In this episode, the hosts delve into a range of topics, from the significance of the Fourth of July to the intricacies of American patriotism and historical perspectives. The discussion opens with a light-hearted acknowledgment of Independence Day, followed by a deep dive into the historical and cultural significance of the holiday. The hosts explore the importance of understanding America's past, the role of patriotism, and the influence of historical figures and events on contemporary society.
The conversation takes a turn towards the complexities of political processes and the importance of due process in governance. The hosts emphasize the need for accountability and justice, particularly in the context of recent political events. They also touch on the influence of music and media on public perception and the role of historical narratives in shaping national identity. The episode concludes with a reflection on the importance of understanding and preserving the foundational principles of American law and governance.
Forward moving and focused on freedom. You're listening to the Global Voice Radio Network. This Mirror Stream is brought to you in part by mymidoboost.com for support of the mitochondria like never before. A body trying to function with sluggish mitochondria is kinda like running an engine that's low on oil. It's not gonna work very well. It's also brought to you by PhatPhix, phatphix,.com. And also, iTero Planet for the terahertz frequency one by Preythe International. That's iteroplanet.com. Thank you, and welcome to the program.
[00:02:03] Unknown:
Yes, sir. Well, happy happy birthday, America. Here we go. Some of the only folks that are working on the big holiday. Landing on. You're not full of You think you could hush WAHEBA, please? And, so here we go to start the program on, July. Thank you. Roger Sales and Brent Winter, when he gets here, will be your cohosts. And, it is the Radio Ranch, and Francine, his producers here. And, so we'll get into whatever we're gonna discuss. Some of the only folks working on the fourth, I can tell you that. So, I'm glad you're with us wherever and whoever you are and where you may be. So, Paul, do we have any, any other assistance with us today helping us, extend this July program?
[00:02:56] Unknown:
Well, I believe that we're on radiosoapbox.com because that's automated. Whenever Eurofolk picks up the stream on Tuesday through Friday, Radio Soapbox picks it up at Wells as Wells. So Yeah. Our thanks to, Paul, Cross the Drink for that. Oh, man. And also eurofolkradio.com. Thanks to pastor Eli James. Brilliant guy. Brilliant guy. It's always a pleasure. And, from what I hear, Paul English live is going to have, him on maybe next week or the week after. I'm not exactly sure, but he is kind of on deck.
[00:03:32] Unknown:
Who? Eli?
[00:03:33] Unknown:
Eli. Yes. Uh-huh. Okay. And, we're also on Global Voice Network. Links to Eurofocal Global Voice Radio are on our website, thematrixdocs,b0cs,.com, as well as the link to pre conference call so you can join us live on the show. Loads of fun. Loads of fun. Let me let me just re remind everybody that if you happen to have a cellular provider that charges you out of network minutes, charges you out of network fees for calling conference systems, First of all, because we have a a direct, we don't have a a standard conference number. We have a one number, so you don't have to put in a PIN, and that sidesteps a lot of that. But if in the event that you do have that problem, just text call me to the dial in number, and the conference system will call you back.
Just answer your phone, and I'm I believe press press either star or pound, whatever, and then it'll bring you right into the conference. Greedy
[00:04:37] Unknown:
greedy cell phone provider.
[00:04:39] Unknown:
Well, they're trying to protect their network. Because if they have a if they have a thousand customers that are camped out on their phone for hours, that just plugs up lines. You know? Okay.
[00:04:52] Unknown:
No. Well, there you go. I was maybe I'll tell my cell phone story today. I don't it doesn't appear that mister Winters is with us yet, is he? No. Yeah. You'll see him up there. He'll pull in in a minute. So here we go. I could play something by John Philip Sousa, you know, like the thunder, some of the great, marching hymns that are associated with the fourth of July through mister Sousa, wonderful celebrated composer. Most people would not, and I think you'll find most people won't be working today. I know, InfoWars folks are all shut down, although they they all, I think prerecorded something to play today so they could give their crew, the long three day weekend, which is groovy.
And, but we slave at the wheel here because there's probably some people that are sitting around on the fourth that didn't go to the beach or the mountains or something. They're going, boy, I wish I had something to do today. Well, here we are for you. So, as always, the program is really for the new people that stumble across our message with, confusing. Our enemies have done a bountiful job of, muddying the water, so you can't identify your slavery or see how to get out of it. I think we've, overcome those obstacles. So if you're new and this is the first time you've had a chance to listen, you got questions, please come forward. All you have to do is hit star six there on your phone and say, hey, Roger, and, we will entertain you as soon as Brent gets here. Usually, there's no telling. We don't, in fact, Brent and I don't even communicate anymore since, since Microsoft did their little dirty deed, but we'll get it back up one of these days.
So we never prepare the program occasionally as this is this topic the audience wants covered. So you you always legal. But, anyway, we just, like, open the mics and let her rip,
[00:06:57] Unknown:
which is something.
[00:06:59] Unknown:
Well, it tends to be very entertaining radio because there's nothing canned, And it's very difficult to, set up things that you're trying to get across intentionally on people when you preplan stuff. I'd much rather uh-oh. Uh-oh. My electricity just went off.
[00:07:17] Unknown:
Uh-oh.
[00:07:18] Unknown:
I'll hold it. Just coming back on. There you go. Just a little short. Oh, man. I swear It's alright. You're you're fine. You got your you got your battery back up. The power thing, I guess, kept kept us going. So there you go. On the fourth. Well, we don't have that too often. I had a little inconvenience this morning. It didn't affect our show. Thank goodness. Or else you and Francine could have done the show. Francine, would you like to step in and do the program for a few minutes?
[00:07:47] Unknown:
Well, I have I have a question for you this morning, Roger. I don't know if you can do it. Okay. Please. It's just a simple quick little question. Do you know why there are no knock knock jokes about America?
[00:08:00] Unknown:
Because all the bad guys are already here?
[00:08:03] Unknown:
No. Because freedom rings.
[00:08:07] Unknown:
Oh. Oh, boy. That's a good one for the day there, Francine. Thank you. It was perfect for the day. Happy Pretty cute. Of July. I'll use that. Sorry. Yeah. I'll use that at our, little gathering this morning. I'll just add a little later.
[00:08:20] Unknown:
I got a pretty good deal from Tom Dee.
[00:08:24] Unknown:
Okay, mister Winters. Good morning, mister Winters.
[00:08:27] Unknown:
You got something for Tom Dee, do you? No. I got a I got a great meme from Tom Dee. It's a picture of a colonial, with, musket, and it says happy Independence Day, brought to you by Citizens with Guns.
[00:08:46] Unknown:
There you go. The bank. An armed society is a polite society. A polite. So you say, that renegade, mister Winters, joined us, has he?
[00:08:58] Unknown:
Yes. He has joined us.
[00:09:01] Unknown:
He's he's fumbling.
[00:09:03] Unknown:
Yeah. He's fumbling for his mute or something. Hey, Brent. No. I got it. I I got to thinking, well, maybe Roger's not gonna do a show today. And then I thought, well, Paul English isn't gonna celebrate the fourth. So maybe maybe we'll have a show, but we wanna make sure and and, wish all the people in Britain a happy workday. We wish they could join us. Maybe they could if they wanted to. I don't know, but we're taking a break today. The fourth is the fourth. I don't know if it has the same understanding that it has had in the past. I mean, the July 4. I do believe that, the evil empire has done what it can, done pretty good job of dumbing people down to the past and done all they can to remove any memory of the past from our minds, good and bad, to the point of tearing down all the statues of the people that were the shakers and movers that, had a an effect upon who we are, a powerful effect, I might add, for good or evil, or maybe they were evil men that had a good effect. Sometimes that happens. Or good men that have an evil effect. But in any case, if you don't know how it happened, you don't know where you're headed. If you don't know where you've been, you can't draw a straight line from there to here and know which way you're attending.
And so we we don't wanna forget the past and what happened, supposedly on the July 4, although there are a good good evidence that it didn't happen on the July 4. It happened on the August 2, but it really doesn't make any difference, and there are people been fighting about that since the very beginning. Doesn't make any difference. The bottom line is that was our declaration of official break from, from Britain or from England. Yeah. I guess Britain too. It was The United Kingdom at that time by that time. Go. Thanks, Roger. Good to be here.
[00:10:56] Unknown:
Glad you're on. Well, we usually, you know, plow on even Thanksgiving or other, holidays with the exception of Christmas and probably New Year's, which every seven years fall on, one of those days. So, anyway, we I I didn't want to not do a show, and, thought it we might have some listeners that might not ordinarily be with us. And, anyway, it's just consistency.
[00:11:28] Unknown:
Yeah.
[00:11:29] Unknown:
Send them in. From, California.
[00:11:32] Unknown:
Yeah. Hey. What what, Chris? What?
[00:11:35] Unknown:
Chris from California.
[00:11:36] Unknown:
Yes, sir. Hey. Good morning.
[00:11:38] Unknown:
You have the hospital? Glad to be here. I'm out of the hospital now. Good. Yes. After be after being t boned. Right. And, it was great, going through all the tests that they put me through. They've assured me that my heart is in perfect condition and and there's no clogged arteries or anything like that. And, so it was it was worth it actually. I really gained a lot of information from the experience.
[00:12:03] Unknown:
Right.
[00:12:05] Unknown:
And, a friend of mine sent me sent me something, by email. Not by email, by text message. This is a very interesting video. It's entitled they live dash or hyphen, they live hyphen Jews are self proclaimed natural born liberals hyphen pastor Peter John Peters
[00:12:29] Unknown:
Oh, okay. .Com.
[00:12:31] Unknown:
Wow. I don't know if you've ever heard of him. I've never heard of him before. He does an excellent job You have never heard of pastor. The 11 of the Pharisee. Yeah. The 11 of the Pharisees and what that really means. Wow. You never heard of pastor Peters before, Chris?
[00:12:47] Unknown:
No. I haven't. Glad to know about him now. Did you know about him? I used to follow him religiously every night on shortwave. He gave me a lot of big pieces to this puzzle. I've met him when he was alive. Wrought bread with him and his followers one time in Nashville. Tremendous person. Do you know about the back you well, obviously, you don't. So let me tell you and the other audience, his website's still up. It's maintained by his followers. It's, scripturesforamerica.org. And they've got all of his sermons and stuff. He was on shortwave, five nights a week, and all that's on there. The problem that they that I've got with it, there's a solution it might, be, it appears, is that they don't give you any descriptions of the episodes.
So you don't really know what you're plowing into, and there's a lot of them on there. But with Paul's discovery of this, I AI thing, they might could somehow attach AI and get the descriptions of the sermons like, like we do. I don't know if that's possible or whatever. It's your help them out. When I first got into this, Chris, in the nineties, right when Clinton got elected and he appointed Butcherino as AG up there, and, they declared pastor Pete Peters the most dangerous man in America. He was a pastor of the Liberty Church of Christ, Church in La Porte, Colorado. And I always thought the guy was kind of a prophet. He had a one he has a wonderful way of breaking things down, but you reference about, yeah, boy. They didn't like him at all. He he had their number, I mean, right on the bull's eye. So thanks for bringing him up and having a chance to mention him again. There's also a guy that he used to have on a lot named Colonel Jack Moore.
You may have heard us talk about him, Chris. Do you know who he was?
[00:14:46] Unknown:
No. I don't.
[00:14:47] Unknown:
He was, one of the guys that was I think he was the first guy to be, released by the North Koreans. They captured him in Korea. And, what they would do is they would I think they did it 12 or 13 times. They give him his last rights, let him smoke his last cigarette, and have whatever breakfast he wanted. And then they take him out into the yard and ready, aim, fire, and all the rifles would go click on empty cylinders. I think they did that twelve twelve or more times to him. They finally released him and, he, got an honorary colonel. I believe he got that battlefield promotion, they call it. And, of course, when he got back, because he was the first guy to get released from the communists over there, he, He, he became, in instant celebrity on the John Birch, circuit, and he was their primary speaker. Okay?
And one night, he was in Little Rock, Arkansas, his hometown, and he got up on stage and started talking about the Zionists. And the next day, they pulled him off tour, kicked him out of John Birch. And, so there's a little insight on the John Birch Society for you. And, I believe a lot of his talks are still on that website. It's if I remember correctly, it's colonel Jack, m o h r, I believe. But, they're all all those folks are gone now, of course. But, yeah, I, cut my teeth on pastor Peters. Quite a guy.
