In this episode of the Global Voice Radio Network, host Roger Sayles, joined by Brent Winters, delves into a variety of topics ranging from personal anecdotes to broader political and historical discussions. The show opens with a light-hearted banter about the unpredictability of co-host Brent Winters' arrival, setting a casual tone for the episode.
The hosts discuss the changing world and their efforts to contribute positively from their "Radio Ranch." They touch on the health update of Pastor Eli James, who recently underwent a triple bypass surgery, and extend prayers for his recovery.
The conversation shifts to a detailed discussion about the political landscape, referencing historical events and figures such as the Clean Air Act's impact on coal miners and Brent Winters' personal experiences in politics. The hosts explore the themes of political power, the role of the jury in the common law tradition, and the influence of the evil empire on governance.
Brent Winters shares insights into the common law tradition, emphasizing the importance of the jury system and the separation of powers. The discussion also covers the historical context of the law of the city versus the law of the land, highlighting the ongoing struggle between these two legal traditions.
Paul English joins the conversation, sharing his experiences with English country dancing and its cultural significance. The hosts reflect on the importance of community and tradition in maintaining societal cohesion.
The episode concludes with a discussion on the current political climate, including the influence of media and the role of leaders like Donald Trump. The hosts encourage listeners to focus on the positive changes and to pray for guidance and strength in navigating these challenging times.
This Mirror Stream is brought to you in part by mymymyboost.com for support of the mitochondria like never before. A body trying to function with sluggish mitochondria is kinda like running an engine that's low on oil. It's not gonna work very well. It's also brought to you by Fatphix, p h a t p h I x, dot com. Visceral fat is weighing your body down. It's causing sluggish response of your organs, and it's gotta go. It's gotta go. It's gotta get rid of it. You just gotta. And also iTero Planet for the terahertz frequency wand by Preif International. That's iTeroPlanet.com. Thank you, and welcome to the program.
Forward moving and focused on freedom. You're listening to the Global Voice Radio Network.
[00:01:15] Unknown:
Well, you You know what? The world's changing without our help these days, so we're still gonna try, though. We're gonna exert a little effort from our corner of the ring, and, that's what we do on six day a week basis. Here at the Radio Ranch, Roger Sales, your host on Fridays. I've got Brent Winters, but he likes to he likes to add a little suspense and drama, so sometimes he waits to come in late. I don't believe he's with us just yet. Miss Francine is. And, of course, we are here on the seventh Friday edition with Brent. And, gosh, there's a lot of other people that are helping us extend our reach all around El Mundo. That's the world.
And, Paul Beaner one Paul Beaner is the keeper of such information, and we like to let him, come on and and give them their proper credit and their proper dues so we can all thank them for, helping us with our little project here, our little freedom project, Paul.
[00:02:14] Unknown:
Oh, yes. Yes. We we appreciate doing that. We appreciate them, and, we'd like to spread the word, share the love as it were. We're for the first hour on one zero six point nine WVOU FM in Chicago is part of the NET family of broadcast services. We're also on, patriotsoapbox.com for the first hour. We're on our flagship station, EurofolkRadio.com. Thanks to pastor Eli James, who I'm hoping that we'll get an update on because he he had a, triple bypass. Eli did? Less than a week ago. Yeah. Eli did.
[00:02:59] Unknown:
Had no idea. So
[00:03:01] Unknown:
we're hoping to have an update on his condition from our buddy Paul, who I'm hoping will be able to join us for this show today. I'm kinda sorta expecting him. You mean over on the other side of the pond? You mean over on the other side of the paw pond, Paul? Yeah. Yeah. Oh. Yeah. That that pond, Paul. Yeah. We're on Global Voice Radio Network. The links to Eurofocal Global Voice are on the matrixstocks.com. And, we're also on homenetwork.TV, freedom nation TV, go live TV, and stream life.tube. You can join us live on the show using free conference call. The links there are also on the website, thematrixdocs.com. And just, just as a passing thought, pending our our medical update for Eli,
[00:03:53] Unknown:
let's all, you know, do a few prayers through through the course of the program for him. Amen. Might not be a bad idea to start with a group here. I'd I'd wait to see Brent here. I don't think he's shown up yet. Or did he? Do I see him up there or not? I think he Oh. It looks like he might be up there. Is he? He did. Okay. Yeah. Good. Welcome, Brent. Welcome, Brent.
[00:04:15] Unknown:
Yeah. Hi. Hi, Paul. Hi, Roger and, Eli. Is Eli listening?
[00:04:22] Unknown:
We don't have any idea.
[00:04:24] Unknown:
Oh, it may be. How well, just in a nutshell, in one sentence, what is the is the problem diagnosed?
[00:04:34] Unknown:
Yeah. He, I believe what, Paul said yesterday was he was experiencing some, tightness in his chest, some chest pain. He went in, and, they looked at him, and they said, dude, you're all plugged up. You're going nowhere. We we have to perform surgery. So he wound up with a triple bypass, and, he got he got out of it okay. He's he's on the mend, and, that was the initial update that Paul had. Don't don't they do all that stuff arthroscopically
[00:05:09] Unknown:
now? I have no idea. I have no idea. I don't even I think they go in under that vein or artery in your arm, your left arm, and go into the heart that way and do it. I don't believe they cut cut him open, you know, anymore. I hope not. We hope he's alright. You know, Eli, as I was talking about the other day, I used to listen to him years ago on RBN. He had a Sunday morning slot, and then something happened between him and Stat Miller, and they parted ways. And then I went up to the mic, to MicroEffect, and they needed, host, and I got Eli on over there. So we've been chasing each other. Now here I am on his deal. So we've been chasing each other for years. You know?
[00:05:52] Unknown:
Right. Anyway,
[00:05:55] Unknown:
we we wish him the best, obviously, and hope for a speedy recovery, which it sounds like he might be on the way to. We'll wait in here. We might be blessed today, Brent, with mister Paul, England joining us. We'll see about his schedule, but Paul Beener told me that might happen. So we'll cross our fingers and hope that it does because he's you know, Paul's just a delightful guy. You know? I mean, working with him behind the scenes, talking with him, having him on the air, he's just a delightful guy. I I he's one of the real neat things that's happened out of this. To me, he was crossing paths with him and being able to work with him for a few years.
So, Brent, how you been doing, man? There's all kinds of stuff been going on since we spoke last time. And I know you don't really keep up with it, but you have advisers that give you pertinent parts of, the events. Is that correct? Oh, that that's correct. Yes. Uh-huh.
[00:06:54] Unknown:
I I can't help but know what's going on, and I know that, people are getting or that DJ is doing a lot of kicking. And he's he's throwing away all pencils and not taking any names and just getting rid of a lot of stuff. And Yeah. Yeah. And I here I am caught up with Tasmanian word associations with in the midst of all this big stuff going on. And I'm asking myself, why is it that I couldn't care less and I could care less have the exact same meaning.
[00:07:29] Unknown:
Yeah.
[00:07:30] Unknown:
Well, you do care because I don't know what I'm saying. How do you say it? You say both things. It means the same thing.
[00:07:37] Unknown:
You know, Brent, I I don't know that either one of us ever thought we'd see this day come, quite frankly. You know, and, it's come. It's here. They they're not done yet. There's something coming. They they they don't stay this quiet for nothing, and they ain't giving up. I promise you. So, the word is they've got all these common cells all over the country that are Mhmm. Armed and training and about to go do something, you know, bad. And we'll see if that happens or not. But, it's a marvelous day to see the surgical efficiency with which Trump is going after these monsters.
And he has changed, buddy. He was not like this the first time around. Well, it made him a dedicated, very dangerous enemy.
[00:08:30] Unknown:
The, evil empire. Yes, Roger. I agree. And the evil empire, to follow-up with your comment, the evil empire has, three progression of three things they always do, always, always, always when it comes to government. And the number one, they do all they can to, embarrass or humiliate those they hate. Yes. They just they just target one fell, and that's what they do to him. And that's what they try to do at the beginning. So Trump met them head on and said you're false fake news. And he said it over and over and over. And they said, okay. Okay. Okay. We'll ratchet it up to our next step. And the the playbook's always the same. The next step is try to indict the man and, embarrass him that way. And they did that. They've done that, for example, to that senator up in Alaska. And once they got him indicted, he, bowed out, left the senate, and went away. And that's what they wanted. They didn't they didn't follow-up on the indictment at all according to Which which said, Begich?
I don't remember the fellow's name. It hadn't been that many years ago. What was it? I'm I'm get I'm just stabbing in the dark. Begich is one.
[00:09:46] Unknown:
You know, when I was up there, I went to high school with, the governor of Alaska at that time was Republican. His name was Hinkle Uh-huh. I believe. And I went to sun school with both of his sons. Yeah. One of them was in my grade, and one of them was a year ahead of us. And then he got elected. I forget who put him up there. It may have been Reagan as secretary of the interior in Washington. But,
[00:10:11] Unknown:
yeah, very familiar with that. But I can't think of who else the other Alaska guy. It was it was very it was it would have been after you were in high school, Roger. It has been after I'm sure of that. But I you know, politicians, their names are forgotten very, very quickly no matter how famous they are. I mean, whoever talks about Bill Clinton anymore even, much less, Dick Nixon. But here we go. So, they they tried to embarrass Trump that way. They got him indicted. Well, they just made it worse. He didn't go away. They said, okay, Buster. Made him more popular. Yeah. So we're we'll just throw your, carcass in jail. And they went after him that way, got several indictments, went to trial.
And right at the very end, he was getting elected to president, and the judge did some shenanigan and got scared or something. Everybody started backing off a little, and they said, okay. Okay. You wanna play it tough. Okay. We'll blow your brains out, and we'll put a 22 caliber bullet right through your skull. Yep. And they tried it on two occasions. And in the providence of the almighty, he turned his head at the last second and it clipped his ear. He's been through the entire playbook of what, of their toolbox of evil. Yep. There isn't anything left. I mean, if a person will do the first one to you, if the evil empire will do the first one to you and try to embarrass you, they will kill you if they think they have to. And that, by the way, friends, is what politics is all about. And I I I give my personal testimony. That's what I call it. Because that's what happened to me, but they got me jailed twice.
And then, so they didn't have to try to shoot me through the head. And you say, Brent, you were that weren't that important. Here's no. I wasn't. Not compared to, but it was the only the only person that had in one way, the only person that had more name recognition than I did in my 27 counties was Bill Clinton. I had 92, and he had between ninety seven and ninety eight. And they know that no. People in other places didn't know how it was, but they know this. They know that one single man can get out of hand if if something hits right. They're not stupid. They don't understand how how it works. I had no hopes or even ideas on my head I would be that kind of guy. I just wanted to do what I was doing. But I began to recognize that the evil empire is sniffing out little tiny sparks everywhere constantly.
Yeah. And DJ just got too big for him, and so they just thought we'll have to try to kill him. And so that's what they tried to do. Well, if that happened to me and well, I guess it kinda did. I didn't nobody shot a bullet at me that I know of. But you'd it does change your outlook quite a bit, and all of a sudden reality sets in on you in a way it wouldn't have before. Because once the government and the evil empire, the useful idiots thereof, apply force and violence to your life, force, forcing you to do things in violence, then everything changes and reality sets in and you realize this is not, anything but a terminal game.
Terminal. Utterly terminal.
[00:13:13] Unknown:
And bloodshed I don't think you're in Kansas anymore.
[00:13:17] Unknown:
Yeah. We're not in Kansas anymore. But here's the here's the thing that, you can't realize. I don't think it's even possible to realize it, what the warfare is unless you suffer the brunt of it. If you're, you're asking some man who's been in a firefight, with rifles, to explain it to you, he can explain it to you, and you can know it. Oh, I know. I see what you're saying and how bad it is. But you that at that point, you just know about it. You don't know it. And you will never know it unless you take the incoming rounds and you throw a few back. Then you begin to know, okay. I get what this is. If they hit me with this bullet, it's gonna kill me or it's gonna hurt, and my family's gonna suffer, and I'm gonna be a paraplegic. And then on and on the madness goes, and it's gonna ruin a lot of people's lives and the despair and all the things that go with it. Well, that's what politics is, and don't think it isn't. And politics the outworking of politics is bloodshed. The outworking of politics is bloodshed.
Politics itself as, the commies said what Mao Zedong said, politics is war. I think it was him. Whoever it was, politics is war without bloodshed, and war is politics, the outworking of politics with bloodshed. And that is true, of course. War is always that terminal end of politics where men can agree upon a common external standard whereby to govern their relationship. Well, my god said this, and so we we said to the jabs, well, our god didn't say you could kill all of us you wanna do. Well, our god did. Well, we got a fundamental problem here. Somebody's gonna have to have to slug it out until we find out who's gonna take the field, and that's what happened, and that's what's always happened. And all of this, all of it is intensely a religious activity.
All politics and all war is religious activity. That's what it is fundamentally, and it comes down to this. Again, if two men or two nations or two political factions cannot agree upon a common external standard whereby to govern their relationship, they only have two choices. They can get away from each other if the world's wide enough, or they will start slugging each other until one man can't slug anymore, one nation. And that is the history of mankind. It has never changed. And to say otherwise is to have your head in the well, in a place for a very, very much darkness in the sand and put it nicely. And it's wet. It's wet and moist there. Yeah.
[00:15:47] Unknown:
They are they do things like they've done. These guys here for the last hundred plus years is they provoke. They're provocateurs. They're just poking. They're just poking. Putin. Putin, you bad. He's bad. He's this. He's that. Poke. Poke. Poke. And the minute he reach out, oh, that bad Putin. And they use all of that stuff for the audience that we may have some new people out there. Never know, Brent. But, mister Winters here ran for, congress from his district. Yeah. 27 counties. Did you say you had the largest district in the country or something? No. Largest district East of the
[00:16:27] Unknown:
it had the same number of people. It was a rural district. So but it had every district has to have the same number of people in the same Okay.
[00:16:35] Unknown:
Go ahead. And that was the, Newt Gingrich contract on America. Right? Wasn't that that election?
[00:16:41] Unknown:
Oh, yeah. I was there. I signed it, and and it was quite a deal. People say I saw you on national news. I knew you. You know? Yeah. I it was all of this was, a a a culture paradigm shift for me to to be involved in that. My family never had. I walked into the courthouse. I had on a pair of bib overalls, I remember, and doc Downey, a shirt tail cousin, was the clerk. And I said, what do you gotta do? Not doc Downey, doc's grandson. I said, what do you gotta do to he was a veterinarian, doc Downey, a horse doctor. What do you gotta do to run for congress in this county? And he laughed and said, you know somebody who wants to run. I said, yeah. I'll run. He he said, you do? I said, yeah.
And I was raising livestock at that time, and, he said, man, I don't know. Nobody's ever asked me that. He got this great big book up on top of this great big filing cabinet arrangement. It was it was about two foot long and about a foot and a half high, and he got it out on the counter and opened that big, big cover up, big stiff cover, made a stiff cardboard, and we got looking around in there what we had to do. He said, well, here it says that you gotta have this many signatures to get on the ballot. And I think it was one half of 1% of all the signatures of my party or all of the votes of my party in the last primary. Yeah. That's what it was, and and that's what it was all over the country to get on the ballot. Well, that amounted to quite a few because at that time, every congressional district had 600 and, 71,500 and and, 32, I believe I got it right, 530 persons, theoretically. Of course, people start moving around after the census. You don't know what you got, but that's all silliness too. But that's the way it was. So that meant one half of 1% of that, whatever that was, of of all the Republican votes in the previous, primary.
Well, I got on the ballot and, then we had a contested primary. And by the way, I, I won the flip of the coin, and, the the flip of the coin was whose name goes at the top of the ballot and whose one's on which one's underneath. You know, you're running against another fellow. One name has to be above the other. And at that time, we were, of course, they were hand dealt with ballots like they ought to be always. And whoever's name is at the top, all studies have shown. Whoever's name is at the top will get anywhere from three to 5% more votes. That's just the reality. How do you deal with that? Well, so what they did there, they flipped the coin. That's the way they always do it. And, said and I won the flip. So my name was at the top. Didn't guarantee anything. But what I didn't understand way back then, thirty year thirty year thirty years ago, I didn't understand that, voter fraud was rampant.
It always has been. Yes. And I but I didn't think anything of it at the time. I thought, well, no big deal. And I heard that they were shipping in, union buses of union members from East Saint Louis. That's not the paragon of virtue over there by any stretch. East Saint Louis. Boy, I'll tell you the things that go on. But, anyway, they were shipping voters or, yeah, voters and union members, and then the coal miners control the district because there are 15,000 of them. 15 get this is the way politics work. About 15,000 coal miners in my congressional district, and the Democrats pushed through Congress what they call the Clean Air Act. The the purpose of the Clean Air Act had nothing to do with clean air. It had everything to do with ending all coal mining, all anthracite coal mining, which is the hot burning stuff that doesn't really destroy the environment as much because you burn less of it. Oh, it it has more, stuff in it that you gotta get rid of, but the scrubbers get rid of it. But to the purpose of the Clean Air Act was to end all coal mining East Of The Great Plains because the coal East Of The Great Plains is that number nine anthracite, and that stuff is black and it burns hot. Well, they the powers that be and the people that were the money folk, they wanted to mine that coal out there in Wyoming and places, and there are a lot of it, but it's not it's more bituminous. It's not anthracite.
And it doesn't burn us doesn't have the same BTUs. BTUs. Every time I say the word BTU, I have to tell a joke, Roger. And it's about the fella, and this is the one around the hall. The little lady that, went to the hardware store and wanted she heard about air conditioners. It this joke came out when air conditioners first came out. People didn't know what BTUs were. Nobody talked about that much. And and, she said, I I want one of them newfangled air conditioners. And, yeah, the hardware store said, well, I have to know how many BTUs you want in your air conditioner. That's British thermal units, you know, of of, of heat.
