In this episode, we delve into a wide range of topics, starting with the technical difficulties and sponsor mentions before diving into the heart of the discussion. Roger Sayles and co-host Brent Winters lead the conversation, touching on the importance of acknowledging the platforms that extend their reach, including Eurofolk Radio and Radio Soapbox. They discuss the dynamics of women's roles in society, referencing a recent show by Paul English that explored women's suffrage and voting systems. The conversation shifts to historical perspectives on slavery, the influence of women in politics, and the societal impact of the suffrage movement. Brent Winters shares insights on the historical context of slavery in America and Europe, emphasizing the common law's stance against slavery. The episode also touches on the cultural and historical significance of various religious and philosophical beliefs, including Christianity's role in shaping societal norms. The hosts engage with listeners, answering questions about historical events, legal principles, and personal anecdotes related to property rights and adverse possession. The episode concludes with a lively discussion on historical books and the influence of various cultures, with a special appearance by Paul English, who shares humorous and insightful excerpts from a 1930s book on foreigners.
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 iterraplanet.com.
Thank you, and welcome to the program. Forward moving and focused on freedom. You're listening to the Global Voice Radio Network.
[00:01:35] Unknown:
Well, there we go, Alvin again, and we would too. We're gonna try to do a little bit of that. Put our collective shoulders to the wheel, if you will, here on the February. Short month always, and, Friday is the day. Roger Sales and cohost Brent Winters. And if he's not here, he'll be here shortly. He likes to hold us in suspense, I think. But I know he's out there because we exchanged some messages. We're on a a number of other partners that help us extend our reach. Mister Paul Beaner is the keeper of such, platforms, and, we have him come out and identify him and give them the proper credit that they've earned and deserve.
Don't we, Paul?
[00:02:22] Unknown:
Yeah. We do. We try to do that for sure. Try to. Morning, Rog. Yes, sir. Happy happy Friday. We, we have a full complement of platforms today. We have eurofolkradio.com. Thanks to pastor Eli James. We've got, radiosoapbox.com. Thanks to Paul, our buddy across the pond. Yesterday's Paul English live was awesome.
[00:02:50] Unknown:
Yeah. I listened to a little bit of it. Have you got have you sent a copy to Farish yet?
[00:02:55] Unknown:
No. I have not. We're also on +1 069 0 in Chicago and homenetwork.TV, freedom nation TV, go live TV, and stream life.tube, WBOU. And, the four that I just mentioned are brought to us by the NET family of broadcast services through WDRN production sport, Collins, Colorado. We're also on Global Voice Radio Network. The links to Eurofolk and Global Voice and the FCC links so people can join us live on the show. Those are all on the website, the matrixdocs.com. That's the matrixdocs.com. And I think that's pretty much everything that I've got going on Okay. For me, Raj.
[00:03:42] Unknown:
Alright. Well, thank you, Paul. I I couldn't help but make that comment. I I got to listen to not half, maybe a little bit less. And so I got the gist of your Paul English live show yesterday, and I couldn't help but think about Farris.
[00:03:57] Unknown:
Yeah. I I was, like, I was, like, so in and out for that show yesterday. I missed more of it than I caught. So Okay. Well, you know what I'm in the audience for the audience, Paul's show yesterday.
[00:04:08] Unknown:
I had a female on there with him. His, guest I I can't remember her or what she had referenced that she was in jail. What was she in jail for? In Germany? For Holocaust denial or something?
[00:04:22] Unknown:
Yeah. Something like that. She, she posted something and, those who wear little hats with fat wallets took a umbrances to it and, they locked her up. Is that right? For how long? Do you know? Couple of years or what?
[00:04:37] Unknown:
Well, it's pretty ugly. It strikes me as six.
[00:04:41] Unknown:
If I remember correctly, it's six years.
[00:04:44] Unknown:
Oh my god. Yeah. Monsters.
[00:04:46] Unknown:
These monsters, man. They're monsters. Yes. Anyway to have your right to free speech violated.
[00:04:52] Unknown:
Right. The the show was on with the usual cast of characters that, Paul has assembled over there, Paul English. And, it was all on women voting and stuff and all these women type issues. And I just couldn't help but think about Iron Man coming on. And when he started that and everybody got all their panties up in a wad and the dress is blown up and all that stuff. And your ball over there, nobody got upset about it at all.
[00:05:18] Unknown:
There there what the the tag for the show was basically to do that very thing. But what it did was it actually evolved into what is wrong with the voting system and that you don't actually have any effect when you vote and all that. It it it dove a lot deeper into the issues than just women's suffrage.
[00:05:47] Unknown:
Oh, okay. Well, I I like I said, I only got through part of the show last night, and I I and I need to go to bed. But, very interesting, and there's, as I said, when Ferris came on here and got, everybody's feathers ruffled, you know, there are a lot of things he said that make a lot of sense. And and and Paul showed just kinda buttressed it yesterday. It's nothing against you gals. It's more against our traditional roles that we've been born into, and and and and people wanna break you out of that and screw the society up, and that's one of them. What is the lay the I heard a high school survey. 85% of high school males are conservative, and, like, 90% of the females are liberal.
K? So you've got that that that really stark dialectic even in the youth, in the youth. And, you remember, I'm sure everybody here is familiar with the old Winston Churchill quote. I'm sure you've heard it, Paul. If, when you're 25, if you're not a liberal, you don't have a heart. And when you're 40, if you're not a conservative, you don't have a brain. Okay? Well, there's a lot of truth to that. That's why it's so funny. Okay? Yeah. But, anyway, good show yesterday. I'm glad I got to see part of it. I haven't heard too many of Paul's shows lately. I had a little time last night. Did I see that the, the mister Winters shows up, with us, it appears? Morning, Brent.
[00:07:10] Unknown:
Hi, Roger. I wanna I wanna see that or listen to that show, and that's
[00:07:15] Unknown:
that's archived some place. Yeah. It's over on Paul Paul English live dot com, and it's the first entry that'll pop up there. And and there's a lot of you know, they went back into the historical, part of this where men used to only property owners could vote. It wasn't just a man. You had to own property. You had to have skin in the game here. And and when they brought suffrage around and, of course, you ladies, you're you're built to be home, homekeepers and mothers and all that stuff. You're very emotional. The good lord made you that way. Okay? And that's a blessing. Alright? But our enemies take that and use it against you and eventually us by using your emotions, which are which can be easily swayed, and and turn them around and it is against, the results or against the society in this development.
Brent, you know, I'm not saying anything that I didn't knew. But, yeah. So, well, it's a situation that probably needs discussion, quite frankly. Now our gals are not that way. We got all these type a lionesses around here, and we love you. You know? I mean, it's just so refreshing to see the gals come forward because as I said back in the old days at the Patriot meetings, man, you you very rarely ever see a especially a single female. You might see some wives there. But, boy, has that changed. They've, they've they've demasculated many of the men there, Brent. The non vocal to add to that.
Mhmm. Go ahead. No. I say what you got to add to that. Oh, the non vocal America,
[00:08:52] Unknown:
which makes up most of America, by the way. Most people don't talk much. They don't talk publicly. Most people, when you're doing talk radio, 99% of the people don't call in. If you get one letter as a politician, the the rule of thumb is there is a minimum of a hundred other people that are thinking the same thing and as far as upset or more upset. So most people don't say anything, but the nonvocal America and I remember this, and I've talked to other people my age that remember it. And it was it began going away when I was a teenager very slowly. But, the nonvocal America, the whole idea of nonvocal America was that there's unity in marriage. It was called the doctrine of unity. It's part of our common law tradition.
The, what man what God has put together, let no man put us under. We all grew up hearing that phrase from the wedding vows, the book of Genesis, of course, be being Christian America. Oh, yeah. Christian America, A 90 over 90% of people, 92, 90 five percent of people by 1975 claimed to be Christians in America. So people had this had this acceptance of the Bible. And, what they said was when a man goes to vote, he he carries the vote of his family. When a man goes to vote, he carries the vote of his family. That means of his wife. Now what do you do with women? What do you do with women? That's the question that people have been asking for centuries. Rome said, well, we don't want women to have an influence in the in the priesthood of the church, so we're just gonna tell the priest that they can't marry. That's why they did that. No. There's no discussion about it. There's no there's no differences of opinion on that matter. They told the priest you can't marry, but we can't afford to have women having an influence in, what we call Christianity.
Well, that just made it more so. That just made it more so. You can't stop the influence of women. How you gonna stop the influence of women? The hand that that that rocks the cradle rules the world. I heard that growing up too. A lot of it's true. And, the most influential man outside of Jesus Christ in the world arguably is Moses. And Jochebed only mentioned once or twice in the Bible was his mother. And she was, infiltrated the courts of Egypt and became his wet nurse when he was a baby. They didn't know it was his mother, and then was with him. Do you think that he understood who he was maybe from that? I think so. And then also, she taught him the fundamentals. Was she highly educated, sophisticated, and all that? No.
That's not what's important. What's important is the impelling force behind whatever you got, and that comes from your mother. And if you don't have a mother, you don't have a mother, God will fill in for you. I've met many people that haven't had mothers that God has used in mighty ways, but that doesn't mean that's what God wants. God wants you to have a mother. And ladies, you, your mothers be mothers. What's refreshing to me, Roger, is, I'm I'm on the pub public platform a lot on the Internet and on radio. And, all the feedback I get from the ladies is positive about what I'm saying. Of course, what I'm saying is not what I'm saying. It's what the Bible says. This is easy. You're not listening to Brent. I just do my best to try to tell you what the Bible says, and it's very clear what the Bible says about relationship between the sexes. See, by the time we come along with with the in America. Now, of course, Paul was probably talking a lot about, England. I don't know. I wanna listen to it. But, of course, having a common tongue, we carry a lot of commonness whether we want to or not.
But, in culture, of course, and in Christianity. But, the, suffrage movement in America before World War one, that that was the evil empire had one purpose in that. Just one purpose. Yep. And you have two hoots and a holler about the female. What they wanted was prohibition of alcoholic beverages. That's what they wanted. Yeah. Why did they want that? They wanted it so they can make money. That's why they wanted it. If there's a prohibition of alcoholic beverages, prohibition put in the constitution of The United States, and they wanted enough voters to get it there. And the only way they were gonna do that was get the ladies to have the vote. Yeah. Or if you get them on a rampage, you get them going in one direction, and Katie bar the door. It's not gonna stop. And all the men watch this. All the men are gonna follow him.
Oh, yeah. And they did. Billy Sunday, the greatest preacher in America. He got on the bandwagon. That's where we get that phrase on the bandwagon because the suffragettes and the and the what do they call them? The the teetotalers. They go into parades all over America, and they have a bandwagon. And everybody get on the bandwagon to show their support. Had the band on the wagon, like a hay wagon or put a band on it, and all the people jump to show their support for, nontolerance of alcoholic beverages. No manufacture, no sale, and no transportation of them. Now the when you think back, I think back, I say this is utter madness.
Not not only the madness, the doctrine itself, but to make it a part of a document that it has no relationship to, the constitution of The United States. The constitution of The United States is not about substantive laws. It's not about do this, don't do that. It just like it'd be like trying to make, abortion, non abortion a part of the constitution. That's not what the constitution's for. That's not what it's in. That's what not is what in it is in it. It doesn't tell us anything about tort law, contract law, the law of bailments, the law of trust, the law of land use, the law of water. It didn't tell us any of that stuff. It's just not part of it. No. It's a common law document. It's about process.
The way things are supposed to happen in government, for instance, and the limits of government. And putting substantive law in our constitution doesn't fit anywhere, anywhere. That's why it's caused so much trouble when they, of course, our common law says slavery is against the law. Our common law says slavery is against the law. Our common law has always said that. There never was a time our common law didn't hold that. Slavery has never been lawful on the island of Britain ever. And you can go read the common lawyers in England, the historians that go back and show that. Or did it exist? Oh, yeah. It existed, and people came close to it with what they call valine valineism.
But still, if a man has a right, he can enforce in a court Cool. Then, he's not a slave. No. And he that that's what abject slavery. What's that, Roger? Well, I was gonna add this. It's referred to, I think, by Cook even,
[00:15:44] Unknown:
Coke as John called him. It is, that it's the English variety of slavery.
[00:15:52] Unknown:
It but it yes. But it isn't slavery. No. They because you volunteered into it, but it's servitude. That's the correct term. Servitude. But at what yes. That's right. But at what point all of us are abused by other people to varying degrees, and all of us abuse other people. And if you don't recognize that, then you have not the spirit of God. That's the trauma of mankind. We suffer that temptation, but all of us are abused. We'd agree to that. At what point does that become slavery? I'll tell you what point it becomes slavery. It becomes slavery at the point that you don't have any duties that you can enforce the doing of in a court.
And, the valine
[00:16:31] Unknown:
had Yes. Right from there. Remedies. Yeah. Force at the manor court. Yep. It couldn't the the Lord couldn't beat the valine. There were some cases on that and and with pretty high remedy payments, by the way. That's right. Hard to know because of the difference in the coinage and the time, but, but there were laws that protected them.
[00:16:52] Unknown:
The baleen the baleen could drag,
[00:16:55] Unknown:
the so called, thing of the land in the court and make him pay. That's right. Mhmm. And, that was part and the Bible says that too. You know, there's not abject slavery in the Bible either. People say there's slavery. Oh, yeah. But there it's not it's really just servitude. It's and that people are servants, and they they had rights against their so called masters. For example, you knock out a slave's tooth, you get mad at him and throw a fist in his face, then he has, according to the law of God and the Bible, he has the right to make you whole still or have somebody hold you while he bust you in the chops and knock your teeth out. Mhmm. And put an eye he has the right. If you put a slave's eye out, then you somebody holds him, and you put his eye out. And it goes on and on and on, stripe for stripe, wound for wound, as they say. Life for life. You kill a slave, you're a dead man.
Mhmm. You'll be you'll be executed if they follow the law. That's the that people say, oh, there's slaves in the Bible. No. No. No. Not like that. And there's not it's not like that. It was not like that in in England either. Now in America, slavery was that way. It was slavery in America. And throughout Europe too. But yes. And the reason it was yes. It was. The reason it was slavery in America because there was no common law on the continent of Europe, and there still isn't. But the reason it was slavery in America was because England said the common law does not apply in our American colonies or plantations.
And that was the fly in the ointment that just caused all sorts of problems. Yeah. The abuse of slaves in America was pretty high. Oh, I know. There weren't many of them. Really, there weren't. Only 9% of the of the Africans brought here to the new world were in America. The other 91% of the slaves were in the Caribbean and South America and Central America. But nonetheless, it was here because the the powers that be in England said we that, the common law does not apply in America. So they use that as a loophole to, have a Roman Babylonian agricultural system in the South. Not everywhere in the South. No. No. There were places in the South that didn't go along with that at all. Maine Tennessee being one of them, Kentucky being another. And by and large, at any time during that horrible war we had between the states, about 20,000 Kentuckians were under unit union arms and more Tennesseans by far because the agricultural system of even though slavery existed in those states, the common law agricultural system in the Ohio Valley continued.
And it was the the Roman agricultural system of the plantation, the, was in the deepest South. That's why people up in our neck of the woods where I'm from say, well, you know, the old thing about we'll sell you down the river. You keep acting up, an old master will sell you down the river. You got a nice ear. Your slavery really isn't slavery here. You're part of the family here. But down there among those Frenchmen and down there along the coast where the infection of the Roman law had been strong, it was abject slavery, and the abuses were over the top. There's no question about it.
But getting back to women and, what where they fit. Well, if you could figure out where men fit, then you don't have to worry about where women fit, but we've even lost that. I've just listened to a fellow today talk about Germany. About Roger, about 50% of Germany. About 50% of Germany is pretty darn conservative. Pretty darn conservative. And, the other 50% is wacko, and they hate they hate The United States. Why do they hate The United States? I'll tell you why they hate The United States because they've turned effeminate, and they won't protect themselves. We protect them. We've been protecting them them for seventy what? Eighty years now. I don't know how long it's been. Yep. Yep. Yep. And spending our blood and our money to protect them.
And they hate us for it. Why do they hate us for it? Because it's it's a it's a destruction of their own manhood. That's why. But you know? But they can't they don't have the Kahunis apparently to pick up the task for themselves or de armed entirely. Go ahead. In Paul's show last night, you'll find this Paul dropped him a, a link to that, to Brent, if you would.
[00:20:59] Unknown:
And so it'll be there for him. The gal that, Paul has on there, and I just can't remember her name, she was in prison. That's what I was asking, our Paul about. And I said, well, she was in jail over there. She did something. The German authorities threw her in jail for, I guess, Paul just said six years. I felt like a holocaust denier. You know? And she was talking there about talking to the German women and asking them about their men. And they go, we want Turks or all this. And she she said, you don't want Germans? They go, we don't have any German men. Okay? They've demasculated all of them in this anti Nazi, however many decades of brainwashing they've been through over there. Okay? I remember, you know, I was in Stuttgart, about nine years ago, I guess. I won a contest. I was over there for about ten days, and, we went over to this motorcycle GP race in, in in Czech Republic. And along the way, we stopped for lunch, and it pulled off the interstate, the Autobahn, and just a small little town. And we had a nice lunch. And after the lunch, the other folks were finishing up, and I was walking around. And I walked to the little square, You know, the little town square that was about a block away or so. And they had all of the men from that town commemorated that died in World War two.
Brenda, it was unbelievable. It's just small town. There's probably Eighty eighty plus people on the on on these plaques and and crosses. It must have wiped out the entire almost masculine population of that town, and I'm sure many other towns in Germany too. Yeah. Was that Tom?
[00:22:37] Unknown:
No, it's Boone. Are you talking about Monica Schafer?
[00:22:42] Unknown:
Yeah. Whoever was on, I don't know her name. I guess that's who Paul had on. Yeah.
[00:22:47] Unknown:
That's Monica Schafer. Yeah. Yeah. Oh, okay. Yeah. She did I think she did six months. She made a little video over in Germany that says, mom, I was wrong about the Holocaust. I'm sorry about the Holocaust. It's a little video, and they locked her up for, like, I think it was, like, six months. It wasn't six years. Oh, okay. Okay.
[00:23:05] Unknown:
Well, anyway, she was relating this conversation she had with the German women last night. I've seen other women over there in Europe, and they're going they're getting raped left and right by these Mohammedans, and they're where are men? Okay. So it's a demasculation agenda. So I guess that's my comment, Brent. Did you go away?
[00:23:30] Unknown:
The more that women leave the roles as women, and the the men are the ones that are behind this. Men are encouraging women to leave the roles. The more that they do that, the more abuse there will be of women and children. And don't tell me it's the other way. No.
