. Same thing with the rest of their states until they went to this all capital letter, state abbreviation which, probably is a federal, indicates a federal area. So that that, that falls squarely. I mean, again, I give all credit to Gavin in California. I was really wanting him to get on here, but his schedule and everything is kinda difficult. And so, you know, I just want to kind of put this to bed, that we can once and for all, you know, kind of get our minds wrapped around that that smallest state is referring to one of the commonwealths that make up The United States Of America.
[01:13:44] Unknown:
Right? The union. Now Could if you turn it back could you go back and refer to the thirteenth amendment and tie that in with their jurisdictions?
[01:13:53] Unknown:
Go ahead. Yeah. Yeah. I would think so. But the smallest state is is what we've always said it was. It's it's one of the commonwealths or the republics that make up the union of The United States Of America. Now when you turn the page, guess what? There's a capital s state. State plural And it's capital s states, and it says general. The bodies that constitute the legislature of a country in contradiction to the assemblies of the provinces, specifically the name given to the legislative assemblies of France before the revolution of seventeen eighty nine and to those of The Netherlands. So they're referring it to a country.
So, and then, of course, when we go look at the definition of state by the INA, the Immigration National, Act, then you'll see that they talk about Guam, Puerto Rico, all the different islands. It's a it's a federal territory, basically. Uh-huh. So there you go. Uh-huh. I believe that the smallest state is is just what we've alluded to, but everybody got bent out of shape over it.
[01:15:21] Unknown:
Well, they had to form some sort of differentiation along that timeline because it's the nationality of '23 act of 1940 where they renamed it as a national. So anything that would dovetail in with that is it it everybody's distracted with the war. Look over there, not over here, and we're gonna screw you from behind, and that's what's going on right there, I think.
[01:15:46] Unknown:
Right. Right. So, anyway, we're gonna look. Gavin is wanting to go back to the congressional records and see if we can get more information from that specific session law
[01:16:00] Unknown:
that was, you know, passed on the floor and get the the real skinny on it. So Tell him to include while he's back in that time frame in the in the archives. Tell him to look around the nationality act in 1942. That's real important. That's where they made this switcheroo.
[01:16:17] Unknown:
Yeah. It was 1942?
[01:16:20] Unknown:
No. Nineteen forty.
[01:16:22] Unknown:
Okay.
[01:16:24] Unknown:
Who was trying to get in there?
[01:16:26] Unknown:
Yeah. Hey, Roger. Just a follow-up comment from Wayne. Yeah, Wayne. Yeah. Please. Yeah. While we're on the subject and I know the other fellow wants to get on, but at some point, could you, maybe, offer some opinions on these federal judges that are stepping on Trump's executive orders? In the past, you see them sometimes step on elections. So you have one person that could be crooked as hell stepping on the will of the people because we elected that president. And I'm wondering if this is tied to what we're talking about, that these guys are making opinions for the, inhabitants of this capital estate, and we all think it's meant for us when we're nationals.
[01:17:04] Unknown:
I would love to find out what some of these judges know. I don't think they know their ass from a hole in the dirt. There's a big, discussion. And on these judges right now, I've heard some discussion on it on Alex about the ones that are acting like they've got lifetime tenure that don't because they were never confirmed by the senate. But they're they were appointed to their judgeship. They've been sentenced in it, but they were never confirmed. And, their for their tenure is, well, it's a little bit precarious possibly. So we'll see. Don't worry. They're gonna be going after them. And I would remind you, especially if you're new and might not have heard this, Edward Gibbons.
Edward Gibbons, probably not exactly a household name, but should be. He was the author of the rise and the fall of the Roman Empire, and his statement out of that book was the first engine of tyranny is a corrupt judiciary. We got one in spades. And what Wayne, of course, if you haven't heard this, is referring to is there's about five of them that have tried to block Trump's stuff already, interest calling interestingly enough, every one of them has a nongovernmental organization. One of them, that judge from Chattanooga, there's over I think he'd been given over a hundred million dollars.
His daughter was a big supervisor at the Department of Education. His wife did something else, and all of them appear to have conflicts of interest. That's why they jumped up and tried to block it when they couldn't. And Trump got you know, God bless him. He's being very respectful. And he goes, well, I'm gonna I'm gonna honor the court's opinion. Even though he knows it's wrong, probably knows they're they're shaky, he said, I'm gonna honor the court's opinion. Now he didn't have to do that. Remember, Andrew Jackson, the the the congress voted on the Second Bank of the United States, and Andrew Jackson vetoed it. And then the Supreme Court ok'd it, and he said, well, let them enforce it. And we didn't have a second bank.
So Trump could have steamrolled over that, and he decided to play strict and nice. I think that's pretty good. Interesting insight that most people would never have. Go ahead, Blaine.
[01:19:25] Unknown:
Yeah. I just I just tend to feel that, again, I can't really put pinpoint it, but to me, an executive order is nothing more than public policy. The president's, outlining his public policy. So I don't know that has the force of law, but again, because he's the chief executive, you know, that he can, use this to execute his powers. Well, remember Clinton's
[01:19:49] Unknown:
remember Clinton's boy? Stroke of the pen, law of the land. Pretty cool? There you go. Yeah.