How many BTUs you want? And she said, well, she thought a minute. She said, I want enough BTUs to cool off a BUT as big as a TUB. That's the way she described the the amount that we we wanted. Well, they had all these coal miners. They passed it Clean Air Act, which had nothing to do with clean air, put all all of them out of work. Every all the coal miners east of the Great Plains. And as you know, in the last couple elections, this was a big question with Donald Trump. He was saying, I'm gonna put you back to work. Well, right when that happened, not long after that happened, you got 15,000 coal miners. They're all heavily unionized for a couple of generations.
All of a sudden, they're out of work, and they hate they hate the other party. They don't hate the party that put them out of work. You know? They're union, so they they don't know the difference. So I don't know why that that happens, but that's the way the mind works. So they were after me that I was gonna put put them out of work, and I was trying to tell, listen, fellows, I'm here to put you back to work. They can never grasp that. So the people that were helping me and especially in those, counties that had the biggest minds, one of them, his name was Greg. I won't tell you his last name. He's sitting at home one night in his, house with his family, a very much Christian man, and had six children or so. I don't remember at that time, and he made a living as an upholster. He made a good living. He redid furniture and Mhmm. Cars. You know? Guy was good at what he did. And all of a sudden, one evening and a great big crash, you know, one one of these older houses with a picture window. The picture windows were very popular in the fifties and sixties. Oh, yeah. And the big big big window pane in the middle Yep. And the other one's on the side. You know? Yep. Yep. Crash. Yeah. And, right in the middle of the living room floor was a giant chunk of concrete with a note attached to it. Uh-oh.
And, of course, the idea was, don't help Brent anymore. You you can't if you don't understand politics, we're trying to give you fair warning, mister Greg. Don't help Brent anymore. Oh, he didn't. He got scared and disappeared. I mean, hey. Listen. I don't blame him. I don't either. Violent. They'll hurt people. I had another fellow help me over another county, a big coal mine over there. And the and the largest mountain the largest mountain in this in the whole state was in that congressional district. Now when I say mountain, do you folks out west, you you say, well, that's just a hill. Well, yeah. To you, it is. But to us, it's a mountain because the mountains back east aren't that big, but it's the largest mountain. And he lived right at the bottom of that mountain. And he was all hot helping me, and he wanted to get me into office, and his name was Bill. He had a son who had his same name, Bill. And so, the the other side, they were trying to stop him from helping me. So they came and, and, his son was, hunting on that mountain. He he had parked at the bottom of it, and he had gone up the hill, and he was hunting. I I think he's hunting deer. Of course, that's a big thing is to hunt deer.
No elk are back there that I know of. Bobcats, some of those, but hunting deer and, and the game warden, they control the game warden came and arrested him and threw him in the county. We call it county. Threw him in county. That means throw it in the county jail. They threw him in there. Of Course, they do it on a weekend, so you gotta wait till Monday to see the judge. Of course. All these games. Well, he was there quite a bit. Well, the problem was see, they had the wrong fellow arrested. He had the same name as his dad. And so they arrested him, but still it sent a signal. See that we are in control. Yep. And if you don't if you keep helping Brent, we got other tools in our bag. Of course, the first one was to send this send this fellow to jail for a a prison sentence for poaching or something. They accused him of some goofy thing.
I don't know what it was. That's just two examples. It got worse. It got much worse. Then finally, they came after me. And, of course, if they start out with the attempts at humiliation. I remember the last few days see, if they put on television commercials, two days before the election, you don't you can't rebut them. You don't have time to make your own you're trying to do that all the time, you know, rebut the accusations. And they came out the whole the party, the Republican party of the state, did television commercials against me.
And that was my party. Yeah. That's what Newt Gingrich, I don't think I don't think he's in my camp now, but at that time, he was speaker, and he wanted to have a majority, of course. And, just before the election, thirty days before the election, I couldn't get him to support me either. I did have who was that fellow that was, oh, he was, secretary of war, secretary of defense, Rumsfeld.
[00:26:34] Unknown:
Uh-huh. Rumsfeld.
[00:26:35] Unknown:
He called me, and he he wanted to be secretary of defense if Bush got in. See? So he called me and and said, I just want you to know I'm out here, and I'm I support you. And and, he had been secretary of defense when I was well, I was under his authority when I was a military guy back in on Nixon and before. And, he so I knew who he was. He was a very young man. It's hard to imagine how young he was, but, then he came back and did it again. Mhmm. He supported me. I got a call from a fellow two days before the election, maybe a day. I don't remember. And, somebody in the in campaign all of a said, Brent, there's a guy that wants to talk to you here, and he says he owns the Chicago White Sox.
I said, the Chicago White Sox? So I went, hello. He said, yeah. This is so and so. I said, where do you live? He said, I live in Florida. I said, well, we're not in Florida. You know? Oh, yeah. I know. He said, but I've been watching you. I've been watching you the whole time. And he said, I want you to know I support you. And he was a Jewish fella. I don't remember his name. Yeah. But here's that's the way it works. Truth is he didn't support me. He but he but when when somebody calls you at the last minute and says, hey. I've been watching you and supporting you the whole time. What they're saying is, I'm afraid you're gonna win, and I don't wanna be caught on the wrong side. That's all it is. It it's that simple and that's stupid. And I had a lot of those calls from wealthy people. Two, the Republican party was against me, but Gingrich was very well known at that time. And Oh, yeah. Talking about he's third in line to be president. He needs to have security, all that stuff. Well, he just put out the word at the very end because, again, he saw, hey. This guy may win. We better be on his side because if if I we're not on his side, he's not gonna support us. See? So they put out Gingrich put out the word nationwide or probably worldwide. I don't know. And after that and that was the last thirty days before the election.
If I didn't get $30,000 in the mail, I was having a bad day, and that's not exaggeration. I mean, the money, it's amazing. This is what I learned in politics too. There's no shortage of money. There is no shortage of money for politicians. It's just getting your hands on it. And if you don't get your hands on it, you ain't gonna get into office because you have you have to buy name recognition. You're not buying people to support you for any particular reason. All you're buying is name recognition. You're not gonna teach anybody anything as a politician. They don't care.
They just wanna feel like they well, I know who that guy is, and they wanna tell other people, oh, he's my friend or I met him or I saw him or that's all it is. It's that silly. It's that stupid. Politics is all about numbers. It's not about truth. You know, you get enough votes, you get in, and you try to keep the numbers up. It's numbers, numbers, numbers. It's like we fought the war in Vietnam. It's all about numbers. Got KIAs. You know? That anything that operates on numbers is the evil empire. I repeat that over and over. Anything that operates on numbers is the principles of the evil empire, and we have it in our tradition. It's called democracy. It's also called republicanism.
Republicanism. There's no difference. Never was. The ancient Greeks made no distinction between those two, but we have it as a necessary element in one of the branches of our government. It is a necessary element in what we call the political branch of our government, which is the legislative branch, a necessary evil. You gotta have it for two reasons. You gotta have the political branch, the legislative branch, fundamentally in our common law tradition for two reasons and two reasons only. Number one, to take your personal property from you by force.
Congress is there. The census is there for one reason according to our constitution, and it's an acceptable thing, but it's a necessary evil, and that is to tax you. There are some taxes somewhere somebody's gonna pay, and only congress and only your state legislature has the power to talk about that and pass legislation about it. That's nasty. That's the political branch. The other power of the political branch has fundamentally at common law, and this is the only one, is to declare war and then pull by doing that, pull your sons and daughters away from you to kill and be killed. That's the two fundamental powers.
That's all the power they need, by the way. That's plenty. The devil with the rest of it. Legislation is just nothing but flat dangerous at every level, and that's dangerous too. Your life, liberty, or property is not safe. And my father used to quote that fella about the legislation
[00:31:20] Unknown:
back in Pennsylvania, whoever said it, is not safe as long as the legislature is in session. That's Well, I say, was it Will Rogers that said the legislature is in session, put your hand on your pocketbook?
[00:31:31] Unknown:
Yeah. Well, sure. And that really, that's the fundamental of pay power they have is to somehow weasel your money out of your pocket somehow. And they got a million different ways to pull it off even passing legislation to establish a national bank like the Federal Reserve to steal all the money. That's legislation. That's how that comes. But coming back to, numbers, the real power and what we're ignoring, they want us to ignore they want us to focus on politics, politics, politics, politics, and it is the it is the the push and the drive of the evil empire to politicize every person.
And once you're politicized, you're polis. You're the law of the city. That's all you pay attention to. Listen. That's not where the power is. That's where the hype is. The presidency, same thing. The hype is there. Where's the real power? I'll tell you where it is. It's an individual instances in front of the jury. The final decider, the final arbiter of right and wrong in individual instances from whose decision down here on land, there is no appeal. That's power. That's real power. The jury is our court of last resort. The jury, the common law jury, which doesn't exist anywhere in the world, is what has all of the real power in America. And the evil empire is doing everything they can to minimize the visibility of the jury, the use of the jury. In England, they've done away with the jury in all cases except criminal cases.
In Canada, they've done this. The grand jury is gone. In Canada, it's gone in England. We still have it. And to get away if we get rid of our machinery, of our common law tradition, which is all about revolves around the jury is what holds our whole tradition, our Christian tradition Yep. In orbit. And if I'm not mistaken, Jesus Christ supported the idea when he impaneled the 12 man jury to witness the evidence of his identity.
[00:33:27] Unknown:
I think I've told you before that John's statement he was writing a book on the jury when he passed. Uh-huh. I'm sure it was one sentence from cover to cover as Glenn says. But, his his thoughts were the jury is the only thing that assures a republican form of government.
[00:33:45] Unknown:
Well, that's the the without the jury, all the three coequal branches of government, which is our common law tradition, where neither branch has the power to to tell the other one what to do, the jury is is the fundamental key to not some things, but everything. And of that, those three coequal branches, the the fundamental in independence is the independence of the judiciary, the independence of the judiciary. And without the jury, the independence of the judiciary comes down to tyranny. You gotta have the jury. In our common law tradition, our forebears and God himself or authorizes this through the power of his son, Jesus Christ. And then Paul the apostle talks about it in first Corinthians chapter six. The Old Testament supports the principle over and over and over again. Our common law tradition going back not centuries, but a couple of thousand of years.
Magna Carta is not the beginning of our common law tradition. Magna Carta is just one of those solid stepping stones in our common law tradition as we hark back through history. I like our constitution of The United States. But friends, how do not be caught up. This is one of my messages I wish I could get across, and I just give you a testimony. Haven't been there. Do not be caught up in the evil empire's game. Politics. Don't be excited about it. It doesn't make any difference. It's what makes a difference is that you insist upon the 12 man jury. That you insist that when you have a problem with your neighbor, your neighbor, you take him to court.
That's a privilege between brothers, my friends. And the Bible says that. You got a you got a problem with your neighbor. What's the first inclination in America today? Or call some bureaucrat or call a sheriff or somebody to come out and tell him not to do that anymore. And if he doesn't, he gets fined. That's not our common law tradition. Yeah. Our common law tradition is a a tradition of private law and private men suing each other. That's what it is. And our differences are not settled in the legislature as much as they're settled in the courthouse, but it comes down to this. Then beyond that, Roger, were you gonna say something? I was. I was gonna say I heard this years ago. I thought it was pretty good. A common law is private law as you were just saying for public perp that's used for public purposes.
[00:36:03] Unknown:
And what they've done is they've brought in private law and and they've made it the opposite. K? They're they're they're bringing it it was common law was public law, but it was used for private purposes. They brought in private law, and they're using it for public purposes. They just always switch stuff.
[00:36:23] Unknown:
Yeah. Yeah. I know. That's true. And get it upside down. The evil empire is exceedingly clever. And, the the but the playbook is always the same. It's always the same. And once a fellow learns the playbook, then he can say no and do it with confidence. Yeah. And the playbook comes down to this, friends. The story, the history of mankind, I said before, two men, two nations cannot agree on a common external standard whereby to govern their relationship, the only option is war, fighting. So in the history of mankind, since the settling of the city of Babylon, there have been two traditions of religion, law, and government. Two traditions, these and no others, these and no more, the right one and the wrong one the wrong one under 10,000 labels called the law of the city. And the evil empire will tell you, oh, there are many traditions of law and government. And they'll offer classes at the local state university, and you can go take them on all the different religions. And you can study them and say, well, I'm trying to decide. They want you to to be to be ambivalent. Say, I'm trying to decide which religion is right. No. No. No. That is hogwash.
There are only two. And God will move you either toward the one or toward the other, and all nations and all men are always tending more toward the one or toward the other on the continuum between the two. And every war that's ever been fought and every conflict that's ever occurred occurred because two men or two nations could not agree upon the principles of the law of the land, our common law, or the law of the city. And every decision you make leans toward one or the other, and these are religious traditions, my friend.
They're religious traditions. You can't have government without having a final arbiter of right and wrong, which, men have called from ancient times a god, a lawgiver, a final arbiter of right and wrong. As I've said before down here on land, God has delegated to us the authority to use the jury. This is the age of man. And then the Bible tells us later is the age of the Lord. Well, what does that mean? Well, that's the age when he governs. Right now, he's delegated that to us, and we are in charge of due process, our common law. Due process is our common law. Not what not the end result to declare that our our job is to follow the process Mhmm. That the law provides and the end result becomes reliable. But God is the God of the end result, not us.
We are to be process focused as men to know how to go about doing things. I just use several examples. Roger, I go into court. We go into court because we can't agree on what the law means and how it applies. So we got all these legal experts. You got two lawyers, at least two lawyers and a judge. That's three lawyers. They don't they can't agree. Nobody knows for sure how to apply the law or a month lawyer. So they're trying to figure that out, and then they want the jury to tell them the facts and then decide what the law is so they can figure it out. So they're fighting over these things. They're fighting over them.
And this court, this common law court, under our common law tradition, which are two fundamentals, two of them, the jury and stare decisis, Let the decision stand. Let the decision stand. Separate and coequal branches of government. Therefore, the the judicial branch follows their decisions. They don't follow the president or the governor, what he said. They don't follow the legislature. No. No. In the final analysis, they follow their decisions. That's called a separate and coequal branch of government. That's why our common law tradition has stare decisis because the branches are separate. Very important. You say, well, I don't like what the courts are doing. I don't either a lot of time, but I'll tell you something. I'd rather have the court separate and coequal than to be subservient to the legislature or the president like we had when Roosevelt was in office. We had a congress that was subservient to the president. They just slobbered all over him, did everything he told them to do. What do we get?
Socialism, communism, bureaucracies, alphabet soup agencies, out the yin yang, tyranny, government by a powerful president, a king, an emperor. That's what you get. That's what you get. A stacked a stacked Supreme Court. Yeah. Yeah. Just yeah. It just doesn't stop. To understand, I just I was asked to go speak about the common law tradition and tell a group of folk what it is, and I feel like when I go away from things like that did I did I really illuminate anything? I'm talking now, and I'm thinking, am I really making this clear? Are people understanding what I'm saying? And is it even possible? I have discovered this. I have discovered this, our common law tradition. Is not something you you go out and teach.
As some people say about some subjects, it's more caught than taught. Right. You try you try to teach it, and it just it it just swells in your hands if you have a grasp. It swells in your hands so fast. It becomes a giant ball that you can't even hold up, and you're trying to and what you need to be able to do is say, look. Here's some fundamentals. And once you get the fundamental structure down, then you can start hanging stuff on it. As the German say, the gestalt, method of learning. Well, they're right. A fancy word. It just means you gotta get the fundamentals first. And if you don't get the fundamentals, the framework, that's kind of a barren framework that you can start hanging details on, Well, you don't you you'll never get it going for the details. And most all of the so called patriot community is hung up in a whole lot of details that are not any more worthwhile than a pinch of dried aloe dropping.
[00:42:00] Unknown:
Amen.
[00:42:01] Unknown:
Yeah. Mhmm.
[00:42:03] Unknown:
Our common law tradition as our Christianity is about what the Bible calls in Hebrews chapter five, first principles. Not just principles. That's big enough. We're talking first principles. Oh, Oh, what's the first principle? Well, that's a principle that governs all other principles. I'll give you I'll give you a five. I I repeat this over and over and over. Do not covet, lie, steal, commit adultery, or murder your neighbor. The Bible throughout calls those first principles because all of the Bible can be categorized under the 10 heads called the 10 commandments.
You say, well, Brent, what about the gospel? Well, the gospel's in there too. Well, what's the gospel? The gospel is, God saves men. Men don't save themselves. Men do not keep those 10 principles and gain favor with God, and he saves them from hell. That's not Christianity. That's Romanism, Mormonism, Judaism, Hinduism, and every ism and schism that we wish was wasms, all those 10,000 labels on the other side, a false religion, a million different ways that you can justify yourself before God by doing something and being a good little boy or girl according to somebody's rules. Even God says, I know you can't commend yourself to me, according to my rules. You can't do that. No. I I'm not gonna do that. What I wanna do is say you're so rotten. I'm just gonna throw away who you are, and I'm gonna give you a new birth, and you'll be a new creature, new mind, new will, new emotions, born from above, born of the spirit. Oh, now I got something I can work with. Now I can give you my standards. Do not covet lies, steal, commit adultery, or murder, and you really want to learn them and do them. Even though you fall down, even though as an errant child, you make mistakes, you still always want to please your father.
That's Christianity. You don't, you don't, you don't commend yourself to God. God in his sovereignty gives you the new birth. You you don't get into the kingdom of God, by by working your way into it by merit. You get in just like you got in your family the first time. Your father decided to give to, seduce your mother and give you birth. When I say the word seduce, I mean that in a loving way. For whatever reason, it was your father that, but by hill his will, you were born. And that's why it says in John's gospel, not by the you're born not by the will of any man, but by the will of God, not even by your own will. I wanna be born again. Well, that's not gonna get it either.
I didn't say that to my father before I was born. I didn't say, hey, dad. I wanna be born. You know? I had nothing to do with it. He did it. He did it. He did it. And that's what the Bible says point blank. First John chapter one verse 12 along in there. Or not first John, the gospel of John chapter one, who are born not of the will of any man, that includes you, but of the will of God. God is the father, and God is the one that decides to give you the new birth. And that is a law because it will not change. God has decreed it to be the way he deals with men, and that's part of the Bible. And do not covet, lie, steal, commit adultery, or murder is a law of condemnation to those that are not born from above. That's what will send you to hell.