[00:23:45] Unknown:
But it's higher now than it's ever been in our own country. Now on this topic, we got we got a a president and a lot of people like, including me. Okay? Yeah. And, I've got a female friend down here and she just doesn't like Trump at all because the first, the first time around and they use that comment and we got a grabber. I'm gonna grab them by their genitals, you know. And, oh, I don't like the way he treats women. Well, look at he's got himself totally surrounded with women. I think it's the first time the chief of staff's ever been a female. DNI, Tulsa Gabbard, the the gal at Bondi at DOJ.
Every time you turn around, there's some female in a significant position in the Trump administration.
[00:24:29] Unknown:
That doesn't make any difference. That that won't stop anybody. I had a friend at home, and he, was a hardcore, Irish. And early his family came there earlier. I remember they had their old graveyard out on the prairie. And, the wagon broke down out on the prairie, and then they just I had to stay there. You know? That broke a wheel, and they couldn't find it on. Fascinating history. Very pro, upfront upfront family in that particular county. Named her Grant. Well, a lot of them started leaving the Roman church in my generation and becoming hardcore Protestants. You know, they were hardcore Roman. You take a hardcore Romanist, and he becomes a Protestant, you got a hardcore Protestant. That's been my observation. Well, a lot of them are starting to do that, but he and I don't know why I didn't really discussed it. He met this girl, and she was black. I don't mean brown. I mean, black.
And, he met her there, and, we're going to college some place, and, he ended up marrying a gal. And, and, she hated she hated the way the the people of color acted and talked. And her mother had, tried to train her to not talk to Bionics and all that, that kind of thing. Right. And, he was working there in town and, because he was so conservative and so was his wife now I'm not advocating interracial marriage. There are problems that come with it that are pretty big. Yes. But but it happens. Well, and I, yeah, I liked his wife. She was just about as sweet as they come, classy gal, and knew how to get along with people. Well, she'd be driving in town, and the cops would stop her.
And she's she and she's a good looking gal too, and she'd laugh and say, I I know why you stopped. But do you know why we stopped you? Yeah. I know why you stopped me. Well, what was it? Well and she said, well, you stopped me because, of DWB.
[00:26:29] Unknown:
Right.
[00:26:30] Unknown:
And you
[00:26:31] Unknown:
and they what what was DWB driving while black? You know? I know why you stopped me. And no kidding. The cops would do that in that town, but they had to. Now here's the other side of it. That little town had a had a state, teacher's college in it, and the policy was to bring as many of those kind of folk into town as they could. They had gangbangers running that whole little town. They were bad. Rapes and killings going on. So if you were not white, it was a white town. If you were not white, see, the government had this policy bringing them in there. If you weren't white, you you were suspect because there'd been so much violence because the gangs, had been moved in with the students.
And, so she'd laugh about it. But then, the left wingers got after him, her husband, and they'd call him racist and all kind of stuff. And he'd say, now wait a minute. I I'm the one that married the blackout. Why are you calling me racist? But you see, it doesn't make any difference. That's what my point. Look look at look at justice Thomas. Oh, they thought, well, we'll appoint this guy that's a different color than the white boys, and and,
[00:27:35] Unknown:
that'll make us look like we're not racist. Well, don't forget don't forget why he was appointed.
[00:27:41] Unknown:
Oh, I know why. Yeah. He was taking Marshall's place, and they had to replace him with a black guy. That's right. I get it. But he was appointed. Oh, he was he's a he's right headed and all. But if he hadn't been black, he wouldn't have been appointed. It's just like if Eisenhower if Eisenhower's name wasn't German, he wouldn't have been chosen to lead the troops into Europe. That's all part of the game of intimidation. And, Reagan or whoever it was appointed, who was it appointed him? Eisenhower? Bush. No. I may not. And I'm talking about Oh, yeah. Bush senior. Justice Thomas. Yeah. Bush senior. Yeah. Yeah. And we're we're glad he's there, but let's get real about reality. That that does the race card plays big. You can't ignore it. We are race conscious.
Everybody is. I have a sure tailed cousin, actually, a cousin who's the other side her other side of the family, not on our side. Cousin of hers married a guy, and I used to be on Facebook. And this gal, she she married a guy that was black again, not brown black. And she's, she re the reason she did it as obvious, she was afraid that some of her friends would think she's a racist because she never ever, ever stopped talking about it ever. But she carried a chip on her shoulder about it and never stopped. Well, you don't have to go out of the way to show you're not racist because the truth is the people that do that and justice Thomas in his book, read his autobiography. I recommend it. Great book. He makes the point that when he left Pinpoint down there what is that in Georgia, Roger? Pinpoint, Georgia. Just outside of Savanna Town.
But that place is out on those islands out there, and it's the the people that live out there are all descended from ex slaves. And, again, they're not brown. They're black. There's no mixture there. And that's some cooney. They got some coonies there too. They call them Geechee.
[00:29:27] Unknown:
And remember when the, when the Acadians came down from Nova Scotia, they stopped along the East Coast. Yeah. They dropped some off in Charleston. They dropped some off in Savannah, but the majority went around and around down Florida and over to Louisiana. But you've got that culture there.
[00:29:43] Unknown:
Yeah. Well, he grew up in it, but he said when he finally got into he's he's smart as whip. I mean, in school, he excelled. And the the the main thing that the Roman religion offers people, the greatest thing, the most powerful thing they offer people is education. The rest of it's the wrong doctrine, but the education, the discipline of it is pretty good. And he went to one of those kind of schools in high school and all, and he excelled. So he got into, the Ivy League schools, went to Yale. I believe he went to Yale Law School. Yes. Said the shocker to him, Roger, again, I read this in his book. The shocker to him was to discover who the racist really were. Right. Because he had followed the the line of, back in the well, he was sixties and seventies, and he'd gone along with the Black Panther some and all that. But then he realized it wasn't the white boys that were the problem.
It was the rich white women that are driving the whole racist thing. Yeah. And they they act like they aren't. They want it like this gal was telling you, she just wanted to stick everybody's face that she had married a fellow of a different color. Well, that's just using black I knew this black that's using black men for your own agenda. That's that's cruel. I knew this lady. Oh, she divorced her husband, divorced. She was a good looking gal. She was 80 some years old. And and, I was at a wedding, and I was supposed to be telling people where to park their cars. You know? They had this area out, and, it was up in Sierra Nevadas. And I had an area where they could park cars, and it would dry. And, and a per a Mercedes Benz pull up. And a man that was driving the Mercedes Benz, again, he was he was, of an opposite color of me.
And, he pulled up in this Mercedes Benz, and this gal I'm telling you about, about 80 years old, she's all sitting in the in the passenger seat, seat and riding shotgun. And I said, I think I he pulled up, and I'm trying to entertain people. And I said, I think you fellas at the wrong wedding. He said, well, what do you mean? He had spool of the window down. He said, what do you mean? I said, people that come to this wedding don't drive Mercedes Benz. There's gotta be a mistake. You know? And he laughed, and we got to talking and laughing, and I didn't I didn't pay attention to the gal. We'll come to find out that she was just rebellious to the nth degree. And when she divorced her husband, she was gonna show him a thing or two. So she marries this man of color just to take him off. He didn't take off her husband. I got the whole story.
And, wouldn't give him the benefit of marriage, Wouldn't give him the benefit of money, had it all fixed up. So he didn't get nothing. She just wanted to show off and she wanted to make her ex husband mad by marrying this guy. That's what, that's the reality of what happens when there is rebellion in the female camp. But is there rebellion in the female camp? Yes. It's never stopped. It started with our grandmother Eve Eve in the garden of Eden. And that's why that story is told first. Was it outright ugly rebellion? No, no. You know, there just a passive thing. Well, I think you ought to eat this too. And she really didn't even know. See, she really didn't even know what she was doing. The Bible says, so She didn't have the discernment to tell the difference, but her husband knew grandpa Adam knew. And grandpa Adam knew that he wasn't supposed to eat it. He understood what had happened entirely, and he committed the ultimate sin. He did it anyway.
And that in doing so, it plunged us all into utter darkness and blackness and depravity. That's what the Bible teaches. And that's what the record says. But in that case, of course, in all of these cases, it brings me back to the reality. We're not to complain against the female of the species. I don't get, I don't care how bad it gets. I don't care how ugly they get. Who's responsible. The men are responsible. The male of the species is responsible for all of this abuse of children, abuse of women, sending women off to war to get their legs and arms blown off, and then men bring them back and make them poster child children. So they can recruit others to go get their legs and arms blown off. That's where we are. We have become a nation in America of craven cowards, craven cowards. That's sick. Oh, I'll send my wife to go die in battle. I'll send my daughter.
You girls go. I, I was on this is how bad it gets. I was on Facebook at one time. And, of course, all the guys that I'd served with are on there and different ones. And, one of them was a marine. I wasn't a marine, but I served with a lot of marines. For For a lot of reason, went to school with them, all sorts of thing. Went to school to them, you know, all that. But this one guy was on there, and he was talking about some it was like this Gabbard, you know, some war hero. Yeah. There are all these war heroes that have their arms and legs blown off, these women. And they're in this US senate and congress and all sorts of crazy things. Well, they were promoting this one woman, and she was, supposed to be a, Oh, a pioneer in the diving community in the Navy. That's what it was.
And, the conversation got going. And of course the men see the men are afraid of ladies. Did you know what the men are afraid of women they're afraid of? I mean, death, they're afraid. They're not supposed to be, but they are. And so they're all afraid of women. So they're just pumping these women up saying, oh, you're the, how wonderful a woman that she is. I've never seen anything like it. And they just get going. They get this, this rhythm going. And I just put on Facebook. I said, we've turned into a nation of craven cowards, and I was sending our daughters willing to send our daughters or nieces off to be killed and kill when we ourselves won't do it. And, and, there's something wrong with that. There's something sick about that. And this guy, the marine, I say I noticed I say he's a marine, because a marine once a marine, always a marine. I understand that. That thing is true, by the way.
He comes back, and he says this, and this is his very words. He said it like a Marine, a string of crust cuss words, you know? And, and then he said, why should we, why should we men do all the bleeding and dying? That's a Marine saying this. Why should we men have to do all the bleeding and dying? And don't think for a minute that is not the attitude and that's the justification for what they're doing. And people like that ought to be horse whipped from now till eternity.
[00:36:14] Unknown:
I agree.
[00:36:16] Unknown:
Sick. And again, the men are responsible.
[00:36:18] Unknown:
What are you fighting for? What are you fighting for? Marine?
[00:36:22] Unknown:
Yeah. Yeah. That's part of it too. If, and if there isn't anything behind you, a fighting man that he's fighting for, that is worthwhile. It should be more important what is behind him than what is in front of him. Amen. What is in front of him, he's doing what he's doing in front of him, not out of vengeance, not out of hatred. He shouldn't. He should do it out of protection of what's behind him. And what's behind him is is his land, his home, his wife, his children. All of those things have the deepest of fundamental meaning in the Christian world, and Christianity is the only true religion, by the way. It's the only true one. I know there's a lot of perversions of it, but at bottom, that's the only true one. And the three persons and one god.
The Trinitarian formula, as they call it. God subsists in three persons. And if you don't accept that, then God has not enlightened your eyes to what God has said in the Bible. But coming back to the Bible, I wanna use the Bible. This isn't Brent talking. God came to our grandma and grandpa, Adam and Eve, and he he said to the woman, what is this you have done? I said to the man, what is this you have done? And if you go back and read those passages, you'll discover that God was upset with Eve. Yes. But he was, but he, but he laid the blame, all of it on Adam.
And it's been that way ever since my friends and us men are to be blamed for all of the hell that's coming down on the breakup of the family, the abuse of children and women. And if you men aren't doing something and you start by saying it, you start by saying no that's BS. Women should not be in combat. DJ Trump, of course, has a good start here. He said, let's get all the trannies and all the queers out of no. He didn't say the queers did. He just said the trannies. Let's get the trannies out of our pocket. I think the trannies are out. Now, for a thousand of years, I don't care how pagan you were. You didn't tolerate.
I'll I'll take that back. No. The Nazis tolerated and promoted, homosexuality in their military system. The Nazis did. At the top of the heap was the SS. At the top of the SS were Didn't Himmler run the SS? Didn't Himmler run the SS? Yeah. They were they promoted and they said this. Listen to this. They've tried to fashion themselves. There's a famous, movie. I forget what the name of it is. I think it's a bridge too far. One of those world war two. Right. Yep. And there's a scene in there where the Nazis have a picture of general Patton, a photograph, a glossy eight by 10. And one of them lights a match to it, and it's curling up and burning there on the table.
And he said so much for the pure warrior. See, Patton said, I'm a pure warrior. That means he didn't pollute himself with things that would, would stifle his ability to fight. Well, the Nazis said the same thing. They followed Hagel. They said that the state was God walking on earth. God's not gonna forgive that friends. I don't care what your what your ambitions are. They were against the Russians. They were against communism. They were all for the family. They were for their own nation. Their motto was the same motto as DJ Trump, Germany first. He said Germany First. Is that right? Yeah. That's right. Is that good? Yeah. That was good. Did it do the job? Yeah. It did the job. But fundamentally and I don't even think Hitler understood this, but he did understand the importance of Hegel. And Hegel is the one that said, you know, these guys were saying God is dead. Nietzsche Nietzsche said God is dead, didn't he? And then Hegel said, state is God walking on earth. And these are German philosophers.
Correct. All of that happened, and it results in hell. But what what, they said to the the SS troops said, women are dirty. They're evil. And therefore, if we cohabit with girls, we should only do it to propagate our German race. Not we should cohabit sexually with each other, each other. And they call themselves, they had a name for it in German, but they called themselves they didn't like the effeminate homosexual. They put them in prison camps and put a little pink star or something or whatever they put on their clothes.
They, they, they, they effeminate homosexual went to prison camp. The masculine homosexual man became part of the SS. And you could work your way up in that, but you had to be willing to go along with the sodomy. And that's what they did. And they did that saying we are pure warriors. They said, Patton's not the pure warrior. No, we're the ones that go all the way. We cohabit sexually with each other. Yeah. That's what destroys society. And if there isn't Christianity at the base of government, then you'll get Nazi ism. And it may look good on the surface, but eventually what's underneath and all the people there will spin out of control and go absolutely stark, Raven, unlimited mad. And they did.
And that's what was underneath it all. Well, that's what we're facing here. If Christianity, it does not at the foundation, our a biblical, not a Romanist understanding, not a Mormon understanding, not a Seventh day Adventist understanding, not a, what's that other one? The Seventh day Adventist, the more the the Mormons and three of them came out of the, the, oh, Christian Science. Those three came out of the same movement in Upper State New York and the Burnt Over District as they call it. Not that an understanding like that. No, we're talking Christianity. We're talking the Bible's fundamentals.
We're talking God in three persons. You say, where does it say that in the Bible? And by the way, if you don't accept that doctrine, then your whole life is chaos because because your mind is chaos. The Eastern Orthodox church says they accept the Trinitarian doctrine, but they don't. They have no hierarchy hierarchy in the Trinity. In the West, we say no. The Bible teaches that the sun submits to the father and the spirit submits to the sun and the spirit has a particular job description to cast light upon the son of God. And the father has a particular job description to tell us to, I have delegated all authority to the son here. He hear ye him bow down and worship him.
And by the way, those of you that deny that the, the three persons of the Godhead you're denying worship of Jesus Christ. If Jesus Christ is not the Godhead, why didn't he do like John the apostle in revelation when the angels or Paul, the apostle, let's take that one in the book of, acts when men fell down to worship him, because he didn't die from the Viper bite, they thought he was a God. He said, get up. I'm a man, a mortal. I'm a sinner like you. But Jesus Christ never did that. Men fell down at his feet and worshiped him. And he never said, get up. Why? Because he accepted their worship and his half brothers, by the way, his half brothers, you can read the Bible. They finally accepted his identity as God himself. You know, if you're a son of God direct birth conception by the spirit of God who emanates from God, as we say, then, you are God. And that aspect of your being born of a woman, God is your father directly in the flesh.
That aspect of your being overwhelms all other things, because the aspect of God, the aspect of his being is infinite. And the infinite nature of Jesus Christ, his body reduced to the span of a man, his authority unlimited in in the skies and on the land. To deny that then is to not, to not deny all. If there does not order within the Godhead, the order of the Bible says is there, and you don't accept that, or even don't even know about it, then all of the creator's creation, you can't expect it to be much ordered either, but it is the laws of nature are unbendable.
Yes. You don't pay attention to them. You'll be maimed or die. This order exists here and to learn the order of the God of all order is to have peace, tranquility, and know where you fit in this created order. Don't be running off to some Hindu priest to think you're going to get one with, with, the world and one with creation, one with God, it ain't going to happen. That's demonism. The way you get one with God, it's not esoteric. You learn his will, which is his law, and you learn how to keep it. All of the Bible is an expression, in many different ways of the law of God, the law of the sovereign, the will of the sovereign is law and everything in the Bible. Every word, every John, every tittle is to get across to God's people. What his will is when the Bible says God is not willing, he has not set a plan. The Greek word, he hasn't set any plan that any man should perish. Is that law? Yeah, that's a law because it comes from the sovereign and that's what he wants.
He doesn't want it. Are men going to perish? Yeah. They're going to perish. He has set a plan. The Bible says of who will not perish. Did you know that he has set a plan and the Bible says he has elected. That means he has a collect us in the Greek. He has chosen who will not perish, but he has set no plan. He says, he said no plan for those who go to hell. Now you try to explain that with logic. You can't do it, but that's what it says. And it's clear as crystal in the text. That's the God we worship. We don't understand him. If we could understand all things about him, we'd tell him to scoot over and we'll hop up in the throne with him, but we don't do that for that reason. We are creatures. We are created.
He is creator. He's big. He's bigger than any of us could ever imagine. If we added all of our imaginations together, It wouldn't add up to how big he is and how powerful he is and how he gets his way in every instance. Yeah. Well, that's not at the bottom of our government,
[00:46:20] Unknown:
that our government will come to nothing. And that doesn't Go go ahead, Roger. They wanna tell us God doesn't exist, don't they? Oh, shit. But yet they'll if you're across the street from an abortion clinic in England and silently praying, they'll arrest you. They can even if they find out you're praying in your home, they can come arrest you. So God's not real? Well, why are you so scared of them?
