(NULL)
In this episode of the Radio Ranch on the Global Voice Radio Network, we delve into the intricacies of the financial system, focusing on the concept of money as debt. We explore how promissory notes are used to create currency and the implications of this process on the economy. Our discussion highlights the complex nature of the monetary system, emphasizing the role of compound interest and the creation of money out of thin air. We also touch on the historical context of financial practices and the impact of government policies on agriculture and small farmers. Throughout the episode, we engage with listeners' questions and comments, providing insights into the often confusing world of finance and economics. Join us as we unravel the layers of financial systems and discuss the broader implications for individuals and society.
In this episode of the Radio Ranch on the Global Voice Radio Network, we delve into the intricacies of the financial system, focusing on the concept of money as debt. We explore how promissory notes are used to create currency and the implications of this process on the economy. Our discussion highlights the complex nature of the monetary system, emphasizing the role of compound interest and the creation of money out of thin air. We also touch on the historical context of financial practices and the impact of government policies on agriculture and small farmers. Throughout the episode, we engage with listeners' questions and comments, providing insights into the often confusing world of finance and economics. Join us as we unravel the layers of financial systems and discuss the broader implications for individuals and society.
[00:00:12]
Unknown:
This mirror stream on the Global Voice Radio Network is brought to you in part by mymitobust.com for support of the mitochondria like never before. Also, fatfix.com, brand new product still in prelaunch. Check it out. Phatphix.com. It's also brought to you by iteroplanet.com and the Price International Iteracare terahertz frequency wand. Here's more info about that. The Iteracare
[00:00:47] Unknown:
device has the ability to awaken dormant stem cells in the bone marrow. Yes. We have slipping stem cells in our bone marrows. As you keep blowing this on your spine, you're activating these stem cells. And guess what? You're gonna create brand new lungs, brand new kidneys. Eventually, as you keep using this over time, you will have brand new organs, glands, and tissues in your bodies. And that's a great news. You have to keep blowing this on your spine because this is what the great Hippocrates said. There's a way to hit the bones, then all diseases can be treated. Activate that. Awaken that stem cells in your bone marrows.
Hit the bones using the future of medicine, which is frequency. This is your time. Grab your one device
[00:01:41] Unknown:
right now. For more information on the IteraCare classic terahertz frequency wand, go to iteraplanet.com. That's iteraplanet dotcom. Forward moving and focused on freedom. You're listening to the Global Voice Radio Network. And, yes, of course, we would love to change the world, and that's what we work on doing. 6 days a week, Monday through Saturday, 11 AM to 1 PM EST. This is the Radio Ranch with Roger Sales who, is with us, in no. Actually, he dropped out. It's gonna take him a minute. They must have reinstituted rolling blackouts in, in Ecuador.
Give a couple of minutes for, for him to join us. In the meanwhile, I can talk about the platforms that we're on. Today, we're actually on 2 of them. We're on Eurofolks Radio dotcom. Thanks to, pastor Eli James, and we're on Global Voice Radio Network. Our website where you can find all kinds of information is The Matrix Docs, the matrix, d o c s dot com. You can find links to Eurofolc Radio. You can find links to Global Voice Radio Network, and you can also find links to free conference calls. You can join us live on the show, live and in person as it were.
Good morning, everybody. While we're waiting for Raj, let's, let's open up the mics. Does anybody have anything they wanna talk about right out of the gate this morning? Come on. Don't be shy. Star 6. That'll do.
[00:04:22] Unknown:
I'm not shy.
[00:04:25] Unknown:
Morning, Joe. How you doing?
[00:04:30] Unknown:
Doing well. Thank you. Just a comment from yesterday with, regarding Brent Winters. And he you remember him talking about Randy Cook and raw material economics and all this kind of stuff? Yeah. Well, something that came up in the, it's not new news, but it resurfaces every time these budget deals come across. They always bring up the farm bill. And if you think back, even as long as you can remember,
[00:05:14] Unknown:
when we get in a budget crisis, they bring up the farm bill.
[00:05:19] Unknown:
And always keep that in mind. And I don't purport to be a expert on this. Gene Schroeder is, as is Randy Cook. But, the deal is that if they do not pass a farm bill, then all of the current agricultural policy goes back to the Agricultural Adjustment Act of 1949, which requires parity pricing of agricultural products. And USDA, I think it's weekly, publishes priority pricings for various crops, be it wheat, corn, cotton, etcetera. And, those prices have to they they have to maintain an economy to support those prices. But that's part of the rub on all this that nobody knows about.
And it's somewhat complicated, but that's just something that, if Brent comes back on next week, they've or maybe wanna talk about it anytime. And like I say, I don't purport to be an expert, but something you need to pay attention to.
[00:06:54] Unknown:
Whether or not they pass a, current farm bill?
[00:06:59] Unknown:
If they do not pass the current farm bill, it re by law, it reverts to the act of 49, which requires parity pricing for agricultural products.
[00:07:12] Unknown:
What do you mean by parity pricing?
[00:07:16] Unknown:
Parity pricing is the prices farmers received during what was called the golden age of agriculture, which was 1917 to 1919, I think, as I remember. And those were the highest prices paid for agricultural products relatively relative to all other production.
[00:07:50] Unknown:
Do you think World War I had anything to do with those prices, Joe?
[00:07:55] Unknown:
It did. But, say, that was part of the scheme that, parity pricing was part of the agricultural adjustment act of 33. And once all that expired and they went through all the nuances of so the supreme court and all these other different entities that Roosevelt created, they ended up in 49 with a new agricultural adjustment act, and everything is predicated on that. It allowed them to as I understand it, and like I say, there's people that are much more better informed on this than myself, but you can go to USDA's website and you can find parity pricing for the week. Those are published weekly as I remember.
And I encourage everyone to do that, and you would see just and and it's not that they were to pay farmers
[00:09:07] Unknown:
for
[00:09:09] Unknown:
parity price. They were to maintain market conditions to support parity pricing, which they don't do. They they take it and regulate everything. And then if the prices aren't what they need to be, they kick in price support, which does not bring it up to parity pricing. But this is how they manipulate agriculture and let big big agriculture overtake the small farm.
[00:10:04] Unknown:
Drives a small farmer out of business.
[00:10:06] Unknown:
Absolutely. Absolutely. Because if you jump through the right hoops, you can get megabucks out of USDA.
[00:10:19] Unknown:
So what effect do you think that would have on on farming as we know it, either way it goes?
[00:10:28] Unknown:
To do what? To maintain see, maintaining parity prices is not to be you know, my thinking is it's not to be done at through price support is to create market conditions that allows those prices to go high. Well, what we have done is fostered everything to for maximum production, which drives prices down. And seeing, like, with ethanol, with the GMO corn, we have to have the ethanol plants or we'd be throwing corn in the rivers due to overproduction. So, you know, it's a it's an interesting study, and, you know, I would encourage you, Paul, to, try to get, Brent to get, Randy Cook on one of his programs and discuss this.
[00:11:39] Unknown:
Question, Joe.
[00:11:42] Unknown:
Go ahead.
[00:11:45] Unknown:
If it reverted back to 49 legislation, would that mean that, food prices would skyrocket?
[00:11:59] Unknown:
Probably. But, see, they have they have manipulated everything, and they just keep trying to plug the dike. And, eventually, the dike's gonna break. And it's all because of how they have now this is my opinion. It's all how they have manipulated the economy through false economies. And it's, you know, oh, what a tangled web we leave. But, I'm not the one to be the spokesman on this, but, there's those that are very knowledgeable of it. Jane's very knowledgeable of this, act of 49, and Randy Cook, who is president of National Organization For Raw Materials. He is very well versed on it.
Very well versed.
[00:13:15] Unknown:
So what you're saying is it would be a good idea to get, Randy Cook and Gene Schroeder together and, just kinda be a fly on the wall while they scull it out.
[00:13:29] Unknown:
Well yeah. Yeah. And, you know, I don't know that they need to be on the same program, but,
[00:13:40] Unknown:
you know,
[00:13:42] Unknown:
they both would have a lot to add to the conversation into the history of why we're where we are today. And, you know, like I say, they keep sticking their fingers in the holes in the dyke, and, they have they don't have enough fingers. They just don't have enough fingers, and the dam's breaking as I see it.
[00:14:15] Unknown:
Right.
[00:14:17] Unknown:
Well,
[00:14:20] Unknown:
no. I guess we're gonna have to touch I think they're using their finger to poke more holes in the dike.
[00:14:31] Unknown:
Well, they only have so they only have so many fingers.
[00:14:36] Unknown:
Joel Salatin would be also great to get the point of view of the smaller farmer. You know, they just shut down another chicken manufacturer in Sacramento area for bird flu. And chickens and eggs have been going up left and right. I mean, I'd say that the eggs went up, probably 50% in a month. How long can that go long? Because we can't afford a chicken egg.
[00:15:07] Unknown:
My question is, how can that be? Something's wrong something's wrong when you have those kind of moves in the marketplace. I can see them going up or down 50% over time, but in a few weeks, something's amiss here, folks.
[00:15:34] Unknown:
Yeah. They're they're doing the same thing with the that they did with COVID. They give the PSA test, which is not an accurate test on animals, and they condemn them. I mean, they're just using a different method than FDR did when he went out and called animals. They're just using a new excuse.
[00:16:03] Unknown:
If you ask me, I'd say they were lying about giving them them tests. They're not testing any of these animals. They're just coming on farmers' properties, ranchers, whatever, and telling them, oh, we found one of your birds or your cows that has this, and it's like, you better do something about it or we're gonna and, you know, it's a fear factor thing, and it they're lying. They lie about everything. They these animals don't have this freaking this whatever they claim they have.
[00:16:34] Unknown:
Right.
[00:16:41] Unknown:
Nor do the people.
[00:16:47] Unknown:
Exactly.
[00:16:51] Unknown:
I just wanted to bring that subject up that for future conversation, not to
[00:16:56] Unknown:
It's very important subject, Joe. We appreciate you bringing that up because I, you know, I got a buddy in South Dakota, and he is one of those, you know, not quite a mega farmer. You know, he just works for a guy, but that guy's got, you know, and it's all it's almost all these people aren't growing food. They're growing ethanol. They're they're growing soy oil. It's crazy.
[00:17:24] Unknown:
You are exactly correct. You're exactly correct. Who the heck is growing the food? And then go back to I know there's a few of us here that are old enough to remember the United Farm Workers strikes out in California back during the sixties fifties sixties. Remember any of that? I I barely I was you know? When I when I was a kid, I thought, man, oh, man. Those sorry darn Mexicans. You know? What are they doing striking? You know, they ought to be out there working and yadi, dadi, dadi. Well, what was happening is they were fight fighting the illegal immigrants, the illegal aliens, if you will.
Yes. We're coming in as what they call scabs and undercutting their labor prices. Mhmm. And what happened you know, this is more of that some of this United Fruit Company stuff. Yeah. This is what the produce companies are held in such concentration now is because they took out the small producer.
[00:18:43] Unknown:
And who was controlling the border?
[00:18:46] Unknown:
There you go. So, you know, it's the hell of a mess, and they lie lie lie lie lie. And Right. You know, big business is is not bad if it's truthful, but they lie about the the schemes that they use to move things.
[00:19:12] Unknown:
So anyway There's a there's a California senator that's 4 or 5 generations of small California farmer, and he says that everything that this legislature has passed in the last 20, 30 years has been passed to put the small family farm out of business.
[00:19:33] Unknown:
Yep.
[00:19:34] Unknown:
And so we can't feed ourselves because Atoo grew all the food.
[00:19:38] Unknown:
Well, there's still 80% of the according to this guy, there's still 80% of the land mass in the state that we're farming, but they're they're asking for help to to be able to survive. I mean, the other thing it does, it it drives the small guy who doesn't really wanna get any bigger. It drives these farms bigger and bigger and bigger.
[00:20:03] Unknown:
Right. Back
[00:20:05] Unknown:
back home, you know, when I was growing up as a kid, you know, a 200 acre farm was the big farm because it's mostly dairy area. Maybe you you milk 80 cows, you know? Now, jeez, you're a you're a hobbyist if you if you ain't milk milking 1500. Right. You know?
[00:20:25] Unknown:
And then think about all of that all of that sludge that comes out of them cows and what they're doing with it. You know?
[00:20:36] Unknown:
All the waste that In a lot of in a lot of cases, Dave, they the the cows stand on slotted floors. They they crap through it. It's mixed to 10 to 1 with water, and it's pumped out on the fields.
[00:20:49] Unknown:
I know. And they're they're doing that with humanure.
[00:20:55] Unknown:
And and you better have a backup system to your electrical because if the power goes out, they've got huge, like, 36 inch fans in these farms to make sure that that pit doesn't gas the cows.
[00:21:07] Unknown:
Am I right?
[00:21:11] Unknown:
So, you know, on a small farm, you know, 1010 20 acres, you can control all that nor you know, with just normal farming practices, you don't even gotta worry about it.
[00:21:22] Unknown:
Well, that's the point when when, people were milking 20 to 40 head of cows, all that manure went back out on the land as natural fertilizer. Yeah. And the sun cooked all the bad stuff out of it, but now it's concentration. Concentration more poisoning the cow.
[00:21:54] Unknown:
Sorry, Joe.
[00:21:57] Unknown:
I'm sorry, Mike. I'm sorry. Microsoft is such a gigantic piece of garbage.
[00:22:05] Unknown:
What happened?
[00:22:07] Unknown:
I I don't know what happened. It just went blank and it starts going back. I think it was they it looks like because I had to deal with it on the desktop computer because we had electricity off last night for an hour or 2. When I came up, I had to okay a Skype update. And I think that's what this was all about this morning, but I forgot. You know, the it's portable. The stuff's very small. I've got bad eyesight up close. I've I've missed the damn password by 1 digit. It's just been a I I if I could get my hands on Bill Gates, I don't think he'd live 10 minutes. I'm telling you. Just
[00:22:44] Unknown:
take a breath. Just breathe deep.
[00:22:47] Unknown:
God, I hate these.
[00:22:51] Unknown:
Okay. Just put a put a Sharpie between your fingers and pretend you're smoking. Alright. Let me smoking a cigar.
[00:22:59] Unknown:
Well, it just hadn't been a great morning. Anyway, let me get situated here. Maybe I can probably can salvage some
[00:23:10] Unknown:
Oh, we've we've been having we've been having a fun discussion about
[00:23:14] Unknown:
You and your crappy ass company.
[00:23:18] Unknown:
Roger named them Blunt.
[00:23:23] Unknown:
We've been, we've been having a discussion about agriculture, and, Joe brought up an an interesting point that, they have not, renewed the, agricultural act. And if they don't, if they fail to do that, we revert back to the Agricultural Act of 1949. And Lord only knows what kind of effect that's gonna have on food production and
[00:23:57] Unknown:
things like that. It's just something that we've been Well, you just got no telling what's in our future. K? I mean, really.
[00:24:05] Unknown:
What's what's important to remember here, it's it's not it's the farm bill.
[00:24:12] Unknown:
It's the farm bill, not the That's the one that's under under stress on this continuing resolution? Is that tied up with this? Okay. Yes. But see,
[00:24:25] Unknown:
it's the farm bill now, but the, agricultural adjustment act of 1949 is the issue that no one talks about.
[00:24:36] Unknown:
I see.
[00:24:38] Unknown:
And, you heard, Brent speaking of Randy Cook yesterday. Did Roger?
[00:24:45] Unknown:
Yes.
[00:24:46] Unknown:
Randy Randy Cook will be a very good candidate for a discussion on this issue. He is he's up to date on it.
[00:24:54] Unknown:
Mhmm.
[00:24:55] Unknown:
All the nuances, and he's very knowledgeable of the history of this. He's president of National Organization For Raw Materials.
[00:25:04] Unknown:
Okay. Well, let's see how this, go ahead.
[00:25:12] Unknown:
He's from Michigan.
[00:25:14] Unknown:
Okay.
[00:25:18] Unknown:
Question. Well, let's see how the how the vote on the bill. They're supposed to vote on it, I think, again this morning. They're gonna try and do a Saturday if they had enough Republicans that didn't leave to go home for Christmas already. So it's just a big f up. I mean, just upside down, capital f, everything you want. Them trying to scramble to get you know what else was in that thing? That 1500 one, Joe, is total, legal immunity from all the January 6th committee people. Yep. So we'll see what happens. They're supposed to vote on it again this morning if they had a, corn. And a $70,000
[00:25:59] Unknown:
raise for the the them.
[00:26:03] Unknown:
Yeah. For Crenshaw. Yeah. I know. Okay. Alright. Wow. It hadn't been a real good morning all over overall, but it's a pretty good morning. I had one of our really kind listeners sent me a very, very generous donation. I sure do appreciate it, Frank. So, if you're listening, that's probably the brightest spot of the morning. We were supposed to have a show on the money system today. Joan, are you with us?
[00:26:41] Unknown:
Yeah. Yes.
[00:26:43] Unknown:
Okay. Well, we'll get to you in just a second here. Oh, I'm doing nothing today. I hate Microsoft. I hate them with a purple passion. Okay. Well, let's see. I'm sorry to be so flustered. It's not like me, generally. But they these people whenever I have a bad day, it is almost always exclusively because of Microsoft and something they've done.
[00:27:19] Unknown:
Alright. Hey, Roger. In in the in the northern hemisphere, this is our shortest day. So are are you at your longest day now?
[00:27:28] Unknown:
Well, I don't I don't we're on the equator. I think all of our days are equal.
[00:27:34] Unknown:
K.
[00:27:37] Unknown:
I mean, really? I tried. It is the summer winter solstice, isn't it?
[00:27:43] Unknown:
Yes. It should be our shortest. Okay. Day longest hours. Yes. Dark.
[00:27:50] Unknown:
Yeah. No. Our our, sun sun, rise and sunsets are very, very predictable and very stable. So Okay. I've got Interesting. What I've got here, Paul, I got some trash on my screen from these dumbasses that I don't want. We're now sending your browser. I'll I'll
[00:28:14] Unknown:
jump I'll jump in there, and I'll take care of it.
[00:28:17] Unknown:
Thank you.
[00:28:19] Unknown:
Okay. Joan and the rest of the audience, does anybody else we went over this Thursday with Joan, and we were using the illustration that she went in and bought something, a car, I think, we used and went in and signed the promissory note. And, Joan, you kept saying where when did they lend me the money or something to that effect. So did you in thinking about that for the last 2 days, have you got that straight in your mind or not?
[00:28:48] Unknown:
Well, I got it more straight and, so and I I watched something for 15 minutes, which was very helpful, which was a lawyer asking a banker, questions about the mortgage. And that was very helpful. And thank you, Sketch. And well, so but then I had for you, I had, 2 or 3 or 4 questions,
[00:29:16] Unknown:
which was, do do you do you want me to ask them now, or did you wanna talk about Well, I just wanted to know if you'd had had gotten that. See, that's the that's the pivot of everything. Is that transaction of there is no money. First of all, that's one you know, when I tell y'all to try and use the word currency? K. Money is gold, silver, and Bitcoin. Yeah. Money is not Federal Reserve notes and because when you ever see the word note in any legal context, it's it's meaning is always a promissory note. You just minimalize that, Paul. It's always a a promissory note. That, Paul.
It's always a a promissory note. And, a promissory note as I was illustrating to you in your example, we're talking is always a promise to pay, which means it's always debt. The whole system is built on debt. There is no money that circulates except Bitcoin. K? I guess gold, silver, whatever, it circulates a little too. But people have you ever heard of Gresham's law, Joan?
[00:30:25] Unknown:
I don't know.
[00:30:27] Unknown:
Okay. Well, there's a law in economics called Gresham's law. It's very, very simple. It says bad money drives good money out of circulation. We should rephrase it and say debt money drives real money out of circulation. K? Which means if you've got gold and silver and Bitcoin like I've you might, you hold it and put it back in a drawer. You don't go out and spend it. Bad money drives good money out of circulation. K? That's called Gresham's law. It it's never wrong. Okay? It's never wrong. The whole system you've heard the saying, there is no money. There's only credit. You've heard people's okay. Well, that's what that promissory note is.
I, Joan, and Costa Rica, promised to pay. Now that's a promise, a promise to pay. You're gonna pay its debt. So many payments of so much interest, principal, interest, etcetera for this many months. That's a promissory note. It's also because we're under the Babylonian merchant code which is having to deal with all this stuff, contracts, etcetera. It also creates you created the 10th whatever the 1,000 of dollars are for the car when you sign that note because you said, I promise to pay so many payments of so much principal and so much interest for so many months. Right?
[00:32:13] Unknown:
Yes.
[00:32:14] Unknown:
Is that credit or is that money? That's credit. You're promising to pay, and you sign it. Jonah, I I I have a sense that you're not getting this, and I don't know how much simpler I can put it.
[00:32:34] Unknown:
Well, okay. Let me put it this way. Can we talk about a house mortgage?
[00:32:39] Unknown:
Because Okay. Alright. Just fine with me. I don't care. It doesn't matter what the thing is, what you're purchasing. The principle is the same in all of them. Have you have you bought a house before, Joan?
[00:32:54] Unknown:
Yes.
[00:32:55] Unknown:
I mean, I I don't really know yeah. Okay. You go into the closing room. Right? There's a stack of about, oh, I don't know, 3, 4 inches of papers that you gotta sign while you're sitting there. Well, guess what the first one is?
[00:33:13] Unknown:
Promissory note?
[00:33:15] Unknown:
Yes. They want you to get that out of the way quick because that's what makes the money. Nothing happens without the promissory note and Joan promising to pay 30 years of mortgage. It's so much principle, so much interest for whatever 30 years is. 360 months, whatever it is. K? Same principle. Alright. A mortgage is much more insidious because of the way it's structured and that you pay you almost virtually most people never pay in much principal on a mortgage because they found out through studies that the average mortgagee only stays in the house 7 years.
So for the first 15 years of a 30 year mortgage, you're paying almost all interest. Oh, you might pay 50¢ or dollar on the principal, but for those 15 years, it's almost all pure interest. That's why the bankers command the housing market. It's nothing but profit for them generally. Okay? Does that make sense to you?
[00:34:26] Unknown:
Yes.
[00:34:28] Unknown:
Okay. So anyway, the same principle's the same. I, Joan, promise to pay so much per month principal interest for this many years, months, whatever. So, the money, you just purchase something. What they do on that promissory note, you see, is they only money, what we call money, what green pieces are now this is part of the problem right there, is we don't know and don't identify whether it's debt or whether it's money. So this is another way they've got us buffaloed because we call that money. We're we're even at our stage, in our group here, with our understanding, and we still do it. That's how deeply this is involved. It it been implanted in your subconscious mind. Okay? It's not money. Yeah. It's debt. You created it when you signed that promissory note.
It's also called in merchant law, commercial paper. Because they can trade it between people. Debt has a value, and the value of debt is not only the principle that you agreed to, but the compound interest that compounds on top of that, which was never created. No one ever sat down and said, I promise to pay all the compound interest on all the existing principles that are circulating. Because all they ever do is loan the principal into existence. Let's say your house was a $200,000. When you did that promissory note, you put $200,000 into the circulating medium. Let me see if you if I can get you to look at it a different way. Do you know what a boiler is? Not a not a kitchen boiler, but like an industrial boiler, Joan?
Not really, but I can imagine. Well, it's a big vessel. Okay? It can be, I guess, any shape. It's a big vessel where in one end of it, they put water in and and and then they apply heat and the water boils and the exit is steam and the steam goes to drive a generator. So it's this big vessel with all of this water in it that has different bleed off. There's a little levers here on it, here on it, there on it, and they can adjust that pressure inside. Okay? Or they can adjust what's in there by how much water they put in at the front or how much steam they take out at the back. Okay? Have you got me? Can you visualize that?
Okay. Well, then let's take that example and let's say the water in the front is when people on this is the money system now. When people are writing promissory notes and money is being put into the system because green paces pieces of paper with dead presidents on them that are sitting in a warehouse, well, they're not monetized. They're nothing but green pieces of paper with dead presidents on them. They don't have any value until they're monetized. The only way they're monetized is when someone takes out a loan and those green pieces of paper are loaned into circulation.
And that always means interest. But they never loan the interest. They only loan the principal. So this is where they make money out of thin air. Is that compounding interest that's inside that boiler with all the rest of the circulating currency in the culture in there and what they do is well, they got a little knob over here and they'll loosen it up. But what does that mean? Well, that means they're taking away the pressure on the inside. What does that mean? Well, they lower your taxes or they go excuse me. They go over and lower interest rates. And so, more people are alone and going and borrowing money because the interest rates are lower. Right?
Or they raise the interest rates like right now, where the mortgage rate goes up to 7%. There's not as many people taking out mortgages. They can't afford it. Okay? So do you are are you with me to this point?
[00:38:52] Unknown:
Yeah. Okay. Just don't for just don't forget, I have 4 questions.
[00:38:59] Unknown:
Let me just finish this, and let's see if you grasp it. Yes. Maybe I should answer your questions. But alright. Let let's let's reverse this. Let's leave it at the boiler right there, and let me hear your questions because I might be able to answer it in your questions. So let's do that.
[00:39:15] Unknown:
What are your questions, Joan? Okay. Okay. So so a person, I have, so okay. So I'm going to buy a house for $200,000. And, well and and so I go to the bank because I don't know anything else but to go get a mortgage from the bank. And the reason and then when I signed the promissory note and what and and and and and they give me and I'm thinking they get they are giving me, let's say, just say, to make it easy, $200,000.
[00:39:49] Unknown:
Be and No. They're not giving it to you. Joan. Joan. They're not giving it to you. You just created it in the note.
[00:39:58] Unknown:
Uh-huh. Okay. Right. Okay. Well, okay. So, I'm thinking I'm thinking that they, the the they're they're using my house as collateral. Of course. Okay. Okay. And so that's so they the way this is just I'm sorry. This is all as far as I've only gotten it so far. And that is that, so they're it's actually I'm not the promissory note is is I don't under 2 things 4 things. Now I have 4 questions, and they're all running together. But one is the the the if I'm paying interest on my own money. I mean, I'm I'm paying interest It's not your money. No. But my house, the collateral, the $200,000 value of my house.