[01:19:57] Unknown:
But we know that that was a bullshit term. You know? Well, now, originally,
[01:20:01] Unknown:
George Washington used executive orders, I believe, but it was for cabinet level officers. Of course, they didn't have a bureaucratic state back then. K? But, all these things and what Trump is going after, especially with Doge, are those cabinet conditions. He's not going after, at least at this point, I don't think, agencies that were okayed by congress. He's going at them that are attached to his executive level, like USAID is under the Department of State. So he's got direct access to it. But I don't know. But I've heard that floated a bit, Wayne. Okay. So we'll see. I I just want you to keep going. Just keep swinging, man.
[01:20:45] Unknown:
So that's what we
[01:20:47] Unknown:
would okay. I mean, I've just never seen anything like this and never even believed I would see it. Yes, Myrka. How are you doing? Myrka, we got till March.
[01:20:58] Unknown:
Oh my gosh. Thank you for the reminder.
[01:21:01] Unknown:
Yeah. It's right around the corner. Die. I know. I'm sorry.
[01:21:06] Unknown:
Thank you. I appreciate, Wayne coming in and explaining the thing again because it's a good reminder for everybody. And, I always say that on, when I explain it, small estate is under god God's law. It's natural law. And I say USA. That's all I say for that. Oh, United States Of America, America. And then there's the, capital state, which is the state of The United States corporation. It's And its territory. Yeah. And it's man made law. It's all legal. We're lawful, and they're legal.
[01:21:48] Unknown:
There's civil rights with the exception now of American Samoa and Swains Island. Let's not forget those little jewels over there also. And I think that that, that document from the state department there at the bottom with the one sentence disclaimer, and it says if you're in the Northern Mariana Islands and it's six months before your eighteenth birthday or whatever, you go in front of a judge and you you say this or you give them that paper. I believe that at that point in time, there was a point in time when the Northern Mariana Islands were included with American Samoa. I've never researched it, but I've seen it referred to. And so that must have been for them back then. Anyway, it's kinda weird, but the Northern Mariana Islands have floated around in their classification a bit is what I take it. There's some other really cool little islands that are possessions down there that, hell, I'd never heard of them till I watched some of this.
Saw them talked about, and a guy was driving around the islands in a, a car talking about their territories. And, you can go do things there that you can't do in other ones. And I don't know all of the specifics, and I don't remember the islands' names, or I don't remember what was going on, but there are some people down there that identified them. I can tell you another set of islands. I've mentioned it on here. Have you Mark, have you ever heard of the Guano Islands? You probably have because you might have heard us talking about them. Yeah. You can my friend Gary Bryant, the one of my law instructors. He was great friends with your friend Cornfield.
What whatever his name was, Mark. Gary, did you ever get us, exposed to Gary Bryant?
[01:23:28] Unknown:
No. I don't recall that name. You're talking about Well, he was really
[01:23:32] Unknown:
he yeah. Cornforth because I used to hear him mention. That's an unusual name. Yeah. Gary, he was he he was a ship engineer. He was a merchant marine guy. And all the time he'd go off on these voyages at sea, he'd just sit there and study law books. And then he'd come back when he got back to The States, and he go to the law library and find the books and make copies of them and compile these three ring binders on different subjects. I'll bet he had 40 or 50 of those things in his trunk. K? And he was a real the the reason I know the administrative state so well is he drilled that into my head when I was fighting the IRS, and I didn't get it till after the hearing.
So I couldn't bring it up in the hearing or if I was gonna appeal it. I couldn't have brought it up at the appellate level because it wasn't brought up at the hearing. So, but he he's the one that schooled me on that. And and then, I mean, when I when I got it, I was just dumbfounded. All all of those administrative all those IRS regulations, I haven't looked at all of them. I've looked at the ones on the books and re or summons for books and records, which I heard Barnes refer to the other day on one of his Saturday Sunday night deals, Mark. He's talking about fighting summons for books and records. I'm going, well, Barnes, go look in. It's an interpretive regulation. It only applies to IRS. It doesn't apply to you. Well, that's the same situation I was in. You know? But I couldn't bring him that too.
Yes. Ralph Rosand found the the alleged He's the only other guy. For the IRS. Yep. He's the only guy that I've ever stumbled on that had the amount of understanding that I've got on it. And Ralph was right on top of it too. And we both approached found it different ways. Okay. Yep. But anyway, the much of that's gonna go away. We may be without an IRS here shortly, folks. They wanna move on this quick. Okay? With the idea that your tariffs that he's instituting will make up for that. And even floating the idea that taxpayers, if you've been filing real regularly, well, you may get, like, $5 back. They're not gonna give it to folks like us, Mark. But if you've been filing at a good little due to full serve, they're gonna reward you, it sounds like to me.
[01:25:59] Unknown:
Yep.
[01:26:01] Unknown:
Hey, Brad.
[01:26:02] Unknown:
Yes, sir.
[01:26:04] Unknown:
Hey. Jack in Colorado.
[01:26:07] Unknown:
Hey, Jack.
[01:26:08] Unknown:
Hey. Quick question. You mentioned McFadden. When was he writing those one speeches?
[01:26:15] Unknown:
He would these speeches that are in that book were between 1931 and 1933 up to the point when they killed him. He had been he had been the chairman of the banking committee since the first term he was ever elected back around World War one. I don't remember '16 or something. And they immediately put him as head of the banking committee, and he held that position until they killed him.