[00:46:42] Unknown:
Yeah. No. It's true, Roger. And that's why the a good point. And that's why the Bible says Romans chapter one, Paul the apostle, right into the Italian Christians at Rome, as I like to say, and anybody else who happened to be there, he said, all, all men know pan the Greek word pan means all, all men know each and all of the creator. Doesn't say they all, they know him, but they know about him. And to deny that and say, well, I don't know. I'm a, I'm an agnostic. I'm an ACS. No, you're just a damn liar. That's what you are. Let's get it straight here. I can, I have a choice and I can believe what you say about yourself, or I can believe what the book says about you? I choose the book. The evidence is too strong. The evidence of the book is irrefutable. And some of you out there are more worried about me saying damn than you are about the fact that you're going to hell. And you're a moralist.
You're a Christian. You're saying you're a Christian, but you're nothing but, just a moralist. You just want to be a, you're Pollyanna. She wants to be a good person. You don't want to do the, the, the nasty thing. Well, God may command you to do something that looks nasty to the world. Hell yeah. Oh, you're just, arrogant. You're Oh, I've had that accusation. You're arrogant. You don't love people. Look, listen to the way you talk, how harsh you are. Oh, my word, friends. I've had people thunder at me,
[00:48:05] Unknown:
and I sure am glad they did. You know what they call that nay a, Brent? What? Tough love.
[00:48:11] Unknown:
Yeah. That's a good one. Yeah. Hey. Love love is tough. It's tough from two directions. It's tough to do it. It's tough to do the right thing because it if people hate you for it. My father always said, no good deed. Really good deed. Not a Pollyanna's deed, but no good deed will go unpunished yet. Correct. Yeah. So you got you got it on that side. And then when you tell your children, no, I don't want you. I don't want you doing drugs and I don't want you drinking. Is that the loving thing to do? And if I catch you, if you're, they're young, I catch you doing some of the things I tell you not to do. I'm going to apply the board of education into the seat of knowledge.
[00:48:47] Unknown:
Is that a loving thing to do? Yeah. I don't know. Sounds to me like it is. Absolutely. It is. Yeah. Of course it is. Oh, thank you, Roger. Where are all these these people that are all wackos are the ones that didn't have any discipline when they were young. Spare the rod and spoil the child. Isn't that right out of the Bible? Yeah. Men, children respect discipline. They might not like it. They may cry and fuss, but they like it.
[00:49:12] Unknown:
Yeah. They will as time be as old. I just wish, honestly, Roger. I'm gonna complain to my dad. My dad's be 99 this year. Oh. I'm gonna I'm gonna text him and complain to him. And I'm also beat me enough. Yeah. Yeah. He did beat me, but not enough. Not nobody does. We're imperfect fathers. Well, you had the famous line. This is gonna hurt me more than gonna hurt you. Oh, yeah. All that baloney. Oh, yeah. I had a fella. I listened to a fella the other day. He was an older guy. He'd raised his children. And he said he was a naval officer at the time, and he said, he got invited over this chief. This old chief invited him over to his house, and he was a young guy, a lieutenant. And he was sitting and watching the there woman of the house where chief's wife was trying to fix a nice meal, and he's watching the children. He had about six children, he said.
And he noticed that everything this chief told his children do, they bam. They'd do it. You know? Yep. Military
[00:50:10] Unknown:
lifestyle.
[00:50:11] Unknown:
Well, I don't know that that was it. Let me tell you the rest of the story. I think military I've, I've honestly, Roger military, military life, I think, can hurt a man because he expects, you know, with military life, you have the, you do have the power of force to get what you want as a husband. You don't have that. See, if your wife won't do what you want her to do, what are you going to do? Send her to the brig. That ain't going to happen. So it's a different environment now with children. Yeah. You have the power of discipline. He said, why why is it your children are so obedient?
Because he would just start his family and he couldn't figure out what to do. And And he said, well, it's real easy. He said, I'll just give you a piece of advice, Lieutenant. And he said, when you go to discipline your children, apply the board of education to the seat of knowledge, don't do it right away. Wait, you know, the old line, you wait till your father gets home, right? That's a killer. Then, you run out the woodshed and fetch me a switch and I'll be out there directly. See that that's waiting and see. And he said, I always wait. And he said, well, why? He said, well, he said, I don't want my children. If, even if I'm not angry, they'll just assume. Cause I'm showing my disappointment. They're going to assume that what disappoints me is that they made me mad and that's why I'm whipping them. Cause they made me mad. It's like the old story about the kid goes to school and he learns a bunch of cuss words and he comes home and he gets up the next morning and he goes to the breakfast table.
And, and, they're sent to breakfast table and the boy looks around and say prayers and he wants some cereal. Well, he didn't know what the cuss words meant. And he said, mom, would you pass me some of them? GED cornflakes, GD. You know what GD means? Try not to say that. And, his father just turned around and backhanded him right in the chops, knock him off his chair. You would talk to your mother that way. And he gets back up. And, but then I, I, I said that. He said, you don't talk to your mother that way. No, he didn't say anything. He just backhanded him. And then he thought for a minute and he said, okay. And instead of asking for the cornflakes, he asked for the Grape Nuts. And he said the same thing. Would you pass me some of them GED grape nuts?
Well, he's dead backhanded him again. What's wrong with you? And he gets back up on the chair and he said, now, listen, son, maybe you want to rethink that request. What is it you want? He said, well, one thing for sure. I don't want Grape Nuts and I don't want cornflakes. So if you wait a little bit, if you don't wait, your children will probably conclude. They don't know. They don't know unless they're made to know Children do things. They don't even know what's wrong. There's they're sinners. You know, they'll do anything. So now what we did was I'll just, pass along on a personal experience, some personal testimony.
We raised a pile of them, and, somehow I got it in my head. Here's what I wanna do, and I did it this way. If I did apply the board of education to the seed of knowledge, I only applied it to the seed of knowledge. I didn't apply it anywhere else. God made that area there. Works real good. And the second thing I never did was I never swatted a child more than three times. Never. Why? Because it could be dangerous, and you could get out of control if you're angry. You just don't do it. Plus, you're teaching your children you're teaching your children how to discipline
[00:54:03] Unknown:
theirs. Question, Ironman.
[00:54:05] Unknown:
What what just let me finish this, and then you can weigh in. Third thing I always did was I always prayed with them before I swatted them. I always prayed with them before I swatted them. Oh, that's true. And the fourth thing I did was I wouldn't swat them until they told me what they did wrong. Mhmm. And if we had to talk about it, we did. I wanted them to know what they did wrong. I didn't don't want them to be confused about it like the boy with the cornflakes and the gravy. Good approach. Yeah. So and we did it that way every time. Now if you do that every time, you won't raise perfect children.
Why? Because we are depraved on the inside. We've got a problem. The spirit of God can overcome it, but without the spirit of God, you're doomed. But we have this taint as babies and as children, this taint of imperfection called mortality. And And it's exceedingly dangerous, and it tends toward death. But that's why I say we need to get some discipline into our children. When we did those things, we hope you wrote those down. If you're listening, I think they're real good.
[00:55:06] Unknown:
But somebody wanted to make a That was mister Ironman Farris. Farris, did you get to listen to the Paul Good day, show you good morning. Hold on. I'm asking you a question. Did you get a chance to listen to the Paul English show yesterday, which I'm sure the answer is probably no. But I'm gonna suggest you go over to PaulEnglishlive.com and dial it up. I think it will well, Farris, yeah, I think it'll blow your dress up. Okay?
[00:55:34] Unknown:
You might not be surprised to know that I was indisposed yesterday and I'll go back and pick it up on the podcast. But I wanted to say that to you gentlemen this morning that for me personally this is a high watermark in Narrowcasting because the lecture that we've had thus far this morning from commonlawyer.com and with conversation with the host, the principal host on the show has been compelling. And what I wanted to ask the following question, how do we get Trump to understand that he's going down the wrong path by putting all these females in high office in positions of power? In other words, let's go to Trump's sons, right? Let's go to the women in his life whose ear he has. Did Did I say that right? Or yeah. Whose ear he has?
Or who have his ear? Let me put it that way. In other words, Melania might be one. DJ,
[00:56:36] Unknown:
DJ Trump. DJ Trump is not Sunday school superintendent. He's president of The United States.
[00:56:43] Unknown:
And, You gotta stop appointing women. You gotta get the women out of there. He he look at his attorney general.
[00:56:50] Unknown:
He's been in Sunday school. Have you ever run for political office?
[00:56:55] Unknown:
You know, I did. I ran for governor of Nashville when the sitting governor female got run out of office because she was paying her security teacher to screw her. Nashville doesn't have a governor. Nashville has a way. Excuse me. I misspoke. I'm like missus Malaprop. Remember that, play about missus Malaprop? And she would say everything a little off, and they turned out to be funny, quirky things. They're called malapropisms. Malapropisms. Let's talk about it. Oh, no. But here's the here's the key. No. I did get some votes for, mayor of Nashville and also mayor of, New Bedford, Massachusetts.
[00:57:31] Unknown:
I'm trying to answer your question. Let me finish. Brent. Oh. Brent. No. He's trying to override you. Stop.
[00:57:38] Unknown:
So how'd you do in the race?
[00:57:45] Unknown:
I I did not I was not victorious, but I got several votes very edifying. And also I ran for mayor of New Bedford, Massachusetts on a radio station up there called WBSM and got many voice votes there through the medium of being world's number one most listened to and most widely heard, talk show, caller broadcaster. So I got both, but I did not win in either case.
[00:58:11] Unknown:
So are you amazed? That is not getting that's gotta get rid of the women. Wait. Wait. Hey. Here's a rule. When I start talking, you gotta stop. That's the only way we can have more here. I'm I'm in a bad place. Okay. Well, I'll Well, we're but that doesn't always work, Brent, because we can't really,
[00:58:26] Unknown:
duplex here. We got a little lag. So
[00:58:29] Unknown:
that's part of the problem, just so you know. Well, what I want him to do is talk slower. Slower. I just get your point, Roger. I understand that's how it works. But, are you a male chauvinist?
[00:58:40] Unknown:
Yes. I am not. I I cherish women. I cherish too many women, actually. And, very highly I think women because they have the role of giving birth to their progeny and continuing the human race. That's their role. But now we have them as attorney general. We have director of national intelligence. We have women everywhere. And they're telling me How many
[00:59:06] Unknown:
but how many wife do you have or girlfriends? You were saying you have.
[00:59:10] Unknown:
One. Oh, I'll I'll answer question a is one, but question b, the number of girlfriends is, that has to remain con
[00:59:22] Unknown:
That's confidential.
[00:59:23] Unknown:
Called confidentiality.
[00:59:24] Unknown:
Alright. Hold on. Stop. Pause. We need to say goodbye to Chicago, and I don't think we're on in England today, are we? Paul, you know. Yeah. Is Paul there? Did Paul get disgusted and leave or what? No. We are. We are. 106.90. Talk right in the microphone. We got feedback coming. Okay. Alright. Last week, Paul got caught with his technical trousers down. Yeah. I could I couldn't get it. I couldn't get at my desk.
[00:59:55] Unknown:
We still sound terrible. WBOU FM Chicago. Thank you for joining us and also radiosoapbox.com and we'll, catch you right back here, for the Slabido edition on one zero six point nine WVOU FM Chicago and radiosoapbox.com.
[01:00:14] Unknown:
Your your audio is terrible there, Paul. Anyway, just to let you know. Feedback feedback. Okay, Farris. Continue. Farris, did you go away? Well, Farris Farris like you to go away.
[01:00:32] Unknown:
Farris has admitted that he's a Flander. And, being so, then the truth is the truth is that he abuses women. That's what he's saying. So he didn't have to say about it. I asked him if he's a chauvinist. He is. That's what a chauvinist is. He's somebody who abuses women. I'm gonna tell you, he abusing his daughter because he let her be a lawyer. Oh, there he oh, yeah. All this. So, yeah, he just, on one one subject and another, and he's all over the lot. And, so we don't know where he's going. But I do wanna point out I did point out that DJ Trump is not Sunday school superintendent. He's president of The United States.
[01:01:19] Unknown:
And I think it is curious that he's got so he's overreacted and put he's put a lot of women in very key positions. Tulsi Gabbard, not that she doesn't warrant it. Listen. Tulsi Gabbard may be the first female president of The US. That's what Roger Stone's saying, and he's pretty good political animal. Okay? You got Bondi, although they're pulling this little Epstein short sheet on her today and yesterday. She seems to be fairly assertive. We'll see. But you got a bunch of them in there. The one that is amazing is the chief of staff, and I don't remember her name. She's married to somebody you would know or a daughter of. And but the problem I've got with it is that evidently, you can't get to DJ Trump if you're not a Zionist.
[01:02:07] Unknown:
Well, I don't I don't know if that's true or not, but he's playing That's pretty true. He's playing in a world he's not a novice at this point, and he's playing in a dangerous, dangerous world. Yep. And with all of that comes all of these forces. The first time he was president, he didn't know what to do with all this COVID baloney. They had him by the short hairs, and they they slap him around and swung him around like a rag doll. Yeah. Surrounded him by traders. Oh, yeah. Did you know his chief of staff was wired
[01:02:36] Unknown:
and they had a copy of every conversation in the white house with his chief of staff in the first term. Did you know that, Brett? No. Did did he know it? No. Yeah. That's the He's come out subsequently.
[01:02:47] Unknown:
That's the way it works. And he's he's playing tougher now, and I'm glad he is. But with all of the things that are going on, I'm not gonna criticize him, for doing this, that of the tether, except to say, if he can do anything at all, he's got to play ball a little bit. That's what politics is. Politics is about that. You know, one man can do everything that has to be done all at once. That's not even possible. Yeah. And having been in that world, I think I have a sense of understanding that. Okay. You don't say everything you think and you don't do everything you wanna do. You'll be you'll be hurt. Okay. When you were running, if Miriam's,
[01:03:28] Unknown:
Adelson came to you and gave you a hundred million dollars, would you listen to her wishes?
[01:03:33] Unknown:
Well, sure. If if I took the money, you'd have to pay. Oh, that's what I mean. Of course. That's understood. Well, I had all that happen. I had all that happen. Yeah. It was, it was a shocker to me at first, and I had to make some decisions. And I had to try to walk gently, and gingerly walk a tight rope in some areas. But I tried to here's what I did, Roger, to put it bluntly, I made a list of things that I wouldn't compromise about. Yeah. And I put that at the top of the list, and then I put the things that, were negotiable at the bottom. And then I went through and tried to put them in order of importance. Mhmm. And I adjusted that list. I had a guy tell me that early on, a fellow who had been state representative there. He said, Brent, here's what I think y'all ought to do.
And, I did, and I'm glad I did. And that's the way y'all run your life too, by the way. You ought to know what hills are worth dying on. Listen, here's the way with friends. Here's here's the way it works. If somebody said to me, well, is there some issue that you won't compromise on that controls all other issues? I'd say, yeah, there is. And I won't compromise on that. And if you follow, if you follow this issue, the point of view I'm, I'm promoting, that'll control all this other stuff in the right direction. That's why I said a while ago, if you reject the unity, the unification, the consistency of the Godhead, your life will be nothing but a toilet of confusion of sewage.
Because if the God you worship, the law giver you worship is not orderly. You cannot be orderly either. Ultimately, you may try to look that way on the outside, but it'll eventually come and bite you. Listen, the Bible says of, of the gods, the demons, the law givers of the nation, the Bible says they're demons. They're demons. Now this takes some defining to define what that means, but ultimately in the new Testament, we get to the word there. It means to, pass out wealth, to divvy up goodies, to be a sugar daddy. What do the Democrats want to do? They want to take other people's money and give it away. That's the basis of their power period. There isn't anything else. That's why they're up apoplectic. That's why they're in panic mode. That's why they haven't got anything to say. They don't know what to do. The money's being drawn away. If you could get the money away from the whole thing would collapse. God's people do not run upon money. They run upon conviction. Correct. It's a
[01:06:00] Unknown:
big difference.
[01:06:01] Unknown:
That's why the Supreme Court of the United States rightly said, if you do not have a religious conviction that never changes and that you have proven you're willing to go to jail for, willing to let your wife go to jail for, willing to die for, then you're entitled to first amendment protection of the religious religion clauses. Do we have conviction? If you aren't a Chris if you aren't a Christian, I'll tell you a secret, friends. If you aren't a Christian, you probably don't have much. Probably don't have much. Because, sooner or later, it will come down if you're in the wrong doctrine, and you'll you'll begin to lose what you think was most important, which is what? Money.
Jesus Christ put it this way. You either worship God, the creator of all things, to us, the law giver, or use the old word in the King James James, mammon. Well, what is mammon? Mammon is wealth. Wealth is defined at different times in history, different places. There was a time in our culture when the word wealth meant cattle, and the word for cattle was fee, f e e. Spelled a little diff spelled a little different, but we still use that word. It means fee. It means money. Wealth. Well, it was cattle. There wasn't any gold or silver. It was agricultural goods. It was whatever coal you can mine out of the ground or timber you can cut. But in any case, mammon means wealth. You can either worship, in other words, a part of the creation or the creator. That's the only two choices you have. A part of the creation or the creator. You could worship a man as part of the creation. You can worship yourself. That's part of the creation.
Paul, the apostle says Romans one again, he said, they have worship speaking of all men that are not Christian men that do not worship the creator. They worship the creature, that messin' old word that means the creation or some part of it thereof. What does an environmentalist worship? All of, all of creation. He's an environmentalist. He's a tree hugger. What does worship mean? Let's let's break that one down. Worship. That means you're willing to attribute worth, time, and money to whatever it is. You're willing to show a bayance of worthy ship.
Worship is the old Anglo Saxon word, worthy ship, but we've shortened it to worship. Worship, that means to attribute worth, to attribute the worth that god's, claimed for himself, to attribute worth that god claims for himself as worship. That's why the Westminster Confession expression of British Christianity, it says, that, the oath the oath is an act of worship. But why do they say that? Well, it is, but what does that mean? That means you're attributing to God. When you take an oath, you're attributing to God the power to enforce the promise you have attached the oath to. You're asking him to come and enforce it.
Well, that's an act of worship. You're attributing a certain worth, a worthy ship to him. That's why he says, don't attribute this worth to anything else. Cross my heart. Hope to die. Stick a needle in my eye. I swear on my mother's grave. Do not attribute that worth to anything else but him. That's the law. Can you swear an oath? Of course. The Bible and we get, many of, examples of it from Paul the apostle and others in the New Testament. But if you swear an oath, don't be an idolater. Do not worship some other thing because whatever you worship, my friend, whatever you worship, whatever you attribute that worth to, you will be like that thing says the book, Says the book. They that worship them shall be like unto them. If you worship Jesus Christ, who will you be like unto?