[00:40:57] Unknown:
Okay. Yes. Is that's all that's loaned into circulation is the value of the collateral. All of the rest is money they make literally here. This is the one place they make money out of thin air. So they're monetizing your collateral, your house. Well, that's $200,000 that's in the circulating medium now. Right?
[00:41:27] Unknown:
Yeah.
[00:41:28] Unknown:
Well, if you pay it off for 30 years though, guess how guess how much you're gonna pay? You're gonna pay $600,000, but they only loan 200,000 into circulation. That 4th 100 that $400,000 is penalty and interest over 36 360 months. Yes. They do not loan the interest into circulation. The this is why it's a big game of musical chairs. And what you're trying to do is pay off your $600,000 so you don't get your house foreclosed on and some and and you gotta beat somebody else out of the collateralized mortgage that they loaned into circulation, and they lose their house and you don't.
It's musical chairs, debt musical chairs.
[00:42:26] Unknown:
How how is the bank able to foreclose on a house if the if this if it's the if it's my money and my house It's not my money, it's how how are they able to foreclose on a house when when they didn't even give me any money. They didn't No. They didn't.
[00:42:45] Unknown:
No. They didn't. Well, we you gave them the money, Joan.
[00:42:50] Unknown:
Oh, okay.
[00:42:52] Unknown:
In the in the process them the you created the currency when you signed the promissory note. I I don't know how much more basic I can get with you.
[00:43:05] Unknown:
Hey, Roger. This is a concept that we haven't been learned yet. And like everything else, it might take a few times talking about it because Okay. Well, I've been I've been talking about it for a year.
[00:43:19] Unknown:
Well, I've been talking about it for years. You don't understand it either?
[00:43:24] Unknown:
No. I'm I'm half lost also.
[00:43:27] Unknown:
Let Roger, is the fraud I have a question about the fraud. Is the fraud that the the fraud is their signature is the promissory note. The promissory note does not the promissory note does not say the the the promissory note is not letting the borrower know that the money is coming from him, the borrower.
[00:43:57] Unknown:
Correct. It's fraud. They don't loan you money. You loan them your signature on a promise to pay promissory note.
[00:44:08] Unknown:
Yeah. And one more thing about the fraud is the is is is the fraud is is why the borrower is paying interest? Who okay. I'll use me, John. On your day. If y if y I fly Joan is paying the interest to the bank No. For my fault. Can it be fraud, Joan, when you agreed to it?
[00:44:37] Unknown:
Okay. I I mean, you agreed to all this. You think they're loaning you money. You're loaning them your signature on a promissory note on every loan made in the world. Primarily in the United States. Okay. Well, let's go through the process again. Maybe this will help you. So when you sign that 4 inch stack of papers at the closing of your house, the very one on the very top is the promissory note. Because they wanna get that one out of the way first and have you concentrate on the other 4 inches of paper that's sitting in front of you that you're wishing you had a damn signature stamp for because your wrist gets limp after one of those sessions. Okay?
So now they've got your promise to pay. You just created for them. You just created $600,000, but they're only gonna loan 200 to put $200,000 of that into circulation. The interest, that other $400,000 comes out of thin air, literally. So now they take the promissory note back to the financial institution. And you're familiar with double entry bookkeeping. Correct, John? I know. I I know you said something about liability and whatever. Okay. Well, this is what allows them to do all this. It was created double entry bookkeeping was created in the 1500 over in the Medici in Italy when Medici and Venice and all those little strongholds. One of those financial centers came up with the idea of double entry bookkeeping.
It's simply a way of, yeah, you you give me a $100, and I owe it back to you. So I'm gonna enter that on the liability side of the ledger. You got assets on one side and liabilities on the other. And they got a balance or else something's wrong. Okay? So I you loaned me a $100. I put it down on my books in the liability section because I need to pay you that back. Do we understand that?
[00:46:56] Unknown:
Yes.
[00:46:57] Unknown:
Okay. So they come and put the note that you've just promised $600,000 is gonna come to them, but they're gonna take that note, and they're gonna take the double entry books at the at the financial institution, and they're gonna put that 200,000, 600,000 on the liability side of the ledger. There's the fraud. They don't it's a asset. It's not a liability. Do you understand that?
[00:47:32] Unknown:
It's on their the liability is on their in their books, on their side? Yes. Yes. Yes. Okay. They enter it as a liability,
[00:47:41] Unknown:
which is generally something you owe. Well, who do they owe that to? You just gave it to them. So they don't here here's what the rest of the process. Then they take that note, specifically mortgages, because all of them go to the Federal Reserve. K? Because they make all this huge money on it. So they take that and sell it to the Federal Reserve. And instead of $200,000, the Federal Reserve gives them back well, it'd be anyway, they discount it. They give it to less than face value in the secondary market. Then they take that value, whatever that is, and they give that to them in Federal Reserve notes, cash.
And they put that on the asset side of the ledger. So supposedly, the liabilities and the assets balance. Then they take the money they just got back from the Federal Reserve discounted on that note, and they go pay your house construction guy that built your house. They never loaned you money. You loaned them your signature on a promissory note that did the whole process. They were never out a penny, out of pocket, a single penny.
[00:49:10] Unknown:
I got that wrong. I got that wrong. Why why is the $600,000 a liability to them on their side, their liability to them?
[00:49:20] Unknown:
The fraud, Joan. That's the only way they can get this deal done and discounted into the secondary market. And then they tell you, well, we loaned you money, so you owe us all this interest. No. You gave them the money they loaned into circulation for the purchase of your house. Your house is collateral. The $200,000 is now circulating out there. It's brand new currency. It was never out there before. It's brand new. And on that 200 grand compiles over 360 months, $400,000. What you call There's the fraud. If all the let me let me see if I can get you another way, Joan. If all the loans in in circulate that are owed were paid, there would not be any circulating Federal Reserve notes. There'd be a whole bunch of debt left over all this interest, but there wouldn't be any circulating medium.
Okay. Now where are where are you?
[00:50:22] Unknown:
Okay. So you said I gave them
[00:50:26] Unknown:
promissory note that I gave them 6 100,000 dollars. No. No. No. Well, you did. In essence, if you pay the hold it, Joan. You did give them $600,000 if you pay out the whole 360 months. Right.
[00:50:41] Unknown:
Right. But so but it that seems like that would be an asset for them, not a liability because I've given them 200 to 600,000. Oh, Joan. Joan. Joan. I'm sorry. We can change the subject.
[00:50:56] Unknown:
Can somebody help me out here, please?
[00:51:00] Unknown:
It's a stream of income. It's a it's a it's a cash flowing your promissory note, your signature creates a stream of income. You're promised to pay just like a house that you buy, to to rent. So they can monetize that. And the fraud is they put it on the liability. They're lying, Joan. So that's part of the fraud. The first fraud is that it's an a loan, that they loaned you anything. Yeah. There's 2 frauds there. Is that helpful?
[00:51:33] Unknown:
Yes. Okay. Alright.
[00:51:39] Unknown:
Roger. Yes.
[00:51:42] Unknown:
This is Larry. How are you doing?
[00:51:44] Unknown:
I'm I've had better days, Larry. Go ahead.
[00:51:48] Unknown:
Hey. When you say it's loaned into circulation, are you saying that the money has to be printed, or is it just digits on a screen, or is it both? Well, I well, it doesn't make a damn whichever one it is.
[00:52:06] Unknown:
Really? But the only way this comes from the Federal Reserve Bank, one of their booklets. Okay? The only way money is monetized is when it's loaned into circulation.
[00:52:23] Unknown:
What does circulation mean? What is circulation?
[00:52:27] Unknown:
It means I give I have it and I give it to you and you give it to somebody else.
[00:52:33] Unknown:
Okay. Bye.
[00:52:34] Unknown:
Circulating dollar bill. God almighty. I got
[00:52:39] Unknown:
I got it. I got that part.
[00:52:42] Unknown:
Well, that's circulation. And there's Okay. Maybe there's a a $1,000,000,000,000 in circulation out there of of and that includes digital stuff too now, but used to be just Federal Reserve notes. Well, that's what's loaned into circulation. There's a $1,000,000,000,000 worth of people that went and signed promissory notes, But they never loaned the interest into circulation, Joan. They only loaned the amount. They're monetizing your collateral. If your house, fair market value, was valued at $200,000, That's how much they're gonna loan into circulation. But, Joan, how much are you gonna pay them back if you carry that to term?
You're gonna pay them 600,000. Well, you only loan 200 in. Where'd the other 400 come from?
[00:53:35] Unknown:
Interest.
[00:53:37] Unknown:
Oh, okay. But where did it come from? It was never loaned into circulation. It was created as compound interest on all of this collateralized more monetized collateral that was loaned into circulation.
[00:53:54] Unknown:
The interest came from me. Right? I paid them a little bit here, a little bit there, the over the years.
[00:53:59] Unknown:
Oh, no. You paid them a whole lot. You paid them a whole lot. Your house is only valued at 200,000 and you paid them 600,000. It wasn't a little bit here and a little bit there. It was a whole bunch over here.
[00:54:14] Unknown:
I know. But I mean, over the months years, I had enough of a little bit of money to pay them the interest over the years. And and so the interest came from me.
[00:54:27] Unknown:
No. The interest came from somebody else's loan.
[00:54:32] Unknown:
Oh, but no. I but I was out of pocket, the all those interest payments.
[00:54:37] Unknown:
Yes. And those people lost their house because they couldn't pay their mortgage because you beat them out of that interest and you were able to pay theirs. So when the game of musical chairs stopped, there wasn't a chair for them to sit down in.
[00:54:54] Unknown:
That's what you meant by musical chair. I get I okay. I got that part, I think.
[00:55:02] Unknown:
I don't care. Listen. I know it's complex. And and the story I told the other day, the way I learned this was I was I was a a dog for information just like some of you are. This bites you and you can't let it go. And even though I was working the next day, I'd stay up till 2 and 3 in the morning to listen to this show that was on WWCR. Because that was the only place we could get information in those days, Alice, outside of written information. Okay? And so I was listening to that show 1 night. I think it was like Water Oz or something, and they had a certified public accountant on there. He was from Chicago.
His name is, I'm assuming he's still alive, Tom Schauff, s c h a I believe it's 2 f's. And to my knowledge, they've just about scrubbed the Internet of his work and the other accountants that were also helping him teach people this. So he had somehow, don't still don't know how, qualified himself to do expert testimony in court cases, forensic accounting, which means he can make 500 plus dollars an hour on the stand as an expert witness. So as he was doing that, he realized that there was nowhere in the US to accredit CPAs to be able to do this.
I don't know how he did it somehow. So what he did is the formula for any successful business, find the need and fill it. So there's a need. So he opened a school to teach other certified public accountants how to become and qualify to do expert witness testimony. So that's what started all this. Okay? So one of the students in one of his classes was a federal bank regulator, and he was taking the class to do expert testimony. And he pulled Tom to the side, and he said every loan in America is a fraud. Right. And Tom Schauff, the expert public accountant said, what do you mean?
And he showed him what I'm attempting to explain to this audience. That's where it came from. 2 CPAs, one of them understood it, and the expert witness had no idea. And guess what, Joan? Neither does 99.999 9% of the people in the country. The whole thing, just like everything else, is a fraud.
[00:57:55] Unknown:
So why is the bank able to foreclose on a house when they don't because you didn't make the payment. But they don't but the they don't they didn't own the the $200,000
[00:58:09] Unknown:
that that They don't know. It doesn't matter. It doesn't matter. You promised to pay that payment, and you didn't pay it. And if you didn't pay 2 or 3 of them, they're they're gonna either sell sell the house on the courthouse steps or issue foreclosure proceedings because you didn't meet your obligation. You promised to pay that, and you didn't pay it.
[00:58:31] Unknown:
That's because you promised. Okay. Roger. Because when you sign a 200 papers when you're doing your closing, you already gave your rights. You have to do everything that goes, legally even, you know, before closing. You cannot read to it. Let let me Hey. Could I could I could I change a little bit in a different way, And maybe this will help. You know, in Costa Rica, their currency is cologne, but most people are buying their houses in dollars or in the market or the or the country, the government gets a $500,000,000 to to build a bridge or whatever they need. Now the International Monetary Fund or the World Bank or the United States, whoever gives them the 500,000,000, they just created $500,000,000.
So now Costa Rica, their currencies, Colon, cannot pay that loan with Colon. So they That's right. They need hard currency. In other words That's right. They need a lot of tourist tourist dollars coming in, or they have to sell a lot of pineapples or whatever they have, or they need, petroleum. So now they need to, get some dollars in whatever way, or sometimes they print their own currency so they could buy in the international, market a first, and they pay. But when they sign that contract, if they don't pay that money, they'll either be sent a big large committee of, international money. Frank, they have to go to austerity and start finding people just to gain dollars. Or eventually, like they did in Iraq or anybody else, they'll send the military and put their own bank to there. What? So it's the same thing. That's where it goes. It's the same thing as an individual, and in this case, a little bit bigger, but the same thing.
[01:00:11] Unknown:
And they insist you pay back you they insist you pay back the loan in dollars. If you're in Costa Rica, what's the exchange rate on the cologne to a dollar?
[01:00:22] Unknown:
Well, I think, like, 5 colognes is equal to $10.
[01:00:28] Unknown:
There the the cologne is stronger than the dollar?
[01:00:32] Unknown:
I guess No. It it should be around 500 of cologne. 500, more or less around 500, 600,
[01:00:39] Unknown:
to a dollar. Oh, yeah. That's what I meant. 500 colognes.
[01:00:45] Unknown:
That's a little that's a little better. So that tells you that the cologne and this is the to what they've got, the dollar has got all this strength in it, and it shouldn't have because it's, well, it's all all of them are in bad shape. Anyway, these are some of the reasons. Same thing with Argentina. That's why all the demands for dollars in Argentina because they had to pay back those IMF loans in dollars. And they're on the peso down there, and they got terrible monetary physical stuff. And they're scrambling for dollars, at least they used to be, so they could pay off these IMF loans. Except in this situation, we're trying to show you, it's the same process all over the world.
They always do you do you know yeah. Does any of y'all know any bankers that loan 1,000,000,000 of dollars without collateral on one side and and compound interest on the other? You know any of those bankers like that? Well, no. You don't because there ain't nothing. Okay? And Roger, I'm not. The whole system is set up so they can suck your essence with this interest. They call it vigorous. Who's trying to say something there?
[01:01:56] Unknown:
Hey, Roger. The dollar is not going anywhere at least in maybe 10 years from now because the whole world has been monetized. In other words, they owed money or dollars to the United States, the Federal Reserve, the World Reserve. So even even the British nation or any they stopped, trying to, do trade with dollar. Eat India, China, everybody owes something in dollars. Yeah. And they that's why the dollar this week got really strong because everybody needed dollars to pay their debt. So they start selling gold or big or whatever because they needed to pay the debt. And that's why Brazil right now is in trouble and most of this currency in the world because it'll take 10, 20 years for each country to get rid of all the dollars they owed. So the United States, the power and the military is in that currency that everybody in the world needs that dollar.
[01:02:52] Unknown:
Yeah. Man. That's how they Yeah. That's how can you put that's how they enforce their muscle is they bring in the military. That's what the military is for. That's why Woodrow Wilson wouldn't sign that $100,000,000 loan to China a 100 years ago. He didn't like the tax system. It was antiquated and burdensome according to his statement and administered by foreign agents. So the IRS is not a government agency. Who was saying may I there a second ago? Is that you, Sherry? That was Carolyn. It's Carolyn?
[01:03:33] Unknown:
Yes. What I wanted to just what I wanted to share is should you download? That's promissory note is what creates the money.
[01:03:45] Unknown:
That's what I've been trying to tell I've been telling trying to tell Joan that for 2 days, to a day and a half now. Go ahead. Yeah. So don't sign the mortgage.
[01:03:57] Unknown:
Get up. Take the keys. You're done. You created the money. Why are you signing mortgage papers? You already gave them the money.
[01:04:11] Unknown:
I ain't gonna sign no mortgage papers no more.
[01:04:14] Unknown:
Yeah. John, I'm trying to just go you said you didn't understand. I'm trying to explain it. Everything revolves around the promissory note. That's where you, when you sign it and agree to the terms, make money. You created that money. It was my currency. It was not circulating before. When you signed that promissory note, you created it.
[01:04:43] Unknown:
So take the keys and don't sign the mortgage.
[01:04:48] Unknown:
And if you did It it has nothing to do with the mortgage. I'm trying to illustrate a point here, please. Please. K? Yeah. Go go go find somebody that'll carry their own paper. That way, you don't have to do a mortgage. Or as we had, the our our buddy on here one day saying, well, there's all kinds of people with private money that'll loan it to you cheaper, than the bank. Go find go find some private money. Well, I'm trying to illustrate to Joan how this works and to the rest of the audience. There's some other people that evidently don't understand it either. Okay?
I'm gonna go into a whole different phase of it in a minute, but I want to make sure you understand this, Joan, and I don't know if you've grasped it yet.
[01:05:35] Unknown:
Well, I I've I've grasped a lot more since you started talking with me about it this morning than I did 2 days ago or whenever.
[01:05:46] Unknown:
Yeah. Because you're thinking they first of all, it's money. It's not money. It's debt. And the reason it's debt is because they're loaning it to you because you signed that promissory note and created it. So they're gonna loan it into circulation for you, and then they're gonna reap the long term benefits of interest and compound it. Yes, sir.
[01:06:07] Unknown:
Hey, Raj Karl again. Hey, what and and I'm, you know, I've got some confusion also. But when you say there's private money out there that would loan less than what the bank is, I've used private money in the past to purchase houses. And unless I'm misunderstanding,
[01:06:29] Unknown:
it cost me a whole lot more than it did. Okay. Well, I don't know. I've never done it. I thought he said it cost less, but there's ways to get a loan without going through a financial institution in this process. K?
[01:06:44] Unknown:
Yes.
[01:06:45] Unknown:
The only way I know of is to ask the person who's selling me the house to let me just pay them payments over time with no You could do that.
[01:06:55] Unknown:
That's called that's called carrying their own paper, and some people will do that.
[01:07:01] Unknown:
Well, what what about the people who won't do how are people supposed to buy a house if if they don't go find private money? Just like I was saying, if they don't qualify for a mortgage,
[01:07:11] Unknown:
if their if their payment history and their credit history isn't that good, they may not be able to get a mortgage. So what do they do now?
[01:07:21] Unknown:
But it's a little bit different when you go in private most most of the time. Because usually, it's somebody that has money, and they Yes. They lend the money, real money, real capital, technically, and use it with a little bit higher interest. And the term will be instead of 30 years, it'll be 10 years or something like that, depending the case. So you're not And then You're not you have to put put more down probably in your house.
[01:07:45] Unknown:
You're not creating money there. The the currency's already existing. They've got it. They're just giving it to you, and you're gonna pay them back that principal along with interest in your payments. You don't send it to the bank. They don't service it. The person that holds the property and the paper holds it and and gains from it.
[01:08:08] Unknown:
Another way of looking at it also is, even if you pay your house, even you buy everything in cash, you never use the credit card or take a loan for a car. But your neighbors are getting loans and and credit cards and signing that mortgage. Guess what's happening to your dollar in your bank? It's getting devalued. Even if you don't do it Yep. Your money is losing value because you're creating money out of in there.
[01:08:32] Unknown:
That that's another. No? Every time you use a credit card the, it's the interest that's,
[01:08:44] Unknown:
created out of thin air. Correct? Only. Only. Only.
[01:08:48] Unknown:
They're Right. Right. What collateralizes the rest of it? You answering the 2 questions, yes, and signing something. That's where it's created. Roger, may I? So I'm I'm trying to get to that point, but I can't get past this concept of you creating money when you sign a promissory note. What, Paul?
[01:09:13] Unknown:
Let me let me see if I understand this. When you sign a promissory note, you set up a, revenue stream, and then that revenue stream generates the money that pays for what you bought, what you signed for. When you pay interest, you are taking money from other revenue streams to pay that interest. So it's a huge Ponzi scheme, and it's destined
[01:09:46] Unknown:
to blow up. Oh, well, that's fine. That that's why there's never been a paper currency that's lasted more than a 100 years. I mean, the dollar today buys about less than 2% of what the dollar bought a 100 years ago. Well, where'd that come from? Well, that came from them diluting the value of the purchasing power with this scheme.
[01:10:12] Unknown:
It's not that that loaf of bread you bought went from 11¢ a loaf to $5. It's the dollar you spent to buy that loaf of bread is now only worth 44¢.
[01:10:26] Unknown:
Okay. Here, Joan. My gold that I bought so many years ago Yeah. Has gone from $300 or less to almost 3,000. So my question to you, has the value of the gold gone up?
[01:10:47] Unknown:
Or has the value of the dollar gone
[01:10:51] Unknown:
down?
[01:10:54] Unknown:
Which is the right answer.
[01:10:56] Unknown:
The the value of the dollar went down. Correct.
[01:11:01] Unknown:
Gold, I could 2000 years ago in Rome, I could take an ounce of gold to go buy a toga, a belt, some nice sandals to go have a nice dinner. Today in New York City, I can take an ounce of gold and go buy a hell of a nice suit, some nice shoes, a nice belt, and go out to one of those 5 star restaurants in New York City. It's purchasing power. It's not the number.
[01:11:29] Unknown:
Okay. Now, since we're still talking about this, it appears we're still talking about this.
[01:11:36] Unknown:
We're gonna talk about it probably the whole program today.
[01:11:39] Unknown:
Okay. Well okay. So now okay. Because of our, good Larry, he said something about the interest is coming from somewhere else. And I thought the interest that I was paying was coming out of my pocket.
[01:11:52] Unknown:
No. You've gotta pay it. But how do you pay it when only the 200,000 for your house was loaned into circulation, and you're up at about the 25th year? So you've got here. Somebody else has done the same thing. They signed a mortgage and loaned in whatever amount of money in circulation. And what you're doing is you've got to beat them, and I'm not saying you're doing it consciously, but to pay your payment, you're beating you're stealing their collateral because the interest was never created. The interest compounds upon all this collateralized of of mortgage but but got you.
All the circulating medium that is nothing more than monetized collateral. And that's all in that buy in that boiler. And you've gotta pay back your principal and go beat somebody else out of their principal that was loaned in and to pay your total amount of interest. And they You're right. When they go to pay theirs, there's nobody left to get that interest from. They can't make their payment, and they lose their house.
[01:13:15] Unknown:
Hey, Raj. The the original 200,000 for the house, okay, that was loaned into circulation because you signed the promissory note. But in order for you to be able to pay the interest, in order for it to come out of your pocket, you had to get it from someone else. You had to earn it. You had to sell something. You had to get a paycheck. You had to do this, that, or the other thing. That money came from another property that was monetized, and that money was loaned into circulation. And then you wound up with it because you earned it, you worked for it, or you sold something to get it. And then you pay interest to a company that never loaned you money in the first place. Correct. And you did it because you agreed to it with the 4 inch tall stack of papers at closing.
[01:14:09] Unknown:
And what Tom Schauff was able to do initially as he was putting this information out to other CPAs, and they were having people that they would tell about it and trying to promote what we're trying to explain here. And I I I know it's complex. I know it's confusing. Okay? But, yeah, it's like our other stuff. It's meant to be confusing because you're never supposed to figure it out. Okay? And so Tom Schauff would get people with a house and they go into court and say, this is a fraud. They never loaned me money. Here's the process. And the court would put the case under seal, which means nobody can see it, and they give them the keys to their new house that they now own.
[01:14:57] Unknown:
Roger, I have a confession. I don't really know even what debt means. I mean, like, just 2 years ago, I think, was the first was the first time I heard that money is debt. And I was thinking, what are they talking about?
[01:15:12] Unknown:
Have you have you seen that, animated video on YouTube that's that title Money as Debt? Have you watched that, Joan?
[01:15:21] Unknown:
Oh, well, no. I can't remember.
[01:15:25] Unknown:
Well, I at this stage, as difficult the time as we're having here, I suggest you watch it again whether you've seen it or not. Okay? Okay. My money is Money, go to YouTube. It's a goes produced by a Canadian guy, and it's titled Money as Debt.
[01:15:44] Unknown:
I put a link in the chat for that, Joan. Thank you, Lisa. Thank you, Lisa.
[01:15:48] Unknown:
And there's another one that's excellent that was done by Bill Still in 2011. It was it was named the documentary of the year in 2011 by these film festivals, and it's called The Secrets of Oz. The Secrets of Oz. It's a 2 hour highly produced documentary that should be required viewing for all of you if you've never seen that.
[01:16:21] Unknown:
How long is Money Is Debt?
[01:16:24] Unknown:
45 minutes.
[01:16:27] Unknown:
Thank you.
[01:16:29] Unknown:
Roger?
[01:16:30] Unknown:
Yes.
[01:16:31] Unknown:
Dora? There's also yeah. It's me. There's also, it this is pretty old now, but it's very good. I listened to it, I don't know, 15 years ago. Mike Maloney's hidden Mike Maloney's stuff. Yeah. Yes. Hidden Secrets of Money. It's very good.
[01:16:54] Unknown:
Mike Maloney is very good at explaining a lot of this stuff. I think in that hidden secrets of money, it's episode 7 that's got all the hard hitting stuff in it. Is that right?
[01:17:07] Unknown:
That sounds right. It's been a long time. But Right. Mike Maloney,
[01:17:13] Unknown:
big silver guy, lives in, Puerto Rico now, I think. The Hidden Secrets of Money, wasn't that it?
[01:17:23] Unknown:
Yes.
[01:17:24] Unknown:
Yep. Okay, Joan. There's just some resources and for the audience. Okay? And I I I mean, I know this. If you first time you're being presented with it, I know this is confusing. If you go look at that money as debt thing, it's very good. It's all animated. It's nonpolitical. It's very neutral in its presentation. But if you'll look at the first, what you'll see in the background are promissory notes. So it's animated now. So you got little promissory notes floating all over, but they don't explain that in that video. But it's on the screen. Okay?