And, the do not covet, lie, steal, commit adultery, or murder your neighbor is a guide that the one that is born from above wants to follow. He wants to. Matter of fact, he's so passionate about it. He'd rather do that than eat. He'd rather do that than eat. And if you have that kind of passion, that's a good sign. If you hunger and thirst as Jesus Christ said in the sermon on the mountain, if you hunger and thirst after right headedness, That's a sign that you're born from above. If all men love you and all men like you, that's a sign you are not born from above. Ain't that amazing? I was talking about we're teaching this course now, Roger, and I want you to if you don't have the link, Roger, I want you to have it. No. I do. I just got yesterday's episode this morning. Oh, well, I yeah. Just well, good. I'm glad you got it. But we talked, sheriff Darleaf and I from Barry County, Michigan teach the course. It's about Christian nationhood, Christian nationhood.
And we were talking about, the an overview. We went and had an overview of of our culture here in America. And our culture here in America, we're a common law country. That in and of itself means we're a Christian culture. But even if you don't consider that, you look at us. Well, we're just a Christian culture and there's nothing any law may mandated. It's we just are. We're we're the only country in the world that's ever been this way. We're so we're more intensely Christian than any people on the face of the planet even with all our problems. But at the same time, we have no official proclamation that we have to be. That's the best kind of Christian nation there is, but we got to talking about the overview of how Christianity shaped up in America from the very beginning, and we made the point that America began as a church relocation program.
A church relocation, effort on the part of the Puritans. Not, a thousand or 10,000, but a few hundred thousand of them showed up during the English revolution. And they've they determined they couldn't win it there, so they were gonna come to New England. They were gonna call it New England, and they were gonna rule England from New England. That was the idea. And, eventually, that really has happened de facto, although not in law. That's really what's happened. Well We have become tell you I can tell you that in this big release of USAID
[00:47:35] Unknown:
Mhmm. One of the, organizations that they're supporting Yeah. The VBC.
[00:47:41] Unknown:
Yeah. Well, I'm amazed, just watching the Internet how the how excited the Brits are over us possibly returning to our roots a little more. Because with us to return to our roots, the Brits, the Northern, the people in Ireland, the Welsh, the Scots, the Canadians, the New Zealand's New Zealanders, the, that, the, the, the Aussies. Well, if we return to our roots, that will bring them back a little more too, and they want that too. Rightly, we made the point that our Christianity in America, only in Britain, only in Britain during the reformation was the reformation of not only church, but also of government. Yeah. The reformation in Europe was not a government, but only of church. And there's a reason for that. Roger, were you gonna say something? I was gonna say keep it up. You'll conjure up Paul English.
We're trying to raise the man from his lethargicness. If he has any, try to maybe he's just listening tangentially. He might be. He might be. I wanna I like him, of course, to come in because he does weigh in on these subjects, and he's, there. He's a loyal Brit. He says he wants his country back. When he said that to me on the phone, that's been a few years ago, he said, Brent, I didn't want my country back. And I the first thing that popped into my head was John Knox. John Knox of Scotland, the unofficial leader of the reformation in Scotland.
Jail, not jail. No. Reduced to a galley slave on a French warship, but to behest the pope of Rome that captured him, put an iron collar around his neck. He was on a on a a British warship for right at around four, four and a half years. No. I didn't know that. Yeah. The the the ordeal permanently crippled his shoulders because it ruined his collarbone on one side. I mean, can you imagine having a heavy iron? It's bad enough. It can ruin your your your body just having one of those ankle bracelets on. Yep.
[00:49:47] Unknown:
Well, he was Or these new box handcuffs.
[00:49:51] Unknown:
Yeah. Same same thing. Go ahead. Yeah. Well, he had a blasted iron collar, of course, didn't wasn't allowed to wear any clothes and didn't take a bath in about four and a half years, and the lice the lice were crawling all all over his body. Oh my lord. Teeth on his hide as all those men were. You talk see, that's what happened to him. So when he got out of that in an exchange, he lived through it. A lot of his friends didn't. He got out of that. When he came back to England, he didn't care anymore. He's like DJ Trump. Yeah. You're gonna try to kill me? You tried. It didn't happen. Now what now? Look what you're gonna have to deal with. So he went back to Scotland. Now here's what I need to say, though. When I heard Paul English, I need to hit the nail with my head before I give any more provisos or explanations. People wanna know, and I have a trouble doing that sometimes.
Paul English said, I just want my country back. Well, John Knox, that was his cry. And he hit the famous words were, give me Scotland or I die. Give me Scotland for the gospel or I die for my God or I die. And he got out of that ordeal and he went back to Scotland. We had been outlawed, Mary, Queen of Scots, who was, fascinating creature. She stood about six foot, six foot tall. She had green eyes. She was striking in the extreme and beauty from what men said and attractiveness. I shouldn't say the beauty. She was just attractive, and there's a difference. Yeah. Some women are beautiful. Some women are attractive, and some are both, but
[00:51:23] Unknown:
Hollywood beauty is different than attractiveness. You know what I mean, Roger. Well, she was attracted. Can I tell you what my mother said? My late mother said pretty is as pretty does.
[00:51:32] Unknown:
Yeah. Well, that that would apply to this this gal, Mary Queen of Scots. She was striking. In her appearance, she was raised in the courts of France. She had that arrogant attitude from it. She got back to Scotland. She became the Monarch over there and, she declared John Knox, outlawed and that common law outlawry mean outlawry, which came to America. We it's still part of our common law tradition. It's never been repealed anywhere. But outlawry means that you won't submit yourself if a fellow won't submit himself to the process of our common law, in other words, come into court and answer, then he has what the Anglo Saxon called before the Norman invasion, a wolf's head, the head of a wolf, which meant, men, if they saw him, had a duty, all of all men had a duty to to bring him in dead or alive, either kill him, bring in his body, or, bring him in alive, whatever he had to do. That was the law. That's when men, they didn't have police forces and the militiamen, the posse, or the sheriff, everybody was responsible for law enforcement. Not a bad idea, by the way, coming back to the authority of the local sheriff.
But declared him an outlaw. He was exiled in France, and he decided to go back to Scotland because he knew that the Scottish people in his own country, loved him and supported the reformation. In other words, the they they were trying to establish the Bible as final court of last resort and and to get rid of Rome. That was what it was all about. And he came back and, of course, people, accepted him. And, he boldly said, I want a I want a meeting, a private meeting with Mary Queen of Scots. Well, that scared the bejeebies out of her. You know, evil people are always scared, scared, scared, scared. All of us struggle with fear. They're not brave. Oh, no. The intrepidity of the spirit of God. The spirit of God is the only thing that can impel a man or a woman to intrepid bold behavior on behalf of truth. It's the only thing. There isn't anything else. Well, she didn't have that. She got prayed. And she said to one of her counselors, she said, I fear the prayers of John Knox more than all the armies of Europe.
Well, that's quite a statement. And she did. I believe her. Well, he got with her. She was exceedingly, I didn't add this. She was exceedingly promiscuous by the way. She had no discernment about sex and she got into some terrible relationships. She ended up getting people, their heads chopped off, and she caused the problem. Of course, ultimately, it all came back to her, and her half sister had her head chopped off. That's what happened. But, this is it was humiliating because when she had a a wig on her head when she went to get her head chopped off, you know, dressed a woman like that always wants to look nice, you know, even when she getting her head chopped off. It's it's almost comical, But she had this fancy wig on. And, you know, when they chop a fellow's head off in England, the idea or a lady like her.
Of course, if she had as a as a member of the nobility, if you're if you're convicted of treason, you get to have your head chopped off. If you're not the member of the nobility, they would hang you. And then just before you died, then they would cut you down. And while you're still alive, the this is called drawing and quartering. They would slice your belly open and and pull your guts out and burn them before your eyes. Then they cut off your private parts and burn those before your eyes if you're still conscious. Usually, pit men would go unconscious. That's called drawing and quartering. And then after they did all that, they'd tie, wild horses to your four, limbs and pull you apart.
And then chop the pieces up and throw them in a tub and put some kind of a cover over it, and, they would, say that, well, at the king's disposal at the king's discretion, he can dispose of these any way he wants. And sometimes he'd hang them over London Bridge. Sometimes he would send them throughout the kingdom to show people, what happens to folks don't that don't like him that much. Well, that's what they're going but she being a member of the nobility didn't get that drawing and quartering done. She just got her head chopped clean off. So it came time for her to get her head chopped off. She was all dressed out and pretty hair and oh, no. Pretty dress. She had on a wig, and it was a red wig. It was a wig of red hair. Why she had it on, I don't know. I never found that information, but they she gave him time for her to lay her head down on the block and, give a a coin to the the the the chop the chopping man, what they call him, the henchman.
And, he chopped her head off. Well, after he chopped her head off, the he he was supposed to this is the the job of the henchman, the axeman. He was supposed to when the head fall down, he was supposed to grab the head by the hair and lift it up before the crowd and say, behold, a traitor. And like that, that was the kind of the the process. Well, he chopped her head off and, he reached down to pick it up, and he grabbed that wig and jerked it. Of course, it was partially attached to her head somehow, but it jerked it just enough. He picked the wig up, and the head went rolling across the stage. Gruesome. Gruesome situation.
So she got her comeuppance from all the death she caused. But in the final analysis, he met with her at Holly Rue Holly Rue Holly Rue Castle. Holly Rue Castle's still there. And, she said to him, with tears in her eyes, the poor put upon rich girl. She said, I perceive that my people will obey you and not me. And he said, mad madam, it is my desire that your people and you and me would obey God. And, of course, him being Protestant, that didn't set with her, and she said, well, my conscience is not so. And he said, madam, you can make put it in, the the sun. Right? Madam, you can make your conscience set up and beg like a dog.
That's not the standard. Your conscience is not the standard. Are we to have freedom of conscience? Yes. That's part of our common law tradition. The most quoted phrase from the Westminster confession is that, God I'm quoting. God, section 20. God is lord of the individual conscience. Is that true? Yes. That is true. But your conscience is not the final court of last resort. And most and he said to her, the conscience is good. Thank you for shutting that off. The conscience is good if it's informed correctly. But the conscience what is conscious? Let's back up.
Conscience is just a fancy Latin word that means with con means with a Latin preposition. Science. Science. What does science mean? It just means stuff, you know, knowledge. That's all it means. Nothing fancy about the word science. We should say knowledge. We should not u use the word science. It it confuses us into thinking there's something special. This is Brent. I hear the West name Brent Allen Winters, common lawyer dot com, w w w dot common lawyer dot com. And I'm here with Roger Sales. This is Roger Sales of Radio Ranch. And I'm here with Roger. We're talking about our common law, the laws of nature, the laws of nature of God. Join us next week, same time, same station, and we'll continue. As a matter of fact, Paul, maybe you could tell him how to continue listening for the next hour.
[00:59:13] Unknown:
Yeah. +1 0690 in Chicago and radiosoapbox.com. Please go to the matrixdocs.com and click on the Eurofocal radio link, the global voice radio link, or the free conference call links, and join us live on the show. Thank you.
[00:59:31] Unknown:
Thank you, Paul. Well, I forgot where I left. Oh, conscience. Can I keep talking, Paul? Yes. You can, Brent. I'll finish the story anyway, and then Roger. Well, I got an an epitaph or two to throw in there. Okay. It's alright. Go ahead. Yeah. We wanna hear them. I'll be done in a second. But he said your my she said to him, my conscience is not so. And he made the comment. And this is important for all of us to recognize that a conscience not rightly informed is not worthless. It's dangerous. It's worse. And most people's all of our consciences are not informed enough rightly. Mhmm. Some more than others. But if you're not right headed and you aren't, if you're not born from above, you're not right headed. You got your nose pointed in the other direction. I don't care how moral you think you are. And if you're trying to be a moral person, trying to be a good person, you're walking in the wrong dress direction. You're trying to justify yourself before God. Forget it. It ain't gonna happen.
God justifies men. That's Christianity. That's our common law tradition. And, that's the only thing that could possibly turn our country around. Lord, give me my country back, to quote Paul in English. Give me my country back. That's what we want. We do want it back. We are a Christian nation. Whether that's our that's the fact of the matter. We can't change that. Our culture is a Christian culture because it is a common law culture. We're different than other countries. Diametrically opposed in our common law tradition, the law of the land. We're not like the rest of the world under the code of just any in the canon civil laws of the Roman Empire, the code of just any end of the sixth century. No. We're not that at all. We are a common law country that arose from those tribes in the North Of Europe, called our common law tradition their bulk right. Now Roger Roger has a couple of stories, but that maybe we'll wanna catch the things we're saying. Add ons. You were talking about, Mary Queen of Scots,
[01:01:31] Unknown:
execution there. And I don't know if everybody in the audience realizes that King James was her son. That was his mama, was Mary Queen of Scots. Quite. Yeah. And he watched that. They made him watch that, what what Brent described to you. And he was so upset that he went into a room for three days. He didn't drink. He didn't eat. He didn't speak with anyone. And when he came out, he never spoke of the incident the rest of his life. He was also a screaming homosexual, and the Scotts called him. Their nickname for him was Shamie Jamie. So they're just a little sidebar on that incident that has had great repercussions in all of our lives and, in fact, the whole world.
[01:02:21] Unknown:
The rest of the story, to quote Paul Harvey. That's right, Roger. All these things are true. Now I don't come out and say homo, King James the first was a practicing homosexual. I don't say that. And the reason I don't say it is because I haven't studied the subject enough to say I've got clear evidence. But I do know that what you said is true. That is what they said about him. There's a lot of little things like that about him that aren't right. But, clearly, he was divine right of kings like his mother, like the Stuart Kings. The Scots the Scots had this an unnatural, people or historians have always said this, this unnatural, affinity for France.
The Scots have always had this unnatural affinity for France. The folks South Of Scotland never had. And, this unnatural affinity for France also gave them a lot of exposure to the law of the city, the code of Justinian. And to this day, Roger, although the our common law tradition is, is in the British island, officially, Scotland is still not a common law country. Could that explain why for all of their fighting and all of their promotion, they have never been an independent country and, well, for many for a thousand years or more. They've they've been tried before that. I don't know. I just know this. The common law tradition has overlaid Britain or, well, the whole island and, Scotland and many Scots have been great common law lawyers like Lord Mansfield. His name is Murray. He was a Scotsman. His brother, though, was a Jacobite.
He was a rebel. He was a law city man. Oh, yeah. On and on the the struggle, see, between these traditions. The history of the island of Britain is a history of the struggle between the law of the land and the law of the city. It is so pronounced. It's shocking when you when you read spend your time reading what happened there. That's all it's ever been, and that's what it is today, and it remains that way in our country. The devil is not taking a break. Roger, go ahead. I was just gonna say for the newer folks, some of the older folks have heard this. John's way of approaching this subject was
[01:04:35] Unknown:
we're in the fight that has been fighting since the beginning of time. And it's just what Brent said, Lex Rex versus the common law. Law of the king versus the the common law of God. Well, it That's what I'm saying. Right here today.
[01:04:52] Unknown:
See, back in those days of John Knox, there was another Scotsman by the name of Rutherford. Rutherford. Samuel Samuel Rutherford. Look him up. What a fella. He wrote a book that overturned a whole lot of well, ruffled a lot of feathers. The name of the book was Lex Rex. And what he said in that book is the law of the land is Lex Rex or yeah. Law over king. Lex over Rex. Law over king. But the law of the city is the other way around. Rex Lex. That book, I used to buy that book. I buy a few cases even though I didn't have the money and I would give it to people. I wanted to read that book. It's a kind of hard reading, of course, because, the style of writing was different. It's readable.
But what he did, he went to the laws of nature's God to prove his point. What's the laws of nature's God? They called it the laws of nature's God. We call it the laws of nature's God in our declaration of '76. John Locke called it the laws of nature's God. In England, John Locke was a fan of the Scottish enlightenment. The Scottish enlightenment, they called it the laws of nature's God, round up in our in our declaration. And what is it? It's the Bible. So Sam Rutherford goes to the Bible to prove that the proper order is law over king, Lex over Rex, and not he uses fancy Latin words. It's really too bad. Really too bad. Why does he use all these fancy Latin words? Why didn't he just say law over king instead of king Lex, Rex, Rex. Why? Because he was trained as where most all the reformers heavily trained as Roman Roman priests. What is a Roman priest? A Roman priest is today, what a Roman priest was then. Foremost, a Roman priest is a lawyer of the canon civil laws of the city, the the canon law of Rome.
Then there's the same thing fundamentally as the code of Justinian of the Roman Empire. That's what it is. The pope is imperial. He is like the Roman emperor. He is God. He is the final word. He says Jesus Christ has given him all authority on earth to be the final word on everything Among all men, that's the official doctrine of Rome. It was at that time, but these boys were edumacated so much in Latin and all of their concepts, everything they understood about reality was in Latin encased in Latin words and phrases. And they're and during a priest to be a priest in those days, it was tough. You had to go to school in higher education at least seven, more like ten years.
And a lot of them did that for twenty years. And during that time in the university system, which is also a product of Rome, they were in the product of Rome, they were in the universities. They weren't allowed to speak or write anything but Latin. Why? Again, well, to hide the truth or what hide their doctrine, not the truth, to hide their doctrine from the unwashed masses. They didn't know know Latin, so they hid it all. It's a hidden religion. It's a it's a Babylonian mystery religion. We gotta have our secret language, and Latin was a secret language. And, of course, the reformation forced Rome to abandon that idea to some degree.
And they did away with the Latin mass Vatican two all that, but there are still those who say, no, we gotta have it in Latin. Why? So you can't understand it and other people can understand it, I suppose. Well, they think there's something magical about the language. See, is there? No, there isn't. Is Latin the language the Bible was written in? No. Why did Rome declare the Latin Vulgate to be the final word and the inerrant word, the final word of, faith and practice for all of Christianity? Because they wanted a language that only they knew. That's how it started, and that's why people they have kept people from reading it all these centuries. That's the final word. Who knows Latin? Latin is not even taught anymore. In our high school, Latin used to be taught in our high school. Yeah. Sure did. Yeah. I mean, my mother took Latin. I could have taken it in high school. By the time I got there, it wasn't required. When my mother was there, she graduated high school in 1950, and she had to take Latin. And that was in Podunk, America in a little tiny town where people that lived outside of town couldn't even get to school because there wasn't any school buses. My father didn't get to go to high school because there was no way to get to town. My mother was fortunate enough. She lived a little closer. My grandma did too. My grandma rode the the the the Hornet.