Jesus Christ. Which would be better? I ask you a simple question. Who are you gonna attribute worth to? Who are you gonna fall down and worship? Don't do it to any other mortal mere mortal. Don't do that. Do not go down on your knees before, any, any King or queen or any Imperial Pope or any patriarch. No, no, no, no. Kiss their ring, kiss their toe, kiss their foot, lick their boots. No, no, no, no, no. That's the worship
[01:10:07] Unknown:
of creation
[01:10:09] Unknown:
and you will be like them to them. What are they? They're mere mortals and they were, will die. Oh, I worship myself. They're hedonism. I worship them. I wouldn't worse. Yeah. You you become ingrown. I asked, man, I asked a big fella, great big young fella. I got a bruiser kind of a guy at a gas station. Of course, they put him in there so people wouldn't try to rob the place, but he wasn't very old. I said, you got religion, son? Well, he's Bubba. You know? Yeah. Right. Bubba. Oh, I love Bubba's. I love him. My part of the country where it is. And they're don't think Bubba's are stupid. They aren't. They they, you know, they they they're just the country folk, you know, and the city folk will always think the country folk are stupid. They aren't. But, oh, no. I get well, I don't guess. Or I said something. You know? I said, well, who decides right and wrong for you?
Well, I never thought about it. Well, okay. He was a Teddy bear, you know? Said, well, who do you decide? He said, well, I reckon I do. Yeah, I guess I do. Yeah. I said, well then, you're your own God. You're because you decide for yourself what's right and wrong and that's it. Oh, I guess that's right. Well, I said you're worshiping yourself. You're attributing worth to your ability to know right from wrong. That's, that's attributing the worth. It only goes to your maker. And if you continue to do that, you're going to be more like yourself all the time and you're going to be in grown and it's going to get worse.
It is. Well, that's what I think. Now don't think that old Bubba didn't go home and have some serious thought about what I said. I hope so. I know they do. These guys are not stupid. Do you know what you see on the outside? I learned this in politics. I've been walking down the road or down on the town square, going around to the businesses, talking to people. Somebody come out and, accustom me. Their eyes would be red or yellow. Their teeth would be green. And, I needed a gas mask just to get close to them. You know? And I might even have liquor on my breath. Right. When I started breaking down what they thought about issues, I found out real quick these people aren't stupid. They're real smart. Their brains work real well. And so far, anyway, for a drunk, get to the point it doesn't. But men God God made men smart.
I know this kid one time went church out in California, this church out in the San Fernando Valley. This kid had come to church on an old beat up bicycle, and he had a great big fat Bible. And he just carry it with him, and he'd take it, open it up, and just jam it down on the handle handle bars, you know, bend all the pages up, all those real thin pages. He'd come to church. He'd listened to the Bible teaching. That kid, everybody said he was mentally retarded. And if somebody asked me if he was mentally retarded, I'd have said the same thing. That kid memorized the entire book of Hebrews, all 13 chapters.
But to talk to him, you'd think surely he he's he's challenged somehow. I don't know. Savant. He was a Savant when he was a he was a Savant. Yeah. Obviously, the guy had mental capabilities, you know? Well, who knows? Who don't be saying, well, these guys got a high IQ, and these guys aren't as no. No. No. Men are smart. Beside the IQ test was invented by a fellow who had a little hat on his head and a fat wallet. Yep. Like, Paul said a while ago. Is it any wonder that all those fellows score higher on the IQ test than any other culture? It's hilarious.
Well, boy, some of them, yeah, I've been around those people. They aren't stupid, but I'm just making the point. They that worship them should be likened to them. And, don't do that. Do worship something greater than yourself. And the only thing that will make you better is to worship the creator of all things. The Bible says, Jesus Christ, having been delegated
[01:14:05] Unknown:
all authority from the father Indeed. Has created all things. Go ahead, Roger. I may have told you this before. You know, my father was alcoholic, not a bad drunk. He was a happy drunk kinda. But, but, boy, my mom got fed up with it and, threatened to leave. And that got everything turned around, and they both started being heavily involved in AA. And my father became the father I'd never had before, quite frankly. Yeah. And, and what he particularly liked to do is what's called 12 step calls. And that's when you get somebody that's hit a bottom, because you can't turn anybody around that's an alcoholic until they hit a bottom. K? Yeah. And so he would go out and try and just see if he could help get them straight and on the path and everything. And the very first thing they do with somebody in that condition is they make them, say that there's something higher authority than them.
It doesn't have to be God at that point because they're coming out of being drunk. Okay? And it takes a while to get that out of your system, get your head reoriented. But, later on, most of them, of course, believe in God. But that initial thing is look. If they if you think that telephone pole over there is greater than you, there's gotta be something greater than you. That's the emphasis on that first coming out of being a drunk into sobriety.
[01:15:24] Unknown:
So I didn't know if you knew that or not. Oh, no. I'd heard that. And I I've worked with people that have been in AA, and I know you've told the story about your father. You had never said I don't think, though, you never said that your dad then became the dad you wanted. I I didn't know that. You had never said that. Although, I always got the impression that you liked your dad. Well, it wasn't bad before that. It just really became, the the real father. You know?
[01:15:47] Unknown:
Yeah. But he didn't have the spirits in him anymore. Yeah. That that stuff's dangerous. And he wasn't mean or anything. That didn't happen. He's just happy. You know? He just just take a little drinky poo and go about his day. You know?
[01:16:01] Unknown:
No. I get it. Well, Roger, that's, my take on what's happening. I guess I
[01:16:07] Unknown:
go ahead. Well, I was just gonna say you wanna open up the phone, see if anybody in the audience has got questions. I always enjoy that. I wanna hear what's on the folks' minds and see what nerves what nerves you've touched Yeah. In the foregoing part of our conversation. Anybody out there got questions for Brent or myself? I have two questions for Brent, please. There there you go, Joan, in Costa Rica. Yes, ma'am.
[01:16:34] Unknown:
Hey, Roger. Hey, John. So, Brent, I've heard I heard you say in the beginning of this class that Christianity is the only true religion. You said something like that. And so I wanted to ask you, is is Catholicism, not Christianity? Or
[01:16:57] Unknown:
what is it? Well, let's look at it this way. And I'll cite from our own history as Americans. There are very few Romanist in America when our country started, and most all of them that were here were confined. Not all of them. Most of them were confined to the state of Maryland. You're correct. Yeah. And Maryland was tolerant. But even in Maryland, they said you can't serve on a jury. You can't take an oath. You must be at bottom, at least, Trinitarian. You must be at bottom at least Trinitarian. And Romanism has been Trinitarian. And that, happened, of course, over a long history.
And, they were accepted for that reason because they were Trinitarian. Quakers Quakers were not accepted. Why? Well, Quakers didn't didn't accept the depravity of the heart of man, and they were refused to take an oath, Calling upon God to enforce their promise. They misunderstand and misunderstood and misinterpreted the admonition of Jesus Christ where the King James says, do not swear at all. Do not swear at all. And that's an unfortunate, translation. It doesn't even come close to say in that course, the phrase at all didn't mean then what it means now. What at all means now is, it's an emphatic way to say never.
But the word there is not at all. The word there means it's the word it does. It's not the word all the word all in Greek is pan or, pass in the, in the nominative case, but the word pan and what pan means is all within the context what we're talking about, but that's that word's not used. I don't wanna talk about that. I wanna talk about the word that's used there. The word that's used there is Olas. It pronounced with a rough breathing and most most dialects, holos. We get our word whole w h o l e from this Greek word. And what whole us means is the best word we have in our English tongue is a Latin word that we borrowed. And it is the word general, General. Generally.
Generally. It's not all. It's generally. Now what does generally mean? Well, the word general means applies in all instances within its jurisdiction. If I say that this army officer is a general officer, that means when he puts out an order, it applies to everyone under his command, everyone. That's why we call them general officers. This officer over here, this, lieutenant j g just just got out ROTC, and, he's he gives an order. It it doesn't apply to everybody in the command. But a general officer, it applies to everybody. Now if I say it, as our founder said, we they didn't say the federal government.
They said the general government in Washington DC. Well, what does that mean? That means the government whose legislation commands everybody within the jurisdiction that falls within the jurisdiction of the constitution of The United States. Now who falls within that jurisdiction? Well, very few people, frankly. The constitution of The United States is written to limit who? You know, it's written to limit those that are in there. Yes. And so when he puts up, when the, when the, when the president, for example, he's part of the general government, when he puts out an executive order and DJ has been putting out executive orders, what does it who do they apply to?
It applies only. Doesn't apply to you, my friend. No. It applies to those under his command. He's commander in chief. He's commander of all the bureaucracies and all the armed forces. He puts out the general order. It applies to everybody equally. No questions asked. If somebody wants to complain, they can't get in to him to talk about it. There's the order. Shut up and deal with it. That's really what I'm both down here. Or leave. Or leave. Yeah. That's a general order. It applies to everybody equally. Our constitution of The United States says in the preamble Mhmm. That this constitution, in order to form a more perfect union, establish justice, ensure domestic tranquility, provide for the common defense, and promote the what? I'm not asking you, Roger, or just everybody's thinking, promote the general welfare. Welfare. Right. Well, what does that mean? That means if welfare is emanates by the command of Congress, it's gotta apply to everybody in the country the same, generally the same, the same. That's what that means. And that's what our law is, by the way, when it comes to welfare, but we've not been doing that because we've been favorite. Well, these people have a different color skin. We'll give them their their skin's red. We'll give them a hospital. See, All that
[01:22:02] Unknown:
kind of stuff. You you Brent, let me tell Brent. You know what's being floated is the revocation of the Civil Rights Act of 1964. Just saying that idea is being floated as a copeland.
[01:22:14] Unknown:
Well, yes. Right, Roger. And you and I have discussed this, all the people that are ex slaves that that was meant to apply to, they're gone.
[01:22:21] Unknown:
So what's the use? What, what are we doing here? And when the, well, it's very interesting that the black community up to that point was extremely affluent. They had their own businesses, their own, you know, there was very little outside of marriage stuff. And after that, it totally turned that around.
[01:22:38] Unknown:
Oh, the well, they who was it in the ancient world that said the poor are a gold mine? And the Democrat, the left the left has used the poor Uh-huh. As a gold mine to get money out of had money, the middle class. Yep. It's not it didn't work. Malcolm x was right. What what Muhammad or Cassius Clay, I like to call him. He might did the same thing. He said, we need to do our own thing. You guys do your thing. That's called freedom fraud Roger. That's called freedom of association. Yeah. Brent, have you ever seen and I'm sorry to interrupt Joan. Joan, just hang on.
[01:23:13] Unknown:
Have you seen the interview with that little squirrelly little liberal, Brit liberal with Cassius Clay over there when he's going? And the guy goes, I bet you can't wait to find yourself a nice white woman. And man, Cassius Clay jumped all over him. Have you ever seen that? Oh, yeah. Yeah. I've heard that. Want no white woman. She doesn't know what I like to eat. She doesn't know my culture. Boy, he just laid into him. And then he said, how many white I heard him say this back then.
[01:23:42] Unknown:
White folk don't want little babies with nappy necks. You ain't gonna he said, you're not gonna convince me of that. Now again now listen listen, Roger. This is getting back to the point I made a while ago. Cassius Clay, there's very little evidence that he could read or write hardly at all. And when he went to get drafted into the army, I don't know that he could even got in because he couldn't pass the test. And this is what I read. I know what I read, But don't tell me that Cassius Clay did not have an intricate mind. He did. Oh, yeah. He was intelligent beyond most men, and he was disciplined in his thinking. Just to listen to him talk, you discover that. Oh, he had his flaws. I know. He was trying to make a living, and he was the mouth from what they call him? The the, Louisville the Louisville lip. The Louisville lip. That was Okay.
From Louisville, Kentucky. Yep. But, smart man. Well, that's called freedom of association. And freedom of association, that's a constitutional concept, which is a means it's a common law concept. I can associate with who I wish to associate with, and that includes I have freedom to disassociate with men too, and I've done that in my life. I can get away from them if I want. You can't force me under freedom of association to make a contract with somebody. I don't want to make a contract with. That's the danger of the legislation we have that says you got to have a contract with these people. If you're going to have healthcare and, and all these other contracts, by the way.
But that's freedom of association. Freedom of contract is under the overarching principle, common law principle of freedom of association. I can connect myself to who I want to connect with, and I can disconnect when I want to. On and on it goes. Mhmm. Well, I forgot what subject we're on. Well, Joan was asking about,
[01:25:34] Unknown:
Catholicism,
[01:25:35] Unknown:
I think. Weren't weren't you, Joan? Who? Yeah. So who are Christian? I think wait. Wait, Joan. Wait, Joan. Wait, Joan. Wait. I'll I'll let you talk some more in a minute. I'm not a creator. I'm a creature. I was created. I don't know who the Christians are, and I the Bible says that I'm too I mean, I have an idea. It gives me tests whereby I may know I'm working on that. The Bible says the book of first John, I've recommended it on here, five chapters. You need to read it every day, thirty days for thirty days. So you know what's in it because it provides tests whereby you may know that you are born from above, born of the spirit and whereby you may know that others are born of the spirit and God expects you to make a decision about that based upon those tests, those tests in first John, I've known men. Of course. Yes. I've known men that were staunch Romanist.
And for me to say they're not Christian would be to usurp the authority and power of God. Yeah. I don't know. I but I know this. I've never met a Christian man or woman that didn't believe weird things. Weird when you get to know them. And I dare say, I believe something weird. If I knew what it was, I'd get rid of it. Maybe I'm blind to it. Maybe some of you are saying that guy's got some weird ideas. But the fact of the matter is we're mortals. And those of us who have a new heart and a new mind, that that new heart is inclined for it with a yearning that seeks the will of God comes from the laws of nature, and the laws of nature is God. That means I'm learning. I'm learning. I know a whole lot more than I did 40 ago, fifty years ago. Yeah.
But I'm and I'll I'll keep learning till I die till I die. Jesus Christ doesn't learn anything. He's God. Okay. There was ever a time that he did not know all that could be known. You can't teach him anything. And, I am not him. I am creature. I am not creator. Joan, go ahead.
[01:27:34] Unknown:
I I was asking if Catholicism not wasn't referring to Catholic individuals.
[01:27:41] Unknown:
Is
[01:27:42] Unknown:
is Catholicism a Christian religion?
[01:27:48] Unknown:
Catholicism, a Christian religion. The answer is according to their official doctrine, you can read it just as well as I can. The answer is no. It's not. According to their doctor. No. I'm not done yet. No. Joan. Joan. Joan. Joan. Thank you. No, Joan. I'm not done yet. Thank you. He's trying to answer your question, dear. No, Joan. I'm not done yet. Alright. I can't hear your voice is high. I don't hear it very well. Yeah.
[01:28:18] Unknown:
She doesn't have a she your phone connection, like I said, she's down in Costa Rica. So you'll see a little bit of leverage here. Joan was saying, alright. I couldn't hear. Okay. So
[01:28:29] Unknown:
having said that, the official doctrines of Rome are not Christian. Why? Because they they tell me, they believe the Bible, because I believe the Bible, because I do not include the priesthood of Rome in my salvation, I I I reject, and I do. I reject that I need the priesthood hood of Rome for anything. Amen. It's really not my salvation to save me from hell. Rome says I need them. And they say and Rome says by official doctrine, if you reject the priesthood of Rome, we are relegated you to hell without any opportunity for repentance. It's called anathema.
It's It's a Greek word from the New Testament. And they say we have the power. I have the power, so the pope, to relegate you, Brent, to hell, and he's done it. K. But does he however
[01:29:18] Unknown:
If you'll buy this papal bull, I might can save you.
[01:29:22] Unknown:
Well, maybe. Who know? But, no, I'm relegated to hell. Let him be anathema. I'm reminded of the story. I read this at the beginning of that book written by a Frenchman who lived in Geneva in the history of Christianity in Britain in England. A two volume set. Go get it. That's the bad one. I've read it three or four times. It was the most one of the most popular books in England for for decades. But he tells a story at the beginning about this Italian priest who who saw the light of Protestantism. I should say saw the light of the Bible, but in other words, the Bible becomes your final authority, from whose decision there is no appeal and not the the pope of Rome. And they tried him for his life in front of the canon, under the canon civil laws of Rome. They had the priest there, and they had him on the dock. And they said, we're gonna ask him three questions. They had all this planned out, and surely, we'll be able to save his life. All he has to do is answer one of the three questions right. They said, what is the first cause of eternal salvation from hell?
And he thought a minute, and he said, Jesus Christ. And he said, okay. What's the second cause? He said, well, Jesus Christ. And they said, okay. You and they were thinking to themselves, he's got one more chance to include a priesthood in this. Oh, by the way, the official doctrine of Rome is that the church is the priesthood. Nobody else. Just the priesthood. But they said, then what's the third cause of eternal salvation? And he said, Jesus Christ. And they burn him at the stake. They were hoping he'd say somewhere in there, I gotta have the priesthood. No, you don't gotta have the priesthood. Matter of fact, if you're thinking that your Christianity is very questionable because Jesus Christ demands that we understand that you can't add to what he did, what he did in paying the penalty for our law breaking is so perfect, so complete.
It's nobody can add to it. And to say otherwise that I need the priesthood of Rome or some something, the Mormon church, or I need the preacher, I need my professor, whatever, or I need to pray to Mary, whatever I need. Something else is to demean Jesus Christ to participate in the mass is to demean Jesus Christ. Why? Because he said my sacrifice is perfect, complete. You can't add to it. And that they call that the sacrifice of the mass. No, no, no. That's demeaning to the savior himself. If you hate him that much, well, you're not Christian. Do people participate in the mass? Yes. Are they Christians? Some may be. Maybe they don't understand. I don't know.
I just know that that's a lot of ugly baggage to have to carry around if you're a Christian man or woman. That's what I know. Are many of them sincere? Of course, they are. Are they I've met some of the most sincere men. One guy recently, I met him. He's an old line Romanist like Mel Gibson. Latin mask. Of course, I don't know what the significance of that is. It's not in the Bible anywhere. But he gave me he said, Brent, I pray this prayer every day, and he gave me one of Augustine's prayers. Well, Augustine is a hero of Protestantism.
And he gave me one of the prayers. He was a Protestant. There's no doubt about it. Although Rome likes to claim people because it makes them popular and make them Romanist and and say give them sainthood like, well, that fellow Patrick.
[01:32:47] Unknown:
Yes.