So you what I'd like for you to do, Joan, you and this is really important information to understand. Okay? And so what I'd like for you to do if you don't understand this is to go watch those resources. And as we go forward into next week or New Year's week or whatever screwed up schedule we're gonna have through the next couple of weeks here. Come on. We'll discuss it again. Because I want all of you to understand it. Because guess where it all comes from? You answering those two questions yes and signing something. Because now you're their property or put more correctly, they have a property right in you.
This is why they did this whole damn thing, so they could get a property right in you. Because slavery is the most profitable business in the history of the planet. Period. And that's what they're doing. They're making you a slave, in essence, so that they can now have a property right on you, and they can extend your labor and collateralize it to back the bond market. The bond market underpins everything. James Carville, I saw him on TV 10, 15 years ago on some program. He goes, when I die you know how funny he talks. Right? When I die, I wanna come back as the bond market.
That was James Carville. You you look look at the equity market, which is the stock market. All these companies, man, warehouses and manufacturing and trucks and retail outlets and god knows what all. Well, that's all equities. You can see that. That's what underpins the stock market. Right, Joan?
[01:20:05] Unknown:
All I'm sorry. I'm not like
[01:20:07] Unknown:
Okay. All the company's assets are the value of the stock market. Right?
[01:20:15] Unknown:
Yeah.
[01:20:16] Unknown:
Okay. Well Yeah. What underwrites the debt market? What underwrites the bond market? It's 5 to 10 times bigger than the stock market. You don't see anything evidencing the bond market, do you? No. There are no big buildings that are associated with the bond market. None of that. It's a big debt market all based on you being a slave and your future income being collateralized. This is the spigot, the origin of all of it right there. Because they take those bonds backed by your birth certificate or whoever's and they sell those bonds in the international market for 6 months, a year, 5 years, 3 years, 10 years, the US Treasury 10 year note, that interest rate is the basis of all loans made all over the world.
That 10 year note, a 20 year note, a 30 year note. And so to pay those bond people that bought those, they extract your labor with the income tax and pay those people. See, even did you notice that even doctor Gene didn't understand that the other night? We were talking about it. He didn't understand it. He's been in this for God knows how many decades. Okay? So it goes to pay the bond market. That's the origin and one of the reasons they did this is that right there because that's the credit spout. All the other stuff that we've talked about all comes from that. From them extending your labor, selling it to some investor, and then the investor gives them cash for that. Don't they, Joan?
If they sell a bond to an investor, the investor gives them cash for that. Right?
[01:22:19] Unknown:
I
[01:22:20] Unknown:
think she mentioned that her power was
[01:22:23] Unknown:
having problems. Yeah. She might have dropped out. My power and and my dog's barking and the power is going off every 3 seconds. And I'm I'm I'm gonna, I'm gonna have to listen to the last, 5 minutes again on on the recording because there's a lot of, house renovation and,
[01:22:47] Unknown:
landscapers are big in holes and the electricity is going out, opening up, owning up. Alright. Well, Joan, I'll tell you what I'm gonna try and do. I'm gonna pick on somebody else, but I'm gonna just say, you go back and listen to the recording and the the replay. Okay?
[01:23:03] Unknown:
Run. Thank you. Yes. Thank you, Ron. Paul. Okay, Joan. Can I ask you to reiterate those titles? We've got money is debt and the hidden secrets of money. There was another one you mentioned. The secrets of of of us.
[01:23:20] Unknown:
And that's Bill Stills. And that is 2 hours of excellent production and information. They even go back to the English Museum in in London with a a guy, a a curator, and they have tally sticks. And they show you tally sticks. Do you know about tally sticks, Paul?
[01:23:44] Unknown:
You've talked about them before.
[01:23:47] Unknown:
Back in the old days of of London, England, they take up a stick and they break it into pieces. And they keep 1 piece and they'd use the other piece in circulation as money. And the only way they could get it back out of circulation was when it got turned in and they'd match the 2 pieces to make sure they fit, and then it wasn't money anymore. Well, they show you those things in that. Okay?
[01:24:13] Unknown:
Wow. Okay.
[01:24:15] Unknown:
It really all all of those are worth watching. Okay?
[01:24:21] Unknown:
K. I'm down running all 3 of them.
[01:24:24] Unknown:
Alright. Well, let's go back to our little example we were on a minute ago, the origins. I wanna explain to you how the whole system works, but this is the crux. If we weren't property, they couldn't do this. Then they'd be having their own money to start and run the economy. You don't think they want to do that, do they? Do you? No. They got a little scam where they let you do it all on credit. Roger. And now the scorpion's on your back.
[01:24:57] Unknown:
Roger? So
[01:25:00] Unknown:
hold on. So it's like the the movie Jones Plantation.
[01:25:03] Unknown:
They created money. Exactly like that. Exactly.
[01:25:07] Unknown:
They created money at a penny for £5 of cotton.
[01:25:12] Unknown:
Basically. Okay. Was that you, Samuel?
[01:25:16] Unknown:
Yeah. The that promissory note, the the real legal term for that that is important, the word that is important, is your consent. And I I've looked up 3, maxims in law on consent. Every consent removes error, number 1. Number 2, consent removes or obviates a mistake. And number 3, he who consents cannot receive an injury. The rest of that stack of papers you're signing is basically giving them estoppels on stopping you from trying to back out of that in any way, shape, or form. And it's all tilted in their direction.
[01:26:04] Unknown:
Well, everything is. Okay? So let let me go back and let's go over for everybody the whole way this system works. From the minute you're born and that birth certificate, the verification of facts is is, completed there in the hospital. It now goes, over the information. It's never signed by mom and dad even though there's spa spaces for it there at the bottom. That then is transferred by the hospital with a terminal that's installed in every hospital by the federal government. This is their milk cow right here. Okay? And they send that information over to Vital Statistics.
They may have different names for them in your state. This is in Texas. They send it over to the Bureau of Vital Statistics, which takes the information sent by the hospital, and they print the birth certificate. And when the birth certificate is printed, it is deposited in a bank safe with armed guards 24 hours a day, 7 days a week. A little flimsy piece of paper. That's because it's being treated as a warehouse receipt. And now that paper locked in the bank safe is you. They pull it out, but take things like there's we mentioned it the other day. There's a number on the bottom of these things called a, on the bonds called a CUSIP number.
I think it's c u s I p, CUSIP. And that's how they track because bonds change hands. Okay? I mean, some investors got it. He sells it to another. The Brit countries don't want them anymore because they don't have to have them to buy oil from Saudi Arabia because they're taking Chinese yuan now, and they hate the damn federal government and these damn bastard Jews. And the people around the world are in these financing countries. They know exactly who's doing this. Okay? So now that the BRICS countries are mounting up, they don't have to have treasury bonds anymore. So they're dumping them into the market. And guess who has to buy them?
Nobody else wants to buy them. The Federal Reserve has got to buy them. The tray actually, I don't think it's the Federal Reserve. I think it's the Treasury. Oh, they've washed their hands of all this stuff. So the Treasury has to buy any access bonds that are circulating out there. If they sit out there and nobody buys them, the whole bond market is gonna go upside down because because everybody understands it's not viable. So they've got to buy them.
[01:28:57] Unknown:
It would have to be the treasury because if the Fed were buying them, they'd be on the hook for them.
[01:29:03] Unknown:
Yes. I know. That's what I was trying to get across. Now I have heard that the Fed owns 49 plus percent of all the bonds that have been issued. I don't know about that. It just came I forgot where I got the intro the the information, but somebody said the treasury has to buy them, which makes sense to me as we finish out this explanation. You'll see that in another place also, Joe. So anyway, they take your birth certificate. They attach it to a bond. Then they have what's called let's look at the bond side here. The Federal Reserve has what's called primary dealers.
Remember 911? The company that was at the top floor of 1 of the towers was called oh, god. I can't believe I just had it. Can somebody god. It has two names. Anyway, the bond company that was at the oh, god. Does that make me mad? Well, this is my this this hadn't been my damn day. Okay? What? Just Lehman Brothers?
[01:30:20] Unknown:
No. Cantor. Cantor Fitzgerald.
[01:30:23] Unknown:
Cantor Fitzgerald. Cantor Fitzgerald. Cantor Fitzgerald. They are a primary bond dealer. There's others. Probably, those who mentioned you just now, probably Goldman Sachs has got a bond desk and all these other place. Will they contract with the Federal Reserve? And the Federal Reserve, when they do a bond issue, those people have to take it. If they can't sell it, it's on them because they are under obligation by being a primary bond dealer that they've got to take the issuance that the Federal Reserve is gonna issue. Now it's up to them to sell it. Okay? And if they can't sell it, they get hung with it. Right? So that I've never really studied. This is just stuff I've come to understand over the years from hearing different things and and kind of putting it together in my own mind. Now it seems to me, and I remember from when I was a child, my grandmother would buy me, US savings bonds as Christmas presents. $25.
So when you buy a bond, you that's discounted. Okay? So what that means is my grandmother would go into the post office and she'd pay like 17.50, and then they give her a $25 savings bond that didn't mature for, let's say, a year, 2 years. And when that 2 years came, I could go take that bond that she paid $17 for and cash it in for 25, its full face value. So that's how they do bonds evidently. Okay? So you've got the origin of the birth certificate, the attachment to the bond goes up to the Federal Reserve. They do a bond issuance, and that's how it's handled at that point.
K? Comment. Does that make sense to everybody? Anybody got any corrections or questions?
[01:32:24] Unknown:
That's where the discount rate comes from.
[01:32:27] Unknown:
Correct. K. So see, this is the back end. When you look at that Federal Reserve note, and it says the full faith and credit of the United States. So if the dollar goes under, what do you do? You take your dollar to a bank and go, I want my full faith and credit of this. Is that how that works? No. The full faith and credit of the Federal Reserve note is the underlying bond because the promise is to the bondholders, not the holder of the Federal Reserve note. They're saying you'll get your coupon payment. That's the full faith and credit of the United States. K?
So what happens is every 6 months, there's 12 different, oh, territories, if you will, of the Federal Reserve. They got one in Dallas down there by Joe and Mark. They got one out in Denver. They got one in San Francisco. They got one up in Seattle. They got one in Minneapolis. They got one in Chicago. They got one in Saint Louis. They got one in New Orleans. They got one in Atlanta. They got one in New York and a cup a couple other. Anyway, there's 12 of them. So every 6 weeks, they get together at what's called a Federal Open Market Committee meeting, FOMC.
Those are the meetings that happen every 6 weeks when they set or at least consider doing something with the interest rate. So every one of those branches of the Federal Reserve is supposed to be looking at all the information in their territory to say, well, do we have enough cash circulating it? Is this right? Is that right? And they take all that information to these FOMC meetings, and they compile all that. And they go, well, we're going to do the discount rate or the overnight rate as they put it. And that is the rate that the Federal Reserve charges their best customers, Chase Manhattan Bank, all the Rothschild banks, all the crooks. That's the interest rate they get on the Federal Reserve notes from the Federal Reserve.
Because when they meet and they say, well, we need another $1,000,000,000 in circulation. And so when they go and they call for that, they ask the Bureau of the Mint Printing Printing Mint, printing and engraving to print up a $1,000,000,000 worth of Federal Reserve notes. Doesn't matter what denomination. And then the Federal Reserve owns the company that they call, and they go print a $1,000,000,000 worth of bonds. And they take the bonds, and they take the Federal Reserve notes. Remember, the bonds are the backing for the Federal Reserve notes. That's the pure faith and credit of the United States, so the bondholders get their payment.
And so they take both of those different entities and they send them up to the Federal Reserve. The Federal Reserve takes the bond side of the billion and assigns it to their primary dealers. They take the Federal Reserve note part, and they go over and lend it out to their favorite banks at whatever that overnight rate is. Okay? And so that and then the they go out and they go, hey, Joan. You wanna buy a house? Yeah. I I need a house here. And she's does the promissory note and whatever they loan the money to and her is probably a a a 50% or a 100%, depending on which way you look at it, from whatever the overnight was. If it's 2 a half percent that the Federal Reserve loans it to them, then they'll loan it to you at 5.
K? It's a wholesale retail relationship. So there's all of your levels of compound interest that are going on. They got it in the bond market with discounting. They got it over here in the federal federal reserve note with all this loan and loan and interest piling up and all that stuff. They're making compound interest all kinds of places. Okay? So that's the monetary structure, and we, are are are collateralized future labor is the first step where the original credit spouse created. And then because they've got a property ownership in you, now they can build up all these administrative agencies, which there's over 600 of them now, and they've been building up to that number since when?
March 9, 1933. There weren't any agencies before that. They started afterwards. That's what the new deal, raw deal, Jew deal, whatever you wanna call it, that's what that was. It's this restructuring of the economy with us as property and to create the original credit spout so that they can build all this banking and economy over it. This is the illusion. Everything we've ever known is nothing but an illusion because it's based on fraud and it's based on lies. And it's based on the fact that you are a involuntary servitude and that we call money debt.
That those are the 2 pillars. That you're free, you're not, and that money is debt, it's not. And this is how it works out in their structure, and it's brilliant. And I hope I've explained it. I've explained it the the best I know how. Okay? And and I hope you've picked up on it, but it's a whole this is why what we do here is so damned important. This so some people so, well, what difference does it make? Well, it makes a hell of a lot of difference. Is there anybody who's got a question or comment on all that? Ahmed?
Yes, ma'am.
[01:38:44] Unknown:
Hey. It's Nancy from Virginia. Hi, Nancy. I appreciate, Joan being willing to go through this because, you know, what I noticed when I'm I mean, it was real clear for me to see the fraud around the citizenship stuff, but I've noticed that, you know, the the financial pieces, were a little bit more challenging
[01:39:11] Unknown:
and Yeah. It's a complicated.
[01:39:13] Unknown:
Confusion. So I think that the same, reactive, programmed negative response to being confronted with the facts is part of the monetary system? Because I just noticed it's the the feeling of, you know, the the immensity, the magnitude of the fraud is kind of overwhelming even though I know, you know, I even though I understand a good bit of it. But I noticed while I'm listening to this, my own the the confusion level, it's it's clearer now, especially about the how they, they put it as a liability instead of an asset, and that's the one the one of the pieces of fraud. But it's just so I just I'm just speaking to the program, the programming that we have all been subject to Some believe. Create confusion around what the money and debt and currency. And so that's really But it was helpful for me to listen to I don't think I have a complete clear grasp on it, but just going over this today, in this detail, I know it's frustrating because, like, why can't it? I I think I have a better I better grasp on it, but I'm just speaking to the programming and the reaction because that reaction is part of the programming to not, you know, the sense of confusion and that is difficult to understand. It's intentionally confusing,
[01:40:46] Unknown:
just like the codes at USC and CFR. Like all their stuff. Well, if you wanna fool somebody, you make it complex. If you want them to see it, you make it simple. This is not complex. It's just that none of you are familiar with it, and it's very intricate on how they've set it up.
[01:41:07] Unknown:
Yeah. Yeah. Very intricate. But I just want to speak to that because, I'm noticing it, that reaction, that little bit of confusion and the resistance inside, you know. And so I recognize that as part of the programming that, deprogramming that I'm engaging in, in my
[01:41:30] Unknown:
pursuit of freedom with everything here. And and and I moved out of the country. You're you're most welcome. I mean, it's just critical stuff to understand. I understand it's complex. Okay? It's meant to confuse you. You're not supposed to understand it. Just like the only guy that really understood it was the bank regulator that went into all these banks in a region and went over all their books. And the expert witness, Tom Schauff, he had no idea. It's right in front of everybody's faces. So, yes, it's really a hidden thing. And and when you hear anybody use the term make money out of thin air, unless they're specifically relating it to compound interest, they don't know what they're they don't know how the system works.
Pure and simple. Roger. Yes, Larry.
[01:42:27] Unknown:
Yeah. I don't know who this Caroline lady was, but do you really think she's saying get the cheese and walk out of there. I don't know exactly what that means, but do you really think they're just gonna let you sign whatever papers you want and then you could walk out of there with the house and and do this without signing all the papers? That's not gonna happen. No. No. It's not gonna happen. No. No. It's not.
[01:42:51] Unknown:
And and the only way you're ever gonna do it is if you go to court with it. And I think after those few initial cases by Tom Schauff that they cut that spigot off too.
[01:43:04] Unknown:
And another thing is to add insult to injury, let's just say you can't make the house payments and you default. Well, you may have spent you know, say it was a 30 year mortgage. You may have spent 20 years paying into that, and you may have a little bit of Equity. What what's it? Equity. You may have a little bit of equity, but then if you stop paying on it, do you really think that the that the bank's attorney is gonna say, well, look at we're we're we're gonna foreclose on your property, and, we know you've you've got, you know, several tens of 1,000 of dollars invested in this, so we're gonna reimburse you. They take it all.
[01:43:45] Unknown:
Yeah. They take it all. I mean, they're greedy Jews. Come on, man. The the their the money is you know, my friend, Walt, the, musician here used to live in New York for a number of 20 years. And, he was talking to one of his Jewish musician friends up there about this very subject. And the guy goes, they're different from us. Their God is money. Very accurate. So was there anything that I okay. Hold on. Larry, was there anything I attempted to explain that you didn't understand?
[01:44:28] Unknown:
No. I I get it pretty much.
[01:44:31] Unknown:
Okay. Good deal. Yes. Was that you, Joan?
[01:44:34] Unknown:
No. It's Nancy again.
[01:44:36] Unknown:
Oh, it's Nancy. Okay.
[01:44:39] Unknown:
Now fraction over their
[01:44:42] Unknown:
lending. Oh, that's a whole different deal.
[01:44:45] Unknown:
So is that on top of, like, the example of the mortgage
[01:44:49] Unknown:
Yeah. Where they just Well, here's what happens. Promissory or Yes. Here's what happens. And that was one of the ways they sold the Federal Reserve was the elasticity of the monetary supply. Okay? So here's what happens. Let's say that, Joan buys her house and she gets her house, and there's $200,000 in new money given to the contractor that built it. Right? Now Joan created that, but that's to pay off the house she just purchased. Right? Okay. So the contractor goes to his bank, and he deposits that $200,000 check-in his bank. Now fractional reserve banking can be altered.
For instance, as we went through COVID, they dropped the, the rate to 0. It's usually about 10%. Now what that means is that whatever they get on deposit, like from the contractor, they've got to keep $20,000 liquid there and set it aside. That's the fractional reserve. Okay? And then they can take a 100 what would that be? 10% would be 20,000. So now they could take a 100 could somebody could somebody hit mute, please? And, they take a 180,000, the remainder of the reserve requirement. Are you with me? He deposits 200. They gotta keep 20.
They can now loan out a 180.
[01:46:32] Unknown:
Right.
[01:46:34] Unknown:
Now as they loan that out, and they maybe they loan it to you. So you go and borrow a $180,000 from it from them, and they put it in your bank. Now your bank has to keep 18,000 of that on reserve, but they can loan out all the rest. And so it goes on and on and on until that's expired. And there are no more percentages to loan out. But that's that takes the 200,000 that was originally there and turns it into hell, I don't know, $1,000,000 or more. Mhmm. Do you understand what I'm saying?
[01:47:13] Unknown:
Oh, yeah. Yeah. Okay. Well, did that also apply to, like, the with the mortgage, can they sell
[01:47:21] Unknown:
discounted note more to more than 1 person? What do you what do you think the 200 Yeah. 2008 banking crisis was about?
[01:47:30] Unknown:
Yep. Well, that's yeah. That's what I
[01:47:32] Unknown:
Go go. And now here's another one. Here's another, to that list, The Big Short. If you never seen The Big Short, that's what it is all about right there. Okay? Yeah. So now we have this thing called a reserve requirement. So the banks have to have whatever they've got loaned out. If the reserve requirement is 10%, they got to have 10% on hand in case there's a bank run. That's what it's for. So now as they dilly with that reserve requirement like they did during COVID to keep the pump up the money supply, do you know that 40% of the currency ever created since March 9, 1933 was created in the last 4 years? Did you know that, Nancy?
That's what this Biden administration's done. 40% of all of the currency that's ever been printed since 1933, almost half was was printed in the last 4 years. That's why your prices are up everywhere.
[01:48:46] Unknown:
K?
[01:48:47] Unknown:
So what did they do in that period of time to get that done? They dropped the reserve requirement to 0. They didn't have to keep any reserves. That's why we're in such a precarious position right now as they hadn't changed that, to my knowledge. So now we've got the one that's gonna hit us more than likely is the commercial building loan portfolio, because all those people are underwater, and those loans are rolled over every certain number of years. And what's happening is the people that have taken out the loan can't pay it because COVID ruined their vacancy rates, and they're not getting the rent coming in to pay their damn note. So when the note gets time to roll over, they just go to the financial institution and give them the keys. You got buildings that are cost 250,000,000, 300, 400,000,000 that are selling for $20,000,000 or less if anybody will buy them.
Now on top of that, all of the businesses that survived off that office traffic, your your your dry cleaners, your drug stores, your your, beauty shops, your whatever shop, well, they're all going dry because all those vacancies now. Nobody's commuting anymore. This is the one that's probably gonna turn the thing upside down is this commercial building market. I mean, what what did I hear the guy say? This is a little while back. There are the equivalent of 21 Empire State Buildings are vacant in New York City. 21, the equivalent of 21 Empire State Buildings, are now vacant in New York City.
[01:50:48] Unknown:
K?
[01:50:49] Unknown:
So now here's the problem they had at the end of Trump, and that's called the overnight rate. Because banks have to meet a reserve requirement, then they get checked every morning to make sure that they've got whatever that requirement is that they're required to have. If they don't have that in cash, what they would generally do in the old days was they'd go to their synagogue buddy who owned the other bank, and they'd let borrow it from him at maybe a half a percent overnight, something like that. You know, they're not allowed to charge interest to each other, only does. And so that overnight night rate got so skewed and these banks were so underwater that they wouldn't loan to each other. Even the Jews wouldn't loan to each other because they know how precipitous the the system is.
So then the bank had to go, and if they did loan, they weren't loaning at a half a percent. They were loaning at 10%. So the banks had to go to the Federal Reserve to borrow overnight to meet their reserve requirements. And they were lending over a $100,000,000,000 a night into the banking system. That was the bank to hang up back when Trump was in office. Well, now after this COVID fiasco and this monetary madness that these idiots have put us through for the last 4 years, it's a whole different set of problems. But all those problems are still underlying. K?
So any questions on all of that?
[01:52:47] Unknown:
May I, lady Linda Louise? May I? Yes, ma'am. You may. Thank you. Another, YouTube video that I highly recommend is the money changers. That's number 1. And number 2, Larry talked about this lady, Carolyn. It's actually Cheryl Kissel from Florida. I don't know why she changes her voice, but, allegedly, she's done that method that she spoke about briefly to 7 properties. And, what I was sharing with my, fellow woman patriot who's sitting here at my kitchen table, I told her when you're autographing these documents, start like the Jews. They read from the back of the book forward. Rather than signing that, or autographing that promissory note, just autograph all the other pages and Yeah. Just pick up the promissory note and run out the door. I've never done it, but that would be an interesting exuberant.
[01:53:49] Unknown:
Well, I don't I don't know how she's gotten away with it. She comes on here and has got a lot of old and antiquated patriot ideas. She had we haven't seen it in a while. Right. So, anyway, it it is a very complex and convoluted deal. That's how they've been able to pull all this off for God's sake. And, the best thing to do don't forget there's only 2 ways that they can control you, by force or by debt. And, just try to get out of debt as best you can. Everybody ought to have that as one of their top priorities. Although, I don't know what's gonna happen with Trump.
I I just wish he wouldn't back that. He doesn't understand what we've gone over here for an hour and a half. Okay? Or else he wouldn't be back in King Dollar. Okay? Because it's all based on slavery and fraud. I'd rather see him it's all dishonest weights and measures. That's why the dollars only worth 2¢ of what it was a 100 years ago. It's dishonest weights and measures. I'd much rather go and see him throw his his towels in with the bricks country and say, let's build a world based on honest weights and measures here where there is no chicanery.
So these wealthy bastards beyond belief and then what are they? Oh, just a little bit more. You know, that's what somebody asked Roosevelt back in the thirties. Well, when is enough?
[01:55:13] Unknown:
Oh, just a little bit more.
[01:55:16] Unknown:
Just a little bit
[01:55:17] Unknown:
more.
[01:55:21] Unknown:
Their god is money. Roger. Yeah. Danny.
[01:55:29] Unknown:
Yeah. Roger?
[01:55:31] Unknown:
Right here, Danny.
[01:55:34] Unknown:
Oh, okay. Yeah. I got a situation that I discovered, but also go back to Tom Schauff. I've just been checking online for, his book. Seemed to be unavailable every place that I checked except Amazon and whoever had it there. It's at $4,995.
[01:55:54] Unknown:
Yeah. I can tell you who's got it. I know someone that's got a copy of it, and that's Jim Ram. But I think you he was pledged to something when he bought it, and I don't believe he's gonna make it available.
[01:56:06] Unknown:
But I'm just giving you Yeah. I've got a what I learned. Yeah. I've got a copy somewhere, I think, but I got it Really? Early days. Yeah. It was out. Yeah. The situation I I came up on, I got to look in through the Tennessee constitution, and the current one for just about any, elected office, it's it's requiring the person to be a citizen of the United States. And, so I got to check-in earlier constitutions here. Revolution of 17 96 did not have that in there, but, the people hadn't voted on that, so then they had another one where the people that voted on and accepted in 35.
And that one has that requirement about being a US citizen. Yeah. Well, 35 is after
[01:57:02] Unknown:
right. Well, 35 is after 33, and I'd expect that. But the only one I know that can 8 8 no. No. 18.
[01:57:10] Unknown:
1833 before the Civil War.
[01:57:13] Unknown:
Oh, okay. I thought you said 19. I thought you said 19 35.
[01:57:21] Unknown:
No. 18 well, yeah. 1835. Okay.