It was a little tiny train that ran from Kansas to Westfield of just a short route that ran through the oil field, It was used to carry equipment and stuff, and she'd run out in the morning. Her father, they lived in a pumper shack, two room pumper shack. We call them dog houses, in the oil field, and she'd run out and that thing would slow down and she'd jump up on it. She'd tell me these stories. They called it the the Hornet. It was a short line, a little tiny small gauge track. She jumped up on that thing, and she got to ride this high school simply because that oil field transport went through twice a day, carrying equipment and working, you know, working in the oil field. Uh-huh. Drilling all.
She got to go to high school. What a deal for her living way out in the country. It was it was very fortunate on her. Well, dad didn't have that opportunity. My mother did because of where she lived. But in that high school, they still taught Latin. And amazing. It was part of a well, they wanted to understand my mother can still quote. They wanted her to understand western the Western world, and, she had to read learn to read sections out of, the Gallic wars or the wars that about, Caesar conquering, France, which in those early days was called Gaul. Uh-huh.
She could still quote the opening line, in, in the native language that Gaul is divided into three parts. You know? He conquered them one at a time, anyway. But One of them was Spain. Well, was it? I don't I never looked at that. Yeah. That was called Gaul too in the western
[01:11:10] Unknown:
part.
[01:11:11] Unknown:
Well, first Caesar and Caesar, or Caesar brought the full realization as emperor of Rome. Well, he inherited what he inherited, he inherited from the law of the city by will, by testamentary will of an emperor of a city, of a single city, the single city of Pergamos. And, the king of Pergamos at that time was called Attilus the third. The Roman Empire was pressing on his doorsteps. He knew that they were gonna take him over sooner or later, and so he cut a deal with them. He said, you let me be absolute emperor of Pergamos and and throughout my lifetime.
And then in my will, my testamentary will, I will deed over to what I want for my daughters. I don't think he had any sons, but I will deed over all the powers of Babylon to the emperor of Rome. You see, Babylon had, it was the center of all the trappings of the law of the city from Genesis chapter 11. Mhmm. Let's say when Nimrod founded the city, that was where the law of the city came to sophistication, and Nimrod was the first true empire or emperor of the world. Yep. Then that when Babylon fell and that happened, you can see that in the prophets of the Old Testament, how Babylon fell there, you know, the Aramaic, the Bible tells us. You have been found in the balances, weighed you have been weighed in the balances and found wanting.
And then he got his head chopped off that night, and then Babylon was taken over and all the priesthood and all the trappings and all the literature they hijacked out of there the last minute and they got it over to Pergamos. And then Pergamos became the center of Babylonian religion, law and government. Another word, the center of devil worship and the altar at Pergamos was an altar of a giant snake. Any accident there? I mean, the snake, the garden of Eden, a giant snake who gave oracles that altar, the evils of Nazism.
People wanna talk about the wonders of Nazism. The evils of Nazism. The Nazis took that altar from Pergamos. Did they? Yes. And they brought it to Germany, and it's still there. They were demon worshipers. Don't tell me they weren't. Now you say Hitler was or wasn't. Hitler was a funny guy because he he didn't know what was going on half the time. Mike, I'm convinced he gave a lot of orders, but the people under him were demon worshipers. There's no question about that. And, they're accused of a lot of things they didn't do. I get it. I get it. The allies did a lot of nasty things to the ignorant German people and the soul. I get it. I understand. And there are others that can tell me about that and probably tell more details. But war is ugly everywhere. You can't stop it. I'm not justifying anybody, but I do know that the Nazis were demon worshipers. And they took that altar, and they wanted the power of that Babylonian alt altar.
And as, Quigley says in tragedy and hope, the Germanic man, when the Roman Empire fell, Germanic man, he was in the legions at that point. He looked around and then, well, what can we do? The our the the the Rome the the order of the Roman world is falling apart. And and they turned their eyes toward Rome, and they've been trying the Germans tried to reproduce Rome ever since. The the the the Bismarck, the return of the century, World War one, and, of course, the ultimate outworking of the law of the city was Nazism. And I I recognize, fellas and gals, I recognize that, Hitler's, plans brought Nazism or Germany out of out of, the hellishness of the ugliness, the Weimar Republic.
But, it didn't last because it was not based upon our common law, which they had abandoned. Germanic states had abandoned during the days of Martin Luther at the behest of Martin Luther. The the kingdom of Luther, of course, God used him, but the kingdom of God advances haltingly. If it wasn't for Martin Luther doing her way, well, he he can be, advised the electors of Germany to do away with the law or the common law tradition, the Volkreich, so that they would have the instantaneous warlike powers to fight Rome who was operating under martial law. The law of the city is a martial law. It is a martial law. Admiralty law is the law of the city.
Martial law is the law of the city. Administrative law is the law of the city. International law is the law of the city. Our common law is not in that part of, not in that ilk, but that's what they wanted. And so after, Martin Luther, the law of the city increasingly prevailed in the German states until it culminated in the official adoption of the Roman code, about 1900. Bismarck took the Roman code, the code of the canon civil laws of Rome, the code of Justin in, put his name on it, tweaked it a little, and said this is the law of Germany. And then they talked, or Japan, Japan liked it. And so they took the Roman code, the Bismarck code. Is it any wonder that they were allies in World War two? No. That just stands to reason.
They supported each other. They were under the same code of Bismarck, which enabled government by a single will, a emperor, a dictator, a empress, government by a single will. That's what enabled, and it justified it. That's why Rome liked it so much when Rome discovered it in the in the eleventh century. They discovered the law long lost code of the code of Justinian during battle in Italy, And that became the official doctrine of the Church of Rome, and it was used to supplant the Bible. The Bible had been even up till the tenth century, at least ostensibly, at least officially, the law of God's people, although Rome had gained too much power. But after that, they call it the papal revolution because that's when Rome officially shifted from the Bible to the Canon civil laws of Rome. It was bad then. Rome had already gotten out of control, but it got worse.
And, a fellow who was right hand man to the pope at that time said, to the pope, thy wish is my very command, no matter how evil. Well, that's the kind of man that he was on that particular Pope. You can go look him up, but, yeah, he's the one that invented bureaucratic law. He invented the administrative state. He did it. Really? He just Justinian. Yeah. And corporations, we got big then. And now I say this on the authority of Harold Barrowman. You've heard me talk about him. He wrote a book. He'd professor at Harvard at the law school, and then he got too conservative for him. They drove him out, and he went to Emory down in Atlanta, Georgia. The Harvard of the South.
[01:18:18] Unknown:
Yeah. Emory is a more conservative school. No question. That's Coke money. That's Coke money, folks. Woodruff family. Go ahead.
[01:18:26] Unknown:
I didn't know that, but it they tolerated him better, and he spent his life writing that book. It's called, Law and Revolution. And he cites the papal revolution of the eleventh century or the turning point in the history of Europe. And I agree with him and that's where all the reformation and the fighting begin to start because officially at that point, Rome said the Bible is not the law of God. The Code of Justinian is the pinnacle of human reason and they even called it and still call it throughout the Roman world, the law of the city world, which is the whole world. They call the Code of Justinian the Logos.
They take the word that the Bible uses to describe Jesus Christ. In the beginning was the logos, and the logos was with God, and the logos is or was God. Oh, you could have say is as in the aorist tense in the Greek tongue. This is John the apostle writing and it, the logos was in the beginning with him and he came into his own. So he shifts, he talks about the logos and then he identified the logos as Jesus Christ. He came into his own, and his own received him not, and on and on he goes. Well, they took that word logos and said this is the Canon civil laws of Rome. This is the final authority.
And it's been that way in every country in the world ever since. Rome has been the chief vehicle of promoting it. Yeah. You say, Brent, are you sure about all this? History is replete. This is why the reformation occurred, friends. America has never ever ever rested her laws on the code of Justinian. You know, Americans in our common law tradition, English speaking world going back to Britain, have never even cared about the code of Justinian so much, Roger, so much that nobody in the English speaking world has ever translated it into English. That's fact. Now Tom Jefferson had a copy of it, but he, of course, tried to learn Latin and stuff and Greek and so he could read it. There was one man who tried to translate it into English, and he happened to be a German immigrant whose family landed in Iowa. A lot of Germans have farmers. They wanted farmers to keep the railroads going, so they recruited them into Iowa and Nebraska, especially.
And they did a good job, of course, conquering the land, farming it, and making it productive. But he was a German immigrant son. He wound up as a sup State of Wyoming Supreme Court Justice. And he determined he was gonna translate the code of Justinian in English. Nobody had ever done it in all these centuries. And the reason we never did it, because we don't care. We don't care what the code of Justinian says. It's not part of our our law. I have heard law professors. It's shocking. Law professors lecture and talk about how much our legal tradition here in America is founded upon the Roman law. Oh my goodness. The it they I don't know. I guess they're taught that in school and they they think it's true because some punky professor dinky doctor taught it to them. Yeah. But no. We don't even care. We never did care. And you can go back to the folks that founded America and the ones that did the most writing. And the only time they ever quote quote the Roman code is to as a bad example.
And the the the man they quote more than anybody else, I'm talking about the folks that were around and influential when our country started, the man they quote more than anybody else is not the Roman code, but, Edward Coke, a justice Uh-huh.
[01:22:05] Unknown:
From England that wrote Highly respected.
[01:22:08] Unknown:
Yeah. He wrote the commentaries on Magna Carta. Uh-huh. That's what they quoted. But law professors say that, you see, that's political correctness. People start saying things, and pretty soon, they start believing their own stupidity. And I say that with all due respect. We're all that way. We're prone to that. But we, lawyers, especially law professors or lawyers, they have a responsibility to know the truth. And they they this has got to be such a mania that Harvard Law School back about 02/2006, I forget when it was, I was watching when this happened.
No question. Harvard Law School is the leading law school. It used to be. I don't say it is now. Leading law school in the country. And they did away listen to this. At the behest of a a Jewish woman that now sits on the Supreme Court of the United States, she was dean. And at her behest, they got rid of all the first year common law courses at Harvard. Haven't returned. They don't care anymore. They want the law of the city. You see? Yep. Yep. That's what they want. You say, what, Brent, why do you say it's a Jewish woman? Because religion is the spring no question. Yeah. Religion is the spring of all human activity. Yep. Go ahead, Robert. I was gonna say, remember Johnny Carson had Karnak, the magnificent,
[01:23:23] Unknown:
the visitor from the East? Well, we call him a conversion of Karnak, the visitor from across the pond. And he's been with us for a couple of minutes, but he's been exceedingly quiet and polite as he normally is. But we should, collectively welcome mister Paul English. Paul, thanks for dropping in with us, man. We were hoping you would. A a a a rumor was around the first hour that you might, and I'm real glad to see that you did. How are you doing?
[01:23:51] Unknown:
I'm doing fine, Roger. I'm doing fine. And Brent, thanks for inviting me in, really. I was just sitting here listening, and, I I I didn't sort of plug in until about five to five my time, which is well, an hour into the show, really. I've just been out doing things and stuff like that and, just got back. So no.
[01:24:12] Unknown:
Always good to I'm just quite happy listening. I get hypnotized listening to Brent. So I just Amazing. Slope off. Guys are amazing. We're always have have more than happy to have you drop by and, love to have your input from over there and and just to hear that wonderful English accent that it's not colonial. It's real English. It's a I know. He's a real Yorkshire man. I I am.
[01:24:37] Unknown:
But Paul Paul beat Paul does quite a good he's polishing up on his toffee nosed English accents. They're quite good at times. He's pretty good. He's a good mimic. Yeah. He is. He's doing quite well. And
[01:24:47] Unknown:
and Roger. It's from And Roger.
[01:24:51] Unknown:
And Roger. Yes.
[01:24:53] Unknown:
Yeah. You know, the one thing that I always remember about where you're from is you're from very close to Leeds. Right? And all those are great Who albums from the sixties live at Leeds and all that stuff. Mhmm. That's kinda how I peg that.
[01:25:09] Unknown:
Yeah. You were a head banger back in the in the seventies, were you? What you what you're telling me? All into the music scene. Yeah. Pretty much. I mean, they're probably their
[01:25:17] Unknown:
popular album and, you know, it couldn't help but I wasn't particularly a big fan of theirs. I liked them, but, you couldn't help but be exposed to it.
[01:25:26] Unknown:
No. I wasn't a fan of theirs either. I think I might have mentioned before, there's a place in Leeds. I don't know if it's still there. There was. I've not lived there for forty years now. Good grief. But, called the Merriam Centre, which was like a sort of shopping centre, and they would put concerts on there. This would be in the, well, from the mid sixties onwards, they would sort of transform it over at the weekends or whenever and clear because it was pretty big. So they had a stage there, and there was a bill. We remember seeing this. So there was a guy over here called Engelbert Humperdinck. I don't suppose he ever Oh, I don't remember him. I mean, obviously, his real name, of course.
Obviously, his real name. He was obviously, you know, mister and missus Humperdinck, decided to call him Engelbert. And it was it's just ridiculous. And he was kind of a crooner, sort of smarmy, well oiled crooning type. Yeah. And he was top of the bill. Yeah. So that okay. So he's top of the bill. Second on the bill, the act that came on just before him was Jimi Hendrix. Oh. And we used to look at this going, what was going on back then? It's just absolutely amazing. So, basically, it's Jimi Hendrix followed by somebody like Dean Martin. You know, you get Frank Sinatra. Yeah. Oh, yeah. Absolutely. You go, what kind of crowd was in there? So I don't know. That would be about nineteen sixty eight or something like that. Yeah. So, they they had a skill with billing back then, but they don't seem to have had. But yeah. Absolutely.
Mhmm.
[01:26:57] Unknown:
So why don't you promote your Thursday show here for the for our audience? Because Paul goes over there, and he has a a that's a heavy slave day for him. He's got two of us to deal with. And, let them know about it because
[01:27:13] Unknown:
folks may wanna hear that. They don't know. Paul loves it. He's great. He loves it. He rocks up and starts playing clips in the middle of the show that I don't I haven't even heard before and wrecking it. He doesn't really.
[01:27:25] Unknown:
Yeah. No. I did this thing for Thursday. Hold on. With that with that subject, he played something a couple of months ago that was not exactly Kosher. Is that Really? Well, I just what I remember hearing from listening to the show or the next show, one of them, but he was, we crossed the line a little bit from what I took away. Alright. What, in your show or my show? Oh, your show.
[01:27:51] Unknown:
Probably. I probably just had to try and brush it off. I didn't get a knock at the door or anything. I can't remember. I mean, what you know, we've got all sorts of new police departments springing up over here. What was it called? What'd you play? Naughty? Naughty? It was about a dog named Stains. Oh, that. Okay. Let's not go back there again. I can't seem to get away from toilet here. Go back there again. No. No. Let's not do that. It's just too much. This is a family show, and I wanna keep my way of stables. For sure. Yeah. Right. Well, you know, I've got there's me and and there's Paul and Patrick. Patrick's in Wisconsin, and then I've got a guy called Eric Von Essex.
It's that's also his real name, not, obviously. And, Eric is, I don't know if you've over here, there's a tradition in English seaside towns. It's probably died out a bit. But when many of the Brits, of course, used to go on holiday at British seaside resorts, they may be having to do it again, I suppose, if we get any sunshine back, which we do in parts. But you can get postcards, to send back to your loved ones. Oh, you're used to. I suppose nobody does that anymore now because they just send a sort of text message on the phone or whatever they're doing. Right. But they were known as saucy seaside postcards, And they were full of busty girls and lots of smutty innuendos and vicars and things with red faces and all this kind of there's a whole sort of subculture of, let's call it cheeky British humor. It's slightly vulgar as well. Well, Eric, and I've told him this, Eric is the human equivalent of one of those postcards. That's what he's just like.
If you imagine a one of those postcards in human form, you've got Eric, and he's just So That's what he's like. He's quite Benny Hill ish, is he? Yes. He is. Absolutely. He's all full of sauce and cheek and double entendres, and he's unstoppable, really. And he laughs the thing about it is, like, he he laughs at his jokes with such gusto. It's infectious. He just loves his own jokes. So he kinda rubs off and, yeah. So he's kind of like that. And it it takes about we just I've got a timer to see how long it takes before we get a sort of smutty double entendre joke in the show. It's I'm I'm trying to stretch you out. But usually within an hour and a half, we all have had one or two volleys, from him. And it's it's just part of it, really. I've got a Dodge, but there you go. Paul, I don't think I've talked to you since,
[01:30:03] Unknown:
since mister Trump was inaugurated. What is, someone from across the pond's view of what's going on over here lately? Because it's three rings.
[01:30:15] Unknown:
Sorry. I just thought I'd do a theatrical, comment you know, musical laugh. Yeah. It's obviously bizarre, but intentionally so. From my perspective, it's bizarre. So, we did a show a couple of weeks ago about Trump. I said, Trump, all talk and no trousers, question mark, really? And, basically, he says things that you want to hear said in public. Right? So they're giving him some good lines. I don't view that he's in charge. I I know he'll be in charge up to a point, but I don't really view that he's actually in charge. I could be completely wrong about this. So on the Monday, for example, he will say all the right things, like you've got freedom of speech back and this, that, and the other, and other stuff. Then on the Tuesday, it's okay to turn Gaza into a holiday resort, and let's just forget about all the people that have died. And then he'll say something great on Wednesday, and then he'll say something sort of completely one world order globalist on the Thursday.