[01:32:48] Unknown:
Patrick. Patrick. His name was, Sucat. He wasn't Irish. And, he might not even been Scottish. We don't know. But he lived on the border between Scotland and and England, and he was he was, taken as a slave when he was a teenager by, Irish, pirators, sold into slavery in Ireland, worked for a pig farmer there for a number of years, got to know him pretty well, And then ran away, went to school in France for fourteen years, prepare himself to go back to to, Ireland and, Christianize those dirty rotten pagans over there. And he he did, but he wasn't, he wasn't Irish, but Rome says, Oh, he was Irish. And they put him in this fancy priest robe.
England at that time knew nothing. Romanism hadn't even entered the Island, any degree to amount to anything. And he wasn't. He wasn't a Romanist. Now he may have been had contact with it in France. I we don't have any records of that. We don't know. I just know that his Christianity was biblical. And the center of biblical Christianity in Britain at that time was, a place called Ione, which was an island. And on that island was a Bible school. We had people say it was a monastery. It really wasn't a monastery because it wasn't Roman. The priesthood had not entered Christianity in the North Of England at that or the North Of Britain at that time.
And that happened much, much later. Well, that's what Rome does. And, Augustine, he gave me a prayer, a beautiful prayer, of course, but it's not the Bible for crying out loud. Augustine was a sinner like me. You don't believe it? Read his confessions. As I've said on this program, the question with Augustine wasn't what people often ask. What sins did he commit? That's not the question. The question is, after you read the confessions, you say to yourself, is there any sin this man didn't commit? Right. I mean, you talk about assorted life. You can't imagine in your worst nightmare what kind of a life he was leading. You wouldn't wanna get your well, you certainly wouldn't want your daughters near him.
But God's the biggest junk dealer in the universe. He'll take anybody. He'll take anybody no matter how old or how young, and he'll deal with the junk and start working with it. Biggest junk dealer
[01:35:04] Unknown:
in the universe. Yeah. S a n f o r d, period. Joan, did that, did that get your question? You had another one?
[01:35:12] Unknown:
Yes. That was thorough. Thank you for that thorough, explanation. Brent, and my other question had to do with, I think in on, previous classes, you have mentioned that and you being so familiar with, politicians and running for, government position. You that you have said I think you said women in government is a bad bad idea. And so I wonder what is your take? I don't know what what is your take on the women Trump has chosen?
[01:35:54] Unknown:
Well, let me just go back to the Bible. That's the safe thing to do, and I'm following my father's advice being on the radio and having taught the Bible on the radio back in Terry Hote, Indiana for quite a while. And dad said, Brent, be careful. Just stick to the Bible. I can go to Paul the apostle. God well, let me start this way. Government is God's business. It's God's business. Men are his servants, all of them, whether they understand it or not, whether they know it or not, The Bible teaches, the prophet Isaiah, that the judgment of God upon a people is that women and children rule over you.
That's what the Bible says. Yep. It's not ambiguous. That's what it says. If women are in watch me, Joan. If women are in government, what does that mean? That means they are executing whether they know it or not. The judgment of God. Is that the will of God? Of course, the judgment of God is the will of God. People often, and I don't think most of them know it. They're just want to be ambitious. Listen, ladies, you ladies, listen, the men listen to Women are much more loyal and much more consistent than men when it comes to loyalty. I don't think it takes a a rocket science to figure that out.
And like the old song says, I feel like a man talking. He said, I feel like a frog on a holler stump. I got so many women. I don't know which way to jump. You don't hear women much writing songs like that. They like to think that they they like to have they like to be one man women. Even if they aren't, that's what they like. Of course, they do. Women think or men tend more to think they can do other things. That's the reality of of our sin. Women are loyal, and women can do what men do in many cases and often do it better. In the military services.
Listen, men, women are more vicious than men in battle. Don't tell me they aren't. You ever see a woman fight? If they're fighting for babies or their babies or their husband, well, they they carry that viciousness as I've often said. God made them that way. Women fight out of instinct. And that's the worst kind of a warrior there is. Men fight on purpose. Women will attack in anger. That's the way God wired them. They'll do it. And it's get out of the way.
[01:38:15] Unknown:
Man, mama bear.
[01:38:17] Unknown:
It is a feminine. Yes, that's right. We'll heal back to them. Roger, the female of the species is more deadly than the male. When the Himalayan peasant, when the Himalayan peasant meets the, he bear and his pride, he shouts to scare the monster who will often turn aside, but the she bear thus accusted, runs the peasant tooth and nail for the female of the species is more deadly than the male and on and on it goes. And the same thing is true
[01:38:46] Unknown:
Women. I'd never heard that poem till Brent reeled it off one day here out of memory. It, it, that is a striking poem. Farris, if you've never read that poem, The Female of the Species by Rudyard Kipling, you might need particularly to read that. Go ahead, Brent.
[01:39:07] Unknown:
Well, women will they're they're wired that way because as as and Kipling points this out too, that the generations never fail. We don't want our generations to fail, and god has wired it into the woman to not let that happen. You get between her and her husband, as it says, and her and her children or somebody else's children. If you ain't ready for it, you better get out of the way. Yep. And I've got personally, I say I've got the scars to prove it. We used to go out and roger and round up the pigs. We used to fair our pigs out on the sandhills. Just let them run loose. You know? They'd come in. We knew it. Finally, it got so the economy of the thing got so you had to have a average of nine pigs per litter to save before you could make a profit. In Cork, some old sows have fifteen, twenty five pigs. Really?
Oh, yeah. Oh, man. But you let them you let them run out on the hills, and they'll raise three or four because they'll lay on them. And they'll they'll get to fighting, and the old borehole will eat one. You know? And so we used to do that. We weren't sophisticated in the earlier times. We got farrowing crates later. We let them out on the hills. Well, my brother and I remember bushel baskets, Roger? Bushel baskets. They used to be everywhere, didn't they? Because we'd buy Of course. Made out of that some kind of wood and stuff. That and a number 10 wash tub. Yeah. We had those. We'd take bushel baskets. My brother and I were a little boy. Dad say, go out and gather up the pigs and bring them in. Now that they're born, we'll gather them up. We gotta wean them. And then we'd bring them in. We'd put them in another little pen, try to wean them. Well, if you go out together up pigs, you gotta deal with, mama.
You get between, you get just like a, just like a grizzly, a grizzly bear or old Ephraim. You get between a sow bear. She thinks you're between her and your cubs. She'll kill you. If a moose thinks you're between her and her cubs, she will kill you. Correct. And if an old sow thinks you're between her and her her piglets, she will try to kill you. So we did that all our lives, and I had some close close calls. We'd gather them up. Well, one time I was older. I was a girl. I was I was married at the time, and I went out. And I get up early, a % humidity, hundred degrees.
And I went out to the hog lot, and we had built hog gates out of a out of solid steel three inch sucker rods out of oil wells. Boy, that's the strongest steel you could find. You can hang a string of those things down. They gotta be strong, you know, to hold all that weight. Sure. 60 and a half one rod long, that's 16 and a half foot. We'd take them, cut them into two pieces, eight foot a piece, and we'd make gates four foot gates out of them. And they were you can imagine how solid they were. Right? I welded them together myself. We had those had a pen out there, and we had these thousand pen and pigs, and and, the pigs get out. If you got hogs, they'll be out all the time. They know if a pig or a hog can get his nose through any hole, he'll get his whole body through.
And so I go out in the morning, but I get up about daylight and a % humidity and a hundred degrees, and I put on a pair of bib overalls without a shirt and, rub them my eyes. And I put I just slipped a pair of flip flops on my feet, and I'd run out the hog lot. The dogs would go with me. I've been doing this since I was a teenager, and the dogs, they'd help me run the they they'd help me run run the pigs down, and they'd hang on their ears. You know? And then the pigs would be running around the corner of the lot, and I'd dive for their legs and try to I was gonna throw them back in the pen. And I pigs were hanging on this one pig's area, probably weighed about 60 and he was still nursing. I mean, we didn't, we weren't very sophisticated and he, he made dogs hanging on his ears and he made the turn around the corner of the fence on the outside, and I dove for his legs and got both of his legs. And I both of us went rolling over in the horse weeds.
And, I didn't let go. And we went down over the hill there, and I took the pig back up. And then I holding on his legs, and I'd have him holding on his legs. It's kinda like running a wheelbarrow on his front legs off the ground. Right. But but when you do that with a pig, especially a bigger one, it's like running a jackhammer. You just said, you know, they're shaking their legs trying to get loose. And Right. And I but I'm I'm handling it okay, and I guide him over to the gate where I wanna swing him over. And then I just get a little centrifuge of force, and I'd swing him up, and then I just let him down gently on the other side. You know, his front feet would touch, and I'd let go of his back legs. I was young and So here here we are, and he's screaming up a storm, of course. Oh, yeah. They're squealing. Yeah. Squealing like mad, and mom's mad. And I see her in a lot, and I look at her, and she's a Yorkshire. She's white. The Yorkshires are white.
I never thought about this, but Paul that listens to us, that Rita Hogg came from his hometown there. That's funny.
[01:43:41] Unknown:
Yeah. First thing I thought of when you said that. Instead of me being a pig. Oh, that's an easier. Listen to that.
[01:43:49] Unknown:
I just sort of tell whenever I heard on the grapevine, someone's talking about Yorkshire pigs. My little my Yorkshire pig alert went off on my phone. I told him about Yorkshire pigs, he said.
[01:44:04] Unknown:
Well, anyway, I wonder now I got thinking about it. I wonder if any Yorkshire pigs around Yorkshire. Right? Every anyway, they're white. They're white breed. A good looking hog, but they're white of skin and of hair. And this old sow was turned sideways to me, and I'm I'm on the outside of the fence, got these solid steel gates there. And, she's screaming. Well, I've seen this all all my life. I'm not worried. And and she's standing sideways, Roger. And dad had told us, now boys, if you're seeing old sow and her udders are engorged and they'll be red, but if they get on the scrap, the udder will turn white because all the blood, she'll suck it out of her out of her udder, and and all the blood will be flowing into her muscles. See?
And if she's gonna attack, her udder will turn white. Well, I'm looking over at her. She's standing sideways grunting like that. Her whole belly and her whole utter was engorged with milk, and it was bouncing up and down. And it was white. And I knew she was gonna attack me, but I wasn't worried because I had this four foot solid three inch inch steel gate there that I'd welded together myself. And I I've seen them crash into those gates. It doesn't do any good. You know? And I kinda enjoy watching it, and I think it's fun. I'm young enough. I like the excitement. So I get ready to swing the pig up over, get a little centrifugal force, and I get to pig up in the air. But by that time, she had she had, started out after me, and she was running full tilt from the other side of the lot.
And I wasn't worried a bit, and I got the pig swung up. And right at the height of the swing, this sow did something I'd never seen a 400 pound sow do before. About two jumps from the gate, she went airborne. And, she was gonna clear that gate. Well, fortunately for me, I had that pig up there, and that pig was going to become a sacrifice for my hide. And she slammed in the side. She slammed into the side of that pig. She was crazed. This is what women do when they want, when you threaten their children. They think, yeah, they're on autopilot at that point. Well, she was too.
And she slammed in the side of that hog, and I let go and tumbled backwards trying to save my hide, and I trumbled down in the horse weeds. I had those flip flops on. And when I got down the horse weeds, I curled around and looked back up. I was on my hands and knees, and she's standing there. Her energy now pretty much expended. And one of her one of my flip flops is hanging from her teeth in her mouth, and she's chewing. Well, that she did her job. She got rid of me. The pig was happy. And, by the way, people ask when I tell the story what happened to the pig. Well, pigs are tough. And that pig had a couple of holes in his hide where she slammed into him. And, I could see down that old sow's throat while she was running at me. I mean, that's her mouth was open. She was ready for something.
That's that's what female species will do. Thank god. My mother my mother is over 90 years old, 95, 90 six. Let's see. 90, yeah, 95, pretty near. She's always had my back, and nobody nobody abused me when I was growing up. And she would come after me, even her best friends. I watched her do it. And she thought that they were threatening me. They'd make up later, but that's just the way women are. And get it in your minds and be thankful to God that that's the way God made them. Somebody's gonna stay silent. Joe's trying to say something, I think. Hey, Joe.
[01:47:31] Unknown:
No. Brent, why don't you tell them what happens if the sow gets you down and you can't get up? What happens, Dave?
[01:47:40] Unknown:
You probably die. I haven't had that experience yet. Have you?
[01:47:45] Unknown:
Well, no. I'm still alive, but she'll let you. And you know that. You never wanna you you never wanna have a heart attack in a pig pen.
[01:47:54] Unknown:
No. Well, no. That's that's right. And there yeah. We've heard the stories about the men that, their body parts were scattered around because a pig, by the way, will eat anything. They even eat each other if they if they can get a little taste of blood, and they'll just gnaw on each other till they'll destroy each other. They're animals. They're animals. And they they operate, of course, on instinct. I have this fellow, Roger, that my father was in the NFO, the National Farmers Organization back when they were you know, they had the theory. It was a good they weren't a theory. It was a reality. If the farmers could if 10% of the farmers in America could withhold their commodities, their eggs, their milk, their meat from, from, going to market, then the farmers would control the market. And that's a mathematic certainty.
And the NFO operated on that on that principle. But but they did other things too. They tried to find collection points. What they wanted to do was eliminate the packing companies and negotiate for good prices, parity prices as they called it in those days. Well, with dad was the county secretary. So the county NFO, the men would come over, the officers, and they would meet at dad's house. And there's this one fellow that come, and he was brother, the Gilbert brothers. Gilbert was their name. And they were they were both kinda long, lanky fellows that talked real slow like that. You know? And I just sat at the table. And when farmers get together, what they do is, in every case, I've been around them all my life. When they get together, they start telling animal stories because that's the exciting thing. What animals do and always see something different.
And, these Gilbert brothers, they raise cattle. And they had a couple old cows that they got to sale barn, have been shipped in from the range out west, and they're pretty wild. And they had not had that experience before, and so they sat in the table. And this guy was telling the story about old cow. You know, when an old cow has a calf, she'll go out in the pasture field someplace and be alone. It's her time and she does her thing and you don't bother. She'll get off in the brush where she can't be seen or in a fence corner anywhere where she thinks she can get alone. Well, he knew she was gonna have a calf, and he wanna get her in the barn. He noticed that the day before that she was swollen in all the right places, and he knew she was milking and that that colostrum milk was coming. So she disappeared. She didn't show up that morning to get fed. And so he knew she was out there. So he said he went out to find her and he finally found her in the briars and she'd had a calf sure as a world.
And he said he walked up, and he's gonna try to drive her back to house. And and, well, instead, she's put her head down, started shaking her head and, you know, throwing dirt with her front feet and all that kind of thing. And and this I was I was about a 12, 14 year old kid. I don't remember. And I was fascinated by the story, and he said that. And then he said, well, he real real slow. He said, I seen that she was gonna she was gonna try to charge on me. And I said, okay, sister. We're gonna have her out right here. And he said he rolled up his sleeves, and he he I I braced my feet, and I was dead when she come at me. I was gonna throw my right arm under her left horn, and I was gonna put my right my left hand on her right horn. And I was just gonna twist her neck and flop the old b I t c h over on her over on her back. That's what he's and he was big enough to do it probably. You know, once you twist once you twist no. That's what bulldogging is all about. You twist your hips till you get them down. Well, you can do it if you don't get run over first. And, I said I was all, wow. This is, you know, this is the way you can throw a cow. You know? And I was going I wanted to try that. That sounded like the manly thing to do, and I said, yeah. Yeah. So I I said I said, well, what happened next?
He said, well, I don't rightly know. But when I come to, she's gone. So that's the female of the species.
[01:51:56] Unknown:
You don't need
[01:51:57] Unknown:
listen. When I was in Alaska, Roger, I think I told you this story. Cause you, you lived up. Oh yeah. We, we had a show when you were up there. Listen, folks, you hadn't been around here very long. Brent and I've been doing this a long time. I was in Patagonia in South America, and he was up in the Matanuska Valley, North Of Anchorage, around Palmer. And we were talking, did a great show on on Brent's laser Internet. It's fantastic.
[01:52:24] Unknown:
Oh, I was in the hay mower of a barn. When I did that show, I got signal up there. But, at that time, well, at that time, two things happened. Number one, at the University of Alaska, I mean, this is in the newspapers down there in Anchorage. And that's in Fairbanks. Or Fairbanks. Right. University of Alaska Fairbanks, there was, all the children, all the children, the well, the students came, they were young people, Came to the door of one of the buildings where they had to get into a class at 08:00, and there was a a cow, cow moose standing in front of the door, and they couldn't get in.
And, an oriental kid, I don't know whether he was American or a foreign exchange student or something. He said, oh, what's everybody waiting on? Let's go to class. And he walks up toward the moose, thought the moose would get out of the way. The moose reared up on her back legs and came down on him with both feet and killed him. Oh. And then just stood there and beat him to death. You know? Oh. Yeah. And it was that time of year when the old cows, if you get near them, they and and I had this experience out at one of my friend's house, and I was standing at the corner of a of a lot where a man was pastoring some horses. And and I was standing there talking to the guy working on the fence, and he and there was a moose up the fence road just away, and that moose just browsed. You know? They look like they're not excited. They have that bullwinkle look on their face that Yep. Non expressionist, and they don't look dangerous.
And it that moose, it was a cow, just kept browsing and coming closer and closer. And finally, I got a little nervous. I said to this fella, is are we okay here? He's, oh, yeah. He said, I'm going moose hunting after I get off work tonight. He said, she's not gonna hurt us. Well, I found out the people that really know when it come this is why animal stories are important. And my father had always said this, and I can testify it to it too. Even the the domestic animals, if you're with them a lot or and you see the wildlife, you see things you've never seen before, an animal do. This old cow come walking down there. He said, oh, don't worry about it. I know I grew up here and all that. Oh, okay. So we're standing there, and pretty soon this moose is just adjacent to us, not more than a half a stone throw away.
And, I'm standing at the fence corner on the outside. All of a sudden, I'm talking to this fella, and this moose turns and looks at us without expression, of course, and then starts running straight at us. Well, I ain't no idiot. I know really all I gotta do. I learned this lesson. All I gotta do is outrun him. I don't have to outrun the moose. You know? So I'm I'm in the lead. We're throwing gravel. I mean, I didn't know. I was 60. I was 60 years old then. I thought I'd watched, so I couldn't do that anymore. I I was, I was balling the jack as they say, and I took off and I instinctively came around the corner of the barn and turned to the right.