[00:16:29] Unknown:
Mhmm.
[00:16:30] Unknown:
He was, one of the disciples. That's who I I'd I'd just add this to button it up. He was one of the disciples of Sheldon Emery. Pastor Sheldon Emery who I'm able to see if Bren agrees with me. He really fathered a lot of the identity preachers. His Sheldon Emery is, his, daughter married, another identity pastor that lives up in Northern Idaho called named Barclay, I believe, is his name. So, anyway, yeah, know a little bit about him. I used to listen to him every night on WWCR, and they had that great lineup. You'd have, Tom Valentine for couple hours representing free, Liberty Lobby, and then you'd have, pastor Peters, then you'd have Bill Cooper, and later on, they added some other ones. But, yep, you used to listen to that lineup every night when you couldn't find this information, Chris, anywhere else.
[00:17:27] Unknown:
And that's why shortwave shortwave became popular. And that shortwave station, is the biggest one in America. I used to be on that shortwave station, but that station existed because of legislation that congress passed during the Reagan years. Really? And Reagan Reagan proposed legislation. What the the mission statement of the by act of congress of the short wave, of course, it reaches around the world, is to promote promote Americanism. Well, that's kind of that's a wide open term. So what they if you don't play country music on that still, they still follow that legislation when I was there. I I play country kinda music, so it's not a problem, but I have my show.
But if you'd if you play country music and are pro America, that's what they've gotta have to meet the requirements of legislation. So Pat Boone has been on there for years. Pete Peters was probably still on there. I don't know if he still is. And, a lot of other patriots that many people wouldn't want to listen to or wouldn't promote. Now pastor Peters grew up in the Sandhills in Nebraska on a cattle ranch, and he ended up, by the time he's grown, he went to study agriculture, which is the fashionable thing to do in our generation if you're off the farm, get an education, which our fathers and grandfathers didn't have. Well, that didn't really mean anything, but he did that. And then he worked went to work for the federal government because that's where the big money was for the United States Department of Agriculture. Well, he did that for a while, and, then while he was doing that, he asked colonel Moore to come speak at his church, little tiny church in La Porte, Colorado in an old army barracks. They had bought an army barracks. They moved there from Fort Laramie, Fort Laramie.
[00:19:21] Unknown:
Really?
[00:19:22] Unknown:
Yeah. I I didn't know that. Yeah. They bought it for nothing. You know? Somebody bought it after the war, and then they somebody moved it into La Porte, which wasn't that far away, but it was hard to get it there. And then they got, they bought it for nothing. It had become a fire station. Now it's coming back. It had become the fire station in that little town, then they fire station built a new building, and they bought the building. And he but before that, he was, he had, after he, was working for The US Department Of Agriculture, he was helping farmers and and, livestock producers get guaranteed loans.
Well, he was doing his job. He asked colonel Moore to come because he had heard him, and he was a patriot. And they you know, patriots at their little church, they said pledge of allegiance and all that, and I realized some people don't agree with that, but that's what they did. They were trying to be patriotic. And pastor Pete invited colonel Moore. Colonel Moore came, and colonel Moore, by the way, received his battlefield, his commission, has a battlefield commission in Europe during World War two. Oh, really? Okay. Yeah. And and he was in Patton's third army, and Patton gave him battlefield commission. Of course, a lot of people were dying. They had a lot of slots to fill. That's the what war does for people's careers. It's a good thing.
Well, any rate, business is good when there's war on for the military. That's something important to keep in mind, and that can be dangerous, and it always is to some degree. But, anyway, he got that commission. He went to Korea, and then he became an adviser to South Korean troops, and he was attached to the, police force of a of a town there in South Korea. And the police force was infiltrated by the commies, overrun. He was taken prisoner, and all these things you said you said happened. Well, so years went by, and this guy had grown up a Baptist. I mean, colonel Moore had grown up a Baptist before World War two, and so he had those sensibilities. He got home. He was a kind of a jack legged preacher and evangelist after the war after the Korean War was over and speaking, as you said, for the Birchers.
Well, then Pete well, Pete asked him to come and speak, and he got to talking about, communism, and he made the connection at this little church. I think a couple of nights, he was invited to speak. He made this connection between, what they call communism is Bolshevickism Bolshevickism, and that's what it was called, of course, during the and after the revolution of Red October nineteen seventeen. Well, the word Bolshevik is, it was a movement of Jewish people. Jewish people invented Bolshevakism, and they dominated it all during the horse linen.
Jewish and, Trotsky was Jewish, and and, Stalin was Jewish as all the Russians tell me, and that's what I read. So it was a Jewish movement. So he brought that up during the presentation, and and he he cited all the people in the Bolshevik party, which became the Red Party of Russia. And, most of them were Jewish. He made that point. And being an evangelist kinda guy, he recognizes, and it's a it's beyond debate that, as Jonathan Edwards said back when our country was about to be in, he said, religious affections are are the springs, I'm quoting him, are the springs of all human activity.
Religious affections are the ultimate springs of all human activity. What does that mean? That means that there's nothing anybody does that that is not got behind it, his religious convictions. And those of you that say you have none, you're just fooling yourself. You're silly. Everybody's got religious conviction. You just don't know what religion is. That's your problem, and the Bible defines religion. The Supreme Court of the United States has defined religion. It's all there. It's just that you don't stop to think about it, and you say, well, I'm not really oh, yeah. You're religious. You're everybody is, and everybody has law that they live by. And if you have a law, you have a law giver even if it's your own self.
And your response to that law giver, the final arbiter of right and wrong in individual instances from whose decision there is no appeal. Your final arbiter of right and wrong, your response to that arbiter is your god. We call him god, lawgivers, the final decider in individual instances. Well, he, Jonathan Edwards made that point, and that's what the point that colonel Moore was making in those presentations way back there at La Porte in the or La Porte it was La Porte, Indiana. I had almost said Indiana. La Porte, Colorado.
Same people named La Porte, Colorado that named La Porte, Indiana, French fur trappers. They were pretty prolific, but, in only of North American continent. But, he made that presentation. He pointed out the Jewish the religious connection to communism. Well, nobody thought anything of it. Then the next morning on the Denver Post front page was that Pete Peters is promoting, antisemitism and that he would even invite somebody as crazy as colonel Jack Moore to come and talk. Well, nobody had thought that no Pete Peters didn't know he would he didn't have any acts to grind with anybody of a different religion except to say that Christ is king, which he did say, of course. Well, that's, of course, contrary to Judaism, Romanism.
What's that other one? Talmadism, Islam, all of them. But as long as you don't make the other connections, they they they don't think you're harmful, and so they consider you harmless and leave you alone. Well, he he just invited colonel Jack Moore. They attacked him on the front page of the paper. All of a sudden, where he worked at the US Department of Agriculture, they sent agents into his office to do an audit for two or three years and try to get rid of him, and all the other churches in the area denounced him and wouldn't have anything to do with him because of the public outcry. He of course, he was kinda what's that, Roger? What? I was gonna
[00:25:46] Unknown:
say he lost everybody in the congregation except for his lost everybody. Except for his family.
[00:25:53] Unknown:
Except for his family. Well, Shucks, in my case I I could relate to that, Roger. If my family when I was pastoring a church over here about fifteen years ago, if my family left the church, half the people would be gone. You know? But, of course, we had, there were 10 of us in the family, so that that means there were 20 there, I guess. But, yeah, he got down to where just him, two or three, however many children he had. I think he had a couple and some some hangers on. But he was, of course, reeling. He didn't he was dumbstruck. As they say in Britain, he was gobsmacked. Like, somebody slapped him right in the mouth unexpectedly, and he didn't have a clue why.
And I've had that happen to me too, by my mother. Didn't even know why she did it. Well, I figured it out later, but takes you you gotta hit somebody pretty hard. It's senseless. I was senseless at that time. My grandmother did that to my older brother. I don't know if it took or not. Boy, she walloped the tarnation out of him one time on the stairway. And he was full grown, and she was up in her eighties at that time. I think he needed it. You know, most of us do. But getting back to Pete, he didn't know what to do. He got gobsmacked. The whole state was against him. The church rejected him. All the churches in the little community at that time, La Porte, the the migration hadn't begun to Colorado. La Porte was a ranching ranchland community, so to speak. And, then he began to he said he remembered what somebody see, Pete Peters had been a strong supporter of the John Birch Society since the, late sixties when he was in college, middle middle to late sixties. And, so he wasn't against the John Birchers. He didn't know what was going on. He thought he thought he said he thought, well, the Jews are God's chosen people. I don't have anything against them. Why are they doing this to me?
And he then began looking and listening, and he heard Sheldon. Sheldon was a very measured, nonbombastic speaker. He tried to gain maintain a lot of dignity and and calmness in everything he did. But, unfortunately, when you take the position that Sheldon Emory took and that Pete Peters took, you're gonna draw some unsavory characters, real unsavory characters to your awesome good folk chorus, but they're on the fringes. And I'd mentioned here a few weeks ago that pastor Pete Peters, was a was a a target not a target, a person of suspicion in the murder of Alan Berg because he invited other people to speak. Well, invited Jack more than other people started coming that were dangerous.
And when I I don't mean that they're always wrong. They're just dangerous because they're foolish about how they approach the problem of of other people as in Germany. I've pointed my point out my point of view out that Germany was foolish. They followed a man that didn't know how to navigate world politics and destroyed their country. That's what happened. Wasn't that what he was thinking or saying was always wrong. That's not the point. And same with, Pete Peters and same with Sheldon Emery. You know, Pete Peter suffered a lot in Oh, yeah. Because it wasn't like he was a a god or a hero. No. They came after him, and his life deteriorated deteriorated because the power was so overwhelming of the evil empire against him that what do you do? Destroys your family? And I don't know, and I've wanted to find out over the years he passed away in his early sixties.
And I want under less than well, more than well, let's say suspicious circumstances. And I wonder sometimes. So is it here and get to the bottom line. I don't wanna hide the ball or kick it around and not say the practical thing here, and I've said it. Some of you have heard me. Does it bears repeating. When it comes to Judaism, Babylonianism, that's what Judaism is. It's the Babylonian Talmud because it's it's just the same old, false religion, dangerous and filthy, dressed up in under a different label than Romanism and Islam and many other isms and schisms that we wish was wasms.
And it's the same filthy, stinking, smelly, putrid stuff. But God tells us how to approach these things, and I I I give you my testimony from what I've learned in life and what I've learned in history, of which I'm in I pay avid attention and, as I know some of you do, and my experience, my testimony, having my brains buried in the Bible for many decades. And my conclusion is this, when it comes to false religion, and that's what Judaism is, it's not a matter of race. It's not racism. There are people from all races, all races you never heard of that follow Babylonian Judaism.
And the people that do it know that. They all know it. There are more Persian Jews in the world than there are any other kind, probably. Yeah. Yeah. I mean, that's just silly to talk about antisemitism as though it's a matter of, blood and race. It's not. But it is a religion, and it's dangerous as all false religion. That means it's underhanded. It's it's, effeminate. It's not manly. Is there something wrong with the feminism? No. As long as you're a woman, there's everything right about it for for crying out loud, but this is a feminism of men. That's what false religion fundamentally is, friends. That's why the Bible starts out with that story and gives us the prime example of a feminism.
What is a feminism? Well, you go back and read about our grandma and grandpa Adam and Eve, and you can learn. And it was devastating what happened there, and it spells the story of the history of mankind and the problems we have. It's all right there, friends. But to understand it I mean, really understand the simplicity the simplicity, not the clump complexity. The simplicity of what happened to our grandma and grandpa happened to them. No. No. They did it. They made it happen. Well, I I wonder sometimes. There are so many. They get tired of the of the results. So many. They get tired of the of the results.
[00:32:20] Unknown:
Hold on.
[00:32:21] Unknown:
And the result The result. Thank you. The results of false religion are Utterly. Of false religion are utterly
[00:32:31] Unknown:
Yeah. But somebody got a got hold on, Brent. Just give me a call. Hold that thought. Somebody got a mic open.
[00:32:38] Unknown:
JJ, you're open. JJ, you're open. Sorry. I just started my company.