[01:26:41] Unknown:
So he probably would have known he probably would have been in on the whole scam for the bankruptcy. What do you what did you mean by, did you say that they were in the Federal Reserve and there's 23 French limousines? In the treasury.
[01:26:56] Unknown:
The English auditors are in the treasury, and there's 21 French limousines waiting outside, if I remember correctly.
[01:27:04] Unknown:
Why would they have That's in my book. It's in my book. Okay. I hear you. Why would they have 21 French limousines from France and DC?
[01:27:13] Unknown:
Jack, to go over and go over the books on a bankruptcy.
[01:27:19] Unknown:
Yeah. But why French?
[01:27:22] Unknown:
It was in the bond market. Maybe they held a bunch of the other bogus bonds. I I don't have answers to these questions. I appreciate y'all's fertile I appreciate y'all's confidence that I know everything. I know a lot, but I don't know everything. K? Okay. So, one last question. You know, it's like Don't you it's like brother Dave Gardner. You you know, I mentioned hold on a second. I mentioned brother Dave Gardner the other day to somebody. I don't think any of you. Treaty of Paris. Could be. Don't know. Anyway, brother Dave Gardner was a southern comedian back in, I guess, the sixties. He used to do records. You know? And and somebody had asked him a a question. You know? He said, well, I don't know. And they said, well, I thought you knew everything.
And he said, well, I do know everything, but I don't know that. So there you go. Last question. Hey, Roger. Hold on. Jack's got a floor.
[01:28:22] Unknown:
Paul, please. I got a key, but go ahead.
[01:28:26] Unknown:
Yeah. I know. It's Paul. Jack? Hey, just one last one.
[01:28:30] Unknown:
This this bankruptcy must have been documented somewhere. Where are these documents hidden, do you think? I don't know.
[01:28:37] Unknown:
Well, again, I don't know, but and they bankrupted us in the bond market. It wasn't the stock market of '29 crash. It was the bond market. And I'm pretty sure that in those bonds, the original United States Of America bonds that they defaulted on, don't forget they're controlling the money now. They can pull any of this stuff they want. That's not gonna get an awful lot of attention like a other type of bankruptcy might. Of course, they were on to keep it as quiet as possible because evidently, what they had done is stolen a lot of the gold. Remember, it was specie back then. Stolen a lot of the gold and carried it over to Europe where there was an arbitrage trade. In other words, they were paying 30 something, 40 or whatever an ounce in Europe, so they stole all the gold at 20 and took it over to Europe and got 40 for it.
That's arbitrage. These guys, the Rothschilds were the were the foundational family that figured out how to do arbitrage years ago when there's telegraphs. They'd float they'd float their deposits, Jack, from time zone to time zone. So they get they get a they get a return on there and they float it to the next time zone. They get a return over there. It's called arbitrage.
[01:29:54] Unknown:
I'm just saying the people that did this have it documented somewhere, and they've got it written down somewhere in this whole Well, they probably did.
[01:30:01] Unknown:
Well, if we could ever get into the bowels of the treasury like Doge, we might could find it. But the problem and one of the excuses they had for confiscating the gold was previous to March the ninth of thirty three, there was a gold settlement contract clause. So every contract you filed and buying a bond is a contract, it there's a gold settlement. If we can't pay you back, we'll pay you in gold. Well, they had to get rid of the gold settlement clauses in all contracts. So I think that's what's going on there, but I don't know for sure. And outside of that statement by congressman t, McFadden, Jack, I've never seen any proof of that. I didn't even know it was in the bond market till a few years back, and somebody said it. And it makes perfect sense. See?
Yeah. But, again, I do again alright. I do know everything, but I don't know that. Okay?
[01:30:58] Unknown:
Hey, Roger.
[01:30:59] Unknown:
Yes, sir. Now there was Paul was trying to get in a second ago.
[01:31:04] Unknown:
Yep.
[01:31:04] Unknown:
Yeah. You know, I I appreciate that. I I gave Mark the courtesy, and I got kinda kicked out of queue there. Yeah. Well, it happens. Since we have a time yeah. I know. And and I love your call, and I learned so much, and I appreciate it. Since we we kinda have some time for a discussion and you asked several times if anybody has anything, something popped into my head. I got a letter the other day from the courts, on a case that I thought was dismissed, and it wasn't. What they did, they only dismissed a part of the case. I assume they dismissed all the case. But something I wanna put out there to I'm kind of, angling this towards you and Mark, but anybody's welcome to chime in. So, to be brief about this case, some people I was doing some work for filed a fraudulent affidavit, which led to a warrant, which led to an arrest.
When I was arrested, the case started out with a 20 f for felony because they can only arrest you on a felony. So when I went and I didn't even realize this till I happen to start pulling out the file and going through it the other day because I received this wake up letter that, hey. This case has been sitting here a year. Nobody's done anything with it. If you don't do anything in the next thirty days, we're gonna just dismiss it completely. But, anyways, it it was filed as a 20 f. Well, I went to court for my arraignment. I was detained twenty two hours.