And there was a pile of wood up under the I had a roof built there, and there was a pile of firewood there. And I climbed up on the pile of firewood, and then I got my hands up on in the rafters. And I was gonna just hold on with my feet and put my feet up on the rafter if that moose tried to get at me, you know, and hope I could hold on long enough. It couldn't get at me. Well, as it turned out, I didn't get run over. I don't know what happened to him. I know he didn't get run over, but I wasn't paying attention. You know? I gotta save yourself first. I couldn't do anything for him, really. As it turned out, we're okay. But just to remind people, I've I've faced off and squared off with raccoons before. You don't do that either. No. For pound for pound, they're the most vicious critter in the American woods. Yeah. I mean, raccoons can kill grizzly bears. That's how vicious they are. I mean, people talking about wolverines and all that. Get out of here. Pound for pound? No. I'd take a raccoon if I needed somebody to fight something.
[01:56:12] Unknown:
But, yeah, you don't mess with their children. Back to you, Roger. I don't Well, I wanted that. We got about two or three minutes here. I'd like to hear mister English's voice there. Find out some of his, we were talking about your show yesterday earlier. Is that what prompted you?
[01:56:28] Unknown:
No. I I I've just come back from the dentist, and I'm armed with lots of antibiotics.
[01:56:33] Unknown:
Oh, I've gotta go this afternoon. It must be that day.
[01:56:37] Unknown:
Oh, yeah. So I didn't sleep last night, so I'm a bit grotty. And, anyway, so I I I didn't catch the whole of the start of the show, but when I got back, I've just sat here all sort of sniffling and being rather pathetic. Uh-huh. But absolutely thrilled about antibiotics. I just love them. Those delicious drugs, they're just tremendous. Yeah. And the dentist said, oh, we'll we'll need to take these teeth out. I said, well, not today. Let's not do that now. Just give me the drugs, please. So he did, and I'll go back and see. So yeah. And and the Yorkshire pig thing was quite interesting. That was very interesting. A cross breed with a Chinese pig in the seventeen hundreds from here, and then, of course, you lot stole them all. Apparently, it's the most popular pig in America and Canada. You've got loads of them. They're everywhere.
So I've learned something about that too. That's good.
[01:57:22] Unknown:
Yeah. Well, that's all we have. Well, we got some Berkshires in across with them and some durocks once in a while. But, yeah, that was the mainstay was the York. We just call them Yorks. And, they're a gentle hog. They're a producer. And, there must be other reasons probably I don't know about that. My my family has been raising hogs for, I know for at least four generations going back to great grandpa. Yeah. And, it wasn't fancy. It always we were the first ones that got them out of farrowing into the woods and tried to get them in the crates. But if anybody wanted, want to butcher a hog, my great granddad, he'd send the dogs out, and, they'd run one by the sled. And he'd have his gun there, and he'd pop him and roll him over on the sled. And butchering was a big deal. We butchered hogs. We I ate I ate pork. No kidding.
By the command of my father, three times a day. And he said, you can't be healthy. And this was the culture in the Ohio Valley. You can't be healthy without eating pork, and I don't know that people believe that anymore. But that was a popular point of view for those people. I don't eat much of it anymore for other reasons, hardly at all. But, we did at that time. It was right it was so much a part of everybody's lives where I grew up in my neck of the woods that, if I know anything I know cattle. Yeah. I know cattle, but I know hogs because we dealt with them. Now I had my my son tell me recently, he wants to get some hogs. I forget the name of these things. They're from New Zealand, and they don't root.
So you can put them out. Yeah. They don't they won't strip the bark off the trees and make things look ugly. Oh, they'll do it a little. They'll but they just stay on the surface, and they're friendly as the day is long. I don't know where I'm gonna get on the Internet and find out about them. I crave having some pigs around just because I was around all my life.
[01:59:08] Unknown:
But, I'm Brent, wasn't it this for the last, I don't know, twenty years or so ago, people were having them little baby miniature pigs like dogs.
[01:59:17] Unknown:
Well, yes. And then then they would, but they would root. Those would I want these if we have them. If we can't make money with them, I don't want them. They're good pork. They say they're the sweetest from what I understand. My son telling me they're the sweetest pork on the market, whatever these pigs are. But they're across of the native people that made them, in New Zealand is what I understand. Maybe they call Maoris? I think they call them the Maoris. I think that might be right. Yeah. I don't know, but I need to look into it. Well, I appreciate all of you. It was good to hear from from Paul chiming in. And, of course, we want him to relax and rest and, let his body get back in shape. It reminds me I had to make an appointment with the dentist too. I gotta get it done. I've got every tooth I was born with, Roger. Every tooth, and I've been there. That's unbelievable.
Yeah. And I'm trying to take care of them. My parents have tried to help me. Yeah. And I appreciate well, I appreciate that about my parents. They, grew up in a world where people didn't, keep their teeth. They just didn't know how to do it. My father went off the war, and he learned how to take care of his teeth. He kept his. My mother was unable to keep hers,
[02:00:24] Unknown:
which we thought was normal. And I found out later it wasn't normal and I've been trying to take care of mine. Yeah. I know you understand that. I've been a problem that's plagued me my whole adult life. And if I around young people, they can't what? Oh, Roger. What can you tell us about the world? I say, take care of your teeth. So I second that.
[02:00:44] Unknown:
Absolutely. Yeah. Did I ever I I had a friend up in Yorkshire, and his parents, I met them when I was about 17. And, later on, he told me about their relationship with their own teeth, which is extremely strange. So, when would they have been born? I guess in the nineteen tens, something like that. And, there used to be a practice back then, in our neck of the woods. I never came across this in any written things, but apparently, this was true. That there were traveling dentists, and they would suggest to people that teeth were gonna give them nothing but trouble their entire life. So why don't we just take them all out now? No. This is when they're young, fit, and healthy. Right? So both his parents went for this. And by the time they were 20, neither of them had one tooth in their head. How about that?
Yeah. And, so they lived. They were, you know, obviously, world champions at denture maintenance or whatever. I just found it absolutely bizarre. Yeah. Really, really. It was terrifying, actually. And, I do think that toothache is the worst, and I've been knocked up and smashed up and all sorts of things. But I don't like toothache because you can't think. No. You can't think at all. It's just impossible to think.
[02:01:58] Unknown:
Everything goes to oil. Clove. Right, Paul?
[02:02:01] Unknown:
I do. Yeah. I had garlic in my mouth for about, like, ten hours and that worked. Although the dentist said, oh, that's not gonna help. I said, yeah. It does. It sort of numbed all the pain. It really helped a lot, actually. Did, did you think to try the iTero wand that that I used it online last night. It's just gone. The problem was, Roger, I couldn't think very well. Okay. Once it started yeah. That's terrible. So anyway, I'll I I thought antibiotics. I spoke to a nurse that I know. This would be about four months ago because I had to take them about four months ago for another abscess on the other side of my mouth.
Now, the the one four months ago is understandable because I had a I actually had to have a wisdom tooth taken out. It was growing at a 45 degree angle Yep. Into the back of the teeth in front of it, the molars at the back. Yeah. And when they took it out, it was the most disgusting, wretched smell I've ever Yeah. Went, oh my because food had been trapped under this 45 degree angle for years. Yep. And it was just disgusting. It really was. I went, god, that's me. That's a part of me. I'm a wretch. You know, it's foul. Yep. And it's still very sensitive down there. If I, so I try not to eat Doritos or anything like that. Although, sometimes it's impossible when you got chili flooding around. Right? You can't not eat those things. But, they'll go into the gum and and then it kicks me off. So I I got some antibiotics from a nurse who could just directly I know. She said, oh, I can write your prescription. You don't have to wait all weekend. And I just got sorted out. And I was asking, I said, I've heard that the more you take antibiotics, the less effective they are. She said, no. It's not true. I can't remember what reason she gave me, but I was thoroughly convinced I'll have to go back. Said, no. It doesn't work like that at all. She said, you can keep taking them forever. I went, yippee.
So I now view them as my favorite pal. I'd much prefer keep taking antibiotics than having my teeth taken out, to be quite I don't want them taken out. So
[02:03:45] Unknown:
Mhmm. Anyway, there you go. Yep. I'm a scientist. Well, great to hear your voice. We were talking about, the gal you had on, Mary Miriam?
[02:03:54] Unknown:
Monica last night. Monica.
[02:03:56] Unknown:
Yes. And her, well, a couple of things. Her her her story about the German gals when she was in prison there was Turks and all the other people because the Germans were weaklings. And, some of the other things that were covered last night. And, it it's very good because we've had that broached here on, on the show with I'm sure he's still listening, Ferris. When he first started coming around, he came on with, it was some real derogatory comments. I mean, although they're not true for a certain percentage, but they're certainly not true for all the gals. But I told him earlier that he needs to go and listen to that show yesterday.
[02:04:38] Unknown:
Well, I I think it's a good recommendation. I found it wonderful to do it because I don't view myself as an expert on this. There are so many questions that came up afterwards in my head, but there's some really pertinent facts. I haven't gone and checked these, but I'm assuming that they're correct. Like,
[02:04:53] Unknown:
only throughout history, only forty percent of men have ever sired children. I heard that. You guys say that. It's astonishing, isn't it? Shocking. Yeah. No shock. I know.
[02:05:02] Unknown:
And the other one, the one that really stuck with me, and I've because I've got the copy of this book, Sex and Culture by, whose name I've now it's just running right in my head. Written in the thirties, didn't you say? It was. Yeah. Sex and Culture by this British guy. Oh, dress. I hate when I forget their names. I could remember it easily last night. My brain's a bit soggy today. But, he when he was researching all of these civilizations, 80 or something, going back three, four thousand years. And he found that once the emancipation of women process had started in these civilizations, the process was never ever reversed, and it always led to the complete end of the civilization.
And there's a reason for it. And it's, it's dynamically and powerfully fascinating to me because I think that there is some I think there really is a problem with women in politics. And, I'm not trying to be misogynistic about it. It's something that I really wanna talk to women about a lot in many ways because I think it's, there's something fundamentally not right about it. It doesn't work. And, certainly, the example that he had in the video about Sweden is really the most striking example that we've got. This is from about 02/2016, where they're literally inviting in racially and culturally incompatible males into their, country who are destroying the Swedish people, and the women want this.
This is to be under and I think that this is really important that there isn't you know, this is a very heavy thing I'm about to say, and I'm not saying I agree with it. But the point he was making was that racial loyalty does not exist in women to the degree that it does in men. And there are very good reasons why. The main one being that in the past, when you were attacked by another tribe, if you did not submit to the other tribe, you got your head chopped off. So I completely understand why they would prefer to not have their heads chopped off. It makes complete sense. But these these forces are at play. And so there was only the beginning, really. The three hours last night was really just the beginning of of drilling down into this and trying to get some sensible answers about it, because I I tend to the view that women in politics I'm only picking that one, but really just about any sort of commercial sphere that have been created by men, they particularly in politics and particularly with this migration situation, they act as mother to the whole world. Oh, you can all come here. We can look after all of you. There's no limit to the amount of work we can make our men do to give you lots of stuff because it's wrong, you see, because we owe you all this stuff. And I think I mentioned last night, I get this comment regularly from some of the women that I talk to. Or this is going up back up a four, five, six year, even longer than that. They go, well, you know, we went around the world and caused them such harm. I'll go, what?
I go, oh, yeah. I'm aware of all that. Yeah. Yeah. And therefore therefore, they're all entitled to come and live here at our expense in our house. I'm going, that's that's really dangerous. Yours first. It's a costly danger. Yours first.
[02:07:59] Unknown:
Yeah. You know, your house first, lady.
[02:08:04] Unknown:
Yeah. And they all go left wing. They all go liberal. Yeah. All of them. Nearly all all the facts, but not all of them. And I was talking about my mum, you know, this whole thing about, the sexual freedom thing in the sixties and all this kind of stuff. And, my mum was completely against it. She was completely mad. I remember saying at one point, she never used words like this around us because we were we were just a well behaved family, really. I didn't think any but she said, there's far too much talk these days about sex as if they invented it. It's just true. It's just it's gone bonkers.
And, so all of these things, I think that the knock on effect, you know, we were talking about the pill, the introduction of those chemicals into the water supply Yep. The effective physiological feminization of men. We've got loads of them over here like blob males with pipe cleaner arms, waddling around, overly sensitive,
[02:08:54] Unknown:
and want to give women the benefit of the doubt on everything. It's tragic. It Did you hear the the research that came out last week? If you give one of those guys testosterone, they become conservative.
[02:09:07] Unknown:
Of course. Absolutely.
[02:09:09] Unknown:
That's true. It came out from the survey. I heard Jones talking about it a couple of times.
[02:09:15] Unknown:
Well, it's about reforming the assertive role of men. You've got to do it. Yeah. I mean, there are there these physiological differences, they knock on duct into all sorts of psychological behavioral patterns, to use the fancy terminology, but we behave differently. That's wonderful. We want that. Yeah. But we don't want this. I don't want this. This is unsound. It's a disease. You can feel it behaviorally, and it's not right. And, this thing about, the drop off in replacement population for us as a race is absolutely to do with some kind of super extended guilt about all these terrible evil things that our forefathers did in the eighteen hundreds or whatever, you know. Please. Like and I say I say to people what? I said, oh, like, we stopped the slave industry. You that is that what you're talking about? They go, no. No. No. You you killed loads of people. I said, everybody killed loads of people. Right? If you're gonna get killed by anybody, it'd be better to be get killed by us. At least you get some roads and railway engines out of it and stuff like that. Right? And we and and we lost three and a half thousand men in the British Royal Navy stopping slave trades. And I've you know, this is don't go down well. And I'm not condoning it, of course. There were rough things, and we've got rough diamonds and even worse than that in our own ranks. I know that. It's not sort of cut and dried, is it, either way? But I think it's an immensely important topic because of all the blows that we have received, I'm of the view, I think, that this is the biggest because it's caused the family to become an unhinged thing. Yes.
And it's dangerous. I I'm fortunate, in that I got raised by extremely decent British mum and dad. They were just spot on, and they wouldn't allow us to swear or anything. I got clipped around the ear, so we didn't do that. And we learned certain rules and ground rules, and there was fun, but there was also a line. And I knew where it was, and this was really good. And, that's all gone by the wayside. Yes. And it we're not we're not the stronger for it. Oh, yeah. That other thing where he was saying that the greatest civilizations are the ones that have exercised the greatest sexual chastity.
Once you unleash that, it's the beginning of decay. Because people think, I guess, that instantaneous animal lusts are the most important thing, which is certainly the culture that we're in now. And there was that quote, you know, that I mentioned from Freud when he turned to Bernays when they were arriving in America in the nineteen twenties, and he said, they don't know it yet, but we're bringing them the plague Correct. I e the sexual revolution. And that really is a plague because and you know this, Roger. The that that little tenant in the communist manifesto is to destroy the family, and that's what it done. It's it's very dangerous,
[02:11:49] Unknown:
particularly if we don't know really how to talk about it. I heard a tidbit this morning. Let me ask you if you use your neck of the woods over there. What's your prime minister's name, Starmer?
[02:12:01] Unknown:
Yes. Yeah. Is he mine? Do I have to have one? He They they really want to They claim that he represents you,
[02:12:08] Unknown:
that he was Jimmy Seville's assistant?
[02:12:11] Unknown:
He was, the attorney general, I think, at the time or was in charge of a major law department and ensured that no inquiry took place into Saville's
[02:12:19] Unknown:
behavior. Uh-huh.
[02:12:21] Unknown:
Well, they're all thick as thieves with it. Of course. Had so much stuff on so much depravity in the highest circles of the land that they were protecting him. So they would have put pressure on Starmer whether Starmer was a good I mean, I just think he's warped like the rest of them. Right? Yeah. I mean, he's a man who's had a complete charisma bypass. He probably can't even spell the word charisma. He's just he's a joke. It's he's not even bad. He just shouldn't even be allowed to be a human being at the moment. He's that bad at it. I love that the audience had never seen this.
[02:12:52] Unknown:
There's a there's a video of him trying to go into a pub, and the owner of the pub goes apoplectic. Do not come. Do not let him in here. He drives him away like the money changers out of the temple.
[02:13:05] Unknown:
Yeah. You get out of my pub. You're not welcome here. I'm boss here. Clear off. Brilliant. Yeah. Yep. Most people in this country feel like that about him. Just normal people come up to me. My I don't know if I mentioned my my next door neighbor, Mike, who's a builder. Fantastic guy. Really just a good guy. He doesn't if you told him he was a Christian in terms of his charitable and kindly ways, he would just laugh at you and think you'd gone mad, but he is. And, we were talking the other day and he just said that his son really wants Keir Starmer to be killed.
I said I said, well, I can kind of empathize with that. I said, I think there's a long queue. If he's if he wants to get it done Yep. He's gonna have to take his turn in the queue, you know. But, I think it's of course, he's surrounded by all these imbecilic women. I'm sorry to put it that way. But they're and imbecilic males, they're they're all imbeciles, the lot of them. Yes. They are.
[02:13:57] Unknown:
So very Fun fun. What else? Give us some other because you're over there. You're living that. We've kinda pulled out of it a bit, it would seem. Although, your guys over there, capitulating with Trump yesterday, it appears. So maybe, maybe they'll maybe Trump will straighten him out. You're a little bit lagging on us here instead of leading us. You got any boots on the ground observations from what the the English people or or how are you close to revolution over there or what?
[02:14:30] Unknown:
I'd like to think so. Then I'd like to think not because I think those things turn out to be pretty nasty, don't they? Yeah. They do, really. They just get completely out of hand instantaneously if one was to kick off. But, yeah, I I there is it's hard to describe. Obviously, we never ever really like our prime ministers. This is true. But this is different. This is of a completely different degree, I think. I think this is the people people are seeing, witnessing that we're literally that they're actively working to destroy every aspect of any freedoms that we might have in our life. Uh-huh. And they are. And people's purchasing power is just being absorbed in increases in prices in everything. I mean, you've got the ridiculous situation over there with the price of your eggs. Yes. Our eggs are not so stupidly priced or haven't as risen as badly as yours. And you think, well, it's not all about eggs. No. But I like eggs. I don't why are you interfering with the eggs? What's going on? And this is all about, I think, or to a degree, you know, the the micromanagement of perceived, possibly small issues, but they're not. This is how they corral you and nudge you slowly into a kind of slightly dissolute and dispirited place. They it's this is what they do. Wallach says eggs are the,
[02:15:42] Unknown:
are the most perfect food. Doctor Wallach, you know, in Youngevity.
[02:15:46] Unknown:
Yep. Well, I tend to agree with him. I love him scrambled on a bit of toast. They're very hard to resist to resist.
[02:15:53] Unknown:
Yes. Yes.