[00:32:44] Unknown:
They're devastating. And, what do we do about it? We see it happen in our own country. I've I've struggled with that all my life. But what you don't do about it according to our captain and our master, you don't attack them head on. You don't do that. No. Do it's a sermon on the mount, quoting Jesus Christ. The King James says, do it says, resist evil. The Bible says resist evil and it will flee, and he, it, not it, he will flee from you. But he also says there in the Sermon on the Mount, Jesus Christ says this, do not resist evil. That's the translation. Well, it's different. Oh, is it the words are important. In the Greek text there, it doesn't say resist evil. Is the other resistance is there. Yeah. But that's not fundamentally what it's stressing. What it's stressing is, do not square off with the evil man.
Do not square off with him. Are there times to square off with him? Yeah. But he's talking about the evil man. He's talking about the coward, but that's what false religion makes out of men. Cowards. Romanism, Judaism, Islam, crowder cowards, craven cowards, and sex perverts. That's what it makes out of men. You follow it, you'll get there. Just stay with it. But I don't want you to do that, but that's what it brings. And when he says do not square off try to square off with evil, he's talking about a man or a person, a demon, or, well, any, any person, demon or man, you square off with them. You're squaring off with somebody that won't square off. He'll make you think he's squaring off with you, but he won't. He won't fight you a fair fight.
Do not square off. That's exactly what it says. Matter of fact, it uses the word anti anti. The preposition is attached to the word, prefixed. And the anti means squared off with. It means face to face. It means it means instead of, not against primarily is again yeah. It's against, but it's instead of. As the reformer said, the pope of Rome is in the place of Jesus Christ. That means that's why he's called in Latin vicar. Vicar of Jesus Christ. He is in place of Jesus Christ, Greek language. You say anti, in place of. But notice, the pope of Rome doesn't say he's against Jesus Christ, but he sure says he's in place of him, and the Bible forbids that.
Vicar means in place of. Same root word as vice, like vice president, in place of. The Latin would say they use the word that means the same thing. What was that fellow they called down in India? They used a Latin word. He was in charge down there, and he had the same powers as the king. The viceroy. Viceroy. Viceroy. Yep. Vy that means in place of the king in French, law French of, England. Well, getting back to back to, Pete, Pete didn't know what to do. Now he got he got this this, cow puncher, and that's what Pete was. No question. I mean, that's all he ever knew. All of a sudden, he's and hit with something he doesn't understand. He'd never seen. He'd never been around these people. He didn't know why they were attacking him, and they they destroyed his life, destroyed his, career.
And they they he realized at that point after the the feds came after him, he said, who has this kind of power to make this happen? Where's this where is this coming from? Mhmm. Well, he lost his job, but he saw the light and quit first. He didn't realize they controlled that and had the power to sick people on him. And then he got the grand jury. He got under a federal grand jury investigation for the murder of a man. He'd never he, he had been interviewed by him on the radio after this all happened. But here's what happened. He had Jack Moore. I told you what happened there. And then he he, not understanding and not having had the experience, he wasn't the veteran of the fight. He was an intelligent man. I don't care how intelligent you are. Until you've been in the firefight Mhmm. How can you possibly know how to keep yourself alive if you haven't got somebody with you saying keep your head down and don't don't be a hero? You know? You might get your brain to blow it out.
Well, Pete did the head on attack. He did the head on attack, and he went after him. And he said, look. You're gonna, attack me in the newspapers like this. I want you to come and listen. I'm gonna invite Jack Moore back again. Well, I have nothing wrong with that. But he decided to take the fight to the forum they on their turf, the newspapers and all that. Now this is my testimony of what I understand about it. And, he thought that he could he could, square off with them. Well, he did all those things, and they just backed off. They wouldn't square off with him. They never did, by the way. Once he challenged them, they they backed off. He didn't hear from him again, but they then had a grand jury indictment against him. Well, is that squaring off? No. That's secret. Mhmm. So they just kept That's a flanking maneuver. Yeah. Well and it well, you that's a that's a nice way of saying it. I don't give it even that. No. That's just plain sneaky snake in the grass. That's all that. No. That's who they are. Flanking at least has some honor to it if you're in battle. They didn't do that. But you're right. They were being they were they weren't they weren't fighting a fair fight, and it got worse from there. I mean, much worse. And it got to the point. Now I'll tell you what Pete did, though, Roger, and I I commend this to the listeners.
Pete Peters, this is an important case study. Mhmm. Pete Peters, when it was all over, he got through it without himself being destroyed, but I say he went through the furnace like the three Hebrew boys. The three Hebrew boys went through the furnace.
[00:38:34] Unknown:
Well, his wife died. His wife died of cancer, and his son got killed at the gate of their ranch in Wyoming. I don't know. Yeah. Yeah. Yeah. What was February. Yeah. Yeah. And then and he died a suspicious death.
[00:38:46] Unknown:
But, he finally backed away and said, well, I get it. And he did a three hour presentation called my experience with Jewish power. And he tells in humility the mistakes and the things he did. And you can go watch that. Now he's not, he didn't say the things I said, but I get the impression that he, he made the point that, listen, he, without going to the scriptures I went to, but just from the laws of nature, he learned that you don't square off with a 220 pound bull two two hundred and twenty no. 2,200 pound bull. You don't square off with somebody like like that. That's stupid. And I've said before, I'll say it again, Germany did that when they squared off with The United States. That was stupid.
Japan did it. They squared off. That was stupid. The Confederates did it. That was stupid. And I'm I'm not down on what they thought at all, but that was stupid. They destroyed themselves or allowed themselves to be destroyed. God says don't square I tell my boys, never draw a gun on a man that's got the drop on you. Never. I don't care what the situation is. You're gonna you you stand a ninety nine percent chance of dying. Don't do that. There may be another way out. But once, somebody's got the drop on you, it's suicide to do that.
And all those people I mentioned before that, in hindsight I realize hindsight is twenty twenty and I've got the hindsight. But if I've got the hindsight, don't make fun of the idea that I I should look back and evaluate everything and then look forward and don't make the same mistakes. But that's not the way to deal with the evil empire and the useful idiots of it. The way to deal with the evil empire and the useful idiots of it is to follow the commands of our captain. Do what he says. And it may not look to you like or it may not it may not appeal to your sense of what I of of glory and my satisfaction and doing what I want.
But, but it will contribute to the glory of your lord and your captain and his honor. And if he's got honor, you've got honor. There's no other way to get it, friends. You do something else, you're gonna get annihilated. In battle, you obey orders, and we are in battle. And if you don't know the bible and there's something about it, you don't know the orders. And you think you know, you probably don't. I can confess after all my decades of having my brains buried in the book. I I confess I feel stupider now and less informed than I did when I started, but I know I'm not. But I don't experience it always that way. We must stay with it, friends. We must go back and review our orders.
And if you do that, you'll win. God will bring you out, and you'll share in the victory. Don't be well, that presentation, not you can find it on the Internet. I think you have to go to BitShoot or something like that. It's been Probably where Chris is. Yeah. Yeah. I'd go but it's on there. I think it's called my experience with with Jewish power. It's in two or three parts, and that's it's we're it's history. It's a real case study, of of the struggle.
[00:41:59] Unknown:
And it's amazing how he kinda blindly walked into that and didn't know anything about it. No. He wasn't. And I I can I can speak to that too having
[00:42:08] Unknown:
been deeply immersed in politics? I hear people talking about, well, Tucker Carlson now talking about APAC, and he was questioning senator Cruz. Oh. Oh, you mean Tel Aviv Tel Aviv Ted? Yeah. Yeah. And senator Cruz said, well, I came to the US Senate, and I was, I wanted to be and was supposed to be and said I would be the chief, the chief
[00:42:33] Unknown:
Defender
[00:42:34] Unknown:
of Israel. Chief defender of the state of Israel in The US. Me wanna puke. Oh, you saw it, did you? Oh, I watched that. Yes. Well, Tucker Tucker, did a good job, but Tucker asked the question, well, what about APAC? Is APAC a a lobby for the state of Israel? He said absolutely not. Yeah. And he and Tucker said, well, if they are a lobby for a foreign government, then they have to register with the US government, and they haven't registered. He said that's because they're not a lobby with the foreign government Of course not. Of a foreign government. He said, well, now wait a minute. He said, well, what is it? You tell me then. Now I speak, from my experience having been to APAC convention supposedly held to raise money, for people like me, but that's not what it's about. And APAC is, a I p a c, America Israeli PAC. PAC is political action committee.
So a PAC as under the law in America is a way to raise a lot of money and get around the individual donation limitations. When I was running for congress, the donation limitations were $1,000 per person per election, primary or general election. A PAC, at that time, I remember, I could get from a PAC, a PAC, a political action committee, up to $5,000. And, sometimes, under under law, there there were groups that raised money all over the country for people like me in my particular in my called bundling bundling of checks in my particular district just running there, but they could raise money from all over the country if people supported my point of view, and that happened a lot. Oh, the the the campaign finance laws mean nothing. Yeah. Absolutely nothing.
And don't ever forget that. The only reason they put those in place is to to to cripple the one challenging an incumbent Yeah. Until he learns the ropes, and it takes a long and once you learn the ropes, you still don't have the support that the incumbent has because he's got the upper hand. Everybody knows who he is, and people will give him money whether they like him or not. And so those campaign finance laws are written to keep the incumbents in office. And I don't mean a little bit, friends. This is my personal testimony. I mean, 100%.
That's all they're for. And and there's a once you know the ropes, you get around them. I had a fellow one time. Yeah. He shut down his factory. He said, I'm gonna give you fifteen minutes to talk to my the people in my little factory, and I think he had anywhere from a dozen or 20 men working there. And he he he made he made the Roger, this guy designed the machines that stuck the little three by five card in magazines, used to when magazines for Internet. You know, the machine you'd open the magazine, that three by five card would, estimate size or renew your subscription or whatever. Well, that was relatively new. That was back in the seventies or eighties or something, but he's the one that and he made a fortune on that. And a lot of other machines, he was truly a genius. You know? He he chain smoked cigarettes and stir up machinery until he figured out how he could change them to do what people wanted done in the printing business.
And, he did well. Well, he shut the factory down and a little manufacturing plant he had, and I spoke to him. And he was butt big on the second amendment. He invited he got Charlton Heston to come back and do a fundraiser for us. He had money, and so he had influence, and he got he, he was big on the second amendment. So I got done with my presentation. That's what he wanted me to talk about. And I went outside, and I had my van there and I guy helping me, traveling around with me. And and when I got done, I had a silk tie on that was a red, white, and blue. A beautiful silk tie that this truck driver is going back and forth to Florida, and he knew a place to get them cheap. And he was getting them for me. Getting them for $5 apiece, and I was giving them away.
Well, then somebody said, why give them away? Why don't you sell them? If somebody wants the one you have, just whip it off your neck and give it to them. They like that. Then I always had a couple in my pocket, and I'd put another one on. See? Well, I got to sell them for $10 a piece, and then I had a paint salesman come to me and to support me. He said, look. This is stupid. He said, you don't understand sales. You could sell double the amount of ties you've got and raise money for your campaign if you, double the price of the ties. I said, now wait a minute. You're telling me by doubling the price of the ties from $10 to $20, I will sell more ties. He said that's right. He said if you don't charge enough for them, people won't think they're getting anything. It's not worth anything. It's just and people don't even think about it. That's just the psyche of of, and I know, Roger, you've been in the sales business for many years. Wow. You could vouch for that, I'm sure. What else do you what else do you do with a last name like mine? Yeah. That's good, Roger. Well, you know, salesmen make more money than doctors. I mean Yeah. It better than being named returns. Right? Yeah. Well, I I started doing took that guy's advice, and it was true. I sold more ties, and I still, though, were run around went around my neck. But this guy came outside after I spoke to the fellows in his factory, and he said, how many of those ties you got? I told him. He said, I want them all.
And I had them piled up in the van, just junk everywhere, and they were piled up in boxes. And I think it he said, I'll give you $20 a piece for them, and it came to over $30,000.
[00:48:02] Unknown:
Yikes.