Anyway, when I got out, I got ORed out. I I went, which is really odd if I'm that bad of a criminal. But, anyways, needless to say, I went to court for my arraignment. Then they brought me back to court again. I don't know how this happened. I totally missed it till the other day. But the case went from a 20 f, which is a felony, to a 20 c r which is a criminal case. Well, they tried to negotiate and bribe me three times in the district court. And when I would not accept the bribe or I was not willing to negotiate, I told the prosecutor, let's take this to trial. She says, if you don't if you don't, cooperate, we're gonna take this to trial. I said, okay. Let's let's take it to trial. However, there was no jurisdiction in district court.
So then they turn it back into the 20 f. Oh, and I left something out here. When I got arrested, I went ahead and filed a counterclaim for the false affidavit, the false arrest, the false imprisonment, etcetera. So but they have to clear my case up before we go back to the civil case. So, so it goes from a 20 c r criminal back to the 20 f felony. So I go up to felony court. I go to court three times. They have absolutely no evidence on me to convict me of what I'm being accused of. So they dismissed the case. So then we go back down to district court.
Now it's under a 20 some 21 c I, which is civil. And, of course, our very first time going to court, the judge, who I believe is extremely biased and prejudiced, reads the motion from the opposed attorney who's representing the couple who, perjured an affidavit to get me arrested. And the the attorney was just asking for a dismissal. No reason why. I just, hey. Will you dismiss my clients and dismiss this counterclaim? And the judge granted it with no hearing. So when the judge dismissed the counterclaim, I filed a new claim, including the judge and the attorney for conspiracy to commit fraud.
Well, now that case is within the court of appeals. But my question is and I'm sorry this is so convoluted, and I hope you all have kept up. But how can you go from a 20 f felony
[01:35:30] Unknown:
to a 20 c r and then back to a 20 f and then into a civil. I just it I've never seen that done before. Well, Paul, what I would tell you is this type of thing is way out of our pay grade, and there's complexities and there's facts and there's all kinds of stuff. And Yeah. I don't know if there's any way we can help you. I I try my job is to keep people out of court, not help them in court. Right. And I would have loved to be that way. And, unfortunately, I got hammed up in this, and I just gotta ride the wave out. So That's why I just I just thought I'd ask if somebody needs I don't that's why I just try to stay away. I don't wanna be a litigious person. You know? I agree with you. I mentioned I mentioned the other day, my one of my better students I ever had is a good friend. He lives down in Saint Simons Island down there around Brunswick somewhere. His name is Rick Scruggs. And back at that point in time, Rick Scruggs had 13 different lawsuits going at one time.
Woah. He had one he had a a case on a certiori to the Supreme Court. He had a tax case with tax court in Washington, DC, and he had, like, 11 other traffic tickets in 11 other jurisdictions. And I thought, god, Rick like, five myself. Right. Well, I I thought, well, shit, Rick. When his friends seem coming, they go to the other side of the street because they're afraid he's gonna serve them. Hey, Rog. So, yes, Paul. You're out of our pray, Grace Paul. Sorry. Go ahead, Paul.
[01:37:02] Unknown:
The document, the book of 500 plus pages, the collective speeches of Congressman Lewis T McFadden. Well, mate. The link is in the chat in free conference call. And if you are not in FCC, go to the matrixdocs.com. Yeah. Go under bonuses, to the docs. Expose the matrix link. And when you get in there, click on the books folder, and it will be in there. It is McFadden. It starts with the word McFadden. That'll get you there. He
[01:37:49] Unknown:
was from Pennsylvania. I forget which part of I think the Northeast Part Of Pennsylvania, but what an amazing guy. K? And, just so you you can't read any of those and not get a sense of who this guy was and where his principles lie. Mhmm. So who else, who else Mark, Mark, you have anything to respond to Paul? Yeah. Hold on. Other than what I did, it was out of our pay grade. And did you have any suggestions for him? No. Just no. Just like you said, you you just can't unload a quick summary on a group and expect any kind of meaningful response. Well, that complex stuff. And some of that is that that's state law you're dealing with, isn't it, Paul? That's Kentucky state law? Yes, sir. Yeah. State law. Yeah. We'll see that mean that even complicates it because it's another state's laws. Well, it sound like it all got dismissed. So,
[01:38:46] Unknown:
you know, when when It got dismissed it got dismissed on the parties who are actually guilty. Not not me. I mean yeah. My well, mine did get dismissed in felony court, but then I turned around and countersued
[01:38:59] Unknown:
civilly. This is what I mean. You're not hearing what I'm saying. You don't let me go. This is way too I'm sorry.
[01:39:06] Unknown:
Sorry. That just it's way too complex. You're living it. You know all these details. We're just hearing it. Sure. And everybody gets really confused, and they start yawning, and their eyes roll back to the back of their head. So,
[01:39:17] Unknown:
thank you. Procedures that go on. And so if if the in the civil case, if the attorney filed a motion to dismiss their own case, that's pretty much an automatic. If they filed a a a motion with that to dismiss your counterclaim, you had a chance to respond to that. And if that was dismissed, you have a chance to appeal your your dismissal of your counterclaim. Yeah. So just a whole lot depends on what you did and how you approached it and so forth. If you don't know court procedures and so forth, you're right in the big middle of of the typical, you know, court procedure type of Yeah. Approach to it,
[01:40:02] Unknown:
then, yeah, there's there's a whole lot that goes on. It can be construed as a it can be construed as a as a procedural hang hangman's news, can't it, Mark?