[02:15:56] Unknown:
Yeah. And the newspapers today were full of pictures of Starmer with Trump. He he talked some absolute crap, in the clip I saw when he was in the Yeah. Oval Office. I mean, he's just like he's so mealy mouthed and slimy. Can't they see it? Trump should've just sort of said, get out, you wretch, and just hit him. And would I would. Yeah. Because you smack him in the face. Now the king is sensitive. The king has reached out, and he wants to come over and have a sit down with mister chief? The king. King No one thinks of him as the king. Yeah. No one thinks of him as the king. It's just a sort of title. You know, it's just it's ridiculous. He's got nothing kingly about him. He's completely, in my view, totally beholden to the same forces that are in charge of the political scene.
[02:16:40] Unknown:
Back on the woman thing, I want to inject this a minute ago and talking about with them in key positions. The deep state absolutely made a fool out of Bondi on this Epstein stuff. I don't know if you've kept up with that in the last twenty four, forty eight hours, but they really took advantage of her being a female. K? Right. And and, Brent, you may not know this. What evidently has happened is they the the real dirty district in the country, it is no surprise to you, I'm sure, is the Southern District in New York. And this is where they were keeping those offline servers and stuff where they've had all this offline information that they've been destroying.
And so that broke, and, they probably do have backups because you wouldn't take all that Epstein stuff that's so suitable for blackmail material and destroy it. You duplicate it and tell them it was destroyed. So, anyway, that's all going on, and they were supposed to have stuff delivered by her office by 08:30 this morning, and it didn't happen at ten by ten. And they just kinda slapped her in the face a little bit, seems to me. Right.
[02:17:51] Unknown:
Well, I think I mean, if they're talking about releasing names and everything, my my cynical hack goes straight at the top of my head because they've had so long to doctor whatever is going to be the communications pieces around this. Right? Yes. Several months. And, you know, you look back on all of these things. They always say, well, when we get in, we're gonna deal with they never get sent to no one does. They they just can't. And I think the reason why they can't, they can't send them a prison because they've got so much dirt on them. They go, yeah. You could send me a prison. But if you doubt all these documents about you come out through these channels. Oh, that's okay. It's like a Mexican stand up. Say a prayer this time is different. Yeah. I want it to be different. I subscribe to a positivity about it. I just don't wanna sort of go slightly gaga in the process. I think it's, I think it's good to be at least be reminded of an optimistic and positive view. It's something that's been rare for the last most of this century, to be quite honest. It's been quite grim, hasn't it? Oh, yeah. But I'm also I also think, therefore, it makes it a perfect time to for them to take even further advantage of us, when they've softened us up a bit. So they get you know, it's good cop, bad cop, really. I know it's an old cliche, but I think it's true. Personally, I never thought I'd see this day in my lifetime, so I'm ecstatic about it. Even
[02:19:07] Unknown:
well, just the the whole thing. I mean, the whole ball of wax, who it is, how it's come about, how he's changed, the blitzkrieg style, bringing on Elon Musk and all these other people who are politically opposite creatures, Tuncie Tulsi Gabbard, Democrat, Robert Kennedy, Democrat, and they've all converted over into this cadre of pretty impressive folks in the key positions. I think Kash Patel is gonna kick ass. You know? Oh, Bolichino or whatever his name is has been named as an assistant that Mhmm. You know about him, but I I know that's not his name. What's somebody help me. Who's the guy that's assistant?
[02:19:49] Unknown:
Bon Bonjino. Bonjino.
[02:19:52] Unknown:
Thank you very much. Boy, so Oh, yeah. A little long. Bonjino, he's a ass kicker, but guess what? And they've got a couple of clips of them, Paul, and they say, well, as you're, in your office, what's your what's your first feeling? And they go, well, to protect Israel.
[02:20:09] Unknown:
Oh, yeah.
[02:20:12] Unknown:
Both both Patel and, Amangino said that. And I I Colson Gabbard may have said it. I don't know. Stretch, you got you got the conversation in the background. Please mute. Thank you. Uh-huh. Or Tom. It's Tom, I believe.
[02:20:29] Unknown:
Tom. It's lending app atmosphere. Yes.
[02:20:33] Unknown:
Yes. Tom, please mute. Paul, please mute him. Please. Please. Oh, Paul. It's so good to have you around. We got another Paul that's been hanging around from Louisville. Hell, he may call in, and we'll have the three Pauls.
[02:20:50] Unknown:
Well, why not? Three amigos. I heard you talk about you mentioned Norm Eisen as well the other day. I heard you briefly when I was Well, you he's the one So that guy needs to be watched. He needs to be watched. Oh, yeah. L Elias is another one. Mark Elias.
[02:21:04] Unknown:
He he's the the one that runs all the, election stuff in the background and orchestrates a lot of that. Elias, what through the government, nongovernmental organization, NGO, he's the one that got 17 or 20,000,000 to do the Sesame Street for Iran. Right. And it's on YouTube. Nice. Yeah. You know how many views it's got?
[02:21:30] Unknown:
How many? 200.
[02:21:32] Unknown:
Two hundred for 17,000,000. How about that for trade?
[02:21:36] Unknown:
I wish they'd give us 17,000,000, Roger. I think we'd do a bit more than 200 for that. That would be good. We could use that money. One of the biggest.
[02:21:44] Unknown:
Yep. Yeah. Who knows? Well, I can say, well, we could use it a lot more constructively than they do. But, boy, they're, they're, just head over heels. Now look, Paul, I'm gonna tell you, I got to I don't think you know unless Paul told you. I got booked on Jeff Rents for next week. So Jolly good. I'm looking for big time explosions of people around here. K? That audience ought to be like a duck to water with this information I've got. So it's next Thursday night. Cool. That's great. Yeah. I'm I'm thrilled. I'll pick it up on the recording after because it's, like, 03:00 in the morning for me. So I didn't even have to convene on you. Just say, Paul, please send him an email asking to get me on. But the listeners did that, and he responded and seems to be that one of listeners, Thomas, got the right email address. Because he was talking to the board or operator last week. They were open for calls, and he said, well, how can I write him an email? And he gave him the sightings address. And I I've heard him mention it over the years. I know he's UFO oriented and all that. But evidently, that's kind of his home email address. So good for you, Jeff. I'm looking forward to meeting and talking with you, and, we will have a wonderful conversation is my prediction.
[02:22:59] Unknown:
Great. All good stuff. Fantastic.
[02:23:01] Unknown:
Hey. You did a great job over there when you were with him.
[02:23:05] Unknown:
I'm trying to get back on again, but he won't answer my emails. You'll have to give me that email address, I'm sure. He said he he said to me at the end, he said, you don't have to come on, Mark. No. I'm not working with that. I'll do that. I heard it. I remember. Yeah. Does he get a great show? You know? It's like a lover's tiff. I don't know what to think. You know? Well, who knows? I need counseling, Roger.
[02:23:21] Unknown:
I know. Well, we'll take the shot and do the best we can with it. So, I'm excited about it, of course. I mean, I've only been trying to get on the show for fifteen years, so it's quite an accomplishment or a goal for me. Yeah. Great. No. That's really good stuff. I'm pleased for you. I hope it goes well. I'm sure it will. Mhmm. I am too. Yeah. We we got a lot in common, broadcast stuff and this, that, and the other. And he was he was very kind and complimentary in our exchange yesterday. And, and he said, let's talk next, Tuesday or Wednesday. And, yeah, I sent him the video that I think is probably the best I've done, and, he said he listened to it. So, I think we're off and running here. I'm very excited.
Although, I hate to get expectations because I've had shots before and had expectations from them. And to this point, I've been mostly disappointed. Mhmm. So you don't try to have expectations. Just alright. It's a fine audience. It's a very established 30 year old seasoned audience. Three hours a night every week for thirty years. I don't even think Jeff takes a vacation.
[02:24:34] Unknown:
No. I don't know what he's on. Must be that to Allison c stuff all the time. It's all garlic, I guess. Yeah. Well, he's into something.
[02:24:41] Unknown:
So Yeah. Anyway, things are going pretty good. I'm just real pleased. Never thought I'd see this and, just loving what we got going here. And I I love working with you and our Paul and, the the camaraderie we've got around here and the flexibility and freedom. And, man, I'm like, one of those one of those pigs with Brent in the slop bucket.
[02:25:06] Unknown:
Yeah. Well yeah. No. It's great. It's really good. I mean, we've got to sort of over here reinstitute trial by jury. Yeah. Yeah. We've got to reinstitute all this stuff. I mean, the thing one of the things recently that's been occurring to me again, you know, you go through periods where you don't dwell on these things all the time. You go bonkers if you do. But it's looking at the fact that many of the challenges, that we have today were actually resolved and sorted for a long time in history. You go back, you go, oh, look. They were doing it right then. Yep. And, of course, they all get worn out. And, people get deceived primarily because of the seduction of money, I would suspect Big info. Over a long period. Yeah. That's really what it is. Mhmm. And, it's unfortunate. But, yeah, I need to know more. I started I I got a hold of, Blackstone's Commentaries on the Law and read about 10 or 15 pages. And I thought, oh, I can understand this. Uh-huh. And I thought, but have I got time to read 2,400 pages?
Well, maybe I do. I don't know. So it's not on top of my reading list. But Brent makes the point that when the the the pilgrims came over and founded New England,
[02:26:13] Unknown:
it was to establish a base where they could go back and take England over. Okay? Well, maybe that's gonna happen all these years later. And we'll just go over and have an influence on you, hopefully, from the things that are gonna outgrow what's going on right now as the worm has turned here.
[02:26:30] Unknown:
We don't mind. I don't think anybody would really mind because certainly nobody from these shores represents us, but that's been true for a long time. Yeah. You know? And, they don't. And I also heard the other day you've gotta have a you gotta be 18 to buy a knife and over there
[02:26:46] Unknown:
now? Do you? That's what I heard.
[02:26:49] Unknown:
Alright. Okay. Probably. Well, kitchen knives or something. I mean, the the number one cause of sort of violent crime is domestic fury in the kitchen, usually. That's where they're used. I have no idea how they're supposed to police that. They just say things to the left and think it's just gonna happen, and it's just this is what makes it so tiresome.
[02:27:06] Unknown:
Are cars next? I mean, they they're on the agenda, I guess. They're gonna ban them next or, all that stuff. I mean, it's just crazy. They don't ever go back and address the cause. They just try and do all these circumvention moves that don't make any damn sense.
[02:27:22] Unknown:
Well, they they do from their perspective, but not from this perspective of common sense, do they? They don't. No. Not from our perspective. These guys are done, man. I I I think they're on their way absolutely over the cliff.
[02:27:33] Unknown:
And at some point, it is my honest to God prayer that the good Lord allows me to participate in helping to shove them over a cliff.
[02:27:44] Unknown:
Yes. I think that would be a good use of anybody's time and particularly someone like yourself. Yeah. They they need to be
[02:27:50] Unknown:
sectioned is what I say. You know? Not cut into pieces, although I know people want to do that. But I just they need to be put aside. Well, I I mean, they're they're dictating the remedy. Okay? It's not my remedy. That wouldn't be my choice. They're the ones that are dictating the remedy because that's the only thing they understand.
[02:28:08] Unknown:
Yes. This is true. Yep. Well, we're early we're still pretty early on into 02/2025, and it's been quite a couple of months, hasn't it? So there's still a long way to go. I came across that speech by Jeffrey Sachs. I don't know if you saw it in Europe last week. Fantastic. Is it Bruce? I mean, I like anything he does. Twenty five minutes long it was, where he was just going through the entire the true history of the reason why the Ukraine situation is what it is. Yeah. And if you don't have the run up to these things, you end up talking about it like the BBC talk about it, which is just complete childish gibberish. It's it's without any sense. But it's always been like that when there's a war going on. They just talk complete nonsense and propaganda and get everybody whipped up into a frenzy. And they can't no one can think. But it's brilliant. Absolutely brilliant speech by him. Yeah. Fantastic. He's a really sharp guy. I don't care what ethnicity he is. He's on my team, I hope. Well, I think so. I think he's on the team of common sense. Yeah. And Naomi Wolf has crossed over. Or have you heard her talk?
No.
[02:29:17] Unknown:
She was a big Democratic. She was Hillary Clinton's prime advisor and stuff, and she's totally crossed over. She's a real intellectual. Alex has had her on several times, and, boy, she's sharp as a jack. Naomi Wolf.
[02:29:33] Unknown:
Yeah. I'm familiar with them. Yeah. Well, if these people can be aligned, if we can all be aligned with, with the laws of God, we've got a chance. But if we can't be, we've still got a lot of trouble to deal with, it seems to me. Seems that even some of the diehard libs are crossing over and seeing that
[02:29:51] Unknown:
they ain't got a chance if you don't come over here. K? Yeah. And we don't have a future at all along that path. Is it rats fleeing a sinking ship? I There's gotta be some element of that. I mean, you got these pollsters on. They've been doing polling for twenty, thirty years, and they go, we've never seen anything like this. The Democratic party's just done it. And they can they refuse to course correct, and they're just going right down. So cross your fingers. Well, you know, I Yeah. Why? Have a small influence, but nothing like has been.
[02:30:27] Unknown:
I think the point that Brent made about an hour ago when he was just talking about the Democrats, basically, they just take money off everybody and redistribute it is is a key part of the whole thing. And I think one of the reasons why we can't get to the right remedy is that that's the job they want to carry on doing. They want to carry on doing that. That's how they see themselves. Yeah. And because they see themselves in that light, they view themselves as modern day saints. And everybody that goes against that, you're evil and you're a racist and you're a conservative and blah blah blah. And it's all nonsense. It's absolutely the opposite as usual because as Brent told us, Satan the definition of Satan is the distributor of wealth.
[02:31:07] Unknown:
That's them.
[02:31:08] Unknown:
Demon, I think he said. Wasn't it? Okay. Who
[02:31:11] Unknown:
Yeah. We said Satan or whatever about a while back, but that that distributor of wealth. And the first thing that hit me was, of course, Social Security and how they made such a big effort to get that imposed back after, they took over in '33. And, also the biblical story that we got one day years ago with Brent and I on the word core band. You're familiar with that. Right, Paul? Remind me. You've I've heard you mention it before. Well, it's a word that I'd never seen before. The guy that wrote the first review of my book years ago, wrote some articles. It was on dollar vigilante, and he wrote another one that said, Jesus is an arc or, anarchist.
And in the article, he used the word core band. I've never seen it before. I was curious. I went on the web, and I really couldn't get a good feel for it. It just said, oh, Jesus used it twice. You, have have invoked Corban and broken laws of Moses and all this. And so I mentioned it on the show one day with Brent here, early on. Alright? And he goes, well, let me see what I wrote about it in my study bible here in the footnotes. Well, how interesting. Turns out that, Paul, you'll be shocked. The Pharisees were corrupting the youth. No. Back in that day, they corrupted the youth, and the the, laws of Moses were that the parents would live with the children in their old age, and throughout their lifetime, they would save and they'd have valuables, and the children would sell the valuables to, take care of the parents as they grew old.
Well, what happened was the Pharisees would corrupt the youth, and they get them to report what valuables were in the house to the Pharisees. And they would declare it's Korban, which is kinda like seizure and self help remedies. And they would declare it the property of the temple, and they'd come grab it. And they'd take it back to the temple, and they'd sell it to support the social system. Never heard that before. And that if you converted to Christianity, you were kicked out of the social system. There's Social Security right there.
[02:33:30] Unknown:
Yes. Yeah. Yeah. They have to provide it. They don't want God providing it to you. No. Are you earning it
[02:33:38] Unknown:
and strengthening yourself in character and body and soul and spirit by earning it yourself? And having pride in something that you've done.
[02:33:48] Unknown:
Yeah. And I think it may have got more difficult for them in the communications sphere because technological advancements are such that if anybody spends a few minutes away from the mainstream news as it were and thinks about the true state of things, it's obviously true that we can now make as many clothes, cars, good food as required. We could actually do that without the interference of the people who pose as the problem solvers. They're always telling us there's a problem. Well, they're right. It's just that it's not it's not the external. It's their internal operation. Right. Yeah. It's the way that they're put together. Excellent. They're absolutely right. It's you. And when they say, Tikam Olam, peace in the world, at the end of that, it will kill yourself. Mhmm. You know? That's why I Did you ever ask a bit heavy? We're talking about yesterday, Joseph Sobran. You're you're familiar with any of these dead? Yes. Yeah. Great essayist. Oh, you okay. You know? Oh, he's a fantastic writer.
[02:34:40] Unknown:
Yeah. Do you remember his his saying, antisemitism is not someone who hates Jews. Antisemitism is someone who Jews hate. Yep. And then he said, antisemitism is a disease. You catch it from Jews.
[02:34:57] Unknown:
Yes. It's true. Yeah. Yeah. It is. And it's been very effective. Unfortunately, it has been and continues to be quite effective. Because I think it it plays on this guilt thing that we've got. We've been conditioned to feel guilty for some reason. Yeah. And and it's very strong. It's very powerful. And And we have to make up for it for all these wicked things that we've done. Yeah. And it's true. There have been wicked things done. But there's also been I I would say in the positive column, it's dwarfed by the positives.
[02:35:28] Unknown:
But, of course, you're not supposed to talk about those. But there we go. The other thing you mentioned last night that I thought was really interesting, I'm glad you dropped by there. You would touch on it, was the dancing part of how the old formal dances were. They're square dances. Brent was talking about square dancing on here a couple of weeks ago. Doceo and promenade home. And and and you were talking about ballroom dancing. Come on. It's got your female guest made a comment or two on it. But while you were talking about that, I was thinking about my tango experience in Argentina. Uh-huh.
All those things, man. They just yeah. And and like you were talking about not going to the bar, and it's loud and you can't talk. And you you twenty minutes and you're ready to leave, and I agree with you. So I thought that was interesting too.
[02:36:14] Unknown:
Yeah. I think in these little small moments, what we think are, you know, the small bits that go to make up everybody's life, you begin to see where the goodness lies. And and it's it's on the little things being, pushed away from us that all the distress comes in. It's just like, don't make a mess with that, and they do. And they're messing with things all the time, just plotting and messing. And, you know, it's only on a small level I can cope with it. Why should you cope with it? Why don't we just have it clean, straight, and direct like we want? That's you. I think I told you I was watching a bunch of videos on Rome,
[02:36:47] Unknown:
a phase a while back, and one of them was talking about one of the Roman emperors that was very sympathetic to the Jews. And he let them come in. He brought them into Rome proper, and he gave them a building where they could hold religious services. And he caught them plotting to overthrow him in there.
[02:37:04] Unknown:
Yep.
[02:37:06] Unknown:
But it tends to be them. It's just It is. It's them.