[00:48:03] Unknown:
And I said he said, I'll write you a check right now. I said, I I it scared me, you know, because I was kinda new then. It scared me. I said I knew that I anything you do, you're afraid to get in trouble, you know, break a law. And I said, I I I don't wanna do that. Let me I said, let me call a lawyer I know in Washington, DC, and he majors on campaign finance law for the for conservatives. And his name was Olson. Good guy. Christian Pella. I called him, and he said, well, you just tell him to call us. We'll help him if he needs to work his way through that, and he did. But, there in other words, there's ways around it. See? That there's just ways around it. A lot of ways around it. And so that's campaign finance. Well, then I got invited. The the all the APAC wanted to talk to me, and they wanted me to fill out a form. And then they sent people to meet me and and talk with me. And the form said the bottom line question is whether or not and they have a lot of money.
The truth is they are, as Tucker Carlson said, this is silly. They're lobbying for the state of Israel. Well, of course, they are. But, technically, if you look at their paperwork and their forms and what they say, they aren't. They're what they're lobbying for, said senator Ted Cruz, is better relations between The United States and the Israeli state, not for the state of Israel. Of course, doctor Carlson said, well, but doesn't that mean that you're trying to help Israel have a better relationship with America? They said he said no. We're I APAC is trying to help America have a better relationship with Israel. Now is that legalese or double speak? Of course. Yes.
In a big way. Well, one of the chief questions on the questionnaire was, do you support the state of Israel? And I said on the questionnaire, my loyalty is undivided to The United States, period. And I put a period after it. For you people in Britain, that means a full stop. I put a period after it. My loyalty is undivided to The United States, and that means my loyalty is undivided to the law of The United States, the law of the land. That's our constitution of The United States is a is a slice of our common law tradition as it is applied to government. That's the law of the land. It calls itself the law of the land in article six. That phrase, law of the land, supreme law of the land, that phrase is lifted from Magna Carta chapter 39.
No man's life, liberty, property shall be taken, this is a paraphrase, except by the law of the land. It says that in Magna Carta. Well, that's important. That's the my loyalty is to that law. And we have two constitutions in America. We have a written constitution and an unwritten constitution. And the written constitution of of The United States, not of your state, those are good too, most of them. But the written constitution of The United States rests as a giant oak tree is rooted in our common law tradition. And if you don't know something about our common law tradition, our constitution of The United States will remain a boring, dry, and dispirited skeleton of words.
It has no meaning outside of our common law tradition. Every word and every phrase is couched in the terms of our common law tradition. That's a quote from chief justice Taft of the US Supreme Court. Other justices have said like things such as justice Joseph Story, and it's absolutely true. So I wrote on there, my loyalty is undivided. Undivided loyalty, by the way, is no loyalty at all according to our common law tradition. My loyalty is undivided to The United States and our constitution of The United States, the and the law of our land, which is our common law tradition. And then I said, the greatest value of the Israeli state to The United States is as a staging area for military activity if need be.
As long as and as long as that opportunity and that's that availability is open, well, I I'm I'm glad it's there, but my loyalty has to be to The United States, not to them. That's axiomatic. That's fundamental. Nobody with a brain in their head that they can use would deny that, but that was enough to deny
[00:52:40] Unknown:
They they dropped you like a hot potato.
[00:52:43] Unknown:
Oh, yeah. And but, golly, how could I say it any other way? And if you do say it any other way, it's divided loyalty. And you, my friend, are a disloyal American. That's and that can work itself out in activity. It has to be an activity called treason. And the punishment for treason, the penalty is death. That's serious business. You know, treason treason, according to god and according to our common law tradition, is to do something, to commit a crime that strikes a crime, a crime that strikes at the very heart of our existence as a people.
In other words, if this crime continues, then our existence of a as a people will discontinue. And if you wanna know what treason to the maker of heaven and earth is, just go to the Bible and catalog the capital crimes in the Bible. Capital punishment among every people in every age throughout the history of man, Christian or not, people are smart enough to know that we got to execute people for things that could destroy us as a people, crimes. The French for years have made fun of us for having allowing, doing capital punishment.
Like, they're too sophisticated for that. See? They're too intellectually superior for that. But I point out that every country and every people has capital punishment for what they consider to be a crime that would destroy their country. And France has capital punishment for treason as they understand it too. They sure do. You know, the the law of the city governs every country in the world. It's contrary to our law of the land. The canon civil laws of Rome govern govern every country in the world, if not directly, most of them directly by the code of Justinian, the Roman empire emperor. But if not directly by that code, then indirectly.
Sharia law is the law of the city. It's that way in every country. They're all they're all contrary to us and will bring war sooner or later. It's happened over and over. That's the history of mankind. And that law that law is dangerous to us, our loyalty. That's why men take an oath of loyalty to our law of the land as it is applied to government, our constitution of The United States. And that loyalty is has to be by the very nature of the word the word and the etymology and definition of the word loyalty has to be undivided.
If you have a loyalty if if you have a loyalty to a god other than the god other than Abraham Abraham, Isaac, and Jacob of the Bible, the God and father of our lord Jesus Christ, God in human flesh, That's treason against him, the maker of heaven and earth. And you are worthy of death according to the Bible. And to be treasonous against him is to be treasonous against The United States because he is the landlord of the allodial landlord of all land on the face of this planet, and he's divided it up divided it up among tongues and tribes and nations of men. And we have a parcel of it here called The United States.
And disloyalty to this land is disloyalty to the land's law, the law of the land, our common law tradition. And disloyalty to those, the law is to disloyalty to the law giver himself who gave that law. The laws of nature and the laws of nature's god, our common law tradition, and the Bible. Our loyalty is to be there. You wanna understand loyalty? You want to understand patriotism in in a Christian sense, in a biblical sense? That's what it is, loyalty to our land, not loyalty to anything else. I told this story, I think. I wanna tell it again if I may, but I went to I'm, from the Wabash Valley. I went to my grandson, is in a little bluegrass country slash sometimes rock and roll band.
He plays the five string banjo and the guitar, and he's a young feller. And he's enjoying learning music and getting and other fellows in the band, they're good too, and they went to the Chautauqua Pavilion in Rockville, Indiana and, played. And I went and listened, and they got all done with their music, and it was kinda just enjoyable. I sat in other people sat in the summertime listening, and and then they played that popular so called I say so called because it's not patriotic song. It's the most popular patriotic song in America today. And, when they played it, it's so popular that everybody stood up and put their hand on their heart. Lee
[00:57:36] Unknown:
Greenwood.
[00:57:37] Unknown:
Yeah. I didn't stand up, put my hand on my heart because that song is from the pit of hell. It's a denial of the reality of patriotism. Sure is. Beautiful music. The words are moving. But when you really listen that's the way music is. Music is used by the useful idiots of the evil empire who gets distracted from the truth. That rock and roll has always been like that. Another music I mean, you go back to the second century, Arianism. Arius was a minstrel. And the Arian controversy and the I call it a heresy, but it's a just a false doctrine came from a man that played music.
That's why the Russkies made rock and roll against the law in Russia. He they knew that that, it would distract them from their religion, which was communism, and they're gone. Don't forget Woody Guthrie. Woody Guthrie. Yeah. All those Woody Guthrie, the Weavers. Remember back in the Oh, I do. Sure. Hootenanny's. Hootenanny was popular. And, the other, the some of the others back from the thirties, like Burl Ives used to hang out with Woody Guthrie, but I find no evidence that Burl Ives, just a footnote, was communist. I found that he was anti communist, but he was in that movement, you know, with Woody Guthrie and let's shoot the communist government of the United States under FDR hired, paid a lot of taxpayer money to wood Woody Guthrie to write songs to promote to promote, the, New Deal of, the the socialism slash communism New Deal of, Woody of Woody Guthrie. They paid him money to write songs like roll on, Columbia roll when they were trying to promote the jurisdiction of the federal government, make corporations and put up dams on the Tennessee River, the Cumberland River, the the, the, Columbia River. And you say, well, all that was good, Brent.
That's not the point, friends. Somebody last week when I was on here said, but those rural electric co ops that they incorporated did a good thing. Well, that's not that has nothing to do with the argument against it. The argument against it is not the outcome. The outcome may be good. It may be bad. The argument against it is how did you go about reaching that outcome? That's our common law tradition. The how, not the outcome. Our common law tradition, our constitution of The United States has nothing in it about outcomes. It doesn't dictate any outcomes about anything.
It says here is how the procedures,
[01:00:18] Unknown:
courses of process, how the government's supposed to operate. But can I can I pick a net with you? Yeah. I like I like Like the penalty of tree of of for treason is hanging. Is that an
[01:00:31] Unknown:
outcome? That's good. Yeah. But it doesn't it doesn't dictate who gets hung. No. That's an important point. See? Of course. It doesn't dictate and say, you gotta have this man for president. Well, that's not the our constitution couldn't do that anyway, but that's our common law tradition. It never stresses the outcome. It follows what the Bible says. The Bible says that when it comes to legal process, the the judgment, the outcome, the verdict belongs to Yahuah, Jehovah. He happens, the maker of heaven and earth. Our job as men, our jurisdiction, is to make sure the fight is fair and done according to Hoyle, according to due process. The process that is due and owing to all concern. Our common law is due process. It's not about the things like the 10 commandments, the outcome standards. That's not our common law. That's substantive law.
Processes are common law. How? And the how that so they I've been, for example, sure. I went to Lewiston, Idaho the first time I was there. By the way, Roger, you're an old rock and roll guy. I can't resist dropping this. You remember, the the song about, came out in '72 1972, Hot Rod Lincoln? Oh, yeah. Of course. Well, the guy that wrote I was spinning records back then. Oh, yeah. You knew that song. Great great, guitar intro. Great story. Back about the hot rod days when the muscle cars ran. You know? You heard the story of the hot rod race when the Fords and the Lincolns were setting the pace, and that story is true. I'm here to say I was driving a model a. Had a Lincoln motor. It was really souped up. The model a body made it look like a pup. Had four gears, used them all, got overdrive, just don't stall.
Got a four barrel carb and dual exhaust, and four eleven gears, you can really get lost. Got safety tubes, but I ain't scared. The brakes is good and the tire's fair. We were driving out of San Pedro late one night and the moon and the stars were shining bright. We were driving up straight Vine Hill passing cars like they were standing still. Well, I always assumed that that song was about Grape Vine Hill because I'd been up and down Grape Vine Hill when I was courting missus Brent more times than I could count, and I was in California. You know, Grapevine Hill, the bottom of or the other side of Grapevine Hill comes down into San Joaquin Valley in Bakersfield where the Okies live. You know? Okay. But but that song wasn't written about Grapevine Hill originally.
It became very famous at country music. The guy was a country music, writer from, Montana, Idaho territory, and he was driving up. When he wrote that song, he was driving up the switchback from Lewiston. You know, the hairpin curve back and forth going up about I I mentioned this last week. But that that song about Grapevine Hill, was written about that grade going down into from up on, high country down in Lewiston. Well, I was at Lewiston, Idaho, and I saw the it was late at night, and I was about half asleep driving through Lewiston. And Lewiston is 700 miles from the ocean. 700 miles.
And I saw, having been a sailor one time in my life, I saw lights of what I knew was something like a supertanker or an awful large container ship. I couldn't see the ship, though. I just saw the lights. I knew it had to be a ship that big. Well, then I found out later that Lewiston, Idaho is the furthest inland seaport in The United States and maybe the world. It's 700 miles from the ocean. Well, that happened because they dammed up the Columbia River, and they put locks in it. So those ships get up to the agricultural get closer to the agricultural products of Idaho and all those potatoes. You know? They gotta go somewhere. And and the lumber and all the other things, they coal, what they can haul out by get it to there by rail. Well, that's the outcome of the communist new deal.
Oh, you say that's good. No. That's not good. I've I've had people say to me I'd say, well, prisons are not part of our common law tradition. Nobody used prisons in America to punish people until, you know, into the early eighteen hundreds. That's not part of our common law tradition. We never in England, they never had a thought of that. Police officers don't wear guns in our common law tradition. We're not that stupid to trust to trust government agents with guns unless it's a military force. You know? We didn't do that in our common law tradition. Like the Bobby's in England, they don't carry guns. Well, that's part of our common law tradition.
Well, the argument that says, but I like the result. Well, the result is hit and miss. It may be good this time, but the next time you ignore process, you're gonna get a bad result, then you're gonna be sad it happened. Process controls everything, Roger, and that's what the patriot community is blind to. They want the result. They wanna take their pitchforks and storm the Bastille, and they wanna throw all the bankers out. What?