[01:40:14] Unknown:
Well, yeah. But you don't just show up in court and the attorney says we wanna dismiss our case in the counterclaim, and the judge grants it just like it it's not out of a surprise. This is a civil case. Everybody plays with their cards up. Everybody gets served, paperwork and and evidence and discovery. All that stuff is, is above board, and you don't just walk in that would happen. You just don't walk into court and and out of the blue, the attorney goes, we wanna dismiss our case and the other party's counterclaim, and it's just granted. It just doesn't work that way.
[01:40:52] Unknown:
You should have been given a chance to respond,
[01:40:55] Unknown:
on paper. Process. Well Right. And if and if you're if if you challenged the dismissal of your counterclaims, and that was, denied and the other opposing party was granted the dismissal of your counterclaim, you can take that up on appeal.
[01:41:15] Unknown:
Right. And that's a due process violation.
[01:41:19] Unknown:
Correct. And so the good news is I'm gonna do exactly what you're talking about, Mark. And I and I appreciate you sharing that because that helps me to affirm that I am now making the right decision. What happened before is this no sign on my part. When I thought it was dismissed, I thought it was dismissed completely, and it wasn't. See? So it just Well, see, that's why for a year.
[01:41:43] Unknown:
Well, you're a good example of why I tell the audience if they can, you know, in all possibility, my suggestion is avoid court. If it's some kind of a traffic fine or something, is it worth putting your life on the back burner so you gotta learn all this crap so they don't trick you? Or you wanna go pay them a hundred dollars and be done with it? Which one's better? Okay? And I'm not gonna tell you. It's your decision. And I'm not gonna criticize you if you wanna fight them because I appreciate that mindset. But if you are, just know what you're in for potentially.
[01:42:16] Unknown:
Yeah. The other thing I do. The other thing I don't understand is, if it all got dismissed outside of your arrest It didn't
[01:42:27] Unknown:
all get dismissed. It You just said it did. You said the criminal charges were dismissed and the civil case. The felony charges were dismissed, and the counterclaim was dismissed. But the case itself is still alive, and that's why I got this letter. Hey. It's been sitting here for a year. Are you guys gonna do anything? So now I'm gonna do exactly what you just said, Mark, which I knew that, but I wanted to get an affirmation.
[01:42:53] Unknown:
No. No. That's not how it works. If the case has been sitting there against you for some courts, hold on, in some courts it's six months and in other courts it's a year. But if you have a case against you and the prosecuting party, that means the moving party, in this case if it's civil, it's a plaintiff. They brought this case against you, they filed it, and then it just sat there. Mhmm. Well, generally, the court clerk will get it brought to their attention and they'll notify all the parties, mainly the plaintiff let me finish please. They'll notify the plaintiff and the defendant that if the plaintiff doesn't move on this case within a certain time frame, then they're gonna dismiss the case automatically by by just an administrative move. And so that usually wakes up the plaintiff and says, oh crap, I gotta I gotta do something or this case
[01:43:51] Unknown:
is gonna get closed. Well, that's right. So That's Paul. However He's up on a telephone pole. However the
[01:43:58] Unknown:
do what?
[01:43:59] Unknown:
He's up on a telephone pole freezing his ass off. Go ahead.
[01:44:05] Unknown:
He however, the plaintiff is so in in encroached in fraud that they're hoping that I don't respond either, and it does get go get dismissed. Because right now,
[01:44:20] Unknown:
if that gets dismissed, it could it could domino effect I'm sorry. You're not making you're not making any sense at all. I agree. Just When it comes to legal procedure, you're not making any sense.
[01:44:31] Unknown:
I know because it's it's that convoluted,
[01:44:34] Unknown:
Mark. It's not convoluted. You're making it convoluted. It's a very systematic approach. It's a very systematic approach to the law and the court procedures if you're getting involved in this. So I think you're spinning out of control. Hey, hey Paul. I've had two semesters of court procedures and court rules. I've had two semesters of legal research and writing. I've had intro to law. I'm a formally trained Paralegal. That's amazing. That's awesome. I'm just telling you right now, you're just out in left field and you're just swinging at everything. And I thought you initially said that they dismissed their case and they dismissed your counterclaim. But now I'm finding out that no, they dismissed your counterclaim, but their claim against you still is in place.
[01:45:30] Unknown:
Right. Because because it again, Mark, if we had time to talk about this offline or after the call I'm not no. Thank you. No. Thank you. No. I I understand that. I respect that. But I'm just saying, it is the truth. If you pull the Look, I've asked for cooperation
[01:45:54] Unknown:
from you and you refused twice. So I don't work with people who can't follow a very simple instruction. So, you got your mind made up on how you're going to handle it and which direction you want to go, and I wish you the best.
[01:46:10] Unknown:
I appreciate that. Thank you. We'd all say Suerte and I would also like to use this as an example, Paul, of why we don't generally bring this kind of a situation on the air. K. It it it confuses listeners. It's very confusing to understand. There's maybe key facts that you don't relate to us, not intentionally, but unintentionally. And it it just screws people up. My from the lesson to learn from this, folks, is what I told you a minute ago. If at all possible, my suggestion to you is to stay out of that situation. Because like Paul then, he's got that stuff floating around in his mind.