[02:37:10] Unknown:
That's it. The priestly class, if that's the right way to describe them, that's what they do. We we've got a booklet that I keep reading out from called Foreigners. It's very funny. It's written by two stout, very clear minded, and very bossy English ladies in the nineteen thirties. Okay. And the assessment of the Jews is amazing. It's actually amazing. It really is. It's very direct. It's also sympathetic in parts. It understands certain qualities and all that kind of stuff. But it one of the one of the things it says is whenever any miss from memory, it says, whenever it whenever any misfortune befalls a Christian country, the Jews have done it. That's what it says. Yeah. He says they plot, and they plot and plot and plot. Nobody knows why, but they just can't stop. They can't. They're always
[02:37:55] Unknown:
Maurice Maurice Samuels was a really, big writer for the Jews in the last century around the nineteen thirties. And he one of the books he wrote is called O You Gentiles. And he just right out in there, he goes, we Jews were the destroyers. That's his statement, not mine. Yep. I know.
[02:38:15] Unknown:
I mean, it's not entirely them as well. It's a it's a tricky topic to talk about over here, but I'm not over here, am I? I'm in America right now. Yes. So, you know what I mean? So but it is. It's tricky. And, it's always worth testing it out with people, but the layers of guff around people's minds are so considerable that you They've done a job. Whoo. Yeah. It's very effective.
[02:38:37] Unknown:
They've set up all these defenses like like, I'm gonna play you can say that, I'm gonna play this card. You get past that, we're gonna play this card. They just got it all laid out, man.
[02:38:46] Unknown:
Mhmm. Yeah.
[02:38:49] Unknown:
Yeah. They kinda do. Well, Paul, we've dominated the conversation. Haven't heard from Brent. Anybody got anything to add or ask?
[02:38:56] Unknown:
Well, I wanna ask something. Yes, sir. Please. This is Chris. This is Chris. Did, hold on. Brent first.
[02:39:03] Unknown:
Alright. Hold on, Chris. Brent first. Chris, this is quick. This is quick.
[02:39:07] Unknown:
Paul, did you say you're in America right now?
[02:39:10] Unknown:
Yes. On the airwaves, in the Internet. That's what I meant. Oh, okay. Okay. In this communication space for Yeah. For for legal purposes, I'm actually on the airwaves in America. That's what's really going on. Right? I want my steak. I'd I'd went out of the way to do it a little if I could've if I'd known where you were. But thank you. Apart from the fact that I've got this abscess and therefore couldn't chew it. But, the offer would be heartily, taken up. It's a wonderful idea, and I'd love to sit down one day and have a steak with you. Maybe two if I was really hungry. It sounds great. It sounds really, really good that. Yeah. I'll be praying. I'll be praying in that direction.
[02:39:48] Unknown:
Thank you. Love it. Yeah. I'd love for all of us to get together. Chris, Chris is one of our newer listeners. He's out in California. What you got, Chris?
[02:39:56] Unknown:
Well, I wanted to get the title of that book that Paul was referring to that was written by those, two ladies regarding, the
[02:40:04] Unknown:
Jews. Okay. It's called Foreigners or the World in a Nutshell. And I'll read you a bit from it if you want if you got a minute. Alright? Hang on. Sure. It's really fun. What's the introductions? The introduction I won't go through the whole thing. It's a bit on the English view of the Americans. These things are wonderfully politically incorrect. They're very funny. The women are called, they've got great names, Theodora Benson and Betty Asquith. Right? And it's called Foreigners or the World in a Nut Shell. It's a very sort of haughty, snotty British view of everybody else, but it's kind of brisk and to the point. What does it say here at the beginning? Oh, it's probably not, it just says this little book is our contribution to world peace. We have considered the idea that this is beneath an Englishman's dignity to understand other nations. And as we have not reached a definite conclusion on the subject, we are working upon an ingenious and valuable compromise. So and it's all about this sort of you've got to just do it our way type stuff. Okay? But the bid on the let me just find this here.
I, I just had it here. I'll read the bit on the Jews. It's very inter I won't read all of it. It's quite long, this one. It just says the Jews. And, they write, Jews are an inscrutable and disheartening people who celebrate Sunday on Saturday. Oriental Jews wear beards, and Occidental Jews wear diamonds. The Jews are sinister. It is well known that there that any catastrophe arising in any Christian country is the work of the Jews. They are behind everything, pulling strings. They plot. They plot from generation to generation with single hearted devotion. No one knows why. They do incalculable harm, but on the other hand, they are necessary and no country is any good without them. Every country has the Jews it deserves. England has the best Jews, but although ours are all right, we are broad minded and can sympathize with other countries such as Poland whose Jews are not so hot and thus constitute a problem. It's very it's very confidently put, isn't it? Crystal clear.
It says, although Jews are responsible for everything that goes wrong in any Christian country, the worst thing a Christian country can do is to persecute Jews. This is curious because persecuting other Christians, if not exactly all right, can in most cases be readily overlooked. Massacring Armenians is not so bad as persecuting Jews. The former practice is adequately rebuked by a chill frown, but the latter calls for loud and repeated protests, mass meetings, and abusive campaigns in the press. Christian races must learn that with all the world to persecute, other Christian races just won't stand for their picking on the Jews. It says Jews are accurate. That's very accurate. It is. It's really you know, it's it's not just all one way. It's even handed but firm.
They go on. She said, Jews are very clever, very musical, and very artistic. Music and the other arts would not be much heard of without them. And what would be rather more serious, the theater would not be able to get on at all. Jews do not partake of the edible products of the pig and subsist mainly upon a mysterious substance known as kosher, which which I loved. I really quite like that. Jews are extremely proud of being Jews, and in their hearts look down on Christians with great contempt. On the other hand, it is very rude and tactless if you allow a Jew to see that you believe him to be a Jew. Jews cringe to an extent that is almost indecent. Jews have great dignity.
The word gabardine, this is to do with a mac over here, raincoat, is is to do with England, I think, is well known in connection with Jews. But this garment does not seem to figure prominently in social intercourse with them, and it has not yet been ascertained where and when it is actually worn. Everyone knows, however, that Jews wear their hats in church. Any any tremendously long, dull novel about Jews is bound to succeed. It's just funny. That is silly. I'm really in the end. So yeah. It's fantastic. The last couple of paragraphs, they write, Jews work very hard and they all make money. They are a very dominant type, a, physically obvious and b, economically subterranean.
Jews keep pawn shops. They lend money at exorbitant rates of usury adopting for the purpose Scottish names. This is. So funny. No one expects nowadays to come upon funny business with pounds of flesh. This would be as out of date and fanciful as to believe that the retaliatory customs still obtain of spitting upon Jews or drawing out their teeth. Jews, however, are undoubtedly very cunning and get the better of Christians with discreditable and ruthless dexterity. These gains they spend on being immensely generous to other poorer Jews. Jews thrive upon persecution. This may throw light on why it is iniquitous for Christians to persecute Jews.
There you go. That's their entry. They don't print books like that anymore, Roger. Boy, they sure don't.
[02:45:08] Unknown:
No. Well, they're being exposed, and they're screaming. Trump's totally surrounded by them. I don't. I've heard you can't get an appointment with him if you're not a Zionist. You've got people, like I said a minute ago, with, Cash Patel and Bongino coming out saying, what's your first loyalty? Israel. I don't think loyalty was the word they used, but both of them, first word out of their mouth Israel is, of course. And, so anybody, I guess, that expects any kind of world political movement or or or office like the president of our country that isn't gonna have the influence in there, you're just naive. It's just like that lady said, they're in every country.
K? Mhmm. And and this was something I found interesting watching a guy named Rick Steves who used to do a lot of European travel stuff, and he's got a bunch of YouTubes and stuff. And in one of the episodes, he was, in one of the cities over there in in Europe, and he's talking about the ghettos. I didn't know the Jews built the ghettos. I thought we built the ghettos for them. They built them.
[02:46:14] Unknown:
Yep. True. Yeah. I better not read it out, the one on who else is it? The list is there's a list of all of them. There's the Negroes. I'd better not read that one out. It might upset people. It's very funny. Maybe not. I don't know. And then there's the Americans. So it's their assessment of Americans. And then towards the end is a chapter called what the Americans know about the English, what the continent knows about the English, what the English know about themselves. It's all really rather witty. And nearly every chapter ends with the in in certain nationality, the Germans have no sense of humor, or the Austrians have no the English have no one has a sense of humor according to them. So it's quite funny.
Yeah. It's a great book. It's wonderfully, wonderfully politically incorrect and therefore hilarious because of it. Yeah. It's tremendous. But there's truth in it as well.
[02:47:07] Unknown:
Paul Paul, please, repeat the name of the book again. I'll put it on the chat.
[02:47:13] Unknown:
Sure. You can get it at archive.org if you search for it. Okay? So it's that's where I've got a PDF of it from. It is called, let me read it out the full title, Foreigners or the World in a Nutshell. Mhmm. Foreigners or the World in a Nutshell by Theodora Benson and Betty Asquith, published according to this 1935 in London. Wow. Bless you. And it's hard. It's just hilarious. It's fantastic. It's really very, very funny. It just basically dismisses everybody else. There's nothing really up to it. It's very interesting on the English, though. It says that we're not clever, and and I know what they mean. They're we're not clever. But, apparently, we've got loads of character. This is the thing that others don't have. We've got loads of that, but we're not very we're not cunning. We don't do that sort of thing. Although, of course, there are others that would say otherwise. I understand that.
[02:48:02] Unknown:
I'm not sure all the colonies would agree with them.
[02:48:06] Unknown:
No. I guess not. You'll find it it's there's something extremely flattering, isn't there, about reading what about what other people think about you? It's it's kind of compelling to sort of view your own people or get a view from people of another race or another culture. Like the French is very funny. What what does he say here? Tremendous advances have been made since the days when all that was known about the French was that they are a polite people fond of dancing and light wine. Indeed, there are few people about whom we know more. We have even unlearned a little. For instance, it is no longer believed that the French eat snails and frogs daily. Less certainty is felt about revising the opinion that Frenchmen kiss each other on the boulevards whenever two male acquaintances meet. Of course, it is not the nonstop phenomenon it was once known to be, but the fact does remain that Frenchmen kiss each other in public. And it goes, the French are very clever. They are. They are both intellectual and intelligent. This is, of course, most undesirable.
Brains generally imply something false, unsound, and shabby, and it is well known that it is character that counts. Not all this brains nonsense. We don't want any of that. It's a real insight. It's fantastically funny. As regards character, the French are sadly deficient. A leading piece of knowledge concerns their meanness. They are fanatically mean. Frenchman know each other for years without ever being asked into each other's houses for a bite to eat or for a snort to drink. It is justly remembered in their defense, however, that that one of the reasons that the French are so inhospitable to foreigners is that the foyer is really too sacred to ask people to. So this is the entrance hall into the house. It's a sacred part of the house. You can't invite anybody in. It's very funny. I mean, it's very light touch by today's things, but it's,
[02:50:02] Unknown:
'tis amusing. Yep. I agree. Thanks for bringing it forward. I gotta go. I've got a dental appointment this afternoon too, unfortunately. Good luck.
[02:50:11] Unknown:
Just asking for antibiotics,
[02:50:12] Unknown:
Roger, and I'll work out. Yeah. Just say give me plenty of drugs. No. I did I had an implant last week. It's just a follow-up to that. But Alright. Okay. I got a bunch of major stuff ahead. So, anyway, not not fun, not cheap, and, not not something I'm looking forward to, but it's one of those things you just gotta do. You know? And and you go back and any kid that asked me, what do you have? Why? Take care of your teeth, first thing.
[02:50:39] Unknown:
Do you want me to read you the opening two paragraphs of the Dutch before you go? Yes. I think so. Let me just read you the Dutch. For any Dutch people descended from Dutch people, this is just I haven't read this one before. I was just looking at it. The Dutch. The Dutch are fat and fair and jolly. They all eat and drink enormously, but this is not gross as in the case of the Germans. It is comic and a part of their general jollity. They are hospitable, and this means that if entertained by a Dutchman, you must eat and drink to bursting point too. The Dutch, especially historically, have much in common with the English. They are Protestant and tough and good colonizers and good sailors. And so just are the English that it is well known how a Dutch admiral named Van Tromp once swept them out of somewhere by the device of tying a broom to his masthead.
On the other hand, Holland is a more bourgeois country than England, full of plain, prosperous men and unfashionable women. And it goes on. I think you'll love it anyway. Anybody that gets a copy, you'll love it. It's to be dabbled in. You can just hop around the different nationalities and get their withering and rather humorous and sarcastic assessments of these people, which is oh, I'll read you the Belgians because it's three lines. Literally, the Belgians. Belgium is little and gallant. Belgians talk bad French and worse Dutch and are dirty. They probably talk good Flemish, but what use is that anyway? They eat horse.
That's it. That's the entire entry for the Belgians. Oh,
[02:52:05] Unknown:
Yikes. What a joy and delight to have you drop by and spend some time with us. I just, enjoy it so much, and, I know others do too. And, Paul, please, as I've told you in the past, you've got a red carpet. Anytime you wanna drop by, we always enjoy it. So, thank you for letting me hold the mic for a bit. Thank you. Appreciate it. Thank you too, Brent. We're we're a big Well, you know, I appreciate it. It's like a family for me. You know, my mom's gone now, estranged from my brother. You folks are my family. Okay? And that's the way I look at it.
[02:52:40] Unknown:
Yeah. We feel the same way, Roger. Appreciate the comment. Thank you. Also, Paul, yeah, we appreciate you dropping in. I I always get a lot a lot out of it. I think that Paul's a good example. I'm talking to everybody. Paul's a good example of a man that has something to say, and the reason he's got something to say is because he's reading all the time. Yes. I that's my belief. I I I meet him on like that. That's what I conclude about him. There may be exceptions, and you may be the exception. But, no, I think you read a lot. That's my conclusion.
[02:53:11] Unknown:
Well, I'll tell you what I'm reading now, Brent. Uh-huh. Because I I it's an area of history. I'm completely, although I'm now eighty eighty pages more the wiser. Uh-huh. A book called God's Battalions, which is about the Crusades, and it's fantastic. It's it's written for the layman, which therefore means it's written well as far as far as far as I'm concerned. Right. Because it's crystal clear. I am absolutely flying through it, and there are so many myths and misunderstandings about what caused all that. And, I can talk about I'll come on and talk about it at length in a couple of weeks' time as well. Please come on. Give us a book report.
I I I will. I wanna do it on my show too because it's it's that good. Particularly, the cost of sending a knight down there is unbelievable. People go, oh, they were just a bunch of looters going down. They were not. These people gave up castles and their entire fortunes to send a knight or knights from the family down there. They had to go with three horses, at least. The battle horse and two pack horses. Then they needed servants to look after the pack horses. Then they needed money to pay for fodder along the way because it's two and a half thousand miles on a horse to get there. But even before you started fighting, all the all the money they had was in coin, so it was heavy metal.
Yeah. So they would put it in a so they had to pay for another division to put all the money from all the knights in this big metal cask, which they would carry on a car or on another horse. They had to pay for that too. It cost a bloody fortune. They went bankrupt doing this. Not bad. It's quite amazing. And the first one, sixty thousand set off, 15,000 arrived. Forty five thousand died along the way. Just to give you an idea what we're talking about. The logistics of it, once you start looking at it, you go, holy moly. It's unbelievable. It's a quite remarkable story. And knights were not pleasant people. I'm telling you. You go, oh, that's serious.
They would just unleash hell at the drop of a hat. And, the pope managed to get them on side with it because he said to them because this had been going on for four hundred years, the spread of Islam around the Mediterranean, literally killing Christians for three, four hundred years, and he just had enough. That is understandable. And he said to them, he said, look. You spend all your life training to become a knight, and then you spend most of your active life killing one another. Why don't we stop that? I'm just paraphrasing in modern parlance. Right? Why don't we stop that and go down there and deal with the real enemy? Because if we don't stop it, it's coming into Europe. And the big battle, one of the big ones, as Charles Martel, which was fought at Tours about July or the late seven hundreds, It was for 150 miles south of Paris. Yes. That's how far they got in. It's incredible, this stuff. And and you need all these details to build up a real picture of what was going on.
So it's a a thrilling book. I have to because I know I know so little about it. So it's like going into a new world and seeing things. And, you get the same themes. And there was an interesting thing about the structure of the Catholic church. He makes a very good comment. I think the the author's called Rodney Stark. He makes a brilliant comment about Constantine when he took over Christianity or thought he had, but he did a great disservice to it, because it was being developed in family meetings, layman meetings in houses, right up to the point that Constantine decided to sort of corporatize it and bring it into the whole of the state power of the Roman Empire.
And it created what he suggests are basically two types of churches. The church of piety, which were the true people devoted to the word, and the church of the corporation, which was the worldly power of the Roman, empire at its service. And it's fascinating. It it really is because the pope, the the knights that went down, renounced all of the wealth of the Roman Empire and went for absolutely spiritual and racial preservation purposes. And that's why they were so formidable when they got there. Even though they arrived, many of them very diseased, riddled with worms, you just look at it, you go, holy moly. It's absolutely remarkable. It really is. And so, you know, it redefines the word fortitude and endurance. I'm going, bloody bloody hell. It's quite a thing. Time. Yes. Yep. Anyway,
[02:57:25] Unknown:
I'll fill you more of that as we get to the end of it. So I'll give you a report on that. Okay. We'll look forward to it. Brent, as always, buddy, just love love seeing you on Fridays, and we'll look for you next week, Paul. You got the invite. Drop in anytime. K? Thank you. I will. Alright. Well, I just and everything. Good luck with your tooth there. I hope the pain's gone. Oh, the drugs are working already. I love antibiotics, Roger. Fantastic. Okay. Well That's good news, and, we'll chat soon. We will. Thank you, buddy. Thank you very much. Love all of you. Thank you. Ciao.
[02:57:59] Unknown:
Hey, Paul. I was wondering, if you could, when you do your expose on, the the crusades, could you get into the Cathars and what they did?
[02:58:14] Unknown:
And I I if it's in this book if it's in this book, I will. The author in the forward or the introduction says, he put this book together. It's not meant to be an academic footnoted book. There are plenty of footnotes in it. What he's done is distilled these big histories of it and made it understandable to the layman, which I think is a is a much more everybody thinks that that's easy. I think it's an an immense challenge to do that. And I think it's where you get this real vitality. If he covers it, I'll be interested. Paul? Paul? Yeah. Brent. We're absolutely here. Yes, sir. One more thing. I would request from you
[02:58:54] Unknown:
that at some point that put out for everybody here a book of re or a list of required reading. Half a dozen books, maybe a dozen, but half a dozen of books