[01:05:38] Unknown:
True.
[01:05:39] Unknown:
Yeah. That's not it, friends. It is the process, and who dictates what kind of process we're supposed to use? Our captain, the lord Jesus Christ. He dictates the process. He tells us what fairness is. Fundamental fairness is due process and our constitution lays that out in writing. Lord, God help us. Here's what I want you to do. God help us. Be be part of the solution, not part of the problem. Don't have all that moral indignation that gets out of hand and you wanna you wanna politics and Trump is in office. I'm glad. I'm glad. Yeah. But don't misunderstand what happened.
Trump is not the answer to our problems process. Our law, we want a man in office that will add two requirements of a judge, a president, a governor, a sheriff, blah blah. Two requirements according to Magna Carta. Number one, he knows the law of the land. What's the law of the land? Process. What's that? We call it our common law, due process. He knows how it works. He knows how the machinery of government and of the courts run. He's got it down. Okay. That's number one. The second requirement is he means to observe it well. I'm quoting Magna Carta. Is that right? Yeah. That's right. We don't want somebody, as a judge, a president, a governor, a sheriff, that's determined to get a certain result.
No. No. No. No. No. We want somebody that respects our rights. How do you do that? By making sure that the right to remain silent is observed. The right to grand jury indictment is observed. The right to, to free speech is observed. The right to remain silent is observed. The right to trial by a 12 man jury is observed, and on and on and on it goes. That's our common law tradition. It's all about the process, how we go about it. We don't want somebody in office in the position of power that is gonna dictate the outcome. No. That happens sometimes. I like to use the example of Mussolini.
He was, of course, in his law of the city country. The canon civil laws of Rome, dominate. And he said, I want these men tried and shot. Now where does that put the stress, on the process or the outcome? That puts the stress on the outcome. On the outcome. That's the law of the city. He he acknowledged the proper process. Try these men. But he certainly didn't mean by jury, and he certainly didn't care. That wasn't what he was stressing. That's just window dressing, boob bait for the bubbas to make them happy. Oh, yeah. We had a trial, But that's different than a genuine opportunity to be heard, friends. That's our common law tradition. Did you get a genuine opportunity to notice and an opportunity to be heard?
That's what we want. That's the mindset that God gives to us in his laws of nature, and laws of nature's God. How we treat the other fella? How? Are you decent? Do you respect all men? How do you go into court? With respect. I mean, lawyers are so sensitive sensitive to that, especially if they're trial lawyers, that they just don't wanna hear it at all. They wanna hear any bombastic speech. They wanna hey. Listen. This is calm. They go in there. Law is king in America. Process is king. One time, Sam Rayburn, democrat, of course, born in born in Tennessee. He was a Tennessean, but he was congressman from Texas.
And, World War War one veteran, What was that fellow's name? From East Tennessee.
[01:09:30] Unknown:
Pyle?
[01:09:31] Unknown:
No. It no. He was from The machine gun guy? No. Yeah. That was he was from near where I was from, Dana, Indiana. But that other fella, World War one, he, captured a Sergeant York. Germans and Sergeant York. Thank you, Jeff. Yeah. Sergeant yeah. Tommy or York. Sergeant York. And, Melvin? Yeah. Sergeant York, when when he got, you know, when he got well, what happened was he came back, all those heroic things, assuming they're true, and he came back. They had a ticker tape parade for him. The state of Tennessee gave him 200 acres of land for nothing as a reward of his wartime service, and and he went to trying to farm and but he was a jack legged preacher.
And so he went to preaching, and he got to feeling like he wanted to do something for the poor boys in the mountains of East Tennessee. And he he lived right on the Kentucky border there, and he said, I'm gonna raise money. I've got the ability to talk. And he's a pretty good talker, by the way, when he get up to talk. And, yeah, I'm gonna go travel around the churches, and I'm gonna raise money and start a a trade school in the mountains for boys in the mountains so they can learn a trade if they want to. And he raised a lot of money.
I forget how much of it was, but it was a a big chunk. Maybe something like a $160,000 back then. Of course, he was a well known personality. You know? He could do that, and he did. And he took half of the money he raised and gave it. He didn't do any arithmetic. He just took half the money and gave it to the IRS. He said, I don't want any trouble any trouble. I got plenty of money. I'm a patriot. Here's half. It seemed like it was a $160,000. He gave it to the IRS. They said, thank you very much. And then he went and tried to build his school. He built a building, and, the IRS came back to him in the nineteen fifties and said, we made a mistake, and we didn't come back in our calculations. And you gave us that money, but you owe us, this many millions because we're adding on to it late fees and,
[01:11:36] Unknown:
enters Decent interest.
[01:11:38] Unknown:
Yeah. Yeah. And, well, there was no way he could pay it. And, slowly, they just stayed after him. For that about $19.54 or 51, it was in the early fifties. By 1958, they had harassed him so much that his health began to break, and he was a quadriplegic. He had a he didn't and he did they took all his money. They emptied his bank accounts. He had that 200 acres, but he couldn't farm it because his health was broken. And Sam Rayburn heard about it, and he was in Congress. And he was a native of Tennessee, And he pushed legislation through Congress that, bought a wheelchair for him. That was something. A few and and a stipend as a war veteran. He never got a stipend.
He ignored all that and got him a wheelchair. Didn't do him much good. By that time, he couldn't do hardly anything. And he died without a penny, a stipend from the government. But what times people ask Sam Rayburn by the way, that's what America does to its they make a hero out of you. This is this is common. It's not uncommon. You become the hero. They use you to promote what they want in government, the will of the government, and he promoted World War two. He promoted he was made an honorary member of the same outfit he was in in World War one. He became a captain. They commissioned him as an officer. He make great speeches to the men, telling them how we gotta go stop Germany and all that. But then, Sam Rayburn asked him one time, said, well, how is it you could get so much done in congress? It was uncanny what Rayburn could get done.
And, he's the one that said, parliamentary procedure, my friend. Parliamentary procedure. He didn't care how it was and he was a left wing Democrat. He didn't care whether it was right or wrong. He knew the machinery. He could run the machinery in such a way, the process, the due process, the how to get what he wants. And don't kid yourself, friends. That's what these Democrats in the political world are doing. They know how politics works. Nancy Pelosi Nancy Pelosi knows how politics works. She has a good guess. She's a evil woman. She's a useful idiot of the evil empire, but all she knows is politics. She's never known anything else. Her father was a political operative to the nth degree and a mobster, and so was her the rest of her family. And it and she just knew how to fool people. And like we say, the Democrat party, the left wing, whatever you wanna call it, they build coalitions coalitions.
The republic and the conservatives don't do that. I'm not saying they should. The conservatives say we want less government and more freedom. Now that's a big picture point of view, friends. Less government, more freedom. That's what we want. We want a strong military, Ronald Reagan. Two issue. Strong military, less government, that means less taxes and dangerous when you hear the words we're the government and we're here to help. Those are dangerous words. So that's big issue stuff. That and you get a consensus on the overall picture, and that's what we got with Trump.
Trump's doing things a lot of conservatives don't like, but he's he's still got them, because they support his overall pitch picture, his big picture question. Do we want America to be great again? Yes. The Democrats don't do that. Democrats go to little tiny groups and individuals and say, what do you want? I'll give you whatever you want. Oh, you want money? You want you wanna bring your, relatives over from Mexico? Well, I support, the, open border. So, heck, I'll give you what you want. I'll give you what you want. And in most cases, it comes down to just evil things, against the constitution of The United States, like particular welfare.
The general government has no authority under the constitution to provide particular welfare, welfare to this group, welfare to that person, welfare to people that have this sexual perversion, welfare to this people that have this skin color, blah blah blah. That's not our constitution never authorizes that. It says right in the preamble, the general welfare, not the particular welfare. That's the police powers of the states. But Nancy Pelosi knows if I give people particular welfare, that's called coalition. They'll all support me, but for different reasons.
That's what they do, friends. They don't have a big picture. They don't have any plan for America. They don't give two hoots and a holler, and they don't give a damn. They don't give a tinker's damn. They don't give well, that's the way they do it. We're gonna give everybody everything they want. And remember what Reagan said if he was quoting somebody else, I think, a government may be yeah. A government that's big enough to give you everything you want is big enough to take everything you have and will,
[01:16:42] Unknown:
period. I like I like what Bernie Sanders said. What'd he say? He said after I get elected, I'm gonna go plant all the trees that all the free stuff's gonna come off of. Yeah. It's that simple.
[01:16:55] Unknown:
Tax, tax, tax, spend, spend, spend, elect, elect, elect. That's Harry Hopkins, first lieutenant of Franklinville. He was a bad guy. These are big pictures, friends. And if you're a conservative, if you're a Christian conservative, what does that mean? That means in the Bible sense, that means we conserve what is good. We examine all things. Paul the apostle examined all things and conserve what is good. I mean, wholesome good. Agatha in the New Testament. What is deep down here Can I interrupt for a second? Of course, Roger.
[01:17:28] Unknown:
I was going to almost play the part of the third hour of Alex Jones yesterday, today. Uh-huh. But you're here. I don't wanna do that. May do part of it tomorrow. He had, general Michael Flynn on yesterday.
[01:17:42] Unknown:
Uh-huh.
[01:17:43] Unknown:
A couple of things he said that were pretty startling to me, and this one's very interesting. Do you know that, the oath the president takes is slightly different from the oath everybody else takes? Indeed. Yes. For an important reason. But go ahead. Well, for the audience, I didn't know this. You say to protect and defend when you take it. Uh-huh. That Trump says to protect and preserve. Uh-huh. He's the only one that takes an oath to preserve the constitution.
[01:18:16] Unknown:
And he That's very interesting. Okay. But defending is preserving it, but he is commander in chief. Correct. He's not he's not the man to pick up the weapon and go after the bad guys, see, to defend the land. He's the one that is in command, and so his his object is a little well, it's different, but the same. A different, division of labor here is preserved as commander in chief. It's not his job to pick up a weapon, but we have had presidents that do that, most notably, John, or James Madison. He got out in the front of the troops in Washington DC when the British, yeah, when the British sacked Washington DC and led the charge against the British. Oh, in 1812.
Yeah. Well, the war of eighteen twelve. Uh-huh. You know, James Madison, when I was running for office, left wing this has been in the news, the public broadcasting system, the government funded media, and they're in all the government university towns like the state universities. And I was at a big state university, and they were I was outside my district, but, there were no television stations in my district. I'll tell you something about how rural it was. But there were television stations on the edge that would broadcast into the district. But if you spend 500 to a thousand dollars on television ad, half of it is wasted because the half of the people or more than half probably that are outside the district. But I was at one of these stations, and I remember my first interview on TV.
And I didn't know what I was doing, but it came out okay. But the they they were trying to nail me and and intimidate me quickly and get me out of the way. And because the incumbent had the field, and he was a left wing wacko. But, guy said to me, well, don't you think it's a little bit un American under the first amendment for a man trained like you are to be running for the Congress of the United States? I said, what do you mean? You're talking about my legal training? He says that, no. No. No. Not not law school, but seminary training. I said, well, oh oh, no. I no. I said I don't. No. I didn't expect that. I said, no. I don't.
He said, well, that's a violation of the first amendment, isn't it? I said, well, the framer of our constitution of The United States was a close disciple of the leader of the Scottish enlightenment, the unofficial leader of the Scottish enlightenment. As a matter of fact, the unofficial leader of the Scottish enlightenment was a man named John Witherspoon and, Rutledge, one of the founders of our nation or the the shakers and movers, I call them. Not really a founder. That's a bad word to use, but a shaker John it was Rutledge, a medical doctor. He was a Presbyterian, and he prevailed along with others that signed our founding documents. He prevailed upon John Rutherford to come and take up the position after the death of Jonathan Edwards, the position of president of Princeton College, now called Princeton University.
John Witherspoon was an inerrantist. He believed the Bible, communicated no errors of fact. He was unchallengeable as an intellectual in Europe and in Britain, of course, and that's why they wanted him to come. He was the unofficial leader of the Scottish enlightenment. The cry of the Scottish enlightenment was that God, the Scottish Reformation, and the British Reformation in England also established the authority the authority of the Bible in those countries. And that the Bible is inerrant. It has no errors of fact. And the Scottish enlightenment then added to that that God has communicated to us. He's revealed himself, his character, and his will in many ways in the laws of nature.