If it's not on the forefront of his mind, it's in the back of his mind, and it's every waking hour he's awake. And you gotta learn all this stuff like these procedures and this court thing and what the specific rules are. And then you might be fighting a corrupt judge who's in cahoots with who you're fighting. And you're just chasing your tail, and you walk out of there scarred and battered. And I suggest you not do that, but you go do what you want.
[01:47:14] Unknown:
I appreciate that. And I'll I'll in the future, any of these kind of things, I'll keep off the call. I apologize.
[01:47:20] Unknown:
Well, you need to go see, I as for I don't have any expertise in that. I'm a paralegal too, but I didn't go do all of it and practice it for twenty years like Mark's been doing. So I've got a familiarity with it, but I'm on the outside. And I just remember what I went through fighting the IRS in federal court, folks. Uh-huh. And, I mean, it wasn't any fun. Okay? It ended up costing me $35,000. I I never got an exhibit. I had an IRS agent on the stand, Mark, for four and a half hours, and I never got one document into evidence. And boy did that little girl hate me.
Whoo. Why? And, they flew a US attorney down. When you're battling IRS, they don't deal with the local DA, a federal, they bring a tax specialist in from Washington. You know, hired A little short five foot four little Jew bastard. You know? And, they've been through all kinds of no telling training and moot trials and procedure. Because when they go through law school, they're not teaching you a law anymore for the most part, maybe a little. They teach you procedure. And that's why most attorneys hate what they do for a living more than any other profession, because all they're doing is taking going after somebody filing all this paperwork, fighting all this crap, and most of them don't like it.
[01:48:42] Unknown:
No. And it's worse now because it's all become political.
[01:48:46] Unknown:
Yep. Hey. I'd like to shift gears if we can. I gotta Well, hold on. Make sure there wasn't somebody that wanted to say something. I I thought there's somebody wanting to interrupt was now's your time.
[01:48:57] Unknown:
Yeah. Roger? Yeah. So there's Dan. Kind of Danny. Kind of bring up some things, from, Cliff Hyde. People seem to like that information back before. But, several times he's mentioned, February 26 as the date. Either something big happens or it starts becoming exposed and everybody's becoming aware of it. But the twenty sixth, that's this next Wednesday.
[01:49:23] Unknown:
Yeah. It is. And You're right in line for something like that happening, Danny. Go ahead. But and Cliff, when he specializes on a date, he can be especially if it's close to that date, he can be incredibly accurate. I mean, remember the day in 02/2008 when p Paul, what's his name, went and got all that money to bail out the House Steelers and held you over the call? We gotta have this or the economy is gonna go under? Paulson. Paulson was his name. You remember that? Cliff Hodge had that nailed hold on. That was in October. He had that nailed to the day from the start of the year in January. He specifically said that day and said something's gonna happen. Of course, I don't know what, but something big's gonna happen. And that's what it turned out to be. He's incredibly accurate short term so that, keep keep next Wednesday in your sights. Go ahead, Danny.
[01:50:21] Unknown:
Yeah. And, that's kind of unusual him name a particular date. Usually Yes. Particularly his longer stuff, longer term stuff is, like when you see these kinds of things happening, you look for this other thing to be coming about. Right.
[01:50:38] Unknown:
He's not doing too much of the longer term stuff. He's concentrating on short term because of its improved accuracy. A lot of the things that are going on on the web have and people putting out there's a group of people that were fighting him. He called them the blue chicken cult or something. And they were particularly salting the web with words to screw up his research. And so he stopped doing the long term and started doing just, I think, pretty close term stuff. Anyway, was there a second
[01:51:09] Unknown:
point? Well, yeah. Another thing he had mentioned sometime back, just to kind of indicate his, his accuracy like you're talking about, he started talking about things falling from the sky. And at the time when he first mentioned it, there had been like one one or two airplane crashes, but he said he didn't know if it's airplanes or UFOs.
[01:51:32] Unknown:
Well, a couple of those drones. Couple of those drones fell out of the sky. I know one of them that they reported in New Jersey, and the cops came immediately and whisked it away. So, but might've been that too. Never can tell. I hadn't listened to Cliff in a while. Hadn't heard any of his stuff, but I followed him really closely for years. K? Well, I heard him the very first time he was ever on Ritz, actually, and followed him from that point, whenever that was, a long time ago. So and and he'll be the first to tell you. So when we're right, we're real right, and when we're wrong, we're real wrong. So, you don't ever really have that total assurance, but he's accurate something like 78% of the time or something. I mean, that's that's way out of just chance.
K?
[01:52:25] Unknown:
Yeah. When I first came aware of him, it was back around 02/2003 or '4, I think. And, first time was somebody sent me an email about this guy. Had done a lot of research, computer work, collecting information off the internet, and kinda had a indication that nine eleven was about to happen, although he didn't know what it was. Well, that's what spike no. That's what spiked him. See? Him and his partner here here's Cliff's background.
[01:52:57] Unknown:
He used to be the head troubleshooter. Have you ever heard of this, Mark? He used to be the head troubleshooter for Microsoft. And whenever there was a problem that they couldn't solve any other way, they sent Cliff High. And at one point, he was down in Mexico City, and they had one of those big earthquakes, and he was stranded there for nine days. And he he wanted to get out. He was miserable. And it was during that time that he incubated this process or this thought pattern and concept that we're all antenna and that we all unconsciously and subconsciously communicate and we receive things and that we do so with our and can be demonstrated with language.