And it's like he's giving with the left hand and taking away with the right or whatever the other way around. So that's the impact that he's had on me so far. It's not that I disagree with the positive things that he said, but I just don't know whether there's actually I mean, I know you've got things going on on the ground, but I really do think it's I'm I'm just highly suspicious. You you know we've been, we've been supporting the BBC? Yes. I did. Thank you for that. So I've got you lots of mind for your very well. That's been coming over the airways for the last twenty five years, have I? But not only them,
[01:31:43] Unknown:
700 and some other media outlets as well as 6,600 and something individual journalists.
[01:31:52] Unknown:
Well, bless god bless America and the CIA for helping everybody out. Year. I know. It's just
[01:31:58] Unknown:
are we surprised? No? You know, are we supposed to pay attention to all these loony organization they said? I mean, it's just nonstop, isn't it? I think it's the the impact on me is it's just I'm we kinda all knew. We didn't know exactly what it was, but this kind of stuff was going on, but never to this magnitude. 5,000,000,000 doll dollars given to somebody that just says aid.
[01:32:19] Unknown:
No person's name. No nothing. 5,000,000,000. Is that old? 5,000,000,000. 5 drop in the ocean. 5 I know. Hundred
[01:32:28] Unknown:
thousand million dollars. 5 billion. Yep.
[01:32:34] Unknown:
Well, I should imagine a few executives in the BBC, you know, crying in their pink handkerchiefs or whatever's going on over there. I think they've had their budget cut by about 8%. I mean, I'd like to see it cut by a % and just Yep. Have it shut down. I can't stand it. Well, the latest, over here is yanking all cutting all the contracts with all media groups,
[01:32:54] Unknown:
PBS, all of them. That's what we just heard this morning. So it was quite exciting times, and I don't believe any well, I'm just kind of projecting here. I certainly didn't. I didn't think any of us would ever see this day, and it's very welcome. And, yeah, he's got some bad sides on the veneer that none of us like, the absolute, involvement with the Zionists, although conservative somewhat. But, otherwise, in that, there's some pretty cool things coming out, really. And it's honestly, it's like every day, I'm out, you know, just getting out of the apartment, eating lunch or whatever. I gotta get back home and see what Trump did today. I mean, it's amazing. It's happening at such breakneck speed.
Brent, you want you haven't even been able to welcome Paul. He and I've been John. So, I know you'd love to talk with him. So So if you got any good English questions for him, well, did Brent run off? We didn't drive him off, did we?
[01:33:53] Unknown:
No. Just because I'm not speaking Latin. I think he's There he is. I think he's stuck on his mute there. There he is. That was it. That was it. I didn't know. You were off brushing up on your Latin, Brent.
[01:34:07] Unknown:
When you said nice things about me when you showed up, Paul, and, I thought, well, the truth is I need a breather, and I knew if you've always got something to say and you you know how to keep a conversation going. And so I said, I'll just sit back for a while and rest, and I'll listen to the melodious melodious sound. I know we'd say this a lot. I hope you don't get tired of it, but it is a melodious sound just to listen to you talk because it is a little different. And, the the what do we call it? The
[01:34:37] Unknown:
the, our common how how do how do how do Hey. A related people separated by a common language. Common language. Yeah. Two two people divided by a common language. That's what it is.
[01:34:49] Unknown:
And the spot I'm trying to I'm trying to pick up a new a new phrase here or there. I have a friend. I think I told you, and she was raised in Gettington. Gettington, England. And you know where it is, kinda in the Central Southern place. And she went to school there because her mother was from there. And then when her father, he was an American from Virginia, and and she thought, of course, she told me when, her father met her mother during the war, she thought she was gonna come to Nirvana when she came to America. Well, she found out he was a hillbilly and didn't have any money, and and, things weren't as nice as they were gonna be. So when he went off when he went off to Vietnam or someplace, he stayed in the service.
Then she would take the children and go back home. And so she was anglicized quite a bit living there. But, she said to me one time and when we when we sat down at the table, we were real close friends with this couple. Of course, the her husband from Michigan and and, Susan and I, and we always spend a lot of time with them. They're just dear friends, and we like to he likes to cook and we like to eat, and we sit down at the table. And if I'm sitting at the table and I say, well, I gotta go or I get up, she just says no. You you know, you I don't want you to, and besides, you didn't ask to be excused.
And she's serious about things like that. And she's, yeah. And she gets upset at herself when she doesn't talk properly because her mother, although she was certainly not aristocracy aristocracy or nobility, there's a there's a properness that, goes with, the culture. And so it's not her name. I'll give you her first name. Her name is, I call her Betty, and I like to call her Bette, which is the American way of, my grandma's name was Bette. And my dad's had a team of horses, and one of them was named Bette and the other one was Kate. I mean, Bette's a word that we like, and it's short for Betty. But her mother her mother called her Betty.
Betty. And she wouldn't allow anything else. Not Betty, but Betty, and disciplined in the pronunciation. Well, she she said to me one time, that she was absolutely gobsmacked. I said, what? Yeah. Who said yes? Was that you, Paul? That was me. Oh, yeah. You you know the word then. Right? Well, I thought I like that word. I said that that word is picturesque, and I could tell it had no Latin parts. You can tell an Anglo Saxon word when you hear it. It usually has one or two syllables. It's got plenty of consonants, and it hits hard. And it and it makes makes the point you wanna make.
And she said gobsmacked. And I said, what? And she well, that's what we'd say. Well, what does it mean? So she told me. Of course, then I went and followed up the etymology, went to the Oxford dictionaries, and did all the things I wanted to do. And so I took that word, Paul, gobsmacked. And I found I no. I found I found a Hebrew word in the Old Testament where it fit and did a better job than any other English word I discovered, and a Greek word in the New Testament, same way. And I every time those two words occurred, I translate it that way in the Bible. Gobsmacked.
Because what it means is to be smacked in the gobbler. Am I right, Paul? Is that the way Yeah. It's a it's a it's,
[01:38:04] Unknown:
it's like astonishment, surprise, amazement, all at the same time,
[01:38:11] Unknown:
being really being surprised about by something. I was totally gobsmacked by that. It means, like, something astonishing happens in a way. Something that you weren't expecting. Yeah. Well, it's something, I think an American would like and we've you know, I got to notice. And when I hear the Englishman speak, Paul I'm a word man, Paul. I know you know that. I know you are too. I know Roger knows it and he is too. I'm a word man. I attach the greatest, importance to words, and I without the meaning of words, we lose the meaning or twist the meanings. Men lose their lives, their liberties, and their property. No question. That's what happened in the garden when our grandma and grandpa Adam first got hit up with the old serpent. It was all a matter of twisting the words. Well, I don't know why I'm this way. I guess me and my dad was quite a bit. He was not an educated man, but his favorite poet was, Robbie Burns.
And, I got to thinking about words and all those kind of things. And when I hear hear other people talk, I'm looking for English words, not Latin words. And I noticed recently, I said, wait a minute. I said, why is it? I think I got this right. We we are more we are more Latinized over here in America with our English than the Englishmen are. Because I hear words when the English, the British even, all of them speak that we would use a Latin based word for. And the only thing I can figure is, we've just had a lot of immigrants over here from Southern Europe. I don't know if that's it, but I would suspect that might be it. But so I learned English. I learned, going back to the roots, I can learn English, which the old Anglo Saxon words. I like them better, and that's just one example that I gave you there. So, yeah, when you came on, I just backed up and said, oh, good. I'll take a breather or maybe I'll learn something, especially about the my own native tongue that I don't know. And, so when you start talking plus, I had made this point before too, Paul, and Roger, you remember this.
I did wanna hear and wanted you to come and weigh in on I was saying things that related to the old country, and I was hoping that you'd weigh in on some of the things that I'd said if there's something that struck your fans here, you could elaborate on or maybe correct us about. As I like to say, I wrote a book about Britain. I wrote a book on it, 958 pages, and that's, having never been there. So what what do I really know about it outside of wanting to read? And the answer is nothing, and that doesn't really tell the whole story. It helps, but it doesn't get us there. I would ask you to maybe here's what I'd like to hear from you, Paul, if you're willing to talk about it.
I talked to you one time, and you said, Brent, I went to a dance south of you, maybe down toward London or someplace. You're kinda up in the North Of Yorkshire on the East Side. And, there were some people there. It was at a church, and, everybody was they and older folk, not ancient folk, but older folk were dancing. And they were enjoying themselves, and you were sitting there. Why you got invited? I don't remember you telling me. And you just said to yourself, wait a minute. This is what I'm missing. This is what I miss about my country. Can you do you remember that story, and can you tell us more about it? It's obviously had an impact. Yeah. And I
[01:41:28] Unknown:
it has because I think it was, it was one of those very awkward moments that turned out to be, excuse me, kinda magical in a way. So it was in a we have these obviously, we have parishes over here. There's about 15,000 of them. They're still all overlaid on the country. Not that people talk about them too much. Although, I am looking into parish councils, which exist, and they've apparently got an awful lot more power than anybody on them really fully realizes. Excuse me. Something's just gone down slightly the wrong way. But there was a gentleman from Chicago, called Coleman, and he was working, I think, at the British Museum or the Royal and or the Victoria and Albert Museum, something like that. He's quite skilled in in what he does, and I can't tell you what it is right now. But, he was over doing some research work or had been, brought over.
And he was very passionate about, country dancing. And, he's, of Irish descent from Chicago, and he plays the flute and other instruments and, had played a lot of sort of country dances over there in The States, where they do Irish music and, American folk music and English folk music. And he he said, you know, he asked me, did I know the difference? I said, well, I would probably be able to tell if I heard it, but it's not the sort of thing I've listened to a great deal, even though I grew up with some of it in the, you know, echoes of my mind as it were as a as a young lad at school.
So he wanted me to meet him, in London on New Year's Eve. And after I'd stopped laughing, he said, aren't you gonna come? I said, no. He said, why? I said, I'll never get out. I said, it will be not possible for me to get out of there. This is about five years ago, I think. Something like that. Four or five years back. So he was a bit miffed about that, and that means, he was not too happy about it. And, he said, well, there's another one coming up a week following. I think it was at Blackheath, which is South Of London, which is north for me because I'm right on the Southern Coast Of England. So I said, sure. I can meet you there. So it was a Friday evening, and, I was driving up thinking that we were gonna talk about things, scriptural things, actually, and other things because it was that's how I'd got to know him.
And, and so I was I when I arrived, I was the youngest person there. And I'm not I'm in my middle advancing years, my maturing years, you see. So and, that surprised me a bit. So everybody was, I thought, oh, this is for first time in a long time I've been to a party where I'm the youngest. You know? And, I'd sent messages to him beforehand. He said, how will I recognize you? I said, I look like a giant wasp. I said, I've got jet black trousers on and a bright yellow shirt. I did. It was just so I that's what I looked like. You know? And that was quite live. Everybody else was in much more subdued and conservative colors. I sort of came in this really blazing yellow shirt, which I've still got, actually. It's one of my favorite shirts, anyway, which is not difficult because I've only got about three. So anyway, so it's not too difficult for me to pick them out. And, I got in there, and there were all of them. There were about 60 people there, all of them in one big organised coordinated dance, all of them.
And, there was nowhere I thought, oh, well, I'll sit down next to a coffee bar or the bar or something. And when there's a break in the music, we'll get talking. But it didn't quite go like that because I ended up being the gooseberry in the room. I I got in there, and I was the only person sat on the side in this chair, you know, feeling incredibly sort of awkward about the whole thing. They're all completely involved and have been, you know, dancing away for an hour. I just turned up thinking I was gonna speak to someone. I didn't think I was gonna get roped into all of this. But I did because, a lady of 82 years of age came up to me. I think she was called Irene or something like that. And and she was so sweet and lovely. And she said, have you come here to see someone? And I said and I'd I'd I'd never met him before, but I could see who he was from the instrument he was playing. And he'd sort of, you know, give me a nod of the head as I walked into the room. I said, I'm I'm here to see the flute player.
She said, oh, well, that's fine. She said, well, he won't be free for a little while. So she said, you'll be dancing with me. I said, no. You don't you don't I said, I don't do this. She said, well, basically, you do now. I went, okay. So she took my hand completely in charge, like these sort of women that used to run the British Empire. They were the ones that really ran it. You see, she was this extremely sort of bossy type thing, which is really very difficult to resist. And, so, my only goal was to make sure I didn't stand on anybody's toes, and I achieved that goal. I was very pleased about this because I was out on the dance floor with her for about ten minutes. And it was incredibly complicated, and I couldn't get my it's the first time I've ever sort of seen or been in something like this. And they had a caller who's going around stopping it every now and again, basically saying, no. We do it like this. And then the whole thing was just one big coordinated dance where I think if it all unfolded over a sort of ten or fifteen minute period, everybody in the room would have, at some point in the entire thing, been in a little cluster of four or two with all the other people. You would have met everybody as the dance unfolded.
And it was quite magic. And Coleman came up to me, and we just got talking about it afterwards. And there was another guy, an English guy, who was telling me about the history of all of this stuff, which, of course, immediately got my attention. I was much more sort of interested in that. And, we were we were dancing because I was really good by now. I'd been nothing at it ten minutes. I wasn't good. Coleman came in and said, you were doing really rather well. I said, I'm sorry. What do you mean? I said, this is ridiculous. He said, no. I he said, it was going okay. I said, I have no way of measuring what I was doing at all.
And, of course, it's kind of awkward and embarrassing. You don't know. You feel like dancing's very good for white guys. It really puts us it exposes us, doesn't it, brutally? It's very funny in a way. And, he just said, look at how everybody's coordinating and helping one another. And we just got into talking about this because he was all our people there. Right? All of our people were there. Nobody else. And he said, look at how everybody's helping one another. And we just got into talking about this. It's no ego in it at all. There's no ego in the musicians. There are no big solos. You don't look at the band. He was talking about that. He said, no. We're just here to provide the music necessary to so the dance unfolds correctly. And, And, the history guy, we we got around to telling me about how this had all come about. It's to do with the so called English civil war, just as you have got a so called civil war.
Ours was in the sixteen forties and stuff. And, there was a guy called Playford who was very concerned that, the country was gonna get completely destroyed, which, of course, in great part, it did, percentage wise, and was, anxious about the loss of music and dancing in the land. So him and his pals, whoever they were, prior to or during all the unfolding of this war, went all around England gathering up all the songs they could, all the lyrics for the songs, and all the dance moves. And these were dances that would have been taking place on village greens, in barns over the winter, and stuff like this, all over the place. And there were many of them, and he collected them all together, and it's called the Playford songbook. And they're they are of a different world. When you hear them, they are of, England in the sixteen hundreds.
And, it's really rather beautiful, but your ear has to get adjusted to it because it's very delicate, and it's designed for a kind of civil a civilized sort of dancing. Right? To put it that way, or very sort of European, or in our case, of course, very English. So, yeah, it was kind of a magic evening, Brent. It really was. It was and and Irene was just fantastic. She was great. She was really good. So I yeah. I had a I had a good time. Maybe I should go back again, but, I don't have an in into that sort of world at the moment. I did actually look it up because I was thinking of taking my wife along. I thought it might be quite good. It might give her something to do at the time, but,
[01:49:46] Unknown:
that that wasn't to be. But yeah. Well, I'm glad I'm glad you unfolded and unpacked more about it because you said things this time that either you didn't say or I didn't catch before. And, one of the things that you mentioned, and I can relate to this because when I grew up, we square danced. And square dancing is the result of what you're talking about of the English civil war. And the reel, r e e l, came to America from Scotland and England. And the Virginia reel is the most famous. We play Saint Anne's reel on our show during the week, you know, different people, playing it in different ways. And these reels didn't have any words to them. And the reason they didn't have any words is because the the the man who called the dance and gave the commands of what to do next did did all these things. And you made the point just now that by the time the evening was over, the way that dance works, you get to dance with everybody and you meet everybody there. Mhmm. And that's what the square dance is. You start with one gal. There's four and a core four corners. You start with one gal, and by the time the dance is over, you're back with the gal you started with. I mean, you get and there's some dances such as o john the o, we used to call it, where you all join hands and circle the ring, stop where you are, give your honey a swing. Well, you start with one gal. You swing that little gal behind you. Okay. Do that. You swing your own, then you promenade her home. Alomand left with the corner gal, and Alomand writes her own. Then you all serenade her with a sweet serenade singing o john. Then you come back around, but you go. There's no limit to that one. You could have, 50 couples or a hundred in that one if you had a big enough room.
I never thought of this though until you said it, that the whole object of the thing is that everybody gets to meet everybody, talk. And it's and and here's the other thing you said. And I when I was a kid, we did this down to the old Cottonwood Schoolhouse. It had a big floor down there by moonshine, and, there was nobody with an ego in the whole thing. There was nobody upstaging anybody. The whole culture of the whole thing was, now that I think back on it, was positive. And how fortunate I was that that happened, and Henry Staley, who ran the Needmore store just north of Moonshine. There was Moonshine store, then Needmore store, and then Hove Town. And then Henry knew how to do the calls. And he took his time to come down when all us were teenage children, really, but the grown ups would participate with us. You know, all this thing about separating children from grown ups in the public school system is false.
And this then this then the Sunday school system tried to pair it the government schools and do that, and you're separating children from parents, and you're separating older from younger. And all of all of this
[01:52:35] Unknown:
creates a culture of young people that's separated from wisdom. That's all it does. And they put the parents in old folks' homes and separate them even to bigger degree.
[01:52:44] Unknown:
Well, your yes. Your story has stimulated my thinking immensely. And these are the things you said at the time when you first told me the story. You talked about this is what I'm I miss. I miss in England this kind of thing, and I talked to a Quaker. I'm this I was speaking at another place in Idaho. He, has a monthly meeting. It's locally oriented about its patriot meeting. What can we do in case of an emergency? Or is the second amendment? All those things come up. But, he grew up at a place called the Illiana the Illiana Quaker community.
Seven generations of Quakerism, his family came up from North Carolina because of their they didn't wanna be around slavery. They settled on the border between Illinois and Indiana, and there's a Quaker community still there. There's a town called Quakertown there still, and that's where he grew up. And during that I'm not a Quaker. I don't agree with all their doctrines, so I'm not a Quaker. The culture of it, I'm not but they're they're Christian folk in the Quaker group just like the Christian folk in mind, believe it or not, but we all have our problems. But he made the point, everything was just assumed.