That's why our declaration of 76 says the laws of nature and the laws of nature is God. Those were two phrases. The first one is the law unwritten, lex non scripta, our common law tradition. And the second one is the written law of god, the written revelation of who he is and his will, his law, the will of the sovereign, and that's the Bible. Oh, John, John Witherspoon signed our declaration of '76, by the way. He got here in time, and he was recognized in, all across the colonies as being the leader of the Scottish enlightenment. The Scottish enlightenment had overtaken all of the island of Britain.
The chief promoter of the Scottish Enlightenment in England was none other than John Locke himself. Tom Jefferson said John Locke was one of the three greatest mortals that ever lived, and he had his picture hanging on the wall in his home. Along with Algernon Sydney, who's heard of him. But John Locke, the Scottish enlightenment, all that was part of John Witherspoon. I said, John I told this fella, James Madison was, went to school at Princeton, and he was John Witherspoon's closest disciple. And he studied he went to Princeton to study to be a clergyman. John James Madison's favorite subject was biblical Hebrew. He liked biblical Greek too, but, I mean, he loved biblical Hebrew.
He graduated in three a four year course in three years. He ruined his health. He was a little man to start with and one strong to start with. He wasn't the guy that got chosen. He was the opposite of chief justice of the Supreme Court John Marshall. When John John Marshall was in the Continental Army, he was a young man. And when they had, athletic contest, which they did, but on all the spare time, soldiers have a lot of spare time. And they don't know what to do, so they, they gamble or they have athletic contest, shooting contest, and he was always the one that people wanted to pick for their team. You know? That was John Marshall. Well, James Madison was just the opposite.
He was the the last one spoken spoken about or chosen when they chose when they wanted to play whatever they played back then. They didn't play baseball or whatever they played, but he wasn't the one he was a little man. He was slight of build, very short, very short and, nonassuming. And his hell failed, and he said that he wanted to be a clergyman, but he didn't think, at that point that he had the physical steam to pull it off because it's a demanding job if it's done properly. And John Witherspoon, taught his boys to do it properly, to really be somebody that was that, well, did what God told him to do and understood the Bible. And that was the whole point of John Witherspoon being at Princeton.
So, no. I said, I don't believe it's unusual. Do you think that's unusual? Because I I've taken time out of my life, a lot of time to try to learn about the Bible. I don't see that that's unusual. I thought first he was talking about being a lawyer, but that wasn't it at all. So you see where the hatred lies and, there's the how. Well, getting back to the point, it's the July 4. We're celebrating the beginning of our country, and we're doing it in an appropriate way, Roger, talking about things that really matter. Here's what I want people to do. I want people to go to commonlawyer.com. You wanna do something? You wanna devote yourself to your country in a more meaningful way? The first thing you've got to do is to know something more than you know about the laws of nature and the laws of nature's God. All of you live by the laws of nature or you'd be you would be dead or bane by this time.
All of you are lawyers in that way. You lawyer, he's a man that's that makes the law cut the way he thinks it ought to cut for justice. Like a sawyer makes a saw cut the way he thinks it ought to cut. That's what you are. Add to what you know about the laws of nature, whatever you've spent your life doing, add to that the Bible. Our common law tradition has two volumes. The laws of nature, our common law tradition, is our our due process. And the laws of nature's god, one written, the other unwritten. The written volume is the court of last resort.
The court of last resort in cases of apparent incontinence between those two volumes are common law and the Bible. Here's what I want you to do. Go to commonlawyer.com. We're starting a course, lord willing, next Thursday, another law course. I teach law classes. There are many of them. We've got a dozen now. We've got in the can. You can take them all. They're at commonlawyer.com under Winters Inn. Winters Inn, I n n. Go to Winters Inn, and you can find them there. And you can take the courses, but we're teaching a course coming up. It's live where sheriff Darleaf and I, sheriff Darleaf from Barry County, Michigan are presenters, and it's comparative law course, a course that, law schools don't teach anymore. It used to be mandatory in law school. I was fortunate that I was in a conservative enough law school that that course was offered by probably the, arguably, the foremost authority on the subject in the country at at the time. And you've heard me talk about him, a comparative lawyer. That was his life, comparative law, showing the distinctions between the only two fundamental traditions of religion, law, and government in the world available, the law of the land and the law the canon civil laws of the city. Those are that's all there is. The canon civil laws of the city come under a thousand labels, but it's all the same putrid, dangerous stuff.
Our law of the land is our common law. It only exists in the English speaking world and the common law countries, and we're the foremost of all of those. We're more English as comparative lawyers have said for a long time. We're more English, more British than the Brits because our common law tradition is our culture, and it's more powerful and more adhered to here adhered to here than over there in in our day. Roger, you gonna say something? I I was gonna say a couple of things, Brent, but I want you to finish up. So Okay. Go go to commonlawyer.com and join us for that class. And you get with that class my comparative law text of seven 958 pages, excellence of our common law. That's the name of it. You get that text, and we'll have reading assignments out of it. Now, Roger, before you then launch off, what I'd like to do before the the hour ends is recite, if I may, just recite a famous American poem
[01:28:46] Unknown:
on this July 4. Please. Launch off. Alright. When the time comes, but you go ahead with what you had in there. Well, I was just gonna add a little bit more to the, Flynn thing yesterday. They have gotten in and gotten total proof that the Chinese, through private planes, flew ballots in here and all the rest of the stuff for 2020. It all came from Obama and Brennan and, oh, all that whole crew. And as to your point on, process, a lot of people are very frustrated because they want Trump to turn on these monsters and, and and throw start throwing indictments around. K?
But they're going back evidently and really following process. That's one of the the detriments, I guess, the Republicans is they don't go in and just throw a thousand people in jail after Jan sixth or whatever. That is right. If they want to, that's object oriented law of the city. They're gonna go back and go through the process and make sure that it's done correctly, and they want them to hang. That's what they're saying, Mike. And and my Alex Jones yesterday. Okay? So, anyway, that was important. I'd encourage some of you, if you want to, go back in the third hour of Alex. It started a little after the top of the hour, but this interview with Flynn, Flynn's a pretty sharp cookie. He's the first one they turned on, okay, when all that happened in the first Trump administration.
And, I just thought it was very significant that they that they were following process. And he said, look. All of them are gonna get indicted. So you get don't need your panties in a wad. I know it's taken some time. We follow process, basically. And then the other day at, one of the Trump, little, press conferences, I think, you you you see the Alligator Alcatraz thing, Brent? No. Uh-uh. You don't know what that is?
[01:30:43] Unknown:
Say it again.
[01:30:45] Unknown:
Alligator Alcatraz.
[01:30:47] Unknown:
Oh, I'd heard something was in Alcatraz was in the news, and we used to go right by it pretty often. I'm No. This is Alligator Alcatraz.
[01:30:56] Unknown:
Oh, what's that? Oh, where you have alligators around it? Well, is there there it turns out there's an airstrip that was put in about twenty years ago right smack dab in the middle of the Everglades. I don't know what it was for, but it's real solid. And it has, extras long runway, and it goes down to a big rectangle. And they are going to get all the illegals and start flying them down there. And they've got a judge, their, DeSantis is gonna get a national guard JAG officer and qualify them to be a judge. And they're gonna bring them down there. They're gonna get their due process, and they're gonna fly them right out. Okay? And it's fantastic. Trump spent I that's one of the better political ideas I think I've ever seen because it was being there unused.
Okay? Well, there's no roads to it. And if someone wants to escape, the nearest road is 60 miles through pythons, alligators, and mosquitoes, and every other godforsaken thing that's Sound like sound like Alligator Alley. It is. It's right down in that area. Be but really, really, great idea from DeSantis.
[01:32:04] Unknown:
Roger, I have a comment, please. Oh, okay. Yes, Lisa. So based on this other and and, how people want, you know, for justice to be held, There's this man from Tennessee also. His name is Edward Kelly. He was a prisoner. I don't know how long he was in for for January 6, and Trump pardoned him. He pardoned all those guys, I guess. No. But he had a list of FBI agents.
[01:32:36] Unknown:
Right.
[01:32:38] Unknown:
And I I I I haven't read a lot of it yet. I've just seen more of the headlines. But he he had another trial now based on him having this list. Some of them say he was plotting to kill him. Most of them just say he's accused of trying to incite a civil war. He got life in prison
[01:32:57] Unknown:
for making this list of FBI agents that were targeting the j six prisoners. Well, maybe that nice? Well, I hope, I hope Trump will take care of that. It sounds like he probably something he'd want pardon. They didn't pardon everybody. They gave some of them, like, commuted sentences, like, the guy we were talking about him last week, Brent, that does, oh, the one that does you said you interviewed his son. The the names. He's so one of the guys from the Proud Boys. That was it. And, amazed that guy, has maintained his composure like he has. But Stuart Rhodes? Trump. Yes. Stuart Rhodes. They didn't pardon. He didn't pardon him because he still he got him out of jail, but he didn't give him a complete pardon because there's a number about six of them that are veterans that still can't access their pensions. They were cut off from their pensions because they charged it as being terrorists.
So,
[01:33:59] Unknown:
you know guy is a is a veteran also.
[01:34:01] Unknown:
Okay. So, no, they they didn't. But that's I I've not heard of that, Lisa. So thank you for the information. Anyway, that's a pretty good idea down there. And now, I guess, Brent, did you know the big beautiful bill passed at the close of business yesterday? Did you know that? Yeah. Well, that's gonna give them all the funds to really get these people out of the country. That's what some of the Democrats were saying. This is like a total sweep of all the of the migrants. I guess it gives them budget to hire more ICE agents and all that. Uh-huh. But, but they were literally saying that and Trump was asked, I think, yesterday, day before, said, did what about, Alejandro Mayorkas?
Of course, you remember who he was. Right? Uh-huh. And, he some and Trump said, well, is he on the list of pardons? We said, well, we don't know. He said, well, if if he's not, we're going after him. So they are gearing up to go after all these guys, okay, is the impression I've gotten. So I wanted to add that in. And like I said, both Michael Flynn and Jones were talking about hanging. And they said, look. We don't talk about this ordinarily. This is these people have earned it. It's a special category, and, they brought it out on, well, Alex has got probably 30,000,000 plus listeners.
I mean, say what you say what you will about Alex Jones. Yeah. That boy has come from nothing and built this whole thing up to the point where he's one of the biggest media channels in the world, period. Oh, yeah. Credits do. Okay? Go ahead, Brent.
[01:35:43] Unknown:
My job is not, I maybe I am like that, but I don't think it was supposed to be. And, Alex, I'm glad he's there, but he appeals to moral outrage. And he stressed that he's the end result is what people want. But I I caution everybody. When you go to war, it should not be your mindset to kill the enemy unless that's the only way to stop him, and often it is. But if you have that mindset of bloodlust, God won't bless that. Period. Right. It ain't gonna happen.
[01:36:19] Unknown:
Yeah. What God wants you to do is win. And the go ahead, Roger. What's that? Well, they're just about bankrupted his family. They're now going after his wife on some other mixed imperannious charge. And his father, who's scheduled to have our open heart surgery very shortly, they've just about totally bankrupted him and harassed him and everything else. So Yeah. I can understand his betrayal.
[01:36:40] Unknown:
And I well, I can too. And, I'm I'm giving my testimony, that the evil system has thrown me into federal prison twice as a lawyer defending people in court in federal court. So I I say that just so people won't think, well, you don't know, Brent. No. I I get it. I know what's going on. The courts are out of control too. But what does god want us to do? I speak also of as a man who's tried a whole lot of things that don't work. And I'm I'm giving my testimony of what my convictions are about what I believe works because god said so. And I've been doing it for quite a while, and I I, commend it to you. Well, Roger, can I read this poem, Natalie? Thank you. Yes. Please. Please, Brent. I just wanted to be sure and get that stuff in and bird dog the audience over. I may pull it over and play a little of it tomorrow. But go ahead. Yes. Let's hear this poem. This is good. You're so good at this. Go ahead. That's kind words, Roger. This poem is not about July, but it certainly relates to July, and it's something that I learned when I was a little boy.