[01:57:26] Unknown:
But And it said citizen of the United States, the requirement was in there? Yes. Citizen of the United States. Yeah. Well, there wasn't a citizen of the United States back then. There was a citizen of the United States of America. There was a citizen of the United States of America and even chief justice story of the Supreme Court in his book, comments on the constitution, made the statement, a citizen of the state is ipso facto a citizen of the United States. Well, they all understood what they were talking about back then.
[01:58:00] Unknown:
Yeah. But I just think about I can use this to, kind of among certain people, like, maybe some legislators and thing that point out how that was there, and then it's in the current one. And I've got some federal, where it basically say that US citizens have have no they don't have the Bill of Rights or other things. And a, Maryland case from the where a guy had moved in somewhere in the Caribbean up in, Baltimore or something, Maryland, and was running for some local office before he did everything to become a US citizen, although he was Yeah. We can't do that. Process. Yeah. And their prod their their decision there was that there's no requirement US citizen in order to be a, citizen of Maryland and that he was qualified to run for the office.
And so bring that those things up to some legislators or others. Ask them what does the guys' state citizen mean
[01:59:12] Unknown:
back then and now. Ask them why the Supreme Court said the states the in states that they can take your children and inject them and propagandize them without your knowledge or consent. Why don't you go ask that one too? Yeah. I see. I can give you the answer. Alright. I understand. Because they're citizens of the United States, and they're property of the federal government. And the schools can do any damn thing they want to them. That's the answer.
[01:59:39] Unknown:
Yeah. I just thought I'd bring that up for people to Okay. Maybe, use this. Alright.
[01:59:47] Unknown:
Okay. Well, we've had a whole hour and a half on the monetary system, so it's kind of a curveball. But, yeah. But to my knowledge, you as a national can run for any office except for the senate. I don't know about the state senate. I know about the federal senate. And where do I get that? From Wikipedia of all places. Go into citizen of the United States, and down underneath, they'll give a couple of paragraphs of the slave side, then they quote the 14th amendment, and right under that is a paragraph where it talks about the national. Go read it. You can't run for senate.
I'm sure that's because of the 17th amendment somehow, but I don't know the specifics. I also know that I'm hearing the whistler here, which means we're finished with this show for the day. If, if you did if I made it clear as mud instead of clear as clear, there's some references there to go look at, and think about it, relisten to the replay. And if there's things you don't understand about it, come back, and we'll talk about it here when we have a show over the next couple of weeks. And I'm not well, we'll talk about the holiday schedule on Monday. Anyway, we're, pretty well done for the day as I am. Okay?
So, it it's been quite an aggravating day overall. But and I just understand this complex, but it's not really when you grasp that that promissory note is where all money is monetized. That's where it's created, and it's never created until it's loaned into circulation at compound interest with collateral. K? Alright. Hey, Raj. I Hope you got something out of it. Yeah, Paul.
[02:01:44] Unknown:
What was the name of that book by Tom Shaw?
[02:01:48] Unknown:
I don't know. Danny, you got the name of it?
[02:01:53] Unknown:
The title.
[02:01:54] Unknown:
What's the title? I don't know. I don't know his his title. I never had a copy of it. I called him up. I helped him write contracts. I'd gone through paralegal school at that time. And when I reached out to him, he was needing some legal help, and I helped him draft some contracts and stuff is where we had the major part of our communication. He never sent me a book, but I knew what he was doing because I had that personal connection with him on top of hearing the appearance on water or whatever that guy's stuff was. So, look, I'm getting out of here.
And, so, we'll see you on Monday. Have a good weekend. And, Paul, I still got my black background, so I don't know if you still got control of my computer or not here.
[02:02:46] Unknown:
Right. No. I disconnected.
[02:02:48] Unknown:
Oh, okay. Oh, yeah. Somebody got a question? Please. Quick.
[02:02:52] Unknown:
Just a quick quick statement. I don't know if you've heard about El Salvador, but they have banned legal tender for Bitcoin. There's no longer and and the economic hit, man, if IMF probably got in there, they got a new loan from the IMF, and they have to use US dollars now.
[02:03:12] Unknown:
Ah, so they had to go get a loan, and part of the stipulations of the loan were no more Bitcoin legal tender. They're scared to death of Bitcoin. Okay. I didn't know that. Okay. Thanks, Sketch.
[02:03:25] Unknown:
Alright. There is a new Yep. Okay.
[02:03:29] Unknown:
Bye. I'll see y'all. I've been talking for 2 frustrating hours. Bye. Yep. Thank you, Roger.
[02:03:37] Unknown:
And I wanted to mention that there's a new book out called Hijacking Bitcoin, the hidden history of Bitcoin, and that book might be part of why they said we're gonna abandon Bitcoin here. So I don't know, but it's very interesting. And Cantor Fitzgerald was mentioned today, but let I think his name is Letnik, who is the primary dealer for Cantor Fitzgerald, is going into the administration of Trump, and they're gonna according to Catherine Austin Pitts, they're gonna use Bitcoin and make the state's pension fund buy Bitcoin for another draining of the people's money, high yield.
[02:04:38] Unknown:
Paul, Danny put the title of that book in the chat for you.
[02:04:43] Unknown:
Oh, cool. Alright. Thank you.
[02:04:56] Unknown:
For those of us not in the chat, could you just state what the title is, please?
[02:05:01] Unknown:
Yeah. It's called hack hijacking Bitcoin.
[02:05:04] Unknown:
That one or or the other one? No. The one that Danny mentioned from Schauff.
[02:05:10] Unknown:
America's Hope to Cancel Bank Loans Without Going to Court by Thomas Schauff.
[02:05:16] Unknown:
Thank you.
[02:05:34] Unknown:
Isn't Tommy Shaw the singer in a band?
[02:05:49] Unknown:
Stick. The
[02:05:51] Unknown:
Stick.
[02:05:52] Unknown:
Yeah. I think he was in Sticks, and he sang with Ted Nugent and the damn Yankee.
[02:06:00] Unknown:
This is spelled s c h a u s. Is that the same spelling?
[02:06:09] Unknown:
So Tommy Shaw, we went to a 6 concert. He threw a blanket into the crowd and I caught it. Good for you.
[02:07:18] Unknown:
Merry Christmas, everybody.
[02:07:22] Unknown:
William, Merry Christmas to you and everybody else.
[02:07:30] Unknown:
Merry Christmas to all.
[02:07:34] Unknown:
Hello. May I ask ask a question, please? Hello? Hello? May I ask a question?
[02:07:47] Unknown:
Sure.
[02:07:48] Unknown:
Good. I did the the affidavit on the model in 2022, December, And, this, 2 months ago, I I applied for my passport. I could have been having any of it, and I received the passport. I received the card. Now my question is about the card. It has 3 stars. What does that mean?
[02:08:26] Unknown:
I must go out there that nobody knows.
[02:08:30] Unknown:
Your guess is good as ours.
[02:08:35] Unknown:
It just means 3 stars.
[02:08:40] Unknown:
Yeah. It is 3 stars.
[02:08:42] Unknown:
Yeah. People on here that have got their passports have different some have 3, 4, 5. Nobody knows, can't seem to find what that signifies. So, like,
[02:08:54] Unknown:
to your So when it is stars. Entity is 3. What, it means now? It's, like a special one? A special?
[02:09:10] Unknown:
We don't know. But if what matters when this subject comes up, what really matters is what is on file in in this with the Secretary of State. So as to a, an endorsement code or stars, we really don't know. But what really matters is what's on file for the secretary of state.
[02:09:39] Unknown:
Okay. Alright. Thank you.
[02:09:43] Unknown:
Hey. This is Carl in Utah. What's the I'm trying to look up that book for canceling debt, mortgage debt. What's the title called again?
[02:09:57] Unknown:
America's Hope to Cancel Bank Loans Without Going to Court. And the author is Thomas Schauf, s c h a u f.
[02:10:16] Unknown:
And there is an archive copy, it looks like, archive.org.
[02:10:27] Unknown:
But, Sketch, he's a colon, so he doesn't have access to the chat.
[02:10:32] Unknown:
Right? Come on, Sketch.
[02:10:35] Unknown:
Yes. I'm just stating that it was on the archives.
[02:10:43] Unknown:
Yeah. So so if you maybe put that in your search, it would take you to there. Yep.
[02:10:55] Unknown:
Thanks for saying that sketch. Of course, I would not have looked down below what Danny wrote. He just he just wrote it out, his own handwriting. And and then I said, oh, okay. Well, I'll just round it. And but then I which because of what you said, I looked even further down, and there it was where I could just click on it.
[02:11:20] Unknown:
Yep. Gotta like that. That's one advantage to coming on the computer. You can get those links as they happen.
[02:11:31] Unknown:
Well, I found the book on Amazon for $4,995, the paperback book.
[02:11:39] Unknown:
I'll probably have to just download it.
[02:11:45] Unknown:
It's only available for, borrowing on archive. It won't let you download it.
[02:12:01] Unknown:
Oh, you can only see part of
[02:12:05] Unknown:
it? No. You can read it online.
[02:12:11] Unknown:
Oh, okay. Oh.
[02:12:24] Unknown:
You can get it on Amazon for 4,995.
[02:12:31] Unknown:
Wow. $4 cheaper than the other one.
[02:12:35] Unknown:
Somebody snapped it up quite early. I I pulled away from it, but I think it was 298 pages, something like that.
[02:12:47] Unknown:
268.
[02:12:53] Unknown:
Yeah.
[02:12:59] Unknown:
Some years ago when, I knew a title officer really well. I think she said that, I don't know if it's California or countrywide, but, the average house people only stay in them 7 to like 9 years. So they're never really paying anything but interest. They never even get close to the principal. Countrywide is And then it turns over again and somebody does it all over again, you know. It's, what a scam.
[02:13:32] Unknown:
Yeah. Countrywide is the pricks at that my house. Before I knew any of this.
[02:14:32] Unknown:
And, Lisa, on that first comment of below the video I posted, on second thought, I don't know what to think about that first comment. Some of it sounds like the truth, but I I don't know.
[02:14:52] Unknown:
Me too. That's why that's why I put that comment to you in there. Yeah. Isn't that interesting?
[02:14:58] Unknown:
Yep. On second thought, I go, well, maybe I don't know if it's all spot on, but but I just had to say that.
[02:15:15] Unknown:
Well, they put a link for a YouTube right at the top of it too, so I don't know.
[02:15:23] Unknown:
I'll go check that out. Thank you. I didn't see that.
[02:15:30] Unknown:
And then there's a link also about that UCC one. I don't know. And it's and it's only 17 minutes sketch. I put a link in here to it.
[02:17:12] Unknown:
Thank you. I was just going there. Appreciate it.
[02:17:23] Unknown:
Oh, well, the title is the same. I think it's just a clip out of that.
[02:17:53] Unknown:
Yeah. That's that's the the video that, is on Rumble, my link, but, that's the one I gave to Joan to try and help her understand it. That one did I mean, it is convoluted, but if you listen to it 3 or 4 times, you get you kinda get the good jest of what what is going on. And the witness isn't too helpful because he's a banker.
[02:19:54] Unknown:
So who was it that
[02:22:52] Unknown:
Something that didn't get covered in our news stream here came from places like Azerbaijan and India. I guess, according to them, Biden and Harris were supposed to go on vacations for the holidays, but went back to Washington DC instead. Some people are speculating that, Joe might be considered too feeble to finish out, but there also might be a false flag, and he's definitely not up to dealing with that the way they want him to. So, who knows what they're up to?
[02:23:43] Unknown:
Well, that's, in addition to the Wall Street Journal where they say he was the term non compos menses at the very beginning of the term. And that's asking the question, well, is there anything that he did if he's non compos Menzus, and all those executive orders he signed. He's not, of sound mind. And in law, there's something to be said that, you know, they they take people's property away when or they don't let them sign contracts when they're non compas menses. So it it it is interesting, isn't it?
[02:24:36] Unknown:
Well, under these emergency powers, which they, you know, they could pretty much do anything they want.
[02:24:43] Unknown:
Hey, Scott. You need to watch more Chicago med to tune up, noncompass minutes.
[02:24:52] Unknown:
Thank you. Yeah. I'm not very good with Latin.
[02:24:59] Unknown:
Yeah. S r 93549, I think it is, that they can seize property, organizing and controlling the means of productions, seizing commodities, assigning military forces abroad, instituting martial law, seizing all, controlling all transportation and communication, regulating the operation of private enterprise, restricting travel, control the lives of all American citizens in a plethora of particular ways. If that's all they have to do is call a national emergency and, you know, they've given themselves complete and absolute power over everybody and everything in this place we call free.
[02:25:56] Unknown:
They can have a good old time.
[02:26:14] Unknown:
Yeah. I'm hoping they don't call an emergency and have Harris put in power and then postpone the inauguration because of the emergency. This is certainly within the purview of that law.
[02:26:31] Unknown:
And pardon Joe.
[02:26:36] Unknown:
Yeah. You know, it'll be a party in the white folks' house then.
[02:26:42] Unknown:
You might be getting God's dirt pardon.
[02:26:51] Unknown:
FYI, I just found that book by Tom Schauff atsatcom with 2 m's, 911.com. PDF version, 200 and 59 pages, I believe. Anyway
[02:27:17] Unknown:
so I would
[02:27:20] Unknown:
that would be printable.
[02:27:26] Unknown:
Is that the one that's going for $4,000?
[02:27:30] Unknown:
That's correct.
[02:27:34] Unknown:
Wow.
[02:27:35] Unknown:
Mhmm. I think I've heard George Riley interview him when the book was at the first out. It didn't cost anything like that. So I missed a lot of this. My alarm didn't go off. And, so what's the gist of
[02:28:01] Unknown:
this?
[02:28:04] Unknown:
What'd be the plan I have?
[02:28:08] Unknown:
Well, Roger was trying to explain to Joan how currency is loaned into existence via promissory note. So people were giving her, or just giving the group links for different things that might give you a a better understanding of the system, and that book was one of them. So
[02:28:44] Unknown:
And I guess it's Illinois Boy's Secret, so it needs to be $4,000.
[02:28:52] Unknown:
5000. Evidently, he has another book out, which is, it's volume 2 of the same book. So I'm gonna have to go back and look again though.
[02:29:24] Unknown:
It's All About the Money is another book, I think.
[02:29:33] Unknown:
That that term promissory note sounds so nice and gentle, and it should really be called a consent note because that's what you're doing. You're consenting to their freaking thievery. Sort of like that George Carlin piece on, the terms in baseball versus the terms in football.
[02:30:16] Unknown:
Baseball is peaceful. Football is war. If they wanted that to be true, they would be playing rugby. You break some stuff in that. But them tight shorts don't get it.
[02:33:40] Unknown:
Ron Gibson says there's a federal lien on all the property in this country you know, since the thirties there and, that you could potentially sue the title company for not disclosing that to you. I told my my friend who ran a title company for most of his life, that and and he says, nope. That's covered in the title. Can sue us. We've disclosed it.
[02:34:20] Unknown:
Before you, sign it, can you line that out?
[02:34:28] Unknown:
I doubt it. And who knows how it's worded? It could be pretty hard to find it. Right? I mean, those paperwork, that whole thing is to Well, they break the law by your consent. You know? Well, get the
[02:34:47] Unknown:
a hold of the package, split it up amongst people, and find all the stuff.
[02:35:07] Unknown:
I think the the better way out is trying to get private loans with people and, not run it through their system. But a lot of those private loans, whose paperwork do they use? They just copy what an attorney copied for a lot of these other situations, that banks use. So there's that. And bottom line is we're all enslaving each other together, you know, as a big happy group of morons going on down the road, enforcing all these laws on each other and, you know, not having a clue really.
[02:36:17] Unknown:
Self policing.
[02:36:43] Unknown:
You say, morons. I say, fools. What's the difference? You say you say morons. I lost my voice. You say morons. I say fools. Is there a difference?
[02:36:58] Unknown:
Well, I'll tell you something that's different. I got a girlfriend taken care of, and, she got some flowers from somebody in a bag and, like, a Christmas bag gift. And she told me to take everything that's in the bag, you know, up to where, the room is that people go up there in, you know, communication area, for the rest of the people going up there washing clothes and everything else. But so I started unloading the bag and it was a thing of flowers and a basket. And it came to me that I thought she was gonna use that on my grave when I died. So I come back downstairs to her room and say, yeah. I thought you were gonna use that on my grave When I died, she said, I'm not ready to kill you yet.
I said, oh, okay.
[02:37:56] Unknown:
So it's supposed to be a joke, though.
[02:38:08] Unknown:
Why have a grave? Cremation, dust to dust, ashes to ashes.
[02:38:16] Unknown:
Well, that it was just a joke. I was just making it up. You know? But there were flowers in the basket that, I told she was telling me to put on the table up there to for anybody to have them. It just came to me. You know? Enjoy the life.
[02:39:00] Unknown:
Plus, you get that reincarnation going on. Right? Linda Louise had a neighbor and friend who was just reincarnated. I don't know about cremation, though.
[02:40:15] Unknown:
Well, thank you, Joe, for that that lovely flower story. And was that Bruce?
[02:40:29] Unknown:
Yes. Bruce.
[02:40:37] Unknown:
That was my way of breaking the ice today, you know, because everybody's going crazy. So I got off, and I got back on.
[02:41:04] Unknown:
People are crazy according to that country song by the same title. People are crazy. God is great. Be or is good, and people are crazy. But the title is people are [email protected]. Lovely story.
[02:41:24] Unknown:
Can I can I correct you on people and person? I think persons are crazy, Not people.
[02:41:38] Unknown:
Well, the psych ward down the title. Down here at the psych ward down here,
[02:41:43] Unknown:
they keep Song title. Singing. Song Do you hear what I hear?
[02:41:50] Unknown:
Christmas. I don't know. I just can't
[02:41:53] Unknown:
deal with it.
[02:41:58] Unknown:
I see things that others don't. Am I crazy too? Am I like everybody else?
[02:42:07] Unknown:
Do you hear what
[02:42:11] Unknown:
I
[02:42:18] Unknown:
Well, you can be crazier.
[02:42:23] Unknown:
What do you hear? A doctor. What do you hear?
[02:42:54] Unknown:
The opening words are this old man and me met at a bar and we etcetera etcetera.
[02:43:16] Unknown:
2 Jews walked into a bar. The second one should have ducked.
[02:43:29] Unknown:
Okay. Why?
[02:43:36] Unknown:
So we didn't hit his head on the bar.
[02:43:57] Unknown:
I like that one.
[02:44:00] Unknown:
Well, maybe he was going in for a circumcision.
[02:44:09] Unknown:
He woulda had to have a forethought for that.
[02:44:24] Unknown:
Well, ain't that what Jews do?
[02:44:32] Unknown:
They got the whole damn world doing it. The there it's like a a a $250,000,000,000 industry, for skin cosmetics, plastic surgery. Them Jew women, they got, penis head, faces. Oh my god. It's it's unbelievable.
[02:44:59] Unknown:
Well, I'm lucky. I'm not circumcised. Not yet. I'm Presbyterian.
[02:45:12] Unknown:
GSM I. Sounds like sounds like you were circumvented.
[02:45:17] Unknown:
Yep. I've come up from the French Huguenot, Lynch. My grandmama's last name, growing up was a Gillebo. How about that that word? Gillebo.
[02:46:01] Unknown:
Did you have a Gilly suit?
[02:46:03] Unknown:
No. Someone call them Gilbo's or something like that. Sometimes. I think they do that in Louisiana. Now this Abbeville is an Abbeville down there too. And, that's where they were sent to to start living off in in United States or the other world back then. And I happen to have the biggest festival in the in the world in Abbeville, Louisiana every year. I've never been there. I wanted to go down there when I was at Louisiana Tech, but didn't get to go. Can you hear me?
[02:48:05] Unknown:
Anybody?
[02:48:11] Unknown:
Yeah. I hear you.
[02:48:13] Unknown:
Okay. Yeah. I've been clicking. Sorry. I'm sorry. Anyway
[02:48:20] Unknown:
Oh, yeah. You got another joke? We everybody can hear you. The whole world can hear you. Whole universe can hear you.
[02:48:28] Unknown:
Yeah. Okay. Well, I I discovered a little little remedy for, television control and telephone and, every little thing I got on on my armrest on my recliner, and they keep falling off, the armrest. So, I'm having to pick them up off the floor. They go down in the the bottom of the seat, with the cushion underneath the cushion. I'm fishing them out every time all the time. So I decided, well, I had bought some rubber bands. So I figured, what the heck? I'll put rubber bands around the controls because the rubber bands are gripped with fabric, and it won't slide off, and it works. Just to give you a little hint, it's, instead of looking for all your controls, it'll still be unharmed when you leave.
It won't fall in the in the hole. This might contribute to, science fiction science fiction. That's I fixed something. That's science fiction. So there you go.
[02:50:02] Unknown:
You're you're so smart.
[02:50:06] Unknown:
Sounds like you rubber fixed it.
[02:50:10] Unknown:
Well, I'm a rubber band freak. Okay? Now I just happened to buy a bag of rubber bands at Walmart, you know, different colors and stuff. They're pretty rubber bands, you know, in all sizes. So they'll fit everything. I'm thinking about putting a rubber band on my car to lock it up instead of locking the key. You know? I think I got one big rubber band I can do that with.
[02:51:02] Unknown:
Hey, Bruce.
[02:51:04] Unknown:
Yes, ma'am.
[02:51:05] Unknown:
There is no outer space, is there? Just the Outer space. Flatter Mhmm. Just the flatter and just the flatter than the firmament.
[02:51:18] Unknown:
Well, what about now? Or
[02:51:21] Unknown:
And and the heavens above. The heavens above.
[02:51:25] Unknown:
But Well, I've been there before.
[02:51:28] Unknown:
You have?
[02:51:29] Unknown:
Yeah. I've been there and come back again.
[02:51:32] Unknown:
Is it space or heaven?
[02:51:34] Unknown:
Heaven. Oh. They said I was too ornery to be in heaven so they sent me back to Earth.
[02:51:42] Unknown:
They said you were too what?
[02:51:44] Unknown:
They sent me back to hell, Earth.
[02:51:47] Unknown:
Because they said you were too what?
[02:51:50] Unknown:
I was too artery up there. So they sent me back to hell.
[02:51:55] Unknown:
Back on earth again. That that makes sense.
[02:51:59] Unknown:
No. Nothing makes sense down here. Now I have, you know, reversed, a a real life reading, and the lady came up with all kind of stuff. It was unreal. So I was a king at one time in my life. Stages. And I was a good king. Looked after the people. Anyway, I was trying to she she was on the run, and she had met me and wanted me to learn ideology from her, and I did. And, I just look it in your eyes and tell what's going through your body. And, she had done a review on me on my past lives. And all that that's one of the things. She said, oh, you were a king at one time in your lifespans, and, you were good.
You you did well with the people, and they liked you. And, I I guess I'm still carrying that on, you know, with what I'm doing here today or now. I make light of things and, make people laugh, enjoy themselves, bring information they never heard before. You know? And and this is, you know, giving something to give to others. That's what we're doing here. Yeah. Every one of us. And I've always had a positive outlook on everything I ever did. I mean, it was all positive. No negative. If I fell flat flat on my face even, I would get back up and do it again or do something else to get success, and it always kind of planned out. You know?
And I had challenges and still do like we all did. But I make and I understand the challenges I got, but I use them to go forward just like being free with the affidavit. I knew what the affidavit was 20 years ago, but I never had to use it as Roger has brought to us for freedom. It took me 20 years to get there. I didn't give up.
[02:54:53] Unknown:
Do you really think you've had a past life or past lives?
[02:54:59] Unknown:
Yes. I do.
[02:55:02] Unknown:
How many? Yep. 1?
[02:55:05] Unknown:
Oh, no. Many. Multitudes. Oh. But she was just reflect reflecting on me being a king when she was going back in my different lives. And, you said you were a king at some point in time in your lifeline lifelines, and you were a good king to the people. And they all loved you. So and she didn't go by. I didn't sit down with her and go through the other. She didn't have time when she was telling me this. And, but she said she she can read different lifetime lines and stuff like that. And she she was an audiologist too, and she was teaching audiology. And she wanted me to take the class. I had no, you know, I I you know, I when I was, I think I was in 9th grade, I did a design of the fly, metamorphosis of the fly.
This is how the detailed thing I drew out of the of the fly metamorphosis of the fly. And, biology teacher told my mother. I said she said, do you know, anything about what Bruce is doing in the classroom in biology? And I she said, no. I don't know. I said, well, I I got a a highly detailed, outline of, you know, the life of the 4 wide. And, it's so detailed. It's just unreal, and and you might wanna talk to your doctor to see about medical illustration. And, you said she said, I'm gonna see if he'll let me keep it. I'm just she was just telling my mother this because I can use it as a demonstration to other students coming up.
And, so, you know, my mother went to our doctor and started talking about what the biology teacher told her. And he said, oh, man. Let me tell you something. As a doctor, medical illustration is teaching us how to do things, and there's only 5 different medical schools that, that have, medical illustration in it. But first, you have to finish in college in the top five of your class, graduating class. Well, that put me out of out of bounds with it. I wasn't even hardly making the to get into college. But, anyway, I did get to college and just, Louisiana Tech.
Oh, and the teacher did keep the, drawing I had, illustration I had of the menopause. Of the flight.
[02:58:57] Unknown:
So you were pretty much as a king, you were lord of the flies.
[02:59:03] Unknown:
Well, you know, thank you. That's an that's an honor. Thank you for that.
[02:59:12] Unknown:
Hey, Jack. Is Sarah here. Mind if I make a comment for a minute?
[02:59:17] Unknown:
Sure.
[02:59:18] Unknown:
Hey. Great. I just wanted to bring everybody up. I heard Sketch's comment about the El Salvador in, just a minute.
[02:59:40] Unknown:
You were gargled out. We we couldn't understand what you said there. I
[02:59:44] Unknown:
can't, seem to stop this.
[02:59:48] Unknown:
Oh.