So he come up with another guy and this idea of these bots and the spider thing and what they were doing initially was financial because he wanted enough money where he didn't have to work for Microsoft anymore. And so they were going and doing stock picks with it. And the guy that did the stock up trading, and he were totally separate. He would just feed him the information. We had no conversation or anything else, and they were going along and doing pretty well with it evidently. And then the one day, they saw this huge spike in their data, and they're going, what is that? And it was 09:11.
And they went, holy smokes. You mean we can see stuff like this? And that's when he changed course and has been refining it ever since. A little background. Wow. Wow.
[01:54:25] Unknown:
Hey, Raj.
[01:54:27] Unknown:
Yes, Paul.
[01:54:28] Unknown:
Got an update. The collective All the Federal Reserve exposed. The collective speeches of congressman Louis t McFadden is now listed in the download section Oh, good. Of the matrix docs. Just go down to the very bottom of the download section about halfway down the page, and it's right there. Click on it. It'll open right up.
[01:54:53] Unknown:
Paul, could you go find another book on the web and put it in there? Lord, when you start getting rain, historical jurisprudence.
[01:55:04] Unknown:
That that I've been trying to find that.
[01:55:07] Unknown:
You can't find it? Roger?
[01:55:09] Unknown:
Yes. I've been trying to. That's that's,
[01:55:13] Unknown:
that's our buddy. Yes, sir.
[01:55:17] Unknown:
Hey, Roger. I'd like to read you a little something about McFadden, and I'm wondering if Trump is threatening him with this. But, it says here in 1933, United States established its insurance policy with HJR one 90 two and recorded it in the congressional record. The federal registry publication of that was not required at the time. An executive order issued on 04/05/1933 paved the way for the withdrawal of gold in The United States. Representative Lewis T McFadden brought formal criminal charges Yes. Yep. On this 01/1960.
You will be the same. Because in here is gonna start hurting. What? On May There's another
[01:56:07] Unknown:
is there another conversation feeding into us here?
[01:56:12] Unknown:
Formal formal criminal charges he McFadden brought on 05/23/1933 against the board of governors of the Federal Reserve System, the comptroller of the currency, and the secretary of the United States Treasury. Yeah. Congressional record, 05/23/1933, page four fifty five to four fifty eight. Those charges are still not acted upon and are still in committee.
[01:56:40] Unknown:
Yep. Yep. Yep. They could be voted on and brought out. That's absolutely true. And that's one of the things that they keep bringing up. They say, well, the president may be may not be able to change and appoint a new, chairman, but the congress can, whittle them right out of existence. So we again, there's some really big battles coming in the next couple of years, folks. It's going to be very exciting. Thank you, Samuel. Now who was the other guy that was trying to say something?
[01:57:14] Unknown:
Hey, Roger. It's Jack in Ecuador.
[01:57:17] Unknown:
Hey, Jack. Gonna see you at lunch in a few minutes?
[01:57:22] Unknown:
Oh, I think Roberto's gonna make it, but I'm kinda tied up. Been listening to the show. And earlier, you were mentioning bankruptcy. And what about James Travancant's
[01:57:32] Unknown:
statement on bank? Well, that all what Travancant was doing was reading Lewis t McSadden's speeches.
[01:57:39] Unknown:
Okay. He was basically he
[01:57:41] Unknown:
was regurgitating McFadden, really. Okay. I got you. But, boy, they had other reasons to hate traffic. Chertoff really hated him. He was in charge of criminal, at the DOJ at that point. And, the what happened was he had in his district up in Youngstown, a guy they accused as being a concentration camp guard that had gotten into The US. His name was Dominik, I think. And so they tried to extradite him and did, I believe, extradite him to Israel, with Chertoff helping him on this charge of being this this, concentration camp guard, which he wasn't. And traffic camp went to Israel and defended him in the Israeli Supreme Court, and he won.
And they got to bring Zemaniah to release him and bring him back, And boy, it pissed the Jews off. Okay? So that's another reason they really hated traffic camp.
[01:58:48] Unknown:
Okay.
[01:58:49] Unknown:
Oh, guy. Evidently, you that well, could be. Speculation is to that. I don't know if it's ever been proved, but he not with us anymore, unfortunately. He was a real good one. And for those of you who may not remember, he, he was the guy, if you ever see any old video of the Congress, and he'd, he'd always go up to the, microphone and say, Scotty, beam me up. And then he'd launch off on whatever he was saying. And Star Trek was big back then, still in our memories.
[01:59:23] Unknown:
So, got a couple of minutes left. Jack, you wanna bring anything else? Stay away. Yeah. Hold on, Julie. Yeah. Hold on, Jack. Yeah. If there's any way any of the members could hit me up in the chat or whatever of how to get in touch with Sam that wants to come to Equinix.
[01:59:38] Unknown:
Oh, well, he may be listening. Okay. Alright. Well, I I've I've steered him, bird dogged him to you, and he said he knew who you were. So he'll get you his own due time, I guess, Jack. Julie, what'd you have?