Back in the pocket where I lived, people were still I grew up, swimming among a wash with World War two veterans, and and people were pretty patriotic, in the rural areas where I lived. And this is the kind of thing we learned at school. We had to flag up on the between the picture of Washington and and Lincoln. You say, well, I don't like Lincoln. Well, but that I'm just giving you the environment, the culture that I was trained in, and I don't believe it's a bad one. I believe it's a pretty good one. Oh, here here here's the this is Longfellow.
I used to recite this when I I didn't think of anything else to say. Come around, I'd do this in front of a crowd, and I found that people like poetry. I didn't understand how much and especially when you're running for office. Well, here it goes. I remember when I was a boy, this is not part of the poem, but I do remember learning this. I remember learning, and I was taught to listen. Listen, my children, and you shall hear of the midnight ride of Paul Revere. On April 18 in '75, hardly a man is now alive who remembers that famous day and year. He said to his friend, if the British march by land or sea from the town tonight, hang a lantern aloft in the belfry arch of the old North Church Tower as a signal light.
One if by land, and two if by sea, and I, on the opposite shore, will be ready to ride and spread the alarm through every Middlesex village and farm for the country folk to be up and to arm. Then he said, good night, and with muffled oar silently roared to the Charlestown shore. Just as the moon rose over the bay where the swinging wide at her moorings lay the Somerset, British man of war, a phantom ship with each mast and spar across the moon like a prison bar and a huge black hulk that was magnified by its own reflection in the tide.
Meanwhile, his friend, through alley and street, wanders and watches with eager ears till the silence around him he hears the muster of men at the barrack door, the sound of arms and the tramp of feet and the measured treads of the grenadiers marching down to their boats on the shore. Then he climbed to the tower of the church, up the wooden stairs with stealthy tread to the belfry chamber overhead, and startled the pigeons from their perch on the somber rafters that round him made masses of moving shapes of shade up the trembling ladder, steep and tall, to the highest winders in the wall, where he paused to listen and to look down a moment on the roofs of the town, and the moonlight flowing over all.
Beneath, in the churchyard, lay the dead in their night encampment on the hill, wrapped in silence so deep and still that he could hear like a sentinel's tread the watchful night wind as it went creeping along from tent to tent and seeming to whisper, all is well. A moment only, he feels the spell of the place and the hour and the secret dread of the lonely belfry and the dead. I've been there, Roger, where that Old North Church is and the Yeah. Graveyard down the hill. I can picture it. Of Course, it's all urban now, but of the lonely Belfry Belfry and the dead. For suddenly, all his thoughts are bent on a shadowy something far away, where the river widens to meet the bay, a line of black that bends and floats on the rising tide like a barge of boats.
Meanwhile, impatient to mountain ride, booted and spurred with a heavy stride on the opposite shore walked Paul Revere. Now he patted his horse's side, now gazed at the landscape far and near. Then impetuous, he stamped the earth and turned and tightened his saddle girth. But mostly, he watched with eager search the belfry tower of the Old North Church. As it rose above the graves on the hill, lonely and spectral and stum somber and still. And lo, as he looks, on the belfry's height, a glimmer and then a gleam of light. He springs to the saddle, the bridle he turns, but lingers and gazes till full on his sight a second lamp in the belfry burns, a hurry of hoofs in a village street, a shape in the moonlight, a bulk in the dark, and beneath from the pebbles in passing, a spark struck out by the steed flying fearless and fleet.
That was all, and yet through the gloom and the light, the fate of a nation was riding that night. And the spark struck out by that steed in his flight kindled the land into flame with its heat. He has left the village and mounted the steep, and beneath him, tranquil and broad and deep, is the mystic meeting the ocean tides. And under the elders, the skirt, that skirt, its edge, that's a tree, the elders, that skirts its edge skirt its edge, now soft on the sand, now loud on the ledge, is heard the tramp of his steed as he rides.
Now it gets a little more exciting as though it already isn't. It was twelve by the village clock when he crossed the bridge into Medford Town. He heard the crowing of the cock and the barking of the farmer's dog and felt the damp of the river fog that rises after the sun goes down. It was one by the village clock when he galloped into Lexington. He saw the gilded weathercock swim in the moonlight as he passed, and the meeting house windows, black and bare, gaze at him with a spectral glare, as if they already stood aghast at the bloody work they would look upon.
It was two by the village clock when he came to the bridge at Concord Town and heard the bleating of the flock and the twitter of the birds among the trees as he felt the breath of the morning breeze blowing or the meadows brown, and one was safe asleep in his bed, who at that bridge would be the first to fall, who that day would be lying dead, pierced by a British musket ball. You know the rest in the book as you have read in the books you have read, how the British regulars fired and fled, how the farmers gave them ball for ball from behind every fence and farmyard wall chasing the redcoats down the lane then across the fields to emerge again under the trees at the turn of that road, only pausing to fire and load.
So through the night rode Paul Revere, and so through the night went his cry of alarm to every Middlesex village and farm, a cry of defiance and not of fear, a voice in the darkness, a knock at the door, and a word that shall echo forevermore. For born on the night wind of the past, through all our history to the last, in the hour of darkness and peril and need, the people will waken and listen and hear to the hurrying hoofbeats hoofbeats of that steed and the midnight message of Paul Revere. And the midnight message of Paul Revere is to every Middlesex village and farm, It comes down to a cry of defiance, but not a fear, but more importantly, a voice in the darkness, a knock at the door, a word, just a word, a word that shall echo forevermore.
That's how the truth spreads. A voice in the darkness, a knock at the door, talk to your friends. Quietly talk to them. Don't be so anxious to pick up your gun and go shoot a bureaucrat. They got to that point, but what is ignored often should not be. Before this happened, there were long, long, drawn out discussions and activities, folk talking at the meeting houses, which he mentioned here, on their porches in town. More volumes, my friend, listen to me. More volumes of Blackstone's commentaries on the laws of England, often called commentaries on the common law, sold in the colonies of 3,000,000 colonists, a mere 3,000,000 colonists, more copies sold here at their publication after the year ten years before this or nine years before this. More copies sold here than in England of eight to 9,000,000 people.
People here were thinking and talking and discussing. You don't wanna go killing people until you know you're right, and that's what war is. Don't be anxious to do that. God has given us battle by trial. DJ Trump is following battle by trial so that he won't have to promote trial by battle. We don't want that. It may be last resort, but it never turns out as good as it otherwise would. We tried that in America almost or right at 700,000 dead Americans, not to mention the hundreds and thousands more who were without arms, legs, eyes, and other body parts, and that horrible, unnecessary, by the way Yes. It was.
Utterly unnecessarily. Should've never happened. Well, it did. God permitted it. Let's learn our lessons. Let's do everything we can like they did. They did everything they could to bring about a result that didn't require war. What did they want more than anything else? I'll tell you what they wanted. It wasn't to get rid of taxes. The rabble rousers used that to fire some people up, but that's not what it was about. It was about our common law tradition. They were trying to the England said England said, even the commentaries, Blackstone's commentary said, I'm quoting pretty much, said, our common law, Blackstone said, our common law does not apply in our American plantations.
That's a synonym for the word colony, plantation, something you plant. And he said the common law doesn't apply here. Doesn't apply anywhere in the empire. King George the third is emperor here. All of their official documents said that. What were we really fighting about? We were saying, wait a minute. You can do that to those people of another race over in India and Pakistan. You tell them that. They won't know the difference. But we're British. We know the difference. We are your we have consanguinity with you. We are your cousins.
You can't do that to us. God help us. Do you understand that? Stop and consider. We did everything we could to avoid it. When we went into war with Britain, we were still British, and we still said we were British. And we didn't want when it first happened and when this happened, Paul Revere's right. We didn't want separation. Not by and large. No. No. We wanted to resolve this. What did they come after at Concord and Lexington? They they came after our right to keep and bear arms. They came after our arm our arms, our explosives, our powder.
They wanna shut down our militiamen, our our common law militia requirements. It's a common law doctrine. Right to keep and bear arms is a common law doctrine. Again, they were going after our exercise enjoyment use of our common law responsibilities. That's what it was all about from start to finish. They said you got an emperor. He's we said there is no emperor in the common law tradition. There's a common law king of limited powers. We said that. There are three, coequal branches of government. We told them that. They said that didn't apply where you are. It's all about our common law tradition, which is about land, the law of the land. We finally said, well, we just gotta defend ourselves.
We won't give up our common law defended rights. Back to you, Roger.
[01:52:44] Unknown:
Wow, Brent. Excellent. Thank you. Mister Longfellow wrote that?
[01:52:50] Unknown:
Henry Wadsworth Longfellow.
[01:52:53] Unknown:
Yeah. Yeah. I don't know if I've ever heard all the all of it. So everybody's probably heard the first part of it. So thank you for that. So thinking while you're reading it. Does anybody have any questions for Brent? We got a couple couple of minutes left or comments. Nobody?
[01:53:12] Unknown:
I do. Yes, ma'am. I do. Yes, ma'am. Please. Yeah. Yep. And happy month of July. Is this John? I know that's Hi. I I know that,
[01:53:24] Unknown:
July is a special month for you, so happy July, Roger. Thank you. Thank you. Where have you been? We've been missing you.
[01:53:32] Unknown:
Oh, thank you. I've just been, involved with, renovation on my house. Okay. That takes a lot. It takes a lot. Yes, ma'am. And but, three things I wanted to ask y'all about that, Roger and Brent brought up in the last hour and a half. And one was the Lee Greenwood God Bless America song. What is unpatriotic about that? What what part is unpatriotic? I mean, I agree that it probably is, and, so that's why I wanna know. And,
[01:54:13] Unknown:
Yeah. Let me let me respond to one question at a time. Yeah. That song says, we thank our lucky stars. That's not Christian. Oh. That's pagan. Good. Our stars, we do not worship the heavenly bodies. But you see how it sounds innocuous. It sounds harmless, but there's nothing in there about thanking God for what we have, our freedoms, our our fundamental duties, our rights. And then it also says that we we give credit, I'm not quoting, but we give credit to the men that died, and now I'm quoting, that gave this right to me. That's paganism.
Men and we appreciate the men that ended up dying to defend our country, but they didn't give us our rights. And to say that is a slap in the face of our maker, and he won't tolerate it. Period. The worship the worship, and that's what that is, the worship of mighty men. That's what the Greeks did when they worshiped their gods. That's what our ancestor did. Well, I shouldn't I don't know who's listening, but I know that those that worship the Nordic gods, Thor, Frigg, Odin, that was that's demon worship. That's what that is. Worship of your of your father, your grandfather, that's ancestor worship. That's demon worship. That's what the Japs did Mhmm. Or in their Shintoism.
That's what the South Pacific Islanders do. They worship their ancestors. That's the fundamental. The Bible says honor your father. That means don't slight him in any way, but he's your father. He's not your maker. And all things must bow to the worship of our maker by his son, the god man, a member of the godhead, Jesus the Christ. Our patriotic songs, the ones that were in vogue in my day and I learned, all of them focused on the land. My country 'tis of thee, sweet land of liberty. Of thee I sing. Land where my fathers lie, honor to fathers, land of the pilgrim's pride, from every mountainside let freedom ring.
It's all about the land. We are to love the land the Lord our God has given us. Our God gave it to us, and he's the one that preserves us. What did the fat lady used to sing there, Roger? Not My Country. That's a good song. Our hymnal, our patron America the America the Beautiful. Yeah. It's about Kate Smith. Kate Smith. Kate Smith. It's all about the go look at the words. It's all about the last, the land I love, pilgrim's feet through each impassioned stress, thoroughfare through freedom beat across the wilderness. America, America, God shed his grace on thee and crown thy good with brotherhood from sea to shining sea. It's all about the land.
And that's patriotism means that's a ancient Greek word that means love of the father. Petros means father, fatherland. And in our Anglo Saxon speech, land is in the masculine. In the French tongue and the Latin tongues, the land is in the feminine. But, when the German That's true. When the Germans, you know, in their culture, they speak a Germanic tongue like our English, and so they're they they spoke of the Fodderland. Fodder, a d instead of a t, but that their land, they did understand that. The reason they understood that was because our common law tradition, as far as we can trace it back to the North Of Europe, most, we it gets lost in the fog of antiquity after that, but our common law tradition goes back a few thousand years to the Germanic and Scandinavian races.