[02:59:51] Unknown:
I'm looking for it. I mean, you'd
[03:00:18] Unknown:
It
[03:00:22] Unknown:
finally stopped. But, I need to bring back up the information that I had on it. I was quite aware about, El Salvador, but I was also more aware of Roger Ver. Everybody know who he was? He was they nicknamed me the Bitcoin Jesus. And it was quite some time ago when I got involved and knew about several things. One, listening to Roger, he was pretty much the only guy that was out there really promoting Bitcoin next to, Antonopoulos. And
This mirror stream on the Global Voice Radio Network is brought to you in part by mymitobust.com for support of the mitochondria like never before. Also, fatfix.com, brand new product still in prelaunch. Check it out. Phatphix.com. It's also brought to you by iteroplanet.com and the Price International Iteracare terahertz frequency wand. Here's more info about that. The Iteracare
[00:00:47] Unknown:
device has the ability to awaken dormant stem cells in the bone marrow. Yes. We have slipping stem cells in our bone marrows. As you keep blowing this on your spine, you're activating these stem cells. And guess what? You're gonna create brand new lungs, brand new kidneys. Eventually, as you keep using this over time, you will have brand new organs, glands, and tissues in your bodies. And that's a great news. You have to keep blowing this on your spine because this is what the great Hippocrates said. There's a way to hit the bones, then all diseases can be treated. Activate that. Awaken that stem cells in your bone marrows.
Hit the bones using the future of medicine, which is frequency. This is your time. Grab your one device
[00:01:41] Unknown:
right now. For more information on the IteraCare classic terahertz frequency wand, go to iteraplanet.com. That's iteraplanet dotcom. Forward moving and focused on freedom. You're listening to the Global Voice Radio Network. And, yes, of course, we would love to change the world, and that's what we work on doing. 6 days a week, Monday through Saturday, 11 AM to 1 PM EST. This is the Radio Ranch with Roger Sales who, is with us, in no. Actually, he dropped out. It's gonna take him a minute. They must have reinstituted rolling blackouts in, in Ecuador.
Give a couple of minutes for, for him to join us. In the meanwhile, I can talk about the platforms that we're on. Today, we're actually on 2 of them. We're on Eurofolks Radio dotcom. Thanks to, pastor Eli James, and we're on Global Voice Radio Network. Our website where you can find all kinds of information is The Matrix Docs, the matrix, d o c s dot com. You can find links to Eurofolc Radio. You can find links to Global Voice Radio Network, and you can also find links to free conference calls. You can join us live on the show, live and in person as it were.
Good morning, everybody. While we're waiting for Raj, let's, let's open up the mics. Does anybody have anything they wanna talk about right out of the gate this morning? Come on. Don't be shy. Star 6. That'll do.
[00:04:22] Unknown:
I'm not shy.
[00:04:25] Unknown:
Morning, Joe. How you doing?
[00:04:30] Unknown:
Doing well. Thank you. Just a comment from yesterday with, regarding Brent Winters. And he you remember him talking about Randy Cook and raw material economics and all this kind of stuff? Yeah. Well, something that came up in the, it's not new news, but it resurfaces every time these budget deals come across. They always bring up the farm bill. And if you think back, even as long as you can remember,
[00:05:14] Unknown:
when we get in a budget crisis, they bring up the farm bill.
[00:05:19] Unknown:
And always keep that in mind. And I don't purport to be a expert on this. Gene Schroeder is, as is Randy Cook. But, the deal is that if they do not pass a farm bill, then all of the current agricultural policy goes back to the Agricultural Adjustment Act of 1949, which requires parity pricing of agricultural products. And USDA, I think it's weekly, publishes priority pricings for various crops, be it wheat, corn, cotton, etcetera. And, those prices have to they they have to maintain an economy to support those prices. But that's part of the rub on all this that nobody knows about.
And it's somewhat complicated, but that's just something that, if Brent comes back on next week, they've or maybe wanna talk about it anytime. And like I say, I don't purport to be an expert, but something you need to pay attention to.
[00:06:54] Unknown:
Whether or not they pass a, current farm bill?
[00:06:59] Unknown:
If they do not pass the current farm bill, it re by law, it reverts to the act of 49, which requires parity pricing for agricultural products.
[00:07:12] Unknown:
What do you mean by parity pricing?
[00:07:16] Unknown:
Parity pricing is the prices farmers received during what was called the golden age of agriculture, which was 1917 to 1919, I think, as I remember. And those were the highest prices paid for agricultural products relatively relative to all other production.
[00:07:50] Unknown:
Do you think World War I had anything to do with those prices, Joe?
[00:07:55] Unknown:
It did. But, say, that was part of the scheme that, parity pricing was part of the agricultural adjustment act of 33. And once all that expired and they went through all the nuances of so the supreme court and all these other different entities that Roosevelt created, they ended up in 49 with a new agricultural adjustment act, and everything is predicated on that. It allowed them to as I understand it, and like I say, there's people that are much more better informed on this than myself, but you can go to USDA's website and you can find parity pricing for the week. Those are published weekly as I remember.
And I encourage everyone to do that, and you would see just and and it's not that they were to pay farmers
[00:09:07] Unknown:
for
[00:09:09] Unknown:
parity price. They were to maintain market conditions to support parity pricing, which they don't do. They they take it and regulate everything. And then if the prices aren't what they need to be, they kick in price support, which does not bring it up to parity pricing. But this is how they manipulate agriculture and let big big agriculture overtake the small farm.
[00:10:04] Unknown:
Drives a small farmer out of business.
[00:10:06] Unknown:
Absolutely. Absolutely. Because if you jump through the right hoops, you can get megabucks out of USDA.
[00:10:19] Unknown:
So what effect do you think that would have on on farming as we know it, either way it goes?
[00:10:28] Unknown:
To do what? To maintain see, maintaining parity prices is not to be you know, my thinking is it's not to be done at through price support is to create market conditions that allows those prices to go high. Well, what we have done is fostered everything to for maximum production, which drives prices down. And seeing, like, with ethanol, with the GMO corn, we have to have the ethanol plants or we'd be throwing corn in the rivers due to overproduction. So, you know, it's a it's an interesting study, and, you know, I would encourage you, Paul, to, try to get, Brent to get, Randy Cook on one of his programs and discuss this.
[00:11:39] Unknown:
Question, Joe.
[00:11:42] Unknown:
Go ahead.
[00:11:45] Unknown:
If it reverted back to 49 legislation, would that mean that, food prices would skyrocket?
[00:11:59] Unknown:
Probably. But, see, they have they have manipulated everything, and they just keep trying to plug the dike. And, eventually, the dike's gonna break. And it's all because of how they have now this is my opinion. It's all how they have manipulated the economy through false economies. And it's, you know, oh, what a tangled web we leave. But, I'm not the one to be the spokesman on this, but, there's those that are very knowledgeable of it. Jane's very knowledgeable of this, act of 49, and Randy Cook, who is president of National Organization For Raw Materials. He is very well versed on it.
Very well versed.
[00:13:15] Unknown:
So what you're saying is it would be a good idea to get, Randy Cook and Gene Schroeder together and, just kinda be a fly on the wall while they scull it out.
[00:13:29] Unknown:
Well yeah. Yeah. And, you know, I don't know that they need to be on the same program, but,
[00:13:40] Unknown:
you know,
[00:13:42] Unknown:
they both would have a lot to add to the conversation into the history of why we're where we are today. And, you know, like I say, they keep sticking their fingers in the holes in the dyke, and, they have they don't have enough fingers. They just don't have enough fingers, and the dam's breaking as I see it.
[00:14:15] Unknown:
Right.
[00:14:17] Unknown:
Well,
[00:14:20] Unknown:
no. I guess we're gonna have to touch I think they're using their finger to poke more holes in the dike.
[00:14:31] Unknown:
Well, they only have so they only have so many fingers.
[00:14:36] Unknown:
Joel Salatin would be also great to get the point of view of the smaller farmer. You know, they just shut down another chicken manufacturer in Sacramento area for bird flu. And chickens and eggs have been going up left and right. I mean, I'd say that the eggs went up, probably 50% in a month. How long can that go long? Because we can't afford a chicken egg.
[00:15:07] Unknown:
My question is, how can that be? Something's wrong something's wrong when you have those kind of moves in the marketplace. I can see them going up or down 50% over time, but in a few weeks, something's amiss here, folks.
[00:15:34] Unknown:
Yeah. They're they're doing the same thing with the that they did with COVID. They give the PSA test, which is not an accurate test on animals, and they condemn them. I mean, they're just using a different method than FDR did when he went out and called animals. They're just using a new excuse.
[00:16:03] Unknown:
If you ask me, I'd say they were lying about giving them them tests. They're not testing any of these animals. They're just coming on farmers' properties, ranchers, whatever, and telling them, oh, we found one of your birds or your cows that has this, and it's like, you better do something about it or we're gonna and, you know, it's a fear factor thing, and it they're lying. They lie about everything. They these animals don't have this freaking this whatever they claim they have.
[00:16:34] Unknown:
Right.
[00:16:41] Unknown:
Nor do the people.
[00:16:47] Unknown:
Exactly.
[00:16:51] Unknown:
I just wanted to bring that subject up that for future conversation, not to
[00:16:56] Unknown:
It's very important subject, Joe. We appreciate you bringing that up because I, you know, I got a buddy in South Dakota, and he is one of those, you know, not quite a mega farmer. You know, he just works for a guy, but that guy's got, you know, and it's all it's almost all these people aren't growing food. They're growing ethanol. They're they're growing soy oil. It's crazy.
[00:17:24] Unknown:
You are exactly correct. You're exactly correct. Who the heck is growing the food? And then go back to I know there's a few of us here that are old enough to remember the United Farm Workers strikes out in California back during the sixties fifties sixties. Remember any of that? I I barely I was you know? When I when I was a kid, I thought, man, oh, man. Those sorry darn Mexicans. You know? What are they doing striking? You know, they ought to be out there working and yadi, dadi, dadi. Well, what was happening is they were fight fighting the illegal immigrants, the illegal aliens, if you will.
Yes. We're coming in as what they call scabs and undercutting their labor prices. Mhmm. And what happened you know, this is more of that some of this United Fruit Company stuff. Yeah. This is what the produce companies are held in such concentration now is because they took out the small producer.
[00:18:43] Unknown:
And who was controlling the border?
[00:18:46] Unknown:
There you go. So, you know, it's the hell of a mess, and they lie lie lie lie lie. And Right. You know, big business is is not bad if it's truthful, but they lie about the the schemes that they use to move things.
[00:19:12] Unknown:
So anyway There's a there's a California senator that's 4 or 5 generations of small California farmer, and he says that everything that this legislature has passed in the last 20, 30 years has been passed to put the small family farm out of business.
[00:19:33] Unknown:
Yep.
[00:19:34] Unknown:
And so we can't feed ourselves because Atoo grew all the food.
[00:19:38] Unknown:
Well, there's still 80% of the according to this guy, there's still 80% of the land mass in the state that we're farming, but they're they're asking for help to to be able to survive. I mean, the other thing it does, it it drives the small guy who doesn't really wanna get any bigger. It drives these farms bigger and bigger and bigger.
[00:20:03] Unknown:
Right. Back
[00:20:05] Unknown:
back home, you know, when I was growing up as a kid, you know, a 200 acre farm was the big farm because it's mostly dairy area. Maybe you you milk 80 cows, you know? Now, jeez, you're a you're a hobbyist if you if you ain't milk milking 1500. Right. You know?
[00:20:25] Unknown:
And then think about all of that all of that sludge that comes out of them cows and what they're doing with it. You know?
[00:20:36] Unknown:
All the waste that In a lot of in a lot of cases, Dave, they the the cows stand on slotted floors. They they crap through it. It's mixed to 10 to 1 with water, and it's pumped out on the fields.
[00:20:49] Unknown:
I know. And they're they're doing that with humanure.
[00:20:55] Unknown:
And and you better have a backup system to your electrical because if the power goes out, they've got huge, like, 36 inch fans in these farms to make sure that that pit doesn't gas the cows.
[00:21:07] Unknown:
Am I right?
[00:21:11] Unknown:
So, you know, on a small farm, you know, 1010 20 acres, you can control all that nor you know, with just normal farming practices, you don't even gotta worry about it.
[00:21:22] Unknown:
Well, that's the point when when, people were milking 20 to 40 head of cows, all that manure went back out on the land as natural fertilizer. Yeah. And the sun cooked all the bad stuff out of it, but now it's concentration. Concentration more poisoning the cow.
[00:21:54] Unknown:
Sorry, Joe.
[00:21:57] Unknown:
I'm sorry, Mike. I'm sorry. Microsoft is such a gigantic piece of garbage.
[00:22:05] Unknown:
What happened?
[00:22:07] Unknown:
I I don't know what happened. It just went blank and it starts going back. I think it was they it looks like because I had to deal with it on the desktop computer because we had electricity off last night for an hour or 2. When I came up, I had to okay a Skype update. And I think that's what this was all about this morning, but I forgot. You know, the it's portable. The stuff's very small. I've got bad eyesight up close. I've I've missed the damn password by 1 digit. It's just been a I I if I could get my hands on Bill Gates, I don't think he'd live 10 minutes. I'm telling you. Just
[00:22:44] Unknown:
take a breath. Just breathe deep.
[00:22:47] Unknown:
God, I hate these.
[00:22:51] Unknown:
Okay. Just put a put a Sharpie between your fingers and pretend you're smoking. Alright. Let me smoking a cigar.
[00:22:59] Unknown:
Well, it just hadn't been a great morning. Anyway, let me get situated here. Maybe I can probably can salvage some
[00:23:10] Unknown:
Oh, we've we've been having we've been having a fun discussion about
[00:23:14] Unknown:
You and your crappy ass company.
[00:23:18] Unknown:
Roger named them Blunt.
[00:23:23] Unknown:
We've been, we've been having a discussion about agriculture, and, Joe brought up an an interesting point that, they have not, renewed the, agricultural act. And if they don't, if they fail to do that, we revert back to the Agricultural Act of 1949. And Lord only knows what kind of effect that's gonna have on food production and
[00:23:57] Unknown:
things like that. It's just something that we've been Well, you just got no telling what's in our future. K? I mean, really.
[00:24:05] Unknown:
What's what's important to remember here, it's it's not it's the farm bill.
[00:24:12] Unknown:
It's the farm bill, not the That's the one that's under under stress on this continuing resolution? Is that tied up with this? Okay. Yes. But see,
[00:24:25] Unknown:
it's the farm bill now, but the, agricultural adjustment act of 1949 is the issue that no one talks about.
[00:24:36] Unknown:
I see.
[00:24:38] Unknown:
And, you heard, Brent speaking of Randy Cook yesterday. Did Roger?
[00:24:45] Unknown:
Yes.
[00:24:46] Unknown:
Randy Randy Cook will be a very good candidate for a discussion on this issue. He is he's up to date on it.
[00:24:54] Unknown:
Mhmm.
[00:24:55] Unknown:
All the nuances, and he's very knowledgeable of the history of this. He's president of National Organization For Raw Materials.
[00:25:04] Unknown:
Okay. Well, let's see how this, go ahead.
[00:25:12] Unknown:
He's from Michigan.
[00:25:14] Unknown:
Okay.
[00:25:18] Unknown:
Question. Well, let's see how the how the vote on the bill. They're supposed to vote on it, I think, again this morning. They're gonna try and do a Saturday if they had enough Republicans that didn't leave to go home for Christmas already. So it's just a big f up. I mean, just upside down, capital f, everything you want. Them trying to scramble to get you know what else was in that thing? That 1500 one, Joe, is total, legal immunity from all the January 6th committee people. Yep. So we'll see what happens. They're supposed to vote on it again this morning if they had a, corn. And a $70,000
[00:25:59] Unknown:
raise for the the them.
[00:26:03] Unknown:
Yeah. For Crenshaw. Yeah. I know. Okay. Alright. Wow. It hadn't been a real good morning all over overall, but it's a pretty good morning. I had one of our really kind listeners sent me a very, very generous donation. I sure do appreciate it, Frank. So, if you're listening, that's probably the brightest spot of the morning. We were supposed to have a show on the money system today. Joan, are you with us?
[00:26:41] Unknown:
Yeah. Yes.
[00:26:43] Unknown:
Okay. Well, we'll get to you in just a second here. Oh, I'm doing nothing today. I hate Microsoft. I hate them with a purple passion. Okay. Well, let's see. I'm sorry to be so flustered. It's not like me, generally. But they these people whenever I have a bad day, it is almost always exclusively because of Microsoft and something they've done.
[00:27:19] Unknown:
Alright. Hey, Roger. In in the in the northern hemisphere, this is our shortest day. So are are you at your longest day now?
[00:27:28] Unknown:
Well, I don't I don't we're on the equator. I think all of our days are equal.
[00:27:34] Unknown:
K.
[00:27:37] Unknown:
I mean, really? I tried. It is the summer winter solstice, isn't it?
[00:27:43] Unknown:
Yes. It should be our shortest. Okay. Day longest hours. Yes. Dark.
[00:27:50] Unknown:
Yeah. No. Our our, sun sun, rise and sunsets are very, very predictable and very stable. So Okay. I've got Interesting. What I've got here, Paul, I got some trash on my screen from these dumbasses that I don't want. We're now sending your browser. I'll I'll
[00:28:14] Unknown:
jump I'll jump in there, and I'll take care of it.
[00:28:17] Unknown:
Thank you.
[00:28:19] Unknown:
Okay. Joan and the rest of the audience, does anybody else we went over this Thursday with Joan, and we were using the illustration that she went in and bought something, a car, I think, we used and went in and signed the promissory note. And, Joan, you kept saying where when did they lend me the money or something to that effect. So did you in thinking about that for the last 2 days, have you got that straight in your mind or not?
[00:28:48] Unknown:
Well, I got it more straight and, so and I I watched something for 15 minutes, which was very helpful, which was a lawyer asking a banker, questions about the mortgage. And that was very helpful. And thank you, Sketch. And well, so but then I had for you, I had, 2 or 3 or 4 questions,
[00:29:16] Unknown:
which was, do do you do you want me to ask them now, or did you wanna talk about Well, I just wanted to know if you'd had had gotten that. See, that's the that's the pivot of everything. Is that transaction of there is no money. First of all, that's one you know, when I tell y'all to try and use the word currency? K. Money is gold, silver, and Bitcoin. Yeah. Money is not Federal Reserve notes and because when you ever see the word note in any legal context, it's it's meaning is always a promissory note. You just minimalize that, Paul. It's always a a promissory note. That, Paul.
It's always a a promissory note. And, a promissory note as I was illustrating to you in your example, we're talking is always a promise to pay, which means it's always debt. The whole system is built on debt. There is no money that circulates except Bitcoin. K? I guess gold, silver, whatever, it circulates a little too. But people have you ever heard of Gresham's law, Joan?
[00:30:25] Unknown:
I don't know.
[00:30:27] Unknown:
Okay. Well, there's a law in economics called Gresham's law. It's very, very simple. It says bad money drives good money out of circulation. We should rephrase it and say debt money drives real money out of circulation. K? Which means if you've got gold and silver and Bitcoin like I've you might, you hold it and put it back in a drawer. You don't go out and spend it. Bad money drives good money out of circulation. K? That's called Gresham's law. It it's never wrong. Okay? It's never wrong. The whole system you've heard the saying, there is no money. There's only credit. You've heard people's okay. Well, that's what that promissory note is.
I, Joan, and Costa Rica, promised to pay. Now that's a promise, a promise to pay. You're gonna pay its debt. So many payments of so much interest, principal, interest, etcetera for this many months. That's a promissory note. It's also because we're under the Babylonian merchant code which is having to deal with all this stuff, contracts, etcetera. It also creates you created the 10th whatever the 1,000 of dollars are for the car when you sign that note because you said, I promise to pay so many payments of so much principal and so much interest for so many months. Right?
[00:32:13] Unknown:
Yes.
[00:32:14] Unknown:
Is that credit or is that money? That's credit. You're promising to pay, and you sign it. Jonah, I I I have a sense that you're not getting this, and I don't know how much simpler I can put it.
[00:32:34] Unknown:
Well, okay. Let me put it this way. Can we talk about a house mortgage?
[00:32:39] Unknown:
Because Okay. Alright. Just fine with me. I don't care. It doesn't matter what the thing is, what you're purchasing. The principle is the same in all of them. Have you have you bought a house before, Joan?
[00:32:54] Unknown:
Yes.
[00:32:55] Unknown:
I mean, I I don't really know yeah. Okay. You go into the closing room. Right? There's a stack of about, oh, I don't know, 3, 4 inches of papers that you gotta sign while you're sitting there. Well, guess what the first one is?
[00:33:13] Unknown:
Promissory note?
[00:33:15] Unknown:
Yes. They want you to get that out of the way quick because that's what makes the money. Nothing happens without the promissory note and Joan promising to pay 30 years of mortgage. It's so much principle, so much interest for whatever 30 years is. 360 months, whatever it is. K? Same principle. Alright. A mortgage is much more insidious because of the way it's structured and that you pay you almost virtually most people never pay in much principal on a mortgage because they found out through studies that the average mortgagee only stays in the house 7 years.
So for the first 15 years of a 30 year mortgage, you're paying almost all interest. Oh, you might pay 50¢ or dollar on the principal, but for those 15 years, it's almost all pure interest. That's why the bankers command the housing market. It's nothing but profit for them generally. Okay? Does that make sense to you?
[00:34:26] Unknown:
Yes.
[00:34:28] Unknown:
Okay. So anyway, the same principle's the same. I, Joan, promise to pay so much per month principal interest for this many years, months, whatever. So, the money, you just purchase something. What they do on that promissory note, you see, is they only money, what we call money, what green pieces are now this is part of the problem right there, is we don't know and don't identify whether it's debt or whether it's money. So this is another way they've got us buffaloed because we call that money. We're we're even at our stage, in our group here, with our understanding, and we still do it. That's how deeply this is involved. It it been implanted in your subconscious mind. Okay? It's not money. Yeah. It's debt. You created it when you signed that promissory note.
It's also called in merchant law, commercial paper. Because they can trade it between people. Debt has a value, and the value of debt is not only the principle that you agreed to, but the compound interest that compounds on top of that, which was never created. No one ever sat down and said, I promise to pay all the compound interest on all the existing principles that are circulating. Because all they ever do is loan the principal into existence. Let's say your house was a $200,000. When you did that promissory note, you put $200,000 into the circulating medium. Let me see if you if I can get you to look at it a different way. Do you know what a boiler is? Not a not a kitchen boiler, but like an industrial boiler, Joan?
Not really, but I can imagine. Well, it's a big vessel. Okay? It can be, I guess, any shape. It's a big vessel where in one end of it, they put water in and and and then they apply heat and the water boils and the exit is steam and the steam goes to drive a generator. So it's this big vessel with all of this water in it that has different bleed off. There's a little levers here on it, here on it, there on it, and they can adjust that pressure inside. Okay? Or they can adjust what's in there by how much water they put in at the front or how much steam they take out at the back. Okay? Have you got me? Can you visualize that?
Okay. Well, then let's take that example and let's say the water in the front is when people on this is the money system now. When people are writing promissory notes and money is being put into the system because green paces pieces of paper with dead presidents on them that are sitting in a warehouse, well, they're not monetized. They're nothing but green pieces of paper with dead presidents on them. They don't have any value until they're monetized. The only way they're monetized is when someone takes out a loan and those green pieces of paper are loaned into circulation.
And that always means interest. But they never loan the interest. They only loan the principal. So this is where they make money out of thin air. Is that compounding interest that's inside that boiler with all the rest of the circulating currency in the culture in there and what they do is well, they got a little knob over here and they'll loosen it up. But what does that mean? Well, that means they're taking away the pressure on the inside. What does that mean? Well, they lower your taxes or they go excuse me. They go over and lower interest rates. And so, more people are alone and going and borrowing money because the interest rates are lower. Right?
Or they raise the interest rates like right now, where the mortgage rate goes up to 7%. There's not as many people taking out mortgages. They can't afford it. Okay? So do you are are you with me to this point?
[00:38:52] Unknown:
Yeah. Okay. Just don't for just don't forget, I have 4 questions.
[00:38:59] Unknown:
Let me just finish this, and let's see if you grasp it. Yes. Maybe I should answer your questions. But alright. Let let's let's reverse this. Let's leave it at the boiler right there, and let me hear your questions because I might be able to answer it in your questions. So let's do that.
[00:39:15] Unknown:
What are your questions, Joan? Okay. Okay. So so a person, I have, so okay. So I'm going to buy a house for $200,000. And, well and and so I go to the bank because I don't know anything else but to go get a mortgage from the bank. And the reason and then when I signed the promissory note and what and and and and and they give me and I'm thinking they get they are giving me, let's say, just say, to make it easy, $200,000.
[00:39:49] Unknown:
Be and No. They're not giving it to you. Joan. Joan. They're not giving it to you. You just created it in the note.
[00:39:58] Unknown:
Uh-huh. Okay. Right. Okay. Well, okay. So, I'm thinking I'm thinking that they, the the they're they're using my house as collateral. Of course. Okay. Okay. And so that's so they the way this is just I'm sorry. This is all as far as I've only gotten it so far. And that is that, so they're it's actually I'm not the promissory note is is I don't under 2 things 4 things. Now I have 4 questions, and they're all running together. But one is the the the if I'm paying interest on my own money. I mean, I'm I'm paying interest It's not your money. No. But my house, the collateral, the $200,000 value of my house.
[00:40:57] Unknown:
Okay. Yes. Is that's all that's loaned into circulation is the value of the collateral. All of the rest is money they make literally here. This is the one place they make money out of thin air. So they're monetizing your collateral, your house. Well, that's $200,000 that's in the circulating medium now. Right?
[00:41:27] Unknown:
Yeah.
[00:41:28] Unknown:
Well, if you pay it off for 30 years though, guess how guess how much you're gonna pay? You're gonna pay $600,000, but they only loan 200,000 into circulation. That 4th 100 that $400,000 is penalty and interest over 36 360 months. Yes. They do not loan the interest into circulation. The this is why it's a big game of musical chairs. And what you're trying to do is pay off your $600,000 so you don't get your house foreclosed on and some and and you gotta beat somebody else out of the collateralized mortgage that they loaned into circulation, and they lose their house and you don't.