My my great grandpa, my grandpa, my dad, We are Quakers. We had these doctrines. We believe the Bible this way. We just assumed it would continue. Then in my generation, that assumption went away. And something hit my father. And by the way, it hit my father too and my mother. And they didn't know what to do with it. And that Yeah. People like me got hit with all these Eastern religions and all people smoking pot and going crazy and doing LSD and, the Hinduism and the promotion of of Buddhism and the Eastern religions and the nuttiness and the madness of it. And, of course, the hippie stick movement and the Bohemian. It was just nothing Bohemianism, which had been going on for centuries. They give it it was the beatniks, of course. Well, first, it was the Bohemians and then it was the beatniks and then it was the hippie. All the same stuff. You don't take a bath. You grow a beard. It's a Judaization, the Judaization of our culture. But we got hit with that real hard, and that's our parents didn't know what to do with it. And they thought things would continue the way it had for three or four generations in America. Well, it didn't happen. No. Now all of that community, all of that commonness and those little microcosms of order, whatever they were, Christian Christian order, I might add, or law. And that's what I see it happen. Then the question comes to me, and I'm an older guy trying to understand this. So I'll ask you, Paul.
What's the what's the what is our responsibility as the this sort of remnant, this the tail end leftovers out here that believe the Bible is true, and Christian culture is is indispensable to good order and decency. What what do we do? What should we be focused on? Do you have any ideas? Do you have you made any conclusions?
[01:55:44] Unknown:
Well, I don't I don't have any one specific thing. I suppose every just about everything that offends me, which is just about everything. Right? I always think about how do we counteract that. But and when you just said about having a having a beard and not having a bath, I I have got a beard right now, and and I'm in need of a bath, actually. So I thought you were specifically talking about me. But, I think the thing I mean, the the one of the things one of the little sort of points I noticed about the dancing as well, or just an extension of it, is it's one big dance.
So everybody knows that. Therefore, everybody is seeking to contribute to the whole. It's just it's unspoken. You don't it's because that's what it is. So everybody's seeking to make it work as well as they possibly can. And, of course, it gets everybody slightly on edge because they don't wanna be the one that that buggers it up. But they do. You know, it just happens, then everybody laughs a bit and moves on. And one of the things that Coleman pointed out to me was that when I made an error, which was, of course, quite frequently, because I didn't even understand what he was when he was calling things out, I didn't know what these moves meant. I'm sort of like it could have been Dutch as far as I was concerned. I'm just what I'm I'm mimicking everybody else as best I could. But he said, have you noticed that when you slightly went off, someone came up to assist you? And I said, yes. Absolutely. And that was really something, you know. And so you've what I think it does is it sends out like an understanding, a completely instinctive, intuitive understanding amongst us, our people, that look, we can cooperate doing this. If we can cooperate doing a dance, there's nothing that we can't cooperate on. Absolutely true. Nothing. We can do anything.
And it is sending out that signal. And I suspect that that's part of the reason why these natural cultural things that we've always done for millennia, really, up until recent times, have been attacked. And we have to come back to the commies, you know, destroy the family. This whole thing about the ego driven nature of dancing now, Look at, you know, someone's so good at it and all this kind of stuff. And I remember when I was young, I was just so disinterested. I just thought it was silly. Okay. I just thought it's completely silly. I like listening to music, but the dancing, you always used to wreck it for me. And it's just one of the art forms, show off dancing, which apart from when those Spaniards do the, the pas de oble, which I really the stamping stuff. I thought if I was ever gonna be a man and do any sort of I'd do that machismo stuff. Castanet castanets and stuff? Well, it's that whole seduction process of the woman. She's like 50 feet across the dance floor, isn't she? Oh, yeah. And, he she stood completely still and motionless. And then he starts to approach her like a bull. I mean, I just think it's fantastic. It's totally different.
It it's completely at the opposite end of the spectrum, but it's genuine. It's real. It's truthful. It's how they have and of course, you know, all that stuff, they get to wear those boots and stamp and make such a fantastic racket. It's just very exciting. I like it. I I could know that relate to think about it. Hold on just just a second from my tango experiences in Argentina
[01:58:55] Unknown:
of what y'all were saying. Go ahead, Paul.
[01:58:59] Unknown:
Let's do a quick prayer a quick prayer for Eli, and then we can do an update after the streams go down. We've only got about Good idea. Seventy five seconds Okay. On your folks. So Brent, would you need us in a prayer for Eli?
[01:59:11] Unknown:
Oh, sure. Thank you for asking us. Kind of the privilege to approach the throne of our god. Let's pray. Our father, our father, who art in heaven, hallowed be thy name. Thy kingdom come, and thy will be done on earth as it is in heaven. Give us this day our daily bread, and forgive us our debts, our trespasses, as we forgive those who trespass against us. Lead us not into temptation, but deliver us from evil. For thine is the kingdom and the power and the glory forever. And if we may focus upon Eli for just a moment, we ask you being the only true healer there is that you would heal his body and that you would encourage his mind and that you would refresh his soul in the midst of this particular hardship.
God help us. We come to you, not to the physicians first, but we ask that the physicians would be give with given your wisdom in dealing with Eli. We ask these things in the absolute authority of our lord Jesus Christ and for his glory and not ours, but for our enjoyment and in his glory. Amen.
[02:00:45] Unknown:
Amen. Amen. Thank you, Brent.
[02:00:49] Unknown:
Well, quick update on Eli. Do you know do you know how he's doing, Paul?
[02:00:55] Unknown:
He's, he's gonna be in the hospital, I think, for approximately three weeks, I think. Woah. Two to three weeks, probably. I mean, he's, he's doing fine as I haven't had an update in the last forty eight hours, but I'll be getting one probably later today, and I'll pass it on to you as soon as I've got it. Okay. So he he the surgery, as you probably know, was on Tuesday, and, he was in a lot of discomfort on the Wednesday. Obviously, probably drugged up. Yeah. But, Compass Mentis and taking phone calls, and I think his son or daughter I'm sorry. I can't remember when she was. He's basically family. One of his offspring is visiting him and should be there, I think, today, actually. They were due there for the weekend.
So he's in the VA hospital. I think I've got the right terminology, haven't I? And so everything's sorted. He he's okay from that point of view, but it's gonna the I think they've indicated that it's gonna be at least three months before he's fully back to normal Was he osteoscopic?
[02:01:55] Unknown:
Do you know?
[02:01:57] Unknown:
I I know nothing of I know nothing of of what has happened. So I don't know how big a thing it was. It was a triple heart bypass that he's had. So, and, so, I mean, I think, you know, he's always been a pretty strong guy, but he's, you know what it's like as you get older. What's what it's like on the outside is not necessarily what the plumbing's like on the inside. And, unfortunately, he got he got caught by that. So anyway. We're sure, we sure wish him the best collectively as
[02:02:27] Unknown:
he's, the man he is, quite frankly. Yeah. Glad he got the hell out of Chicago A Couple Of Years ago. I was worried about him. There for a couple of years. He, you know, he wasn't out of there yet. I don't think Deanna's out of there yet either. Is any any anybody heard anything about Deanna?
[02:02:48] Unknown:
I haven't. No.
[02:02:51] Unknown:
Okay. Well, Paul, I don't know if you gotta run off or not, but it sure is a pleasure having you around. And, thanks for the insight and the stories, and, we're glad to have a connection with the old country here.
[02:03:05] Unknown:
Yeah. Me too. I I I'd like to have one too. Now probably there's some see your way.
[02:03:14] Unknown:
You live right down on the South Of England. Right? And Southampton is off to the West. Where are the where are the Hills Of Dover? They're off to the East. Right?
[02:03:25] Unknown:
That's right. Spot on. Yeah. Camperbury
[02:03:28] Unknown:
is down there also?
[02:03:30] Unknown:
Yeah. It's off to the East as well. Canterbury's in Kent. So And not too far from Hastings
[02:03:35] Unknown:
is down there also.
[02:03:37] Unknown:
Yep. I drive past bat I drive through battle regularly because I've got a good friend out there, a very good colleague of Eli's, actually, who he just had a stroke in November, but he's fully he's 86. He's fully recovered. Oh, he's very well recovered. Recovered. I'm off to I go to see him every couple of weeks on Tuesday, and I drive through battle or the Hastings, and it says, you know, ten sixty six country when you drive through it. Did you know, by the way, that after the battle, they left the dead on the field for a hundred years? No. You know what? They just left them there. Yeah. Won't let anybody bury them or anything. Wow. Pretty nasty. There's a very fertilized
[02:04:15] Unknown:
environment.
[02:04:17] Unknown:
Oh, there's some lovely daffodils growing down. Now what is Southampton?
[02:04:20] Unknown:
Wasn't Southampton One of the real big slave ports here? I mean, the slave didn't get out. They're still on the ships and stuff, but I think it was Bristol and Southampton was one too.
[02:04:31] Unknown:
I know Bristol was. Probably Southampton simply because it's a very large natural port. I think it's where the Titanic departed. Although it wasn't the Titanic. It was the Olympic for those that looked into it. Yeah. There's a big switcheroo with that. Yeah. More for all. All part of all part of the Federal Reserve formation story as well of that. There's no doubt, I think. So a completely wacky event. But, yeah. Yeah. Bristol was known as a big one. I mean, actually, I was I I've just got a book. It might have arrived today about the Crusades, which I'm very keen to jump into, to readjust it looks as though it's a proper book, so it's gonna readjust my the impression I have of it. I've never really jumped into looking at the Crusades, but I want to because, Crusades two point o is probably required, to be quite honest. Although I could probably get locked up by the new Crusade Police Department, which they're forming any minute now. So because it's just mad over here. It's absolutely mad. You know? Well, you could tell me that was the plan from a hundred years ago was to have another crusade,
[02:05:33] Unknown:
pit us against them.
[02:05:35] Unknown:
Yep. Yeah. Absolutely. Although I'll although I'm gonna I'll reserve judgment until I've read this book. Book. It comes quite it's quite recent, about 02/2010, but, apparently, it's a bit of a breeze. I'm I'm I'm very keen to do it because I know nothing about it, so I'm very keen. Alright. We're gonna require your return with a book report. Yeah. I'll I'll do that. I'll absolutely do it. And I on the show yesterday, I'm sure I've mentioned this before. The picture for yesterday's show is really fantastic, but it's of this unbelievably large scale battle that took place five miles from where I grew up. I never knew this when I was young. Right? We just had this apocryphal tale that this beck called Cockbeck, which is near me, ran red with blood for three days. And we all used to sort of, oh, yeah. It was terrible, because none of us really knew what we were talking about. We just received it down the line, not necessarily thinking it was true. Anyway, it turns out to be completely true.
And, there was a battle in on Palm Sunday, March the twenty ninth fourteen sixty one, in the snow, called the Battle of Towton, t o w t o n. And it's the biggest loss of English life in one day in a battle ever. Yeah. 28 and a half thousand people. So, and I've I've got a wonderful book on it, which is really all about the battle and the logistics of it. And I've just learned the strangest sorts of little things that wouldn't occur to you unless you begin to really focus in on it. Like, throughout that entire period and English history under the Tudors, there's just a lot of war. It's just a lot.
It just doesn't stop for hundreds of years. It's it's like an echo, really, of the Normans being in charge. It's just that this country's never really quite been the same since October to some degree. You get a sense of it as you get older. But, for example, it took so much energy to muster your army, like, a lot. So, basically, how do you muster? You've got men on horses with messages running around to a lord here who can bring you five knights and 300 arch if you just think about the communications to get everybody gathered on the battlefield. Right? So that's a massive and they've gotta be fed as they march into the battlefield. And if they're hanging around on the battlefield, they've gotta be fed as well. So the minute they saw the enemy, they just fight as fast as they possibly could. Because it's too expensive to have guys sitting around in fields eating all the time and and moving all the food. The the logistics of it. You just don't even think about things like this. No. Well, I never thought about it. It's absolutely incredible. And, the other thing that I've I've come across is, about how these battles were fought.
Primarily, archers were incredibly important. Yeah. And, they would always start off with the archers going at it. And so the first half an hour or hour would be just absolutely hails of arrows. And the thing is that you if if, as was often the case, one of this one of the sides would be more powerful in that department than the other one, causing the other one to have to attack with, you know, swords and daggers and all that kind of stuff. And the reason for that is there would be a rear guard on the field. And so if you were getting struck down by arrows, you couldn't actually retreat. There was you were just up against the press of men behind you and nobody, of course, there's nobody with a megaphone.
They're just people running around with flags, I guess, trying to communicate as best they could. I mean, it's just been absolute chaos. You think it's to some degree. And at Towton, in the first half an hour, there were close on half a million arrows fired. That's and they said, literally like in those films, it went dark. There were the volleys were so huge coming over these arrows that the sky was just made black as they came over. And I'm thinking, holy moly. So I'm just letting you know, you know. It's it's quite fascinating. And there was a report from an Italian guy in London about fourteen eighty odd. This would be about twenty years after that battle, although there's still been plenty more after that.
Commenting on English archers at the time and the bows that they use, and he said the bows are bigger, the arrows are bigger, and heavier than the ones we use in Europe. And he said this is because the English have got such massive hands. I don't know if this is true. But apparently, a very big handed people, huge massive hands. So it's it's quite amazing. And it just took place round the corner from here. I used to ride my bike there all the time when I was 14 and 15, completely oblivious to it. And there's not even there's only one marking on the battlefield. It's a a wooden cross, and a little plaque and that's it. And no one in England knows about it. It's amazing, really. Really, you know, in comparative terms. I've watched a lot of English history on YouTube and stuff, and I've seen them talk about that battle.
Yep. Yeah. It must have been bad. Yeah. It must have been pretty bad. Wow. Yep.
[02:10:34] Unknown:
Well, I was just anyway. We've dominated the whole show. And if there's anybody in the audience that had questions or whatever, ask any of us. You know, where the show's long over, but I think we would entertain doing that. Sorry to interrupt you, Paul. What were you gonna say?
[02:10:49] Unknown:
No. I'd I'd kinda just come to a natural Okay. Sort of little pause, I think, but yeah. Yeah. Anybody got any questions or comments for any of us?
[02:10:58] Unknown:
Is there anybody out there listening?
[02:11:01] Unknown:
Are are we They've all gone dancing, Roger. Are we the They've all gone dancing.
[02:11:05] Unknown:
Drop down the well.
[02:11:08] Unknown:
They're all everybody's I guess basically brushing up on their Latin or considering country dancing for the first three months of spring. And inspired them, Paul. I'm really pleased. Don't worry. I won't come back again for a little while. I can't have it. You can't you can't have me turning up and making everybody go, I've had enough of this. Better. You better.
[02:11:29] Unknown:
For if for if you're new, this is the guy that we really all of us, thank for what we've got here because it was his sacrifice and determination and pit bulldoggedness that, did all of the sacrifice and reading manuals and putting this thing together so we can have something like this. So, again, my friend, thank you so much.
[02:11:53] Unknown:
Oh, no. It's fun. I I I like it. I just hopefully, you know, it takes little pushes, but the aim is to try and make these sorts of things bigger. Well, that's always been my aim, really, I suppose. I do. No. Mine too. You know, and really, taking time out to think about how we do that kind of stuff. I've just been looking at you know, you you you've probably seen and possibly even lost huge chunks of your life with these, YouTube shorts, you know, these little videos. They're like forty five seconds long. You can lose your life in those things. They're ridiculous. But, they're very powerful for sort of like getting simple messages and alerts across to people. And, I'm kind of intrigued by this just to keep but also, I think there's something I think there's something else happening. I keep reading things with regards to what's going on. I was the reason why I just ordered the book on the Crusades is that somebody sent me an article.
I've forgotten the name of the website. It's quite recent, written by an American guy, about a new cruise is it time for a new crusade? Now he's not talking literally about that kind of stuff, but the essence of it was on point. And, you know, just coming back to parts of what we've touched on in the previous hour, we have to get right with God. There's no other solution. No. There isn't. And we're we're in there just isn't I mean, you know, I you know, as men, we want to it's understandable. We use our brains and think our brains are gonna do it. And they do achieve a lot, but it's not enough. And and we're good people, but we're not good enough to to tilt it. And something is, in fact, we won't be allowed to tilt it without that connection, without doing our duty by that stuff. So all these things that touch upon it and to give it, for me personally, a kind of more robust feel, I think people, understandably, have got a a view of certainly, over here of Christianity being a fae thing, which it has become. I mean, the church system over here is hilariously useless.
It's it's ridiculous. It's a complete pantomime, really. And it is like a wolf in sheep's clothing. It sort of pretends to be nicey nicey, and it's just a destructive force, unfortunately.
[02:13:57] Unknown:
Anything associated with the World Council of Churches, in my opinion, has been corrupted.
[02:14:02] Unknown:
Oh, yeah. Yeah. And and people you know, I understand why people have the impression that they do, but it's a false one. And so correcting that or assisting people it's like I've said before, I've got a guy over the road here. Mike, he's called. I'm I'm surrounded by three Mikes. I don't know what it is about Mikes, but they all seem to sort of end up in this place where I live. He's a builder. He's a great guy. If you said he was a Christian guy, he wouldn't know what you were talking about, but he is. He absolutely is.
He didn't even know he is. He's kind. He helps you out. He says, yes. I'll do this. Yes. I don't ask him for many things, but he's cheerful. He's it's just you go that's that's what I'm looking for. Like Yeah. Good yeoman. Yep. To live and work. That's all I'm after. And the thing is that it requires an awful lot of that background knowledge to bring that back, which is, you know, it is required. And country dancing as well. Mm-mm.
[02:15:00] Unknown:
Well, I was, I was dancing tango for a couple of years down there after that accident. And tango is very, very interesting because it's not a dance. It's a whole lifestyle. Mhmm. You start wearing tango clothes. You listen to tango music. You hang around with other tango people. You go to practices, and then you go to Malonga's, which is a big, tango dance in a big area. And it's just a whole lifestyle, and it was really cool. And I was I was getting pretty good at it, even getting complimented by by the, the teachers and stuff. And then, well, then a female came along and got me very distracted. So but I'm in Russia. I enjoyed it. That's what all all tango is is a big lonely arts club. K? So, but, boy, it's really cool. K. And it's hard. And and everyone always looks at the female.