And land in the Germanic tongues is masculine. In the Latin tongues, it's feminine. That's why because of the Norman invasion, the Normans invaded England. They brought with them a bastardized form of the French tongue. And so when I was a boy in school, when we learned about, America, we we talked about the motherland because the British speaking or the English speaking people, the British people in America called England the mother country because of the French influence of the Normans that conquered England and so all these things, we we you say, well, why do the the German say fatherland? Why did we say motherland? But really our English tongue says fatherland and on and on it goes. But God shed his grace on the land. And it is the land the Lord our God has given us, and we are responsible for it to know the extent of it, to make sure the boundaries are clear. That's conservatism, friends. That's the Bible, what the Bible teaches. You gotta make the boundaries clear, and you don't allow things happen on the land that pollute the land or our maker, the Elodio landlord says he will have it he will have the land vomit us out. That's what happened to our grandma and grandpa Adam and Eve. They god gave them parcel of of land, the real estate to care for. The wall Uh-uh.
Go ahead. Go to the go to the website commonlawyer.com. Join that class coming up so you can learn more. I learn every time I teach it. If you know something good, let's learn more together. And you support us, and you support miss Francine when you do this. So go join the class, please. Thank you. Oh, yes.
[01:59:58] Unknown:
John, good to hear your voice. We're wondering where you've been when somebody disappears for a while. You never know. You know? So glad to see you resurface. Happy fourth of July to all of you. I hope you have a celebratory rest of the day and, try and remember what the holiday is about. We'll be back tomorrow, to discuss a little more. I may have Paul play part of that Michael Flynn talk yesterday. It's pretty pretty interesting. So, otherwise, in that, I don't have anything else too much to add. Just try and remember the day, the men that have, unfortunately, for a lot of them laid down their lives for alternate reasons than they thought they were, but they've given us what we've got today. Be grateful that we've got president Trump and that we're making progress, up there even though it might not be as fast as many of us would like.
Stay tuned. We'll just be you know, and I'm I'm very grateful. Don't forget gratitude and what a wonderful emotion it is and that we're all born and living in this time to see these events transpire. That men perhaps have wanted to live in this time for thousands of years. So count your blessings. And, we will be back tomorrow. Have a wonderful fourth, and, see you tomorrow or soon. Thank you, Brent.
[02:01:24] Unknown:
Thank you, Roger. Thank you all for listening.
[02:01:27] Unknown:
Alright. We'll let Paul cut that off there. And I'm not gonna hang around today. We've got a little celebration going on here. And, and I'm sure most of you do also of some sort. So, Chris, thanks for opening up the, conversation on pastor Pete today. He was, he gave me a lot of really big pieces to this puzzle. Not that he knew he was doing that, but when he'd preach on some of these subjects, I'd go, oh my god. Bam. There's big piece. So, maybe we can talk about that a little bit tomorrow or, sometime. And if none of you have ever heard of pastor Peters, his website, again, maintained by his folks, is scripturesforamerica.org0rg.
So anybody else got something for me?
[02:02:25] Unknown:
Yeah, Roger. It's Bruce. Hey, Bruce. That Lee Greenwood song he sings was for The US citizens, not the nationals.
[02:02:38] Unknown:
Well, actually, no. It's for the nationals because it says because we're so free. US citizen didn't free. That's my complaint with us. Okay. So Okay. Anyway alright. Anybody else? So Roger, I just Hey, Samuel. Hi. I just
[02:03:01] Unknown:
hi. I just wanted to point out that, in the Old Testament, and, of course, God never changes, justice was more important to him amongst his people than sacrifice to him.
[02:03:15] Unknown:
Mhmm. And Justice.
[02:03:17] Unknown:
Think we've lost
[02:03:18] Unknown:
we've lost sight of that one. Well, maybe we're trying to get that back a little bit. We'll see as time goes on. You see, here's the problem. There's also, for people who don't know, there's go ahead. No. I was just gonna say here's the problem. If these people aren't prosecuted, then whenever, however, the next time they get in office, it's gonna be twice as bad or more than the last time. There's got to be accountability for what has happened. K? Gotta be.
[02:03:52] Unknown:
Excellent point, Roger. Excellent point.
[02:03:56] Unknown:
I also wanted to point out that, this country also has another flag that we used to have a civil flag, and we used to fly it a whole lot more. Last time it was really pulled out was at the end of World War one that I I know about history, and it's instead of the the horizontal stripes, it's basically got the vertical and the the stars aren't on a blue field. They're blue on a white field. So it's a bit different, but, it's the civil flag, flag of peace. The common law flag, really, I would say.
[02:04:34] Unknown:
Well, Tom d sent me a I haven't had a chance to even look at it yet, but they're floating the idea, Trump is that if Iran attacks Israel again, that they're going to give Israel the b 50 twos and the bumper bunker busters or whatever. Interesting approach to that. Not tremendous, but interesting. Anyway, we'll, we'll see all tomorrow. Roger, it looks like they're look.
[02:05:08] Unknown:
Looks to me like there's every sign that they're planning their their bombing of Iran right now. Could be. Net and Net and Their families are doing a lot of reconnaissance
[02:05:19] Unknown:
drones over the over the country. Well, Net and I'm a Yo Yo Yahoo comes into town Monday. So I'm not sure how long he's come staying, but, obviously, they're cooking up something. They never don't. I I bring before the, the story again. I saw watching everything on Rome, and one of the Roman emperors was very favorable to the Jews like the guy king of Poland, and he invited them into the, to Rome and even gave them a building where they could hold services. And what did they find? They found them in there plotting to overthrow the emperor. Same bunch.
Same thing. They're always scheming. Always. Always. K? Thomas Jefferson, eternal vigilance. Right? Can't be vigil if you don't know who you're being vigil for. Right? Okay. So anybody else got anything on this July 4? I guess not. Brent, go spend some time with your family. Okay? Enjoy the holiday. Yeah. And we'll see you, next Friday. Okay?
[02:06:32] Unknown:
Uh-huh. Thank you, Roger. Alright. Thanks, Franny.
[02:06:37] Unknown:
You're welcome, Roger. Thank you. Alright. Alright. Ciao ciao.
[02:06:40] Unknown:
I think if I can find this little exit deal here. There it is. Alright. See you soon.
[02:06:59] Unknown:
I sent, Mirka, Paul, Lisa, Welch, Andy. I sent them the article on one of the articles. I've got a bunch of them. On the civil flag. If anybody's interested, maybe somebody can post that in the chat.
[02:07:24] Unknown:
Andy flies one. That's the flag he has flying at his house.
[02:07:30] Unknown:
Who does?
[02:07:34] Unknown:
Andy. I've seen a picture of it.
[02:07:37] Unknown:
Cool. Yeah. I, that one there's a one site. I don't know if that's the one I sent out. They've got a whole bunch of items in their store. There's stamps with that flag. There's flags of different sizes, etcetera, for those who are interested.
[02:08:08] Unknown:
You talking about The US civil civil peace flag?
[02:08:12] Unknown:
Yes.
[02:08:14] Unknown:
You know what that was created for? I missed part of the show. I had a phone call. Is is that what your article is about? What it what that was created for?
[02:08:25] Unknown:
Yeah. It gets into the history there. I don't know which one. There's there's a whole bunch of them. Some go really deep into the history of it.
[02:08:35] Unknown:
Well, what I'm aware of is that they created that flag. It's still US. You know, I don't like it because it's called a US civil peace flag, but it wasn't really for peace. It was in commerce, and they claimed they were chasing the coast guard used it to chase down, you know, people that they wanted to collect taxes from, for commerce and, on the high seas or whatever. But our assembly flies that flag and, you know, here in Michigan and and all the other states that are following the Michigan process, they use that flag. And they say it's it's not a flag, it's a banner.
You know, it doesn't fly out, it hangs down And you use they they say put it on your home,
[02:09:27] Unknown:
and display it as a banner.
[02:09:29] Unknown:
And, you know, they say you don't get messed with it. Muse, the gal from Michigan here, she said she has a couple of those in her yard. Last year, she was talking about it, and there was a big power outage. And, the somebody, the power company or the gas company was coming through her neighborhood, and they asked her permission to enter her yard. But she fake thought it was because of those flags. But I know people that fly those on their they make a license plate out of those, you know, and they put it on their car as their plate. And they say that they don't get messed with because they're not in they're not in commerce, but that flag is a commerce flag. That's what it was created for. So I don't really get their you know? It was it was put at the ports of entry,
[02:10:27] Unknown:
in a lot of cases early on, and it was, there's there's actually photos of it flying on a flagpole below the military flag.
[02:10:38] Unknown:
Uh-huh.
[02:10:40] Unknown:
So I don't know, Jay, but, you know, like everything else Well, they made it full after the war. Even know about it. You know? Right. Right. But they created it after the war to show they weren't at war. They didn't wanna use that war flag.
[02:10:55] Unknown:
Right. So they used that they called it the peace flag. And Right. It's supposed to be for civilians, but civilian, that's the opposite of somebody that's in the military, but it was the coast guard that was flying it first.
[02:11:11] Unknown:
Yeah. Well, we are definitely also under the common law at the time. So it was a peace flag. And some of those articles talk about how it's representative of the common law more so than the military flag is. And that's why they the our our assembly flies it for that reason and, you know, to show that we're not at war.
[02:11:32] Unknown:
You know, we're in peace and, leave us the frick alone.
[02:11:37] Unknown:
Well, under the fourteenth amendment, if you're a citizen, you're you're you're a rebellious one.
[02:11:43] Unknown:
Yeah. Right.
[02:11:46] Unknown:
You're you're in rebellion against your country, your state.
[02:11:50] Unknown:
And and I wanted to say something about the the meme that Paul said, Tom sent him, a civilian with a with a rifle. That that's an oxymoron. That's slaves can't have rifles.
[02:12:07] Unknown:
Yeah. That that was truly the transition. When they came when they came to take the when they came to take the arms, they showed them that they weren't serfs.
[02:12:17] Unknown:
Yeah. It it it's a citizen. I said civilian, I think. It said citizen with a rifle. It's like,
[02:12:28] Unknown:
Yikes.
[02:12:32] Unknown:
Anyway, value. How did you send that? Did you text it Samuel?
[02:12:44] Unknown:
Some I texted, some I emailed.
[02:12:47] Unknown:
Can you send that to me?
[02:12:50] Unknown:
I've got a whole bunch of them. I'll try to pick one that not I'm not sure who I sent what, but, I'll send the one where they where they offer the flags, and you can get stamps too for, the stamp size flags that are stamps. So you can put those on legal documents.
[02:13:12] Unknown:
Right.
[02:13:15] Unknown:
So you're coming in peace
[02:13:17] Unknown:
Right.
[02:13:18] Unknown:
Under the common law. Right.
[02:13:22] Unknown:
Yeah. Like I said, people have those on their you know, instead of a license plate, they have that a plate. They make plates that go on your car, and bumper stickers and stuff. So it's worth a try.
[02:13:38] Unknown:
Just Samuel?
[02:13:40] Unknown:
Yeah. Do you do you have that site?
[02:13:44] Unknown:
Oh,
[02:13:47] Unknown:
let me go take a look here. See which one it was. Uh-oh. That's not this. I've also got a whole bunch of browsers. I'll look at which one it was in. Okay. Let me see if there's an ant. Let me see if this is, US Civil Flag Dot Flags, Plural, Dot Org is one site, and that offers a lot of the, the flags, the stamps, and all that good stuff.
[02:14:26] Unknown:
Okay. So if it's medium, that's fine. I've I've been wanting to order one up, so thank you. You're welcome.
[02:14:33] Unknown:
Thanks. I yield. Oh, this is Bill in Idaho. I yield. I sent it, Dave. Hopefully, you get it.
Introduction and Hosts Introduction
The Importance of Understanding Slavery and Freedom
Historical Figures and Their Influence
Pastor Pete Peters and His Impact
Religious Convictions and Their Influence on Society
Campaign Finance and Political Influence
Historical Context of American Independence
The Role of Religion in American Politics
The Midnight Ride of Paul Revere
Reflections on Patriotism and National Identity