It's musical chairs, debt musical chairs.
[00:42:26] Unknown:
How how is the bank able to foreclose on a house if the if this if it's the if it's my money and my house It's not my money, it's how how are they able to foreclose on a house when when they didn't even give me any money. They didn't No. They didn't.
[00:42:45] Unknown:
No. They didn't. Well, we you gave them the money, Joan.
[00:42:50] Unknown:
Oh, okay.
[00:42:52] Unknown:
In the in the process them the you created the currency when you signed the promissory note. I I don't know how much more basic I can get with you.
[00:43:05] Unknown:
Hey, Roger. This is a concept that we haven't been learned yet. And like everything else, it might take a few times talking about it because Okay. Well, I've been I've been talking about it for a year.
[00:43:19] Unknown:
Well, I've been talking about it for years. You don't understand it either?
[00:43:24] Unknown:
No. I'm I'm half lost also.
[00:43:27] Unknown:
Let Roger, is the fraud I have a question about the fraud. Is the fraud that the the fraud is their signature is the promissory note. The promissory note does not the promissory note does not say the the the promissory note is not letting the borrower know that the money is coming from him, the borrower.
[00:43:57] Unknown:
Correct. It's fraud. They don't loan you money. You loan them your signature on a promise to pay promissory note.
[00:44:08] Unknown:
Yeah. And one more thing about the fraud is the is is is the fraud is is why the borrower is paying interest? Who okay. I'll use me, John. On your day. If y if y I fly Joan is paying the interest to the bank No. For my fault. Can it be fraud, Joan, when you agreed to it?
[00:44:37] Unknown:
Okay. I I mean, you agreed to all this. You think they're loaning you money. You're loaning them your signature on a promissory note on every loan made in the world. Primarily in the United States. Okay. Well, let's go through the process again. Maybe this will help you. So when you sign that 4 inch stack of papers at the closing of your house, the very one on the very top is the promissory note. Because they wanna get that one out of the way first and have you concentrate on the other 4 inches of paper that's sitting in front of you that you're wishing you had a damn signature stamp for because your wrist gets limp after one of those sessions. Okay?
So now they've got your promise to pay. You just created for them. You just created $600,000, but they're only gonna loan 200 to put $200,000 of that into circulation. The interest, that other $400,000 comes out of thin air, literally. So now they take the promissory note back to the financial institution. And you're familiar with double entry bookkeeping. Correct, John? I know. I I know you said something about liability and whatever. Okay. Well, this is what allows them to do all this. It was created double entry bookkeeping was created in the 1500 over in the Medici in Italy when Medici and Venice and all those little strongholds. One of those financial centers came up with the idea of double entry bookkeeping.
It's simply a way of, yeah, you you give me a $100, and I owe it back to you. So I'm gonna enter that on the liability side of the ledger. You got assets on one side and liabilities on the other. And they got a balance or else something's wrong. Okay? So I you loaned me a $100. I put it down on my books in the liability section because I need to pay you that back. Do we understand that?
[00:46:56] Unknown:
Yes.
[00:46:57] Unknown:
Okay. So they come and put the note that you've just promised $600,000 is gonna come to them, but they're gonna take that note, and they're gonna take the double entry books at the at the financial institution, and they're gonna put that 200,000, 600,000 on the liability side of the ledger. There's the fraud. They don't it's a asset. It's not a liability. Do you understand that?
[00:47:32] Unknown:
It's on their the liability is on their in their books, on their side? Yes. Yes. Yes. Okay. They enter it as a liability,
[00:47:41] Unknown:
which is generally something you owe. Well, who do they owe that to? You just gave it to them. So they don't here here's what the rest of the process. Then they take that note, specifically mortgages, because all of them go to the Federal Reserve. K? Because they make all this huge money on it. So they take that and sell it to the Federal Reserve. And instead of $200,000, the Federal Reserve gives them back well, it'd be anyway, they discount it. They give it to less than face value in the secondary market. Then they take that value, whatever that is, and they give that to them in Federal Reserve notes, cash.
And they put that on the asset side of the ledger. So supposedly, the liabilities and the assets balance. Then they take the money they just got back from the Federal Reserve discounted on that note, and they go pay your house construction guy that built your house. They never loaned you money. You loaned them your signature on a promissory note that did the whole process. They were never out a penny, out of pocket, a single penny.
[00:49:10] Unknown:
I got that wrong. I got that wrong. Why why is the $600,000 a liability to them on their side, their liability to them?
[00:49:20] Unknown:
The fraud, Joan. That's the only way they can get this deal done and discounted into the secondary market. And then they tell you, well, we loaned you money, so you owe us all this interest. No. You gave them the money they loaned into circulation for the purchase of your house. Your house is collateral. The $200,000 is now circulating out there. It's brand new currency. It was never out there before. It's brand new. And on that 200 grand compiles over 360 months, $400,000. What you call There's the fraud. If all the let me let me see if I can get you another way, Joan. If all the loans in in circulate that are owed were paid, there would not be any circulating Federal Reserve notes. There'd be a whole bunch of debt left over all this interest, but there wouldn't be any circulating medium.
Okay. Now where are where are you?
[00:50:22] Unknown:
Okay. So you said I gave them
[00:50:26] Unknown:
promissory note that I gave them 6 100,000 dollars. No. No. No. Well, you did. In essence, if you pay the hold it, Joan. You did give them $600,000 if you pay out the whole 360 months. Right.
[00:50:41] Unknown:
Right. But so but it that seems like that would be an asset for them, not a liability because I've given them 200 to 600,000. Oh, Joan. Joan. Joan. I'm sorry. We can change the subject.
[00:50:56] Unknown:
Can somebody help me out here, please?
[00:51:00] Unknown:
It's a stream of income. It's a it's a it's a cash flowing your promissory note, your signature creates a stream of income. You're promised to pay just like a house that you buy, to to rent. So they can monetize that. And the fraud is they put it on the liability. They're lying, Joan. So that's part of the fraud. The first fraud is that it's an a loan, that they loaned you anything. Yeah. There's 2 frauds there. Is that helpful?
[00:51:33] Unknown:
Yes. Okay. Alright.
[00:51:39] Unknown:
Roger. Yes.
[00:51:42] Unknown:
This is Larry. How are you doing?
[00:51:44] Unknown:
I'm I've had better days, Larry. Go ahead.
[00:51:48] Unknown:
Hey. When you say it's loaned into circulation, are you saying that the money has to be printed, or is it just digits on a screen, or is it both? Well, I well, it doesn't make a damn whichever one it is.
[00:52:06] Unknown:
Really? But the only way this comes from the Federal Reserve Bank, one of their booklets. Okay? The only way money is monetized is when it's loaned into circulation.
[00:52:23] Unknown:
What does circulation mean? What is circulation?
[00:52:27] Unknown:
It means I give I have it and I give it to you and you give it to somebody else.
[00:52:33] Unknown:
Okay. Bye.
[00:52:34] Unknown:
Circulating dollar bill. God almighty. I got
[00:52:39] Unknown:
I got it. I got that part.
[00:52:42] Unknown:
Well, that's circulation. And there's Okay. Maybe there's a a $1,000,000,000,000 in circulation out there of of and that includes digital stuff too now, but used to be just Federal Reserve notes. Well, that's what's loaned into circulation. There's a $1,000,000,000,000 worth of people that went and signed promissory notes, But they never loaned the interest into circulation, Joan. They only loaned the amount. They're monetizing your collateral. If your house, fair market value, was valued at $200,000, That's how much they're gonna loan into circulation. But, Joan, how much are you gonna pay them back if you carry that to term?
You're gonna pay them 600,000. Well, you only loan 200 in. Where'd the other 400 come from?
[00:53:35] Unknown:
Interest.
[00:53:37] Unknown:
Oh, okay. But where did it come from? It was never loaned into circulation. It was created as compound interest on all of this collateralized more monetized collateral that was loaned into circulation.
[00:53:54] Unknown:
The interest came from me. Right? I paid them a little bit here, a little bit there, the over the years.
[00:53:59] Unknown:
Oh, no. You paid them a whole lot. You paid them a whole lot. Your house is only valued at 200,000 and you paid them 600,000. It wasn't a little bit here and a little bit there. It was a whole bunch over here.
[00:54:14] Unknown:
I know. But I mean, over the months years, I had enough of a little bit of money to pay them the interest over the years. And and so the interest came from me.
[00:54:27] Unknown:
No. The interest came from somebody else's loan.
[00:54:32] Unknown:
Oh, but no. I but I was out of pocket, the all those interest payments.
[00:54:37] Unknown:
Yes. And those people lost their house because they couldn't pay their mortgage because you beat them out of that interest and you were able to pay theirs. So when the game of musical chairs stopped, there wasn't a chair for them to sit down in.
[00:54:54] Unknown:
That's what you meant by musical chair. I get I okay. I got that part, I think.
[00:55:02] Unknown:
I don't care. Listen. I know it's complex. And and the story I told the other day, the way I learned this was I was I was a a dog for information just like some of you are. This bites you and you can't let it go. And even though I was working the next day, I'd stay up till 2 and 3 in the morning to listen to this show that was on WWCR. Because that was the only place we could get information in those days, Alice, outside of written information. Okay? And so I was listening to that show 1 night. I think it was like Water Oz or something, and they had a certified public accountant on there. He was from Chicago.
His name is, I'm assuming he's still alive, Tom Schauff, s c h a I believe it's 2 f's. And to my knowledge, they've just about scrubbed the Internet of his work and the other accountants that were also helping him teach people this. So he had somehow, don't still don't know how, qualified himself to do expert testimony in court cases, forensic accounting, which means he can make 500 plus dollars an hour on the stand as an expert witness. So as he was doing that, he realized that there was nowhere in the US to accredit CPAs to be able to do this.
I don't know how he did it somehow. So what he did is the formula for any successful business, find the need and fill it. So there's a need. So he opened a school to teach other certified public accountants how to become and qualify to do expert witness testimony. So that's what started all this. Okay? So one of the students in one of his classes was a federal bank regulator, and he was taking the class to do expert testimony. And he pulled Tom to the side, and he said every loan in America is a fraud. Right. And Tom Schauff, the expert public accountant said, what do you mean?
And he showed him what I'm attempting to explain to this audience. That's where it came from. 2 CPAs, one of them understood it, and the expert witness had no idea. And guess what, Joan? Neither does 99.999 9% of the people in the country. The whole thing, just like everything else, is a fraud.
[00:57:55] Unknown:
So why is the bank able to foreclose on a house when they don't because you didn't make the payment. But they don't but the they don't they didn't own the the $200,000
[00:58:09] Unknown:
that that They don't know. It doesn't matter. It doesn't matter. You promised to pay that payment, and you didn't pay it. And if you didn't pay 2 or 3 of them, they're they're gonna either sell sell the house on the courthouse steps or issue foreclosure proceedings because you didn't meet your obligation. You promised to pay that, and you didn't pay it.
[00:58:31] Unknown:
That's because you promised. Okay. Roger. Because when you sign a 200 papers when you're doing your closing, you already gave your rights. You have to do everything that goes, legally even, you know, before closing. You cannot read to it. Let let me Hey. Could I could I could I change a little bit in a different way, And maybe this will help. You know, in Costa Rica, their currency is cologne, but most people are buying their houses in dollars or in the market or the or the country, the government gets a $500,000,000 to to build a bridge or whatever they need. Now the International Monetary Fund or the World Bank or the United States, whoever gives them the 500,000,000, they just created $500,000,000.
So now Costa Rica, their currencies, Colon, cannot pay that loan with Colon. So they That's right. They need hard currency. In other words That's right. They need a lot of tourist tourist dollars coming in, or they have to sell a lot of pineapples or whatever they have, or they need, petroleum. So now they need to, get some dollars in whatever way, or sometimes they print their own currency so they could buy in the international, market a first, and they pay. But when they sign that contract, if they don't pay that money, they'll either be sent a big large committee of, international money. Frank, they have to go to austerity and start finding people just to gain dollars. Or eventually, like they did in Iraq or anybody else, they'll send the military and put their own bank to there. What? So it's the same thing. That's where it goes. It's the same thing as an individual, and in this case, a little bit bigger, but the same thing.
[01:00:11] Unknown:
And they insist you pay back you they insist you pay back the loan in dollars. If you're in Costa Rica, what's the exchange rate on the cologne to a dollar?
[01:00:22] Unknown:
Well, I think, like, 5 colognes is equal to $10.
[01:00:28] Unknown:
There the the cologne is stronger than the dollar?
[01:00:32] Unknown:
I guess No. It it should be around 500 of cologne. 500, more or less around 500, 600,
[01:00:39] Unknown:
to a dollar. Oh, yeah. That's what I meant. 500 colognes.
[01:00:45] Unknown:
That's a little that's a little better. So that tells you that the cologne and this is the to what they've got, the dollar has got all this strength in it, and it shouldn't have because it's, well, it's all all of them are in bad shape. Anyway, these are some of the reasons. Same thing with Argentina. That's why all the demands for dollars in Argentina because they had to pay back those IMF loans in dollars. And they're on the peso down there, and they got terrible monetary physical stuff. And they're scrambling for dollars, at least they used to be, so they could pay off these IMF loans. Except in this situation, we're trying to show you, it's the same process all over the world.
They always do you do you know yeah. Does any of y'all know any bankers that loan 1,000,000,000 of dollars without collateral on one side and and compound interest on the other? You know any of those bankers like that? Well, no. You don't because there ain't nothing. Okay? And Roger, I'm not. The whole system is set up so they can suck your essence with this interest. They call it vigorous. Who's trying to say something there?
[01:01:56] Unknown:
Hey, Roger. The dollar is not going anywhere at least in maybe 10 years from now because the whole world has been monetized. In other words, they owed money or dollars to the United States, the Federal Reserve, the World Reserve. So even even the British nation or any they stopped, trying to, do trade with dollar. Eat India, China, everybody owes something in dollars. Yeah. And they that's why the dollar this week got really strong because everybody needed dollars to pay their debt. So they start selling gold or big or whatever because they needed to pay the debt. And that's why Brazil right now is in trouble and most of this currency in the world because it'll take 10, 20 years for each country to get rid of all the dollars they owed. So the United States, the power and the military is in that currency that everybody in the world needs that dollar.
[01:02:52] Unknown:
Yeah. Man. That's how they Yeah. That's how can you put that's how they enforce their muscle is they bring in the military. That's what the military is for. That's why Woodrow Wilson wouldn't sign that $100,000,000 loan to China a 100 years ago. He didn't like the tax system. It was antiquated and burdensome according to his statement and administered by foreign agents. So the IRS is not a government agency. Who was saying may I there a second ago? Is that you, Sherry? That was Carolyn. It's Carolyn?
[01:03:33] Unknown:
Yes. What I wanted to just what I wanted to share is should you download? That's promissory note is what creates the money.
[01:03:45] Unknown:
That's what I've been trying to tell I've been telling trying to tell Joan that for 2 days, to a day and a half now. Go ahead. Yeah. So don't sign the mortgage.
[01:03:57] Unknown:
Get up. Take the keys. You're done. You created the money. Why are you signing mortgage papers? You already gave them the money.
[01:04:11] Unknown:
I ain't gonna sign no mortgage papers no more.
[01:04:14] Unknown:
Yeah. John, I'm trying to just go you said you didn't understand. I'm trying to explain it. Everything revolves around the promissory note. That's where you, when you sign it and agree to the terms, make money. You created that money. It was my currency. It was not circulating before. When you signed that promissory note, you created it.
[01:04:43] Unknown:
So take the keys and don't sign the mortgage.
[01:04:48] Unknown:
And if you did It it has nothing to do with the mortgage. I'm trying to illustrate a point here, please. Please. K? Yeah. Go go go find somebody that'll carry their own paper. That way, you don't have to do a mortgage. Or as we had, the our our buddy on here one day saying, well, there's all kinds of people with private money that'll loan it to you cheaper, than the bank. Go find go find some private money. Well, I'm trying to illustrate to Joan how this works and to the rest of the audience. There's some other people that evidently don't understand it either. Okay?
I'm gonna go into a whole different phase of it in a minute, but I want to make sure you understand this, Joan, and I don't know if you've grasped it yet.
[01:05:35] Unknown:
Well, I I've I've grasped a lot more since you started talking with me about it this morning than I did 2 days ago or whenever.
[01:05:46] Unknown:
Yeah. Because you're thinking they first of all, it's money. It's not money. It's debt. And the reason it's debt is because they're loaning it to you because you signed that promissory note and created it. So they're gonna loan it into circulation for you, and then they're gonna reap the long term benefits of interest and compound it. Yes, sir.
[01:06:07] Unknown:
Hey, Raj Karl again. Hey, what and and I'm, you know, I've got some confusion also. But when you say there's private money out there that would loan less than what the bank is, I've used private money in the past to purchase houses. And unless I'm misunderstanding,
[01:06:29] Unknown:
it cost me a whole lot more than it did. Okay. Well, I don't know. I've never done it. I thought he said it cost less, but there's ways to get a loan without going through a financial institution in this process. K?
[01:06:44] Unknown:
Yes.
[01:06:45] Unknown:
The only way I know of is to ask the person who's selling me the house to let me just pay them payments over time with no You could do that.
[01:06:55] Unknown:
That's called that's called carrying their own paper, and some people will do that.
[01:07:01] Unknown:
Well, what what about the people who won't do how are people supposed to buy a house if if they don't go find private money? Just like I was saying, if they don't qualify for a mortgage,
[01:07:11] Unknown:
if their if their payment history and their credit history isn't that good, they may not be able to get a mortgage. So what do they do now?
[01:07:21] Unknown:
But it's a little bit different when you go in private most most of the time. Because usually, it's somebody that has money, and they Yes. They lend the money, real money, real capital, technically, and use it with a little bit higher interest. And the term will be instead of 30 years, it'll be 10 years or something like that, depending the case. So you're not And then You're not you have to put put more down probably in your house.
[01:07:45] Unknown:
You're not creating money there. The the currency's already existing. They've got it. They're just giving it to you, and you're gonna pay them back that principal along with interest in your payments. You don't send it to the bank. They don't service it. The person that holds the property and the paper holds it and and gains from it.
[01:08:08] Unknown:
Another way of looking at it also is, even if you pay your house, even you buy everything in cash, you never use the credit card or take a loan for a car. But your neighbors are getting loans and and credit cards and signing that mortgage. Guess what's happening to your dollar in your bank? It's getting devalued. Even if you don't do it Yep. Your money is losing value because you're creating money out of in there.
[01:08:32] Unknown:
That that's another. No? Every time you use a credit card the, it's the interest that's,
[01:08:44] Unknown:
created out of thin air. Correct? Only. Only. Only.
[01:08:48] Unknown:
They're Right. Right. What collateralizes the rest of it? You answering the 2 questions, yes, and signing something. That's where it's created. Roger, may I? So I'm I'm trying to get to that point, but I can't get past this concept of you creating money when you sign a promissory note. What, Paul?
[01:09:13] Unknown:
Let me let me see if I understand this. When you sign a promissory note, you set up a, revenue stream, and then that revenue stream generates the money that pays for what you bought, what you signed for. When you pay interest, you are taking money from other revenue streams to pay that interest. So it's a huge Ponzi scheme, and it's destined
[01:09:46] Unknown:
to blow up. Oh, well, that's fine. That that's why there's never been a paper currency that's lasted more than a 100 years. I mean, the dollar today buys about less than 2% of what the dollar bought a 100 years ago. Well, where'd that come from? Well, that came from them diluting the value of the purchasing power with this scheme.
[01:10:12] Unknown:
It's not that that loaf of bread you bought went from 11¢ a loaf to $5. It's the dollar you spent to buy that loaf of bread is now only worth 44¢.
[01:10:26] Unknown:
Okay. Here, Joan. My gold that I bought so many years ago Yeah. Has gone from $300 or less to almost 3,000. So my question to you, has the value of the gold gone up?
[01:10:47] Unknown:
Or has the value of the dollar gone
[01:10:51] Unknown:
down?
[01:10:54] Unknown:
Which is the right answer.
[01:10:56] Unknown:
The the value of the dollar went down. Correct.
[01:11:01] Unknown:
Gold, I could 2000 years ago in Rome, I could take an ounce of gold to go buy a toga, a belt, some nice sandals to go have a nice dinner. Today in New York City, I can take an ounce of gold and go buy a hell of a nice suit, some nice shoes, a nice belt, and go out to one of those 5 star restaurants in New York City. It's purchasing power. It's not the number.
[01:11:29] Unknown:
Okay. Now, since we're still talking about this, it appears we're still talking about this.
[01:11:36] Unknown:
We're gonna talk about it probably the whole program today.
[01:11:39] Unknown:
Okay. Well okay. So now okay. Because of our, good Larry, he said something about the interest is coming from somewhere else. And I thought the interest that I was paying was coming out of my pocket.
[01:11:52] Unknown:
No. You've gotta pay it. But how do you pay it when only the 200,000 for your house was loaned into circulation, and you're up at about the 25th year? So you've got here. Somebody else has done the same thing. They signed a mortgage and loaned in whatever amount of money in circulation. And what you're doing is you've got to beat them, and I'm not saying you're doing it consciously, but to pay your payment, you're beating you're stealing their collateral because the interest was never created. The interest compounds upon all this collateralized of of mortgage but but got you.
All the circulating medium that is nothing more than monetized collateral. And that's all in that buy in that boiler. And you've gotta pay back your principal and go beat somebody else out of their principal that was loaned in and to pay your total amount of interest. And they You're right. When they go to pay theirs, there's nobody left to get that interest from. They can't make their payment, and they lose their house.
[01:13:15] Unknown:
Hey, Raj. The the original 200,000 for the house, okay, that was loaned into circulation because you signed the promissory note. But in order for you to be able to pay the interest, in order for it to come out of your pocket, you had to get it from someone else. You had to earn it. You had to sell something. You had to get a paycheck. You had to do this, that, or the other thing. That money came from another property that was monetized, and that money was loaned into circulation. And then you wound up with it because you earned it, you worked for it, or you sold something to get it. And then you pay interest to a company that never loaned you money in the first place. Correct. And you did it because you agreed to it with the 4 inch tall stack of papers at closing.
[01:14:09] Unknown:
And what Tom Schauff was able to do initially as he was putting this information out to other CPAs, and they were having people that they would tell about it and trying to promote what we're trying to explain here. And I I I know it's complex. I know it's confusing. Okay? But, yeah, it's like our other stuff. It's meant to be confusing because you're never supposed to figure it out. Okay? And so Tom Schauff would get people with a house and they go into court and say, this is a fraud. They never loaned me money. Here's the process. And the court would put the case under seal, which means nobody can see it, and they give them the keys to their new house that they now own.
[01:14:57] Unknown:
Roger, I have a confession. I don't really know even what debt means. I mean, like, just 2 years ago, I think, was the first was the first time I heard that money is debt. And I was thinking, what are they talking about?
[01:15:12] Unknown:
Have you have you seen that, animated video on YouTube that's that title Money as Debt? Have you watched that, Joan?
[01:15:21] Unknown:
Oh, well, no. I can't remember.
[01:15:25] Unknown:
Well, I at this stage, as difficult the time as we're having here, I suggest you watch it again whether you've seen it or not. Okay? Okay. My money is Money, go to YouTube. It's a goes produced by a Canadian guy, and it's titled Money as Debt.
[01:15:44] Unknown:
I put a link in the chat for that, Joan. Thank you, Lisa. Thank you, Lisa.
[01:15:48] Unknown:
And there's another one that's excellent that was done by Bill Still in 2011. It was it was named the documentary of the year in 2011 by these film festivals, and it's called The Secrets of Oz. The Secrets of Oz. It's a 2 hour highly produced documentary that should be required viewing for all of you if you've never seen that.
[01:16:21] Unknown:
How long is Money Is Debt?
[01:16:24] Unknown:
45 minutes.
[01:16:27] Unknown:
Thank you.
[01:16:29] Unknown:
Roger?
[01:16:30] Unknown:
Yes.
[01:16:31] Unknown:
Dora? There's also yeah. It's me. There's also, it this is pretty old now, but it's very good. I listened to it, I don't know, 15 years ago. Mike Maloney's hidden Mike Maloney's stuff. Yeah. Yes. Hidden Secrets of Money. It's very good.
[01:16:54] Unknown:
Mike Maloney is very good at explaining a lot of this stuff. I think in that hidden secrets of money, it's episode 7 that's got all the hard hitting stuff in it. Is that right?
[01:17:07] Unknown:
That sounds right. It's been a long time. But Right. Mike Maloney,
[01:17:13] Unknown:
big silver guy, lives in, Puerto Rico now, I think. The Hidden Secrets of Money, wasn't that it?
[01:17:23] Unknown:
Yes.
[01:17:24] Unknown:
Yep. Okay, Joan. There's just some resources and for the audience. Okay? And I I I mean, I know this. If you first time you're being presented with it, I know this is confusing. If you go look at that money as debt thing, it's very good. It's all animated. It's nonpolitical. It's very neutral in its presentation. But if you'll look at the first, what you'll see in the background are promissory notes. So it's animated now. So you got little promissory notes floating all over, but they don't explain that in that video. But it's on the screen. Okay?
So you what I'd like for you to do, Joan, you and this is really important information to understand. Okay? And so what I'd like for you to do if you don't understand this is to go watch those resources. And as we go forward into next week or New Year's week or whatever screwed up schedule we're gonna have through the next couple of weeks here. Come on. We'll discuss it again. Because I want all of you to understand it. Because guess where it all comes from? You answering those two questions yes and signing something. Because now you're their property or put more correctly, they have a property right in you.
This is why they did this whole damn thing, so they could get a property right in you. Because slavery is the most profitable business in the history of the planet. Period. And that's what they're doing. They're making you a slave, in essence, so that they can now have a property right on you, and they can extend your labor and collateralize it to back the bond market. The bond market underpins everything. James Carville, I saw him on TV 10, 15 years ago on some program. He goes, when I die you know how funny he talks. Right? When I die, I wanna come back as the bond market.