Right? Because she's spinning and dancing and and rubbing her legs around and all that stuff. But it's the guy that tells her what and instruct her how to do all that. So even though you don't notice him, he's the real the real missing element. But it's very cool. I did enjoy it. I gotta admit.
[02:16:12] Unknown:
Well, I've just got this picture in my mind of you in one of those spectacular
[02:16:16] Unknown:
fandango jackets or whatever they're called, which is quite a nice bit. I mean, it's it's a very it's a very cool scene, you know, from young people all the way up through older people. Of course, most of the younger people go, oh, that's granddad's music. You know? But, but you do, you get in. It's a whole lifestyle. It's very cool. I I liked it. So Yeah. Anyway Okay. So we know what you're getting up to this weekend then. No. I haven't been doing it here. There there was before COVID, there was a bar, a club up in Quito that was a tango club. I heard about it, but I never got up there. And, but and when I had that foot accident, I guess I could probably still do it, but, a few years under the bridge. Anyway, good memories. And, I I honestly did enjoy. It's very important for me because I started doing it after the automobile accident, and it was kind of a therapy for me, really. Right. Yeah. Yeah. No. School sounds good. Pretty cool.
But, so we're here now. Well, Paul, anything else you wanna impart on us? Nobody's got any questions for Paul. I find that hard to believe out of this audience, but they've been very quiet this week. I think they're stunned by Trump and his blitzkrieg. I hate to use that term in association with Trump because you know what they're gonna ex extrapolate out of that. Right? Hitler. Hitler's blitzkrieg. Yeah. There you go. Who's this?
[02:17:43] Unknown:
It's Samuel.
[02:17:45] Unknown:
Oh, hey, Samuel. Yeah.
[02:17:48] Unknown:
Oh, one of the considered one of the greatest, writings on governing yourself, through the bible, through Christian understandings, was written by John Winthrop, the governor of the Massachusetts Bay Colony in 1630. And I'll just give you some shorts here out of it. A lot of people talk about liberty. Right? Well, he says here, it is liberty to do evil as well as to do good. That's true. And he goes on to say the the exercise, sorry, and maintaining of this liberty makes men grow more evil, and in time to be worse than brute beasts. So he's out in in this writing. He's pointing out how if you don't have a a foundation in scriptures and, those understandings and make them part of your governance, you're gonna be in trouble, and it's not gonna take very long. And he was telling his group, which weren't all Christians, by the way, there was a group there that, was a mixed bag, And he was basically saying we need to run our businesses under, you know, our business with each other, outside of ourselves, etcetera, based on the Bible pretty much. And it's a great speech. People should read it.
[02:19:27] Unknown:
Is this the one that's called a model of Christian charity, Samuel?
[02:19:32] Unknown:
Is it that one? Yeah. And in those those days, charity was a replacement word for love.
[02:19:41] Unknown:
Yep. Sixteen thirty. Yes. Quite recent then.
[02:19:48] Unknown:
I believe on the ship over there, which was the Abigail or something like that.
[02:19:53] Unknown:
Well, I've got here in front of me, so I might read that might be my evening's reading. Well, there you go. Well, no doubt those are our roots, strong roots. And your country,
[02:20:02] Unknown:
as Brent has told us so often, one of the strongest Christian countries in history, your country.
[02:20:09] Unknown:
Well, if it's gonna survive, it's gonna have to get back to that in some way. Yep. You gotta get the Islamists out of there. Maybe you could get the Yeah. I mean, the the first place for it to start yeah. I mean, the I think the first place that it has to start is in people's hearts. Yep. It it it's it's nothing to do with knowledge, really, or technical skill. It's to do with getting reconnected. And and our our people are kind of you could say it's tragic, but it's it has to go this way. It's almost as if it's good. And they're so timid about speaking out, so so many people, but that's reducing. I think it is. Maybe I'm just being wrong hopeful of this parish, but I think it is reducing. I've never sort of been quiet on that score, and I try to push people all the time to get them to understand.
You know, if you think we were strong in the past, there's a reason, and it's to do with race. And, whilst you allow the alien to live amongst you, I've not got nothing against them. It's got nothing to do with that. We're done for. And, it's a slow gradual decline of accommodation of things that basically chew you up, a bit like with the dancing. We ended up with this sort of crazed stuff. Right? Which was fun for a while, I guess. And when you're young, you didn't know anything better. Right. But there's something else about, like, many of the things that we've naturally developed suit us right. They do. And, of course, they've been painted out to be, you know, fuddy duddy and silly and to some degree that I mean, when Brent was talking about dancing with your elders, that used to happen all the time when I was young at Christmas parties with my Yep. Aunties and uncles. Because my mum was of a big family. I mean, we don't my mum was one of eight, which is, you know, the more I think about it, I'm going, god, that really is quite exact it was because we weren't surrounded by anybody else that came from such a large family.
And, but it just were. My grandma was just, she got busy for about twelve years. And, it was fab. I'd I'd dance with my grandma and everybody be talk and there was no age no one thought about it like that. And it's wonderful. And when you're young, you wanna sit around and listen to your uncles talking stuff. Yes. You don't mind not understand it, but you wanna be in the presence of it. It rubs off. There's a feeling you get. You can't sort of, you know, talk about it in a, an intellectual way, thankfully, because you're so young, but you absorb things. You absorb a feeling very important. Those you get the great comments like, when I was a lad your age, we used to bum, and they tell you this story, you know. I know. I love all that stuff. I try to do it now. All that's what what will they think of next? I just keep coming out with things. It's completely it's like really hamming it up. Well, I never. How does that work? Oh, there are some clever people out there. My dad used to speak like that all the time, like mocking the whole thing. It's just very funny. It just is.
And in the end, just being with your kith and kin around the fire. And I'm I mean it literally, actually. We've just been, the other day in fact, for the winter, we've got a lot of wood and rubbish in the garden. And so every now and again, we light a fire. And we did on Sunday just gone. It was a beautiful day. There wasn't a breath of wind. It was cold, but it was a clear blue sky, and it wasn't too cold. And then we just sat out Sunday afternoon from, like, 03:00 till 05:00 around a a I can't right now. I'm just talking to someone. Two minutes. Pardon? Okay. Yeah. Sorry. Someone's just chatting to me. But we were just sat around that around a fire with all these nice, what I call tree wood. There's a lot of tree wood in it, and it was just crackling and spitting. I just got completely lost in looking in the embers of the fire. It was just so good. Fantastic. It's just the best. I just thought as long as we can make a fire, we're okay. Yeah. Speaking of fires, you got one you gotta go put out? Sounds like?
No. That was my son desperate to know what he was supposed to cook for supper. Oh. So, but I I can it's okay. He's he's great. He has to cook every now and again. So it's it's good. I you know? No. That's good training.
[02:24:09] Unknown:
Good training. Yeah. Yeah. Yeah. Oh, I've got them all sorted out here, Roger. Good. How old are they now? They're in their young kinda early twenties.
[02:24:18] Unknown:
Let's see. My youngest son will be 23 in March. My my eldest son will be 26 in August. So How's that happen?
[02:24:28] Unknown:
Wow. How's that happen? I don't know. Amazing what a what a barometer children are. Right? Mhmm. Well, I'm starving too. So, not to not to walk away from a pleasured conversation with my friend here. But anybody else in the audience have anything real quick? I I know one short question, you get Paul off on an oratory for a while. But if you got something brief, we'd love to hear it.
[02:24:56] Unknown:
Well, maybe it'd be good real quick for, I'd like for, Paul to to, tell everyone about his show.
[02:25:06] Unknown:
Yes.
[02:25:09] Unknown:
And let them know how they can get more of you.
[02:25:12] Unknown:
That's kind of you. I think maybe they're all maybe everybody's aware, but for those that aren't, it's the website to go to is paulenglishlive.com, And there are links there to when we do I only go live once a week, which is on Thursday afternoon, for you guys. It's 3PM to, 5PM US eastern time. Although, we overrun usually by an hour. I keep on meaning to curtail it and bring it down to two because I'd like to actually start doing at least one other briefer show during the week, almost like Billy No Mates, as we say, over solo, flying solo because there's certain things because it's it's it's a bit of a melee.
The Thursday show has turned into quite a thing. But this coming Thursday, February Oh. Is the eightieth anniversary of the start of Dresden. Oh. And, so Monica Schafer's gonna be joining me, who you probably know of Monica. And Dennis Wise, is also down to join us as well. So, the idea is to make sure that we don't get so doom laden, that everybody wants to sort of slit their wrists because it's a pretty heavy topic. Tragic. Tragic. I've done so many shows on it, and I've got a lot of clips by it. But I want to cut it, so it's the eightieth. And and when it was the eightieth of the whole thing the other week, of course, over here, we we we can't. I'm very circumspect. If you get me in a pub, I'll I'll I'll let go. But on air, I I won't, because we live in a you know, it's dodgy. It's Bolshevik. BBC is a Bolshevik brainwashing corporation, really. And the whole thing is just, you know, if you've those of us that have read history, it would be foolish to really not learn from it, wouldn't it? So, you just have to be guarded about how we talk about it. But what we ended up talking about is how can we talk about a thing that we're not supposed to talk about? So you discuss it from that angle.
And it really looking at the control of speech, which is why I was encouraged when Trump said the other week, America is now a free speech country again. Right. There's no censorship. But then yesterday, he said, but you're not allowed to criticize the Jews. Oh. So you didn't really mean it then? Or I mean, I'm shorthanded it, but basically, that's what's going on. And it's see? It gives with the right hand and takes away with the left. This is intentional, I think. It's all intentional. It's a demoralization process.
And it's that thing what's that fancy term? Cognitive dissonance. It's to get two conflicting ideas running at the same time. Right. And to act as though you never said the one on the previous day. Like, there's no acknowledgment of it. Like, with the Gaza thing, there's no acknowledgment that all these children have been blown to bits. And he sat with a guy that ordered ordered it all. I've never gone out to lunch with a mass killer, have you? I don't intend to. So I just find it all it's very odd, and it's by design. They know what they're doing. And I'm not trying to rain on anybody's parade. I understand. Oh, yeah. We did end up talking about just going on to supremely trivial, although it may not be trivial in the great sort of mix of social engineering media nonsense. But you've got to think all the Super Duper Bowl happening, don't you, on Sunday? Yes. Isn't this? And it's a perfect day for a major false flag too. That's what I that's what I was gonna say. Because Trump's going. Isn't he the first president to ever attend one? Yes. Yeah. So this is interesting. And, also, everybody, of course, on Monday will be reporting about the satanic halftime show. This is what we're expecting, isn't it? Completely. And you you know what else is going on? You know where it is. Right? It's in New Orleans. New Orleans. Yeah. You know what else is going on? The March.
Oh, it's just got everything. Is James Bond gonna be there as well then? I don't know. He may be the King of Rex.
[02:28:52] Unknown:
Holy rhettos this year.
[02:28:55] Unknown:
Here's an interesting thing because I know you you I know you follow college football more, I think, Roger. But Yeah. Patrick, who's on who comes from Wisconsin, who's on the show, his surname is, Chanal, c h e n a l. His brother plays for the Kansas City Chiefs. Oh, really? Two Super he's got two Super Bowl rings already. Good. Congratulations. When you ask Patrick about football, he goes, I don't know. I don't know anything. Yeah. I don't know anything about it. It's really funny. But it's made my brother a multimillionaire,
[02:29:25] Unknown:
though. Has it? No. Well, that's good. If he plays for the Chiefs, it has. Oh, yeah. Yeah. Yeah. Two Super Bowl rings? Of course.
[02:29:33] Unknown:
Yeah. He's after a third on Sunday, I guess. So, you know, I don't know. It'd be too late for me. It'd be way past my bedtime, and I've gotta stay up reading a model of Christian charity. A really good game anyway. The good games are the division playoffs and the things we had a couple weeks ago for the pro side to me. Okay? I think the good games, Roger, are the college football, I gotta say. Well, even more so. Yes. I agree. He's got he's still got that touch of being connected with the people. And I you know, professional sports are
[02:30:01] Unknown:
the most of them are nonsense. It's the only area of our society that they hadn't been able to really screw with with all this, woke stuff. Mhmm. They got into the NFL of, you know, a bit, but they had not anywhere into college football. So
[02:30:18] Unknown:
that's what they're trying to say. They never got to the point where they were putting female linebackers out on the pitch, did they? No. You saw what Trump did yesterday with a whole room full of girls. Right?
[02:30:29] Unknown:
No. I didn't. Joe Biden would have been in hog heaven, all those little girls around. They've been sniffing everywhere. He outlawed men and women's sports. Executive order. Good. There's only two two genders, male, female, etcetera, etcetera. So
[02:30:48] Unknown:
take what you good stuff you can get, man. Yeah. No. That's what we were saying when we'd covered it two weeks ago. I actually you know, there's still a part of me that remains as kind of as long as the words are coming out every now and again, you've gotta take that stuff. But I think the bigger picture is to watch how they're playing our emotions up and down. I don't know where I'm going with that, you know, but
[02:31:09] Unknown:
evidently, he was in a private, you know, somewhat private with people they're meeting and talked about the assassination and now that he believed in God, but he really believed in it in Jesus Christ afterward and used those words. And, I would imagine that an incident like that would turn a man's head. I mean, I is that to, punish, have an impact on one, a a great impact?
[02:31:40] Unknown:
I hope that's, you know, I hope that that's a sincere thing, but I've I've got to tell you I'm cynical from a distance. My view is You got everything. You you got everything. You know, if they wanted him dead, they killed Kennedy apparently with a I know he wasn't really Lee Harvey Oswald. Right? No. But they killed him back in, you know, sixty years ago. Yep. I'm seriously, if they wanted that guy dead, he'd be dead. They wouldn't need to shoot him with a bullet. Why why was it a bullet in a public space? If you want him dead, you won't do that. Do you see what I'm you just wanna do that. Why would you do that? I but maybe I'm a dimbo. Maybe I don't know what I'm talking about. The truth is I actually don't know. Maybe God did turn his head that little bit to look at that thing and have that close encounter
[02:32:20] Unknown:
with a Yeah. With a 2,300 foot per second two two three projectile.
[02:32:27] Unknown:
And maybe he is playing six dimension interstellar chess with the whole thing. I don't know. I mean, it was interesting that body language thing with Netanyahu where he pulled the chair out for him. Oh, yeah. In other words, he treated him like a woman, didn't he? Uh-huh. It was,
[02:32:42] Unknown:
he already knew he was he beat him. It was a a a comment out of JD Vance the other day coming out of a meeting. He said Trump's having the time of his life. So he had really, really enjoying it. The guy only sleeps four hours a night. He drinks these Coke ones or whatever it is and eats junk food. I think one of the reasons I heard somebody speculate on a lot of the reasons he eats junk food is that he with a group of people, they'll go along and dart into some little fast food place and buy the meal for everybody because he knows they can't poison him that way.
[02:33:23] Unknown:
I if if we sit and look at it, many things would reveal themselves to our mind. You really have to focus in. The truth is I don't know. Neither does anybody else. And I think you're right. We have to if there are good words coming out of anybody's mouth, it's like I mentioned before. Liz Truss was this woman who was the prime minister here for forty seven days. Right? Just forty seven days. History of England. Right? Yeah. And she's a bit gawky as a communicator. She's not unintelligent by any means, but she she doesn't come across that well. However, she's the one that said, back in January of last year on radio with Steve Bannon, that, she found out that the prime minister of England can be fired, but the governor of the Bank of England cannot. And therefore, she said this, the governor of the Bank of England has got more power in the democracy than the prime minister has. Spot on. I've never heard anybody and I've just said that to people. I said, whatever you think about it, that's absolutely true, and you need to hear it over and over again. And most of the political class will not hear it because they know where their bread is buttered, and they can't work for you. Don't even expect that they ever can. They can't. They're compromised to the nth degree. They're not gonna do it, which is why the fire's got to come from the little people.
Or I like being a little bit. Fear of the Jews.
[02:34:41] Unknown:
Yep. In the biblical quotation. Brent could correct me if I'm wrong. Yeah. So, anyway, well,
[02:34:50] Unknown:
Paul, I just say it's always in the light to have you. You know? The big my biggest complaint is we don't get you enough. Okay? Well, I always feel so welcome, and I don't wanna muscle in for the whole thing. I like listening to Brent too, and and I could make it today. And if my schedule eases up a bit, I'll try and join you every couple of weeks or whatever. I know it's been maybe a month. You're I'll ask him, and I'm always letting Paul. It's lovely, but you always it's such a warm welcome from everybody. So it's a bit of a treat for me. It's Yep. It's really nice being on this side of the conversation as opposed to being
[02:35:19] Unknown:
Yeah. It's all it's mainly acts on a Thursday. Supposed for a little people in the in the pubs that go, oh, here comes that Paul again. Yeah.
[02:35:30] Unknown:
Yeah. You know, you can kinda overstay your welcome, can't you, a bit and and stuff and Well, three days. I think the more you do this as well, you realize that there's although there are many, many things to talk about, this for all of us, I guess, we focus down on a few that we're really very, very keen on Yeah. That we think really are major parts of the key. And therefore, you you know, you can drive people bonkers by just going on and on and on. Well And sometimes it's difficult to gauge whether you're doing that or not. So I tried to sort of for company is three day rule. You know, the three day rule? Company and fish
[02:36:02] Unknown:
both start to spoil. So, Alright. Anyway, always a pleasure, my friend. We welcome you and, just, so appreciated to have people like you in my orbit, quite frankly.