[01:59:51] Unknown:
I just was gonna I was just going to elaborate on, what Sam just read to you, regarding your in your book, From Sovereign to Serve, page page 27, congressional record, 03/17/1993, volume 33, page h dash one three zero three. And that's James Traffikant talking to, how every all of us, The United States citizen was registered as a beneficiary of the trust via his or her birth certificate and that, prior to 1913, the Federal Reserve Act, most Americans owned clear allodial titles property free and clear of any liens and mortgages until the Federal Reserve Act of 1913 hypothecated all property within the Federal United States to the Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve. And that's why I know you don't like this word. I like to bring up the SEFC we KB trust because I think this ties into how we are debtors and creditors to this and that we do have some sort of a way to somehow access this which I'm consider I'm I am still researching right now, but they hyposticated all the present and future properties, assets, and labor of We The People.
[02:01:10] Unknown:
And they did it in that what he mentioned, h j r one ninety two, if you go back and read that. And at the end of it, they say we own all the property. And at the very end of it, guess what's there? Except by operation of law. Touche. So what does that mean, except by operation of law? That means you can get out of it if you put in a lawful defense, like filing the affidavit and tell them they're full of shit.
[02:01:37] Unknown:
And they're feasting. Okay. Thank you.
[02:01:40] Unknown:
Slavers.
[02:01:41] Unknown:
Okay. Hey, Raj. Yes. I know we're off the air. Well, we're not off the air on Eurofocal.com, but and we're still on the air on Global Voice Network. So I wanted to update this information. Historical Jurisprudence book by Guy Carlton Lee. Three hundred and seventeen pages. The link is in the free conference call chat right now. Fantastic. Yeah. I I had
[02:02:12] Unknown:
it. But, Mark, have you heard me talk about that before? Historical jurisprudence?
[02:02:19] Unknown:
I don't think so.
[02:02:20] Unknown:
It's a book written in the thirties by the same guy, Arthur, he named, and it's a a history of jurisprudence. And, it was published by John Hopkins, I think. The first ninety pages is on the Babylonian merchant code. If you ever get a chance, it's easy reading. You might wanna blur through that. Okay? Okay. It starts out the first sentence is Babylon's great contribution to the world was reducing everything in the society down to the abstract form of contract.
[02:02:54] Unknown:
Oh.
[02:02:56] Unknown:
And it goes on to explain a lot of stuff. It's very, very interesting. I don't have time time to get into it. Now I gotta go get out in the rain and go meet these guys for lunch, I guess. So, anybody else? Yes, sir. Paul?
[02:03:09] Unknown:
That book, Historical Jurisprudence, is also in the books folder up on docs.exposetomatrix.com.
[02:03:18] Unknown:
Okay. It's another one of these foundational things. If you're a new student like Julie, that'd be very beneficial for you to read. If you read that, it's not difficult reading. You'll have a better idea of the Uniform Commercial Code and its origins than, well, 90 something percent of the people in the country. Right. Many of the lawyers, they don't understand this. Yes.
[02:03:42] Unknown:
You have that book in that Sovereign to Serve website.
[02:03:45] Unknown:
Yeah. I think that might have been taken down.
[02:03:49] Unknown:
Okay.
[02:03:50] Unknown:
I don't know. Just speculate. So, anyway, anybody got anything for me? Because I'm gonna have to get get on my pony and ride. Okay. Well, I'm a go on and put the saddle on her then. I'll see y'all on Monday. Have a great weekend. And, Mark, good to see you on the show. And, Yeah. Wayne, good to hear from you always and, everybody else, and we'll find, our buddy in Houston here pretty quick, Jack. So, anyway, I'll, see you on Monday. Have a great weekend. Okay? And enjoy the good, informal show today. Thank you. Love each and every one of you. Adios. Yep. Ciao. Yeah. I'm having a great lunch even with my implant. Yep. Ciao.
[02:04:40] Unknown:
Hey. Thanks for joining us for the Radio Ranch with Roger Sales on Global Voice Radio Network. We're normally on EurofolkRadio.com. That that stream is down at the moment, but it's on its way back up as it were. Perhaps we'll have something hashed out on that by Monday or Tuesday next week. Catch us here Monday through Saturday, 11AM to 1PM eastern for the Radio Ranch. Monday, first hour, Roger, splits hosting duties with John Kasarab. Thursdays, the Radio Ranch is followed by Paul English Live on Global Voice Radio Network and PaulEnglishLive.com. Fridays, Rogers joined by Brent Allen Winters, common lawyer dot com. Saturday, the Sabadeau edition is basically just old people getting together, chewing the fat, and talking about whatever comes up. I'm Paul from global global voice network.
Can't talk. That's easy for you to say. I'll catch you right back here tomorrow. No. Monday, 11AM to 2PM, one PM eastern. Alright. Forget it. I'm giving up. Bye. Blasting the voice of freedom worldwide, you're listening to the Global Voice Radio Network.
[02:06:13] Unknown:
Bye bye, boys. Have fun storm
[02:06:20] Unknown:
I'm glad that's over.
Introduction and Program Overview
Technical Difficulties and Broadcast Issues
A Day in the Life: Roger's Eventful Day
Computer Troubleshooting and Solutions
Health and Wellness Discussion
Weather and Global Solar Minimum
Revocation of Election and Legal Processes
Trump Administration and Political Updates
Gold and Economic Speculations
Small 's' State vs. Capital 'S' State
Legal Challenges and Court Procedures
Cliff High Predictions and February 26th
Historical Jurisprudence and Closing Remarks