That was James Carville. You you look look at the equity market, which is the stock market. All these companies, man, warehouses and manufacturing and trucks and retail outlets and god knows what all. Well, that's all equities. You can see that. That's what underpins the stock market. Right, Joan?
[01:20:05] Unknown:
All I'm sorry. I'm not like
[01:20:07] Unknown:
Okay. All the company's assets are the value of the stock market. Right?
[01:20:15] Unknown:
Yeah.
[01:20:16] Unknown:
Okay. Well Yeah. What underwrites the debt market? What underwrites the bond market? It's 5 to 10 times bigger than the stock market. You don't see anything evidencing the bond market, do you? No. There are no big buildings that are associated with the bond market. None of that. It's a big debt market all based on you being a slave and your future income being collateralized. This is the spigot, the origin of all of it right there. Because they take those bonds backed by your birth certificate or whoever's and they sell those bonds in the international market for 6 months, a year, 5 years, 3 years, 10 years, the US Treasury 10 year note, that interest rate is the basis of all loans made all over the world.
That 10 year note, a 20 year note, a 30 year note. And so to pay those bond people that bought those, they extract your labor with the income tax and pay those people. See, even did you notice that even doctor Gene didn't understand that the other night? We were talking about it. He didn't understand it. He's been in this for God knows how many decades. Okay? So it goes to pay the bond market. That's the origin and one of the reasons they did this is that right there because that's the credit spout. All the other stuff that we've talked about all comes from that. From them extending your labor, selling it to some investor, and then the investor gives them cash for that. Don't they, Joan?
If they sell a bond to an investor, the investor gives them cash for that. Right?
[01:22:19] Unknown:
I
[01:22:20] Unknown:
think she mentioned that her power was
[01:22:23] Unknown:
having problems. Yeah. She might have dropped out. My power and and my dog's barking and the power is going off every 3 seconds. And I'm I'm I'm gonna, I'm gonna have to listen to the last, 5 minutes again on on the recording because there's a lot of, house renovation and,
[01:22:47] Unknown:
landscapers are big in holes and the electricity is going out, opening up, owning up. Alright. Well, Joan, I'll tell you what I'm gonna try and do. I'm gonna pick on somebody else, but I'm gonna just say, you go back and listen to the recording and the the replay. Okay?
[01:23:03] Unknown:
Run. Thank you. Yes. Thank you, Ron. Paul. Okay, Joan. Can I ask you to reiterate those titles? We've got money is debt and the hidden secrets of money. There was another one you mentioned. The secrets of of of us.
[01:23:20] Unknown:
And that's Bill Stills. And that is 2 hours of excellent production and information. They even go back to the English Museum in in London with a a guy, a a curator, and they have tally sticks. And they show you tally sticks. Do you know about tally sticks, Paul?
[01:23:44] Unknown:
You've talked about them before.
[01:23:47] Unknown:
Back in the old days of of London, England, they take up a stick and they break it into pieces. And they keep 1 piece and they'd use the other piece in circulation as money. And the only way they could get it back out of circulation was when it got turned in and they'd match the 2 pieces to make sure they fit, and then it wasn't money anymore. Well, they show you those things in that. Okay?
[01:24:13] Unknown:
Wow. Okay.
[01:24:15] Unknown:
It really all all of those are worth watching. Okay?
[01:24:21] Unknown:
K. I'm down running all 3 of them.
[01:24:24] Unknown:
Alright. Well, let's go back to our little example we were on a minute ago, the origins. I wanna explain to you how the whole system works, but this is the crux. If we weren't property, they couldn't do this. Then they'd be having their own money to start and run the economy. You don't think they want to do that, do they? Do you? No. They got a little scam where they let you do it all on credit. Roger. And now the scorpion's on your back.
[01:24:57] Unknown:
Roger? So
[01:25:00] Unknown:
hold on. So it's like the the movie Jones Plantation.
[01:25:03] Unknown:
They created money. Exactly like that. Exactly.
[01:25:07] Unknown:
They created money at a penny for £5 of cotton.
[01:25:12] Unknown:
Basically. Okay. Was that you, Samuel?
[01:25:16] Unknown:
Yeah. The that promissory note, the the real legal term for that that is important, the word that is important, is your consent. And I I've looked up 3, maxims in law on consent. Every consent removes error, number 1. Number 2, consent removes or obviates a mistake. And number 3, he who consents cannot receive an injury. The rest of that stack of papers you're signing is basically giving them estoppels on stopping you from trying to back out of that in any way, shape, or form. And it's all tilted in their direction.
[01:26:04] Unknown:
Well, everything is. Okay? So let let me go back and let's go over for everybody the whole way this system works. From the minute you're born and that birth certificate, the verification of facts is is, completed there in the hospital. It now goes, over the information. It's never signed by mom and dad even though there's spa spaces for it there at the bottom. That then is transferred by the hospital with a terminal that's installed in every hospital by the federal government. This is their milk cow right here. Okay? And they send that information over to Vital Statistics.
They may have different names for them in your state. This is in Texas. They send it over to the Bureau of Vital Statistics, which takes the information sent by the hospital, and they print the birth certificate. And when the birth certificate is printed, it is deposited in a bank safe with armed guards 24 hours a day, 7 days a week. A little flimsy piece of paper. That's because it's being treated as a warehouse receipt. And now that paper locked in the bank safe is you. They pull it out, but take things like there's we mentioned it the other day. There's a number on the bottom of these things called a, on the bonds called a CUSIP number.
I think it's c u s I p, CUSIP. And that's how they track because bonds change hands. Okay? I mean, some investors got it. He sells it to another. The Brit countries don't want them anymore because they don't have to have them to buy oil from Saudi Arabia because they're taking Chinese yuan now, and they hate the damn federal government and these damn bastard Jews. And the people around the world are in these financing countries. They know exactly who's doing this. Okay? So now that the BRICS countries are mounting up, they don't have to have treasury bonds anymore. So they're dumping them into the market. And guess who has to buy them?
Nobody else wants to buy them. The Federal Reserve has got to buy them. The tray actually, I don't think it's the Federal Reserve. I think it's the Treasury. Oh, they've washed their hands of all this stuff. So the Treasury has to buy any access bonds that are circulating out there. If they sit out there and nobody buys them, the whole bond market is gonna go upside down because because everybody understands it's not viable. So they've got to buy them.
[01:28:57] Unknown:
It would have to be the treasury because if the Fed were buying them, they'd be on the hook for them.
[01:29:03] Unknown:
Yes. I know. That's what I was trying to get across. Now I have heard that the Fed owns 49 plus percent of all the bonds that have been issued. I don't know about that. It just came I forgot where I got the intro the the information, but somebody said the treasury has to buy them, which makes sense to me as we finish out this explanation. You'll see that in another place also, Joe. So anyway, they take your birth certificate. They attach it to a bond. Then they have what's called let's look at the bond side here. The Federal Reserve has what's called primary dealers.
Remember 911? The company that was at the top floor of 1 of the towers was called oh, god. I can't believe I just had it. Can somebody god. It has two names. Anyway, the bond company that was at the oh, god. Does that make me mad? Well, this is my this this hadn't been my damn day. Okay? What? Just Lehman Brothers?
[01:30:20] Unknown:
No. Cantor. Cantor Fitzgerald.
[01:30:23] Unknown:
Cantor Fitzgerald. Cantor Fitzgerald. Cantor Fitzgerald. They are a primary bond dealer. There's others. Probably, those who mentioned you just now, probably Goldman Sachs has got a bond desk and all these other place. Will they contract with the Federal Reserve? And the Federal Reserve, when they do a bond issue, those people have to take it. If they can't sell it, it's on them because they are under obligation by being a primary bond dealer that they've got to take the issuance that the Federal Reserve is gonna issue. Now it's up to them to sell it. Okay? And if they can't sell it, they get hung with it. Right? So that I've never really studied. This is just stuff I've come to understand over the years from hearing different things and and kind of putting it together in my own mind. Now it seems to me, and I remember from when I was a child, my grandmother would buy me, US savings bonds as Christmas presents. $25.
So when you buy a bond, you that's discounted. Okay? So what that means is my grandmother would go into the post office and she'd pay like 17.50, and then they give her a $25 savings bond that didn't mature for, let's say, a year, 2 years. And when that 2 years came, I could go take that bond that she paid $17 for and cash it in for 25, its full face value. So that's how they do bonds evidently. Okay? So you've got the origin of the birth certificate, the attachment to the bond goes up to the Federal Reserve. They do a bond issuance, and that's how it's handled at that point.
K? Comment. Does that make sense to everybody? Anybody got any corrections or questions?
[01:32:24] Unknown:
That's where the discount rate comes from.
[01:32:27] Unknown:
Correct. K. So see, this is the back end. When you look at that Federal Reserve note, and it says the full faith and credit of the United States. So if the dollar goes under, what do you do? You take your dollar to a bank and go, I want my full faith and credit of this. Is that how that works? No. The full faith and credit of the Federal Reserve note is the underlying bond because the promise is to the bondholders, not the holder of the Federal Reserve note. They're saying you'll get your coupon payment. That's the full faith and credit of the United States. K?
So what happens is every 6 months, there's 12 different, oh, territories, if you will, of the Federal Reserve. They got one in Dallas down there by Joe and Mark. They got one out in Denver. They got one in San Francisco. They got one up in Seattle. They got one in Minneapolis. They got one in Chicago. They got one in Saint Louis. They got one in New Orleans. They got one in Atlanta. They got one in New York and a cup a couple other. Anyway, there's 12 of them. So every 6 weeks, they get together at what's called a Federal Open Market Committee meeting, FOMC.
Those are the meetings that happen every 6 weeks when they set or at least consider doing something with the interest rate. So every one of those branches of the Federal Reserve is supposed to be looking at all the information in their territory to say, well, do we have enough cash circulating it? Is this right? Is that right? And they take all that information to these FOMC meetings, and they compile all that. And they go, well, we're going to do the discount rate or the overnight rate as they put it. And that is the rate that the Federal Reserve charges their best customers, Chase Manhattan Bank, all the Rothschild banks, all the crooks. That's the interest rate they get on the Federal Reserve notes from the Federal Reserve.
Because when they meet and they say, well, we need another $1,000,000,000 in circulation. And so when they go and they call for that, they ask the Bureau of the Mint Printing Printing Mint, printing and engraving to print up a $1,000,000,000 worth of Federal Reserve notes. Doesn't matter what denomination. And then the Federal Reserve owns the company that they call, and they go print a $1,000,000,000 worth of bonds. And they take the bonds, and they take the Federal Reserve notes. Remember, the bonds are the backing for the Federal Reserve notes. That's the pure faith and credit of the United States, so the bondholders get their payment.
And so they take both of those different entities and they send them up to the Federal Reserve. The Federal Reserve takes the bond side of the billion and assigns it to their primary dealers. They take the Federal Reserve note part, and they go over and lend it out to their favorite banks at whatever that overnight rate is. Okay? And so that and then the they go out and they go, hey, Joan. You wanna buy a house? Yeah. I I need a house here. And she's does the promissory note and whatever they loan the money to and her is probably a a a 50% or a 100%, depending on which way you look at it, from whatever the overnight was. If it's 2 a half percent that the Federal Reserve loans it to them, then they'll loan it to you at 5.
K? It's a wholesale retail relationship. So there's all of your levels of compound interest that are going on. They got it in the bond market with discounting. They got it over here in the federal federal reserve note with all this loan and loan and interest piling up and all that stuff. They're making compound interest all kinds of places. Okay? So that's the monetary structure, and we, are are are collateralized future labor is the first step where the original credit spouse created. And then because they've got a property ownership in you, now they can build up all these administrative agencies, which there's over 600 of them now, and they've been building up to that number since when?
March 9, 1933. There weren't any agencies before that. They started afterwards. That's what the new deal, raw deal, Jew deal, whatever you wanna call it, that's what that was. It's this restructuring of the economy with us as property and to create the original credit spout so that they can build all this banking and economy over it. This is the illusion. Everything we've ever known is nothing but an illusion because it's based on fraud and it's based on lies. And it's based on the fact that you are a involuntary servitude and that we call money debt.
That those are the 2 pillars. That you're free, you're not, and that money is debt, it's not. And this is how it works out in their structure, and it's brilliant. And I hope I've explained it. I've explained it the the best I know how. Okay? And and I hope you've picked up on it, but it's a whole this is why what we do here is so damned important. This so some people so, well, what difference does it make? Well, it makes a hell of a lot of difference. Is there anybody who's got a question or comment on all that? Ahmed?
Yes, ma'am.
[01:38:44] Unknown:
Hey. It's Nancy from Virginia. Hi, Nancy. I appreciate, Joan being willing to go through this because, you know, what I noticed when I'm I mean, it was real clear for me to see the fraud around the citizenship stuff, but I've noticed that, you know, the the financial pieces, were a little bit more challenging
[01:39:11] Unknown:
and Yeah. It's a complicated.
[01:39:13] Unknown:
Confusion. So I think that the same, reactive, programmed negative response to being confronted with the facts is part of the monetary system? Because I just noticed it's the the feeling of, you know, the the immensity, the magnitude of the fraud is kind of overwhelming even though I know, you know, I even though I understand a good bit of it. But I noticed while I'm listening to this, my own the the confusion level, it's it's clearer now, especially about the how they, they put it as a liability instead of an asset, and that's the one the one of the pieces of fraud. But it's just so I just I'm just speaking to the program, the programming that we have all been subject to Some believe. Create confusion around what the money and debt and currency. And so that's really But it was helpful for me to listen to I don't think I have a complete clear grasp on it, but just going over this today, in this detail, I know it's frustrating because, like, why can't it? I I think I have a better I better grasp on it, but I'm just speaking to the programming and the reaction because that reaction is part of the programming to not, you know, the sense of confusion and that is difficult to understand. It's intentionally confusing,
[01:40:46] Unknown:
just like the codes at USC and CFR. Like all their stuff. Well, if you wanna fool somebody, you make it complex. If you want them to see it, you make it simple. This is not complex. It's just that none of you are familiar with it, and it's very intricate on how they've set it up.
[01:41:07] Unknown:
Yeah. Yeah. Very intricate. But I just want to speak to that because, I'm noticing it, that reaction, that little bit of confusion and the resistance inside, you know. And so I recognize that as part of the programming that, deprogramming that I'm engaging in, in my
[01:41:30] Unknown:
pursuit of freedom with everything here. And and and I moved out of the country. You're you're most welcome. I mean, it's just critical stuff to understand. I understand it's complex. Okay? It's meant to confuse you. You're not supposed to understand it. Just like the only guy that really understood it was the bank regulator that went into all these banks in a region and went over all their books. And the expert witness, Tom Schauff, he had no idea. It's right in front of everybody's faces. So, yes, it's really a hidden thing. And and when you hear anybody use the term make money out of thin air, unless they're specifically relating it to compound interest, they don't know what they're they don't know how the system works.
Pure and simple. Roger. Yes, Larry.
[01:42:27] Unknown:
Yeah. I don't know who this Caroline lady was, but do you really think she's saying get the cheese and walk out of there. I don't know exactly what that means, but do you really think they're just gonna let you sign whatever papers you want and then you could walk out of there with the house and and do this without signing all the papers? That's not gonna happen. No. No. It's not gonna happen. No. No. It's not.
[01:42:51] Unknown:
And and the only way you're ever gonna do it is if you go to court with it. And I think after those few initial cases by Tom Schauff that they cut that spigot off too.
[01:43:04] Unknown:
And another thing is to add insult to injury, let's just say you can't make the house payments and you default. Well, you may have spent you know, say it was a 30 year mortgage. You may have spent 20 years paying into that, and you may have a little bit of Equity. What what's it? Equity. You may have a little bit of equity, but then if you stop paying on it, do you really think that the that the bank's attorney is gonna say, well, look at we're we're we're gonna foreclose on your property, and, we know you've you've got, you know, several tens of 1,000 of dollars invested in this, so we're gonna reimburse you. They take it all.
[01:43:45] Unknown:
Yeah. They take it all. I mean, they're greedy Jews. Come on, man. The the their the money is you know, my friend, Walt, the, musician here used to live in New York for a number of 20 years. And, he was talking to one of his Jewish musician friends up there about this very subject. And the guy goes, they're different from us. Their God is money. Very accurate. So was there anything that I okay. Hold on. Larry, was there anything I attempted to explain that you didn't understand?
[01:44:28] Unknown:
No. I I get it pretty much.
[01:44:31] Unknown:
Okay. Good deal. Yes. Was that you, Joan?
[01:44:34] Unknown:
No. It's Nancy again.
[01:44:36] Unknown:
Oh, it's Nancy. Okay.
[01:44:39] Unknown:
Now fraction over their
[01:44:42] Unknown:
lending. Oh, that's a whole different deal.
[01:44:45] Unknown:
So is that on top of, like, the example of the mortgage
[01:44:49] Unknown:
Yeah. Where they just Well, here's what happens. Promissory or Yes. Here's what happens. And that was one of the ways they sold the Federal Reserve was the elasticity of the monetary supply. Okay? So here's what happens. Let's say that, Joan buys her house and she gets her house, and there's $200,000 in new money given to the contractor that built it. Right? Now Joan created that, but that's to pay off the house she just purchased. Right? Okay. So the contractor goes to his bank, and he deposits that $200,000 check-in his bank. Now fractional reserve banking can be altered.
For instance, as we went through COVID, they dropped the, the rate to 0. It's usually about 10%. Now what that means is that whatever they get on deposit, like from the contractor, they've got to keep $20,000 liquid there and set it aside. That's the fractional reserve. Okay? And then they can take a 100 what would that be? 10% would be 20,000. So now they could take a 100 could somebody could somebody hit mute, please? And, they take a 180,000, the remainder of the reserve requirement. Are you with me? He deposits 200. They gotta keep 20.
They can now loan out a 180.
[01:46:32] Unknown:
Right.
[01:46:34] Unknown:
Now as they loan that out, and they maybe they loan it to you. So you go and borrow a $180,000 from it from them, and they put it in your bank. Now your bank has to keep 18,000 of that on reserve, but they can loan out all the rest. And so it goes on and on and on until that's expired. And there are no more percentages to loan out. But that's that takes the 200,000 that was originally there and turns it into hell, I don't know, $1,000,000 or more. Mhmm. Do you understand what I'm saying?
[01:47:13] Unknown:
Oh, yeah. Yeah. Okay. Well, did that also apply to, like, the with the mortgage, can they sell
[01:47:21] Unknown:
discounted note more to more than 1 person? What do you what do you think the 200 Yeah. 2008 banking crisis was about?
[01:47:30] Unknown:
Yep. Well, that's yeah. That's what I
[01:47:32] Unknown:
Go go. And now here's another one. Here's another, to that list, The Big Short. If you never seen The Big Short, that's what it is all about right there. Okay? Yeah. So now we have this thing called a reserve requirement. So the banks have to have whatever they've got loaned out. If the reserve requirement is 10%, they got to have 10% on hand in case there's a bank run. That's what it's for. So now as they dilly with that reserve requirement like they did during COVID to keep the pump up the money supply, do you know that 40% of the currency ever created since March 9, 1933 was created in the last 4 years? Did you know that, Nancy?
That's what this Biden administration's done. 40% of all of the currency that's ever been printed since 1933, almost half was was printed in the last 4 years. That's why your prices are up everywhere.
[01:48:46] Unknown:
K?
[01:48:47] Unknown:
So what did they do in that period of time to get that done? They dropped the reserve requirement to 0. They didn't have to keep any reserves. That's why we're in such a precarious position right now as they hadn't changed that, to my knowledge. So now we've got the one that's gonna hit us more than likely is the commercial building loan portfolio, because all those people are underwater, and those loans are rolled over every certain number of years. And what's happening is the people that have taken out the loan can't pay it because COVID ruined their vacancy rates, and they're not getting the rent coming in to pay their damn note. So when the note gets time to roll over, they just go to the financial institution and give them the keys. You got buildings that are cost 250,000,000, 300, 400,000,000 that are selling for $20,000,000 or less if anybody will buy them.
Now on top of that, all of the businesses that survived off that office traffic, your your your dry cleaners, your drug stores, your your, beauty shops, your whatever shop, well, they're all going dry because all those vacancies now. Nobody's commuting anymore. This is the one that's probably gonna turn the thing upside down is this commercial building market. I mean, what what did I hear the guy say? This is a little while back. There are the equivalent of 21 Empire State Buildings are vacant in New York City. 21, the equivalent of 21 Empire State Buildings, are now vacant in New York City.
[01:50:48] Unknown:
K?
[01:50:49] Unknown:
So now here's the problem they had at the end of Trump, and that's called the overnight rate. Because banks have to meet a reserve requirement, then they get checked every morning to make sure that they've got whatever that requirement is that they're required to have. If they don't have that in cash, what they would generally do in the old days was they'd go to their synagogue buddy who owned the other bank, and they'd let borrow it from him at maybe a half a percent overnight, something like that. You know, they're not allowed to charge interest to each other, only does. And so that overnight night rate got so skewed and these banks were so underwater that they wouldn't loan to each other. Even the Jews wouldn't loan to each other because they know how precipitous the the system is.
So then the bank had to go, and if they did loan, they weren't loaning at a half a percent. They were loaning at 10%. So the banks had to go to the Federal Reserve to borrow overnight to meet their reserve requirements. And they were lending over a $100,000,000,000 a night into the banking system. That was the bank to hang up back when Trump was in office. Well, now after this COVID fiasco and this monetary madness that these idiots have put us through for the last 4 years, it's a whole different set of problems. But all those problems are still underlying. K?
So any questions on all of that?
[01:52:47] Unknown:
May I, lady Linda Louise? May I? Yes, ma'am. You may. Thank you. Another, YouTube video that I highly recommend is the money changers. That's number 1. And number 2, Larry talked about this lady, Carolyn. It's actually Cheryl Kissel from Florida. I don't know why she changes her voice, but, allegedly, she's done that method that she spoke about briefly to 7 properties. And, what I was sharing with my, fellow woman patriot who's sitting here at my kitchen table, I told her when you're autographing these documents, start like the Jews. They read from the back of the book forward. Rather than signing that, or autographing that promissory note, just autograph all the other pages and Yeah. Just pick up the promissory note and run out the door. I've never done it, but that would be an interesting exuberant.
[01:53:49] Unknown:
Well, I don't I don't know how she's gotten away with it. She comes on here and has got a lot of old and antiquated patriot ideas. She had we haven't seen it in a while. Right. So, anyway, it it is a very complex and convoluted deal. That's how they've been able to pull all this off for God's sake. And, the best thing to do don't forget there's only 2 ways that they can control you, by force or by debt. And, just try to get out of debt as best you can. Everybody ought to have that as one of their top priorities. Although, I don't know what's gonna happen with Trump.
I I just wish he wouldn't back that. He doesn't understand what we've gone over here for an hour and a half. Okay? Or else he wouldn't be back in King Dollar. Okay? Because it's all based on slavery and fraud. I'd rather see him it's all dishonest weights and measures. That's why the dollars only worth 2¢ of what it was a 100 years ago. It's dishonest weights and measures. I'd much rather go and see him throw his his towels in with the bricks country and say, let's build a world based on honest weights and measures here where there is no chicanery.
So these wealthy bastards beyond belief and then what are they? Oh, just a little bit more. You know, that's what somebody asked Roosevelt back in the thirties. Well, when is enough?
[01:55:13] Unknown:
Oh, just a little bit more.
[01:55:16] Unknown:
Just a little bit
[01:55:17] Unknown:
more.
[01:55:21] Unknown:
Their god is money. Roger. Yeah. Danny.
[01:55:29] Unknown:
Yeah. Roger?
[01:55:31] Unknown:
Right here, Danny.
[01:55:34] Unknown:
Oh, okay. Yeah. I got a situation that I discovered, but also go back to Tom Schauff. I've just been checking online for, his book. Seemed to be unavailable every place that I checked except Amazon and whoever had it there. It's at $4,995.
[01:55:54] Unknown:
Yeah. I can tell you who's got it. I know someone that's got a copy of it, and that's Jim Ram. But I think you he was pledged to something when he bought it, and I don't believe he's gonna make it available.
[01:56:06] Unknown:
But I'm just giving you Yeah. I've got a what I learned. Yeah. I've got a copy somewhere, I think, but I got it Really? Early days. Yeah. It was out. Yeah. The situation I I came up on, I got to look in through the Tennessee constitution, and the current one for just about any, elected office, it's it's requiring the person to be a citizen of the United States. And, so I got to check-in earlier constitutions here. Revolution of 17 96 did not have that in there, but, the people hadn't voted on that, so then they had another one where the people that voted on and accepted in 35.
And that one has that requirement about being a US citizen. Yeah. Well, 35 is after
[01:57:02] Unknown:
right. Well, 35 is after 33, and I'd expect that. But the only one I know that can 8 8 no. No. 18.
[01:57:10] Unknown:
1833 before the Civil War.
[01:57:13] Unknown:
Oh, okay. I thought you said 19. I thought you said 19 35.
[01:57:21] Unknown:
No. 18 well, yeah. 1835. Okay.
[01:57:26] Unknown:
But And it said citizen of the United States, the requirement was in there? Yes. Citizen of the United States. Yeah. Well, there wasn't a citizen of the United States back then. There was a citizen of the United States of America. There was a citizen of the United States of America and even chief justice story of the Supreme Court in his book, comments on the constitution, made the statement, a citizen of the state is ipso facto a citizen of the United States. Well, they all understood what they were talking about back then.
[01:58:00] Unknown:
Yeah. But I just think about I can use this to, kind of among certain people, like, maybe some legislators and thing that point out how that was there, and then it's in the current one. And I've got some federal, where it basically say that US citizens have have no they don't have the Bill of Rights or other things. And a, Maryland case from the where a guy had moved in somewhere in the Caribbean up in, Baltimore or something, Maryland, and was running for some local office before he did everything to become a US citizen, although he was Yeah. We can't do that. Process. Yeah. And their prod their their decision there was that there's no requirement US citizen in order to be a, citizen of Maryland and that he was qualified to run for the office.