[02:36:16] Unknown:
Yeah. Well, likewise, Roger. It's great. It counts so much. It's in fact, it's everything, to be quite honest. Well, it's everything. Very positive. Things are really going
[02:36:26] Unknown:
more positive than I think many of us or any of us would have ever expected. And, it's, we we are seeing the weakness of our enemy. We're seeing the strong tactics, educated tactics of Trump. He's not the same guy he was in the last term. I would tell you that right off. Okay? No. He's not. And, we better take all the good news we can get. I think so. And pray for him that he sees the evil in these bastards, and maybe he did. You know, there's a a oh, who is the the the economist? He's Jewish. I wanna say Suskind, but that's not it. He got some publicity lately, and he's kinda turned against him. You know? And he did an interview with Tucker Carlson and a couple other people over the last couple of months, and Trump took one of those argument, interviews where he was very derogatory about Netanyahu and all this stuff and put it on True Social on his account.
[02:37:24] Unknown:
So a little hints, little hints. I know. I I remember that. That wasn't that before the election or just after he he won. They said something quite derogatory about him. And Right. You just can't read the body. Like, I don't know quite what's going on. Maybe none maybe only he and a few of his close confidant. I I want it all to turn out the way we all want it to turn out, but I I don't know. I am good for this.
[02:37:47] Unknown:
It's hard to get their influence out of something that's world changing or world influencing. It may be the the the the good king as opposed to the wicked king, which we're exposing, but they they still got those tendencies. So maybe Trump will you better pray for him, folks. That's all I ask. Yeah. Otherwise, that pray for Paul. Pray for all of us. Okay? Yeah. And, we got some powerful medicine and that we can continue to roll it out and expose, people of the world to, you know, our little piece of the pie here. But, thank you for giving me the opportunity to do that uninterrupted.
No commercials. I'm not selling the audience's ears. None of that stuff, and I thank you for it, my friend.
[02:38:32] Unknown:
No. It's great. Really good. Fantastic. Anyway, cracking year to everybody. Happy New Year to everyone. Yes. Yes.
[02:38:39] Unknown:
We will see you sooner than later, hopefully. Okay? Yeah. Yeah. You will. You will. Fantastic. Thank you very much, Roger. What an enjoy. And Brent and everybody listening. Thank you. Yep. Yep. There he goes. Mister Paul English to go get dinner, organized. And balances many plates. He's like that guy you used to see on Ed Sullivan that had that that conference table there. And and with all those plates on a stick, he keep them all spinning, jumping around that table. Some of you will remember that. I'm sure that's kinda Paul.
Otherwise, in that, anybody got any, questions for me or Brent?
[02:39:17] Unknown:
A comment, Roger?
[02:39:19] Unknown:
Yes, please.
[02:39:21] Unknown:
I think, as we get to know Trump more and more, I I think the possibility of him having a power drink inside that Coke can is high, but he gets a million dollars every time he shows up with it.
[02:39:35] Unknown:
I'll tell you, he's something. I I listen. The guy's gonna go down in history like people, like, well, let's hope the ends are different. Napoleon, etcetera, etcetera. He he is an absolute historical figure of great importance, and I just say we're lucky to live in this time. Period. Men have wanted to be alive right now for thousands of years, and we're here. Okay? So be grateful.
[02:40:03] Unknown:
Don't be scared. I like to be powerful. That you're recommending that we pray for him. I think that's the best we can do.
[02:40:10] Unknown:
Well, it's certainly something we can do. I don't know what else we can contribute, and he seems to have an awful lot of good stuff going for him. Hopefully, this coming week, we'll get, some of these, Gabbard or RFK or, Patel Patel, confirmed. So, anyway, well, you guys have a good day, and we'll see you tomorrow. We're gonna have, March back tomorrow, and he's got some stuff he wants to introduce to the audience. So, I suggest y'all stick your nose in. And, I'm just glad to see him get back among the healthy and the living. So, anyway, that anybody else?
[02:40:58] Unknown:
Yeah, Roger.
[02:41:00] Unknown:
Oh, there's somebody very distant. Mhmm. Can't hardly hear you. Oh,
[02:41:06] Unknown:
okay. I yield. Never mind.
[02:41:10] Unknown:
Can anybody I can barely hear it. Who was it?
[02:41:13] Unknown:
It's a sketch, and I'm sorry. I'm on a different device today.
[02:41:17] Unknown:
Okay. We are sketch. Hold hold it till tomorrow, buddy. You sound like you're in China.
[02:41:24] Unknown:
Well, I Okay. You started the show with you were talking about somebody's big balls, and I thought you were talking about your aunt. So I just wondered who you were talking about. Well, no. Oh, big balls. No. Big balls
[02:41:37] Unknown:
is a 25 year old kid that's one of Musk's leaders on these raids. And he made some kind of a comment that was I don't remember what even the comment was, but they kicked him off the Doge team. And I think they've rehired him, but his name is Big Balls. And at 16 years old, he had some kind of a platform with a whole bunch of websites under it. So he's quite proficient in the computer area, but that's his nickname, big balls. K?
[02:42:11] Unknown:
Okay. Thank you.
[02:42:13] Unknown:
You're welcome. And, well, I could probably make a comment. I'll hold it, and I'll see y'all tomorrow with Mark. And, thank you, Brent, if you're still with us, man. Sure appreciate you as always, and, Francine and the the little the little, winter's trunk the little winter's crew that comes over here. So, I'll see y'all tomorrow. Have a great day. Thank you, Roger. Good morning. Bye. My pleasure.
[02:42:42] Unknown:
Why are they playing into these wimps' hands? Like, you can't make a comment without getting fired or whatever. Why don't they wear T shirts in there? Black T shirts with white letters f y f. And a lot of you know what that means.
[02:43:06] Unknown:
Good question, Brett.
[02:43:09] Unknown:
It's government. When have they cared about your feelings? Never.
[02:43:15] Unknown:
Never.
[02:43:18] Unknown:
Lisa.
[02:43:24] Unknown:
Hey. Have you all seen Katherine Austin Fitz's new report regarding Doge and everything in supersonic speedboat?
[02:43:36] Unknown:
No. It's not about about Bitcoin. They're not about Doge.
[02:43:39] Unknown:
Yeah. I'm a link. Yeah. Give me a second. I gotta email it to myself so I can pull the link into the chat. Give me a minute. Thank you.
[02:43:52] Unknown:
Yeah. She had quite the report on Bitcoin. If you get a chance to get any of her recordings or go online with the report that you can give to different legislators or whatever about the land taking and the tokenization of all assets. Bitcoin just be another pump and dump Ponzi making off with the made off in the past?
[02:44:15] Unknown:
Yes. Are you guys going to post that in the free conference call room?
[02:44:22] Unknown:
I think she is.
[02:44:24] Unknown:
Thank you.
[02:44:25] Unknown:
What about what they're gonna do with the Navajo? They're gonna take their water.
[02:44:31] Unknown:
Yep.
[02:44:32] Unknown:
Can we say a little
[02:44:34] Unknown:
can we say hollow the more?
[02:44:39] Unknown:
Did you see that the, governor of New York shut down all of the, chicken processing plants only for, like, three or four or five cases of bird flu?
[02:44:52] Unknown:
They need to string her up.
[02:44:55] Unknown:
Yeah.
[02:44:56] Unknown:
And does it really break the flu? Propagandize
[02:44:59] Unknown:
people out of not eating eggs, so, you know, that that is, like, over. So now they're just gonna eliminate them or make them so expensive that, when they used to be a poor man's staple, they're they're becoming, I don't know, dollar a piece, you know.
[02:45:14] Unknown:
Yeah. At, at Costco, there was a picture of somebody that had something like, I don't know, 30 boxes of eggs in their cart. This was yesterday.
[02:45:25] Unknown:
Well, I make sure I leave with, like, 72 of them. Not cartons, but eggs. Yeah.
[02:45:33] Unknown:
I can't remember what part of the country there is, but some farmer came up with a kiosk. And you go with your credit card and you, put your card on it and it opens up a door and you get two dozen of beautifully free range eggs. You can see a camera of all the chickens in the back of the farm running around. And they're I think for two dozen, I think it was, like, dollars 6 or something like that. It was unbelievable. $7 maybe something like that, and you just pull over to the side of the road, put your credit card up, and then if you have any issues, you there's a call button that you can press for any issues with the door not opening or the door jamming or something like that.
[02:46:15] Unknown:
One of our local discount stores is putting limits on them, like one or two packs depending on how much supply they have.
[02:46:26] Unknown:
Yes. Everything from a land grab to a water grab to a food grab to a digital financial system rolling out.
[02:46:39] Unknown:
You guys hear that French toast sizzling?
[02:46:42] Unknown:
The what?
[02:46:45] Unknown:
I just put some bread, in the, on the griddle. It's French toast.
[02:46:51] Unknown:
Oh,
[02:46:52] Unknown:
yum. The worst of it for me is you're sitting next to that piece of crap who just slaughtered all these people over there and it doesn't say a word about it, you know?
[02:47:06] Unknown:
Yep. All of the Palestinians and people in Gaza.
[02:47:10] Unknown:
Well, you know the Palestinians are the black folk over there. They are not white.
[02:47:18] Unknown:
Yeah. They were in the nineteen o '5 bible. The map was all Palestine in the map in the nineteen o '5 bible. And when the Scofels camp came out, everybody probably knows this, in '19 whatever, then then all of a sudden Israel appeared on the map.
[02:47:34] Unknown:
But I saw in the winter times that area was Judea.
[02:47:38] Unknown:
1 thing that a commentator that I listened to picked out in Trump speaking about Palestine is he used a number for the ones that remain that is 500,000 less than what they used to be. Instead of BS of 40 to 60,000.
[02:48:00] Unknown:
Yeah. For those of you who are interested from a biblical standpoint on, Instagram, there's a guy who, let me find out who this is. His name is Shepard4theking, s h e p h e r d f o r t h e k I n g. He is unbelievable. He is tying all of this stuff up into between Trump and all of this stuff. He Trump just got a golden buzzer and the time on it was 03:30, thirty three degree Mason, but he's tying more than that together. He's tying Apollo and all of the, stuff together and he comes out every day with a new video. It's only about two minutes or three minutes long at most, but it's fascinating.
[02:49:01] Unknown:
Isn't that like a bad Don? I know. A bad Don. A bad Don. Yeah. Yeah.
[02:49:08] Unknown:
It's it's it's just very interesting, though. You're like, oh my god. I never thought of that. Wow. It's just, the guy it's just unbelievable, the the things he's talking about, Illuminati and, just all sorts of stuff. I'll post it, the Instagram channel in the chat.
[02:49:26] Unknown:
You gotta wonder how how long the script is and all this stuff, like, alright. This year or this decade or this period, based on all the numbers that they run, we're gonna do this and such and and now we're gonna tokenize Navajo water or whatever?
[02:49:46] Unknown:
Yeah. They're gonna tokenize everything. They're gonna tokenize your car, your house, your bank account, everything, your money, everything. If they roll out with the US Treasury note, they're gonna tokenize everything.
[02:49:58] Unknown:
Your blood pressure Yep. Connect connected to the Apple Watch, I'm sure. Yep.
[02:50:04] Unknown:
They're gonna tokenize We The People.
[02:50:09] Unknown:
Some of these guys like Boris, the big thing that you kinda takes a different spin on, maybe a traditional Christian, look that we've been kinda inculcated with is that, you know, we have this ability to return this Babylonian system to them and not live chasing money, which isn't money anyway. It's just all debt. Forgive us our debts as we forgive our debtors. Right? So, yeah, there's a way to do that within that they've allowed and, you know, and even, I think it was, forget who wrote the treaties that talks about, you know, the purpose of the constitution is to continue the mercantile thing as well as, have the god god, provided rights protected.
But, you know, there's a way to use their system kinda like in a Tai Chi way where you're kinda returning all the debt to them. And I think it's by using some of these papers that they have, different papers that they use. So quite interesting, this guy, Boris, if you ever have a chance to listen to his, I am some dude. And, it's quite, he talks about, I think, trim tab, which is a small little rudder on a sailboat that can that can turn the whole the whole deal. Anyway, I yield.
[02:51:31] Unknown:
I guess you didn't listen to Mike Getty yesterday after Roger's show. You only need to on Thursdays. He's a pretty good historian on the constitution era and revolutionary war and civil war and reconstruction.
[02:51:50] Unknown:
What is his name again?
[02:51:53] Unknown:
Mike Gaddy. And here's the rule. Never ever never ever ever you too, Joan. Never ever mention Roger's or Mike Gaddy's names to either one of them.
[02:52:12] Unknown:
Okay.
[02:52:13] Unknown:
There is a big rift between them, and there's a number of us that like both of them. But never ever cross those names with each other.
[02:52:28] Unknown:
And he's on every day or he's just on certain days?
[02:52:32] Unknown:
He's on Thursday after Roger's show on, your DIY help, and it's on pre conference call.
[02:52:45] Unknown:
Thank you. Can you relisten to them again, Brent, if you go to YourDIY Health?
[02:52:57] Unknown:
If you go to the website yourdiyhealth.com and look up his archive, you can find it.
[02:53:06] Unknown:
Okay. Thank you. Yeah. That's good to hear you. I've never listened to him before. For some reason, I thought that he was in cahoots with, that guy with the last name English, but maybe I misunderstood.
[02:53:19] Unknown:
It's Jim Ramseit.
[02:53:22] Unknown:
Say that again?
[02:53:24] Unknown:
Your do it yourself health, DIY health is site. He's on after Roger, Mondays through Thursday. And then Thursday, he has Mike Gaddy as his guest. Okay. Thank you.
[02:53:41] Unknown:
The person who mentioned, Boris, I am some dude, is that Boris Boris Ericsson?
[02:53:49] Unknown:
Yes. Okay. Thank you. Yeah. If you go to the Sovereign Living, which is Glenn, Glenn's channel, Sovereign Living on YouTube, there's some old bump bars on there. And then I was just in touch with, one of the guys that is on the live there. His name is Daniel Joseph. He, I just emailed him about, some of the questions that I had with relate relating to some of Boris' work. So he is responsive. One of the things that they were doing was leading the d and b number of, or somebody was talking about that. I don't know if Boris was doing that himself, but I was warning about leaning judges that that can get you into a lot of trouble. But I never heard of leaning the d and b number to put pressure in a, in a case.
I yield.
[02:54:42] Unknown:
Thank you. And then did Brent say that Mark's gonna be on tomorrow on Saturday's show?
[02:54:47] Unknown:
Roger said that.
[02:54:50] Unknown:
Thank you.
[02:54:56] Unknown:
The Solari report has been posted in the chat.
[02:55:01] Unknown:
Thank you, Sherry.
[02:55:03] Unknown:
When you think about if they left all the remedy there, you know, including national status and then even this remedy that Mark is proposing with filing a, revocation of election, all this. The the commercial stuff is there not because we get entangled with it, but because we wanna exit it. And I think that's the intent of anything that I would ever do with regard to UCC or whatever would be to I wanna exit this Babylonian system. Money, you know, is for the money changers, and the temple should not be you know, we're not gonna make direct deposits in the BB's account anymore, including the blood of American white American men, especially European men that they're trying to now recruit back into the forces.
[02:55:49] Unknown:
What about the honorable brothers?
[02:55:54] Unknown:
Sorry. I I don't know if that was I heard since Trump, they're getting 3,500
[02:55:58] Unknown:
enlistees a day.
[02:56:01] Unknown:
Wow. There you go. Especially the the white southern boab show is getting suckered in there. Of course, they're offering all kinds of benefits. Right? Including citizenship. They were for a while. I wonder if they still got that one going.
[02:56:13] Unknown:
Actually, there's been plenty of honorable Hispanics who served, and they were screwed out of their citizenship to the point of even being deported. That sucks.
[02:56:26] Unknown:
Yeah. Talk about a trade service. Right?
[02:56:28] Unknown:
Well, because the company commanders are a bunch of douchebags and lazy.
[02:56:35] Unknown:
Might it be that the economy is so pathetic that that is what's causing people to enlist guaranteed funds? I yield.
[02:56:46] Unknown:
I agree. I heard there was 350 a day, but I also heard that, some of those, they're gonna, kick them out of the country. They've been offered to to join the army and the military, and, and they get a citizen. I don't know if it's true or not, but a couple of people are saying that.
[02:57:07] Unknown:
Hey. You know, I wonder if they're going to ship our people overseas, and, the foreigners that enlist stay here. I'm really troubled with Trump using the military for domestic purposes in California. I yield.
[02:57:25] Unknown:
Well, the LA Mayor doesn't know how to keep a button in the country.
[02:57:32] Unknown:
The problem, they're the only one that has the infrastructure and the equipment and the manhunt and the engineers and when you have a a mass destruction at that, at that size. So if the governor, I don't like the governor of California, asked or requested, they're the only one who could do that. Building bridges and highways and so on.
[02:57:57] Unknown:
I don't know how many of you are familiar with Soldier of Fortune magazine, but back in the seventies and the very early eighties, they had an advertisement, you know, see the world, meet new and interesting people, and kill them. Chalk that up to California.
[02:58:19] Unknown:
The guy over here wrote up memoir. He, advertises in the local freebie, a filthy way to die about the Vietnam War.
[02:58:30] Unknown:
About a bright and shining light by John, the story of John Paul Van.
[02:58:39] Unknown:
I didn't know about that one. That sounds good.
[02:58:42] Unknown:
It was happily talked about thirty five years ago.
[02:58:49] Unknown:
That's it for the Radio Ranch with Roger Sales on radio.globalvoiceradio.net and eurofolk radio dot com. This has been a Friday edition with Roger Sales and Brent Allen Winters. Catch Roger and Brent every Friday, 11AM to 1PM eastern. We're also on eurofoapradio.com, Global Voice Radio Network, and a host of other platforms, Monday through Saturday, 11AM to 1PM eastern time. Thank you so much for joining us today. That's it for me. I am out of here. Have a great day and a great weekend if I don't catch you again. Bye now.
Forward moving and focused on freedom, you're listening to the Global Voice Radio Network.
Introduction and Hosts Introduction
Health Update on Eli James
Political Climate and Trump's Actions
Politics and Warfare
The Power of the Jury
Common Law and Christianity
Paul English Joins the Conversation
English Traditions and Dancing
Prayer for Eli and Health Update
Historical Reflections and Common Law
Trump's Influence and Political Observations
Closing Remarks and Future Plans