And so bring that those things up to some legislators or others. Ask them what does the guys' state citizen mean
[01:59:12] Unknown:
back then and now. Ask them why the Supreme Court said the states the in states that they can take your children and inject them and propagandize them without your knowledge or consent. Why don't you go ask that one too? Yeah. I see. I can give you the answer. Alright. I understand. Because they're citizens of the United States, and they're property of the federal government. And the schools can do any damn thing they want to them. That's the answer.
[01:59:39] Unknown:
Yeah. I just thought I'd bring that up for people to Okay. Maybe, use this. Alright.
[01:59:47] Unknown:
Okay. Well, we've had a whole hour and a half on the monetary system, so it's kind of a curveball. But, yeah. But to my knowledge, you as a national can run for any office except for the senate. I don't know about the state senate. I know about the federal senate. And where do I get that? From Wikipedia of all places. Go into citizen of the United States, and down underneath, they'll give a couple of paragraphs of the slave side, then they quote the 14th amendment, and right under that is a paragraph where it talks about the national. Go read it. You can't run for senate.
I'm sure that's because of the 17th amendment somehow, but I don't know the specifics. I also know that I'm hearing the whistler here, which means we're finished with this show for the day. If, if you did if I made it clear as mud instead of clear as clear, there's some references there to go look at, and think about it, relisten to the replay. And if there's things you don't understand about it, come back, and we'll talk about it here when we have a show over the next couple of weeks. And I'm not well, we'll talk about the holiday schedule on Monday. Anyway, we're, pretty well done for the day as I am. Okay?
So, it it's been quite an aggravating day overall. But and I just understand this complex, but it's not really when you grasp that that promissory note is where all money is monetized. That's where it's created, and it's never created until it's loaned into circulation at compound interest with collateral. K? Alright. Hey, Raj. I Hope you got something out of it. Yeah, Paul.
[02:01:44] Unknown:
What was the name of that book by Tom Shaw?
[02:01:48] Unknown:
I don't know. Danny, you got the name of it?
[02:01:53] Unknown:
The title.
[02:01:54] Unknown:
What's the title? I don't know. I don't know his his title. I never had a copy of it. I called him up. I helped him write contracts. I'd gone through paralegal school at that time. And when I reached out to him, he was needing some legal help, and I helped him draft some contracts and stuff is where we had the major part of our communication. He never sent me a book, but I knew what he was doing because I had that personal connection with him on top of hearing the appearance on water or whatever that guy's stuff was. So, look, I'm getting out of here.
And, so, we'll see you on Monday. Have a good weekend. And, Paul, I still got my black background, so I don't know if you still got control of my computer or not here.
[02:02:46] Unknown:
Right. No. I disconnected.
[02:02:48] Unknown:
Oh, okay. Oh, yeah. Somebody got a question? Please. Quick.
[02:02:52] Unknown:
Just a quick quick statement. I don't know if you've heard about El Salvador, but they have banned legal tender for Bitcoin. There's no longer and and the economic hit, man, if IMF probably got in there, they got a new loan from the IMF, and they have to use US dollars now.
[02:03:12] Unknown:
Ah, so they had to go get a loan, and part of the stipulations of the loan were no more Bitcoin legal tender. They're scared to death of Bitcoin. Okay. I didn't know that. Okay. Thanks, Sketch.
[02:03:25] Unknown:
Alright. There is a new Yep. Okay.
[02:03:29] Unknown:
Bye. I'll see y'all. I've been talking for 2 frustrating hours. Bye. Yep. Thank you, Roger.
[02:03:37] Unknown:
And I wanted to mention that there's a new book out called Hijacking Bitcoin, the hidden history of Bitcoin, and that book might be part of why they said we're gonna abandon Bitcoin here. So I don't know, but it's very interesting. And Cantor Fitzgerald was mentioned today, but let I think his name is Letnik, who is the primary dealer for Cantor Fitzgerald, is going into the administration of Trump, and they're gonna according to Catherine Austin Pitts, they're gonna use Bitcoin and make the state's pension fund buy Bitcoin for another draining of the people's money, high yield.
[02:04:38] Unknown:
Paul, Danny put the title of that book in the chat for you.
[02:04:43] Unknown:
Oh, cool. Alright. Thank you.
[02:04:56] Unknown:
For those of us not in the chat, could you just state what the title is, please?
[02:05:01] Unknown:
Yeah. It's called hack hijacking Bitcoin.
[02:05:04] Unknown:
That one or or the other one? No. The one that Danny mentioned from Schauff.
[02:05:10] Unknown:
America's Hope to Cancel Bank Loans Without Going to Court by Thomas Schauff.
[02:05:16] Unknown:
Thank you.
[02:05:34] Unknown:
Isn't Tommy Shaw the singer in a band?
[02:05:49] Unknown:
Stick. The
[02:05:51] Unknown:
Stick.
[02:05:52] Unknown:
Yeah. I think he was in Sticks, and he sang with Ted Nugent and the damn Yankee.
[02:06:00] Unknown:
This is spelled s c h a u s. Is that the same spelling?
[02:06:09] Unknown:
So Tommy Shaw, we went to a 6 concert. He threw a blanket into the crowd and I caught it. Good for you.
[02:07:18] Unknown:
Merry Christmas, everybody.
[02:07:22] Unknown:
William, Merry Christmas to you and everybody else.
[02:07:30] Unknown:
Merry Christmas to all.
[02:07:34] Unknown:
Hello. May I ask ask a question, please? Hello? Hello? May I ask a question?
[02:07:47] Unknown:
Sure.
[02:07:48] Unknown:
Good. I did the the affidavit on the model in 2022, December, And, this, 2 months ago, I I applied for my passport. I could have been having any of it, and I received the passport. I received the card. Now my question is about the card. It has 3 stars. What does that mean?
[02:08:26] Unknown:
I must go out there that nobody knows.
[02:08:30] Unknown:
Your guess is good as ours.
[02:08:35] Unknown:
It just means 3 stars.
[02:08:40] Unknown:
Yeah. It is 3 stars.
[02:08:42] Unknown:
Yeah. People on here that have got their passports have different some have 3, 4, 5. Nobody knows, can't seem to find what that signifies. So, like,
[02:08:54] Unknown:
to your So when it is stars. Entity is 3. What, it means now? It's, like a special one? A special?
[02:09:10] Unknown:
We don't know. But if what matters when this subject comes up, what really matters is what is on file in in this with the Secretary of State. So as to a, an endorsement code or stars, we really don't know. But what really matters is what's on file for the secretary of state.
[02:09:39] Unknown:
Okay. Alright. Thank you.
[02:09:43] Unknown:
Hey. This is Carl in Utah. What's the I'm trying to look up that book for canceling debt, mortgage debt. What's the title called again?
[02:09:57] Unknown:
America's Hope to Cancel Bank Loans Without Going to Court. And the author is Thomas Schauf, s c h a u f.
[02:10:16] Unknown:
And there is an archive copy, it looks like, archive.org.
[02:10:27] Unknown:
But, Sketch, he's a colon, so he doesn't have access to the chat.
[02:10:32] Unknown:
Right? Come on, Sketch.
[02:10:35] Unknown:
Yes. I'm just stating that it was on the archives.
[02:10:43] Unknown:
Yeah. So so if you maybe put that in your search, it would take you to there. Yep.
[02:10:55] Unknown:
Thanks for saying that sketch. Of course, I would not have looked down below what Danny wrote. He just he just wrote it out, his own handwriting. And and then I said, oh, okay. Well, I'll just round it. And but then I which because of what you said, I looked even further down, and there it was where I could just click on it.
[02:11:20] Unknown:
Yep. Gotta like that. That's one advantage to coming on the computer. You can get those links as they happen.
[02:11:31] Unknown:
Well, I found the book on Amazon for $4,995, the paperback book.
[02:11:39] Unknown:
I'll probably have to just download it.
[02:11:45] Unknown:
It's only available for, borrowing on archive. It won't let you download it.
[02:12:01] Unknown:
Oh, you can only see part of
[02:12:05] Unknown:
it? No. You can read it online.
[02:12:11] Unknown:
Oh, okay. Oh.
[02:12:24] Unknown:
You can get it on Amazon for 4,995.
[02:12:31] Unknown:
Wow. $4 cheaper than the other one.
[02:12:35] Unknown:
Somebody snapped it up quite early. I I pulled away from it, but I think it was 298 pages, something like that.
[02:12:47] Unknown:
268.
[02:12:53] Unknown:
Yeah.
[02:12:59] Unknown:
Some years ago when, I knew a title officer really well. I think she said that, I don't know if it's California or countrywide, but, the average house people only stay in them 7 to like 9 years. So they're never really paying anything but interest. They never even get close to the principal. Countrywide is And then it turns over again and somebody does it all over again, you know. It's, what a scam.
[02:13:32] Unknown:
Yeah. Countrywide is the pricks at that my house. Before I knew any of this.
[02:14:32] Unknown:
And, Lisa, on that first comment of below the video I posted, on second thought, I don't know what to think about that first comment. Some of it sounds like the truth, but I I don't know.
[02:14:52] Unknown:
Me too. That's why that's why I put that comment to you in there. Yeah. Isn't that interesting?
[02:14:58] Unknown:
Yep. On second thought, I go, well, maybe I don't know if it's all spot on, but but I just had to say that.
[02:15:15] Unknown:
Well, they put a link for a YouTube right at the top of it too, so I don't know.
[02:15:23] Unknown:
I'll go check that out. Thank you. I didn't see that.
[02:15:30] Unknown:
And then there's a link also about that UCC one. I don't know. And it's and it's only 17 minutes sketch. I put a link in here to it.
[02:17:12] Unknown:
Thank you. I was just going there. Appreciate it.
[02:17:23] Unknown:
Oh, well, the title is the same. I think it's just a clip out of that.
[02:17:53] Unknown:
Yeah. That's that's the the video that, is on Rumble, my link, but, that's the one I gave to Joan to try and help her understand it. That one did I mean, it is convoluted, but if you listen to it 3 or 4 times, you get you kinda get the good jest of what what is going on. And the witness isn't too helpful because he's a banker.
[02:19:54] Unknown:
So who was it that
[02:22:52] Unknown:
Something that didn't get covered in our news stream here came from places like Azerbaijan and India. I guess, according to them, Biden and Harris were supposed to go on vacations for the holidays, but went back to Washington DC instead. Some people are speculating that, Joe might be considered too feeble to finish out, but there also might be a false flag, and he's definitely not up to dealing with that the way they want him to. So, who knows what they're up to?
[02:23:43] Unknown:
Well, that's, in addition to the Wall Street Journal where they say he was the term non compos menses at the very beginning of the term. And that's asking the question, well, is there anything that he did if he's non compos Menzus, and all those executive orders he signed. He's not, of sound mind. And in law, there's something to be said that, you know, they they take people's property away when or they don't let them sign contracts when they're non compas menses. So it it it is interesting, isn't it?
[02:24:36] Unknown:
Well, under these emergency powers, which they, you know, they could pretty much do anything they want.
[02:24:43] Unknown:
Hey, Scott. You need to watch more Chicago med to tune up, noncompass minutes.
[02:24:52] Unknown:
Thank you. Yeah. I'm not very good with Latin.
[02:24:59] Unknown:
Yeah. S r 93549, I think it is, that they can seize property, organizing and controlling the means of productions, seizing commodities, assigning military forces abroad, instituting martial law, seizing all, controlling all transportation and communication, regulating the operation of private enterprise, restricting travel, control the lives of all American citizens in a plethora of particular ways. If that's all they have to do is call a national emergency and, you know, they've given themselves complete and absolute power over everybody and everything in this place we call free.
[02:25:56] Unknown:
They can have a good old time.
[02:26:14] Unknown:
Yeah. I'm hoping they don't call an emergency and have Harris put in power and then postpone the inauguration because of the emergency. This is certainly within the purview of that law.
[02:26:31] Unknown:
And pardon Joe.
[02:26:36] Unknown:
Yeah. You know, it'll be a party in the white folks' house then.
[02:26:42] Unknown:
You might be getting God's dirt pardon.
[02:26:51] Unknown:
FYI, I just found that book by Tom Schauff atsatcom with 2 m's, 911.com. PDF version, 200 and 59 pages, I believe. Anyway
[02:27:17] Unknown:
so I would
[02:27:20] Unknown:
that would be printable.
[02:27:26] Unknown:
Is that the one that's going for $4,000?
[02:27:30] Unknown:
That's correct.
[02:27:34] Unknown:
Wow.
[02:27:35] Unknown:
Mhmm. I think I've heard George Riley interview him when the book was at the first out. It didn't cost anything like that. So I missed a lot of this. My alarm didn't go off. And, so what's the gist of
[02:28:01] Unknown:
this?
[02:28:04] Unknown:
What'd be the plan I have?
[02:28:08] Unknown:
Well, Roger was trying to explain to Joan how currency is loaned into existence via promissory note. So people were giving her, or just giving the group links for different things that might give you a a better understanding of the system, and that book was one of them. So
[02:28:44] Unknown:
And I guess it's Illinois Boy's Secret, so it needs to be $4,000.
[02:28:52] Unknown:
5000. Evidently, he has another book out, which is, it's volume 2 of the same book. So I'm gonna have to go back and look again though.
[02:29:24] Unknown:
It's All About the Money is another book, I think.
[02:29:33] Unknown:
That that term promissory note sounds so nice and gentle, and it should really be called a consent note because that's what you're doing. You're consenting to their freaking thievery. Sort of like that George Carlin piece on, the terms in baseball versus the terms in football.
[02:30:16] Unknown:
Baseball is peaceful. Football is war. If they wanted that to be true, they would be playing rugby. You break some stuff in that. But them tight shorts don't get it.
[02:33:40] Unknown:
Ron Gibson says there's a federal lien on all the property in this country you know, since the thirties there and, that you could potentially sue the title company for not disclosing that to you. I told my my friend who ran a title company for most of his life, that and and he says, nope. That's covered in the title. Can sue us. We've disclosed it.
[02:34:20] Unknown:
Before you, sign it, can you line that out?
[02:34:28] Unknown:
I doubt it. And who knows how it's worded? It could be pretty hard to find it. Right? I mean, those paperwork, that whole thing is to Well, they break the law by your consent. You know? Well, get the
[02:34:47] Unknown:
a hold of the package, split it up amongst people, and find all the stuff.
[02:35:07] Unknown:
I think the the better way out is trying to get private loans with people and, not run it through their system. But a lot of those private loans, whose paperwork do they use? They just copy what an attorney copied for a lot of these other situations, that banks use. So there's that. And bottom line is we're all enslaving each other together, you know, as a big happy group of morons going on down the road, enforcing all these laws on each other and, you know, not having a clue really.
[02:36:17] Unknown:
Self policing.
[02:36:43] Unknown:
You say, morons. I say, fools. What's the difference? You say you say morons. I lost my voice. You say morons. I say fools. Is there a difference?
[02:36:58] Unknown:
Well, I'll tell you something that's different. I got a girlfriend taken care of, and, she got some flowers from somebody in a bag and, like, a Christmas bag gift. And she told me to take everything that's in the bag, you know, up to where, the room is that people go up there in, you know, communication area, for the rest of the people going up there washing clothes and everything else. But so I started unloading the bag and it was a thing of flowers and a basket. And it came to me that I thought she was gonna use that on my grave when I died. So I come back downstairs to her room and say, yeah. I thought you were gonna use that on my grave When I died, she said, I'm not ready to kill you yet.
I said, oh, okay.
[02:37:56] Unknown:
So it's supposed to be a joke, though.
[02:38:08] Unknown:
Why have a grave? Cremation, dust to dust, ashes to ashes.
[02:38:16] Unknown:
Well, that it was just a joke. I was just making it up. You know? But there were flowers in the basket that, I told she was telling me to put on the table up there to for anybody to have them. It just came to me. You know? Enjoy the life.
[02:39:00] Unknown:
Plus, you get that reincarnation going on. Right? Linda Louise had a neighbor and friend who was just reincarnated. I don't know about cremation, though.
[02:40:15] Unknown:
Well, thank you, Joe, for that that lovely flower story. And was that Bruce?
[02:40:29] Unknown:
Yes. Bruce.
[02:40:37] Unknown:
That was my way of breaking the ice today, you know, because everybody's going crazy. So I got off, and I got back on.
[02:41:04] Unknown:
People are crazy according to that country song by the same title. People are crazy. God is great. Be or is good, and people are crazy. But the title is people are [email protected]. Lovely story.
[02:41:24] Unknown:
Can I can I correct you on people and person? I think persons are crazy, Not people.
[02:41:38] Unknown:
Well, the psych ward down the title. Down here at the psych ward down here,
[02:41:43] Unknown:
they keep Song title. Singing. Song Do you hear what I hear?
[02:41:50] Unknown:
Christmas. I don't know. I just can't
[02:41:53] Unknown:
deal with it.
[02:41:58] Unknown:
I see things that others don't. Am I crazy too? Am I like everybody else?
[02:42:07] Unknown:
Do you hear what
[02:42:11] Unknown:
I
[02:42:18] Unknown:
Well, you can be crazier.
[02:42:23] Unknown:
What do you hear? A doctor. What do you hear?
[02:42:54] Unknown:
The opening words are this old man and me met at a bar and we etcetera etcetera.
[02:43:16] Unknown:
2 Jews walked into a bar. The second one should have ducked.
[02:43:29] Unknown:
Okay. Why?
[02:43:36] Unknown:
So we didn't hit his head on the bar.
[02:43:57] Unknown:
I like that one.
[02:44:00] Unknown:
Well, maybe he was going in for a circumcision.
[02:44:09] Unknown:
He woulda had to have a forethought for that.
[02:44:24] Unknown:
Well, ain't that what Jews do?
[02:44:32] Unknown:
They got the whole damn world doing it. The there it's like a a a $250,000,000,000 industry, for skin cosmetics, plastic surgery. Them Jew women, they got, penis head, faces. Oh my god. It's it's unbelievable.
[02:44:59] Unknown:
Well, I'm lucky. I'm not circumcised. Not yet. I'm Presbyterian.
[02:45:12] Unknown:
GSM I. Sounds like sounds like you were circumvented.
[02:45:17] Unknown:
Yep. I've come up from the French Huguenot, Lynch. My grandmama's last name, growing up was a Gillebo. How about that that word? Gillebo.
[02:46:01] Unknown:
Did you have a Gilly suit?
[02:46:03] Unknown:
No. Someone call them Gilbo's or something like that. Sometimes. I think they do that in Louisiana. Now this Abbeville is an Abbeville down there too. And, that's where they were sent to to start living off in in United States or the other world back then. And I happen to have the biggest festival in the in the world in Abbeville, Louisiana every year. I've never been there. I wanted to go down there when I was at Louisiana Tech, but didn't get to go. Can you hear me?
[02:48:05] Unknown:
Anybody?
[02:48:11] Unknown:
Yeah. I hear you.
[02:48:13] Unknown:
Okay. Yeah. I've been clicking. Sorry. I'm sorry. Anyway
[02:48:20] Unknown:
Oh, yeah. You got another joke? We everybody can hear you. The whole world can hear you. Whole universe can hear you.
[02:48:28] Unknown:
Yeah. Okay. Well, I I discovered a little little remedy for, television control and telephone and, every little thing I got on on my armrest on my recliner, and they keep falling off, the armrest. So, I'm having to pick them up off the floor. They go down in the the bottom of the seat, with the cushion underneath the cushion. I'm fishing them out every time all the time. So I decided, well, I had bought some rubber bands. So I figured, what the heck? I'll put rubber bands around the controls because the rubber bands are gripped with fabric, and it won't slide off, and it works. Just to give you a little hint, it's, instead of looking for all your controls, it'll still be unharmed when you leave.
It won't fall in the in the hole. This might contribute to, science fiction science fiction. That's I fixed something. That's science fiction. So there you go.
[02:50:02] Unknown:
You're you're so smart.
[02:50:06] Unknown:
Sounds like you rubber fixed it.
[02:50:10] Unknown:
Well, I'm a rubber band freak. Okay? Now I just happened to buy a bag of rubber bands at Walmart, you know, different colors and stuff. They're pretty rubber bands, you know, in all sizes. So they'll fit everything. I'm thinking about putting a rubber band on my car to lock it up instead of locking the key. You know? I think I got one big rubber band I can do that with.
[02:51:02] Unknown:
Hey, Bruce.
[02:51:04] Unknown:
Yes, ma'am.
[02:51:05] Unknown:
There is no outer space, is there? Just the Outer space. Flatter Mhmm. Just the flatter and just the flatter than the firmament.
[02:51:18] Unknown:
Well, what about now? Or
[02:51:21] Unknown:
And and the heavens above. The heavens above.
[02:51:25] Unknown:
But Well, I've been there before.
[02:51:28] Unknown:
You have?
[02:51:29] Unknown:
Yeah. I've been there and come back again.
[02:51:32] Unknown:
Is it space or heaven?
[02:51:34] Unknown:
Heaven. Oh. They said I was too ornery to be in heaven so they sent me back to Earth.
[02:51:42] Unknown:
They said you were too what?
[02:51:44] Unknown:
They sent me back to hell, Earth.
[02:51:47] Unknown:
Because they said you were too what?
[02:51:50] Unknown:
I was too artery up there. So they sent me back to hell.
[02:51:55] Unknown:
Back on earth again. That that makes sense.
[02:51:59] Unknown:
No. Nothing makes sense down here. Now I have, you know, reversed, a a real life reading, and the lady came up with all kind of stuff. It was unreal. So I was a king at one time in my life. Stages. And I was a good king. Looked after the people. Anyway, I was trying to she she was on the run, and she had met me and wanted me to learn ideology from her, and I did. And, I just look it in your eyes and tell what's going through your body. And, she had done a review on me on my past lives. And all that that's one of the things. She said, oh, you were a king at one time in your lifespans, and, you were good.
You you did well with the people, and they liked you. And, I I guess I'm still carrying that on, you know, with what I'm doing here today or now. I make light of things and, make people laugh, enjoy themselves, bring information they never heard before. You know? And and this is, you know, giving something to give to others. That's what we're doing here. Yeah. Every one of us. And I've always had a positive outlook on everything I ever did. I mean, it was all positive. No negative. If I fell flat flat on my face even, I would get back up and do it again or do something else to get success, and it always kind of planned out. You know?
And I had challenges and still do like we all did. But I make and I understand the challenges I got, but I use them to go forward just like being free with the affidavit. I knew what the affidavit was 20 years ago, but I never had to use it as Roger has brought to us for freedom. It took me 20 years to get there. I didn't give up.
[02:54:53] Unknown:
Do you really think you've had a past life or past lives?
[02:54:59] Unknown:
Yes. I do.
[02:55:02] Unknown:
How many? Yep. 1?
[02:55:05] Unknown:
Oh, no. Many. Multitudes. Oh. But she was just reflect reflecting on me being a king when she was going back in my different lives. And, you said you were a king at some point in time in your lifeline lifelines, and you were a good king to the people. And they all loved you. So and she didn't go by. I didn't sit down with her and go through the other. She didn't have time when she was telling me this. And, but she said she she can read different lifetime lines and stuff like that. And she she was an audiologist too, and she was teaching audiology. And she wanted me to take the class. I had no, you know, I I you know, I when I was, I think I was in 9th grade, I did a design of the fly, metamorphosis of the fly.
This is how the detailed thing I drew out of the of the fly metamorphosis of the fly. And, biology teacher told my mother. I said she said, do you know, anything about what Bruce is doing in the classroom in biology? And I she said, no. I don't know. I said, well, I I got a a highly detailed, outline of, you know, the life of the 4 wide. And, it's so detailed. It's just unreal, and and you might wanna talk to your doctor to see about medical illustration. And, you said she said, I'm gonna see if he'll let me keep it. I'm just she was just telling my mother this because I can use it as a demonstration to other students coming up.
And, so, you know, my mother went to our doctor and started talking about what the biology teacher told her. And he said, oh, man. Let me tell you something. As a doctor, medical illustration is teaching us how to do things, and there's only 5 different medical schools that, that have, medical illustration in it. But first, you have to finish in college in the top five of your class, graduating class. Well, that put me out of out of bounds with it. I wasn't even hardly making the to get into college. But, anyway, I did get to college and just, Louisiana Tech.
Oh, and the teacher did keep the, drawing I had, illustration I had of the menopause. Of the flight.
[02:58:57] Unknown:
So you were pretty much as a king, you were lord of the flies.
[02:59:03] Unknown:
Well, you know, thank you. That's an that's an honor. Thank you for that.
[02:59:12] Unknown:
Hey, Jack. Is Sarah here. Mind if I make a comment for a minute?
[02:59:17] Unknown:
Sure.
[02:59:18] Unknown:
Hey. Great. I just wanted to bring everybody up. I heard Sketch's comment about the El Salvador in, just a minute.
[02:59:40] Unknown:
You were gargled out. We we couldn't understand what you said there. I
[02:59:44] Unknown:
can't, seem to stop this.
[02:59:48] Unknown:
Oh.
[02:59:51] Unknown:
I'm looking for it. I mean, you'd
[03:00:18] Unknown:
It
[03:00:22] Unknown:
finally stopped. But, I need to bring back up the information that I had on it. I was quite aware about, El Salvador, but I was also more aware of Roger Ver. Everybody know who he was? He was they nicknamed me the Bitcoin Jesus. And it was quite some time ago when I got involved and knew about several things. One, listening to Roger, he was pretty much the only guy that was out there really promoting Bitcoin next to, Antonopoulos. And
Introduction to the Radio Ranch
Discussion on Agricultural Policies
Impact of Farm Bill on Agriculture
Technical Difficulties and Microsoft Frustrations
Monetary System and Promissory Notes
Understanding Debt and Interest
Bond Market and Economic Implications
Fractional Reserve Banking Explained
Historical Context of U.S. Citizenship
Speculations on Political Developments
Property and Legal Implications in the U.S.
Reincarnation and Past Lives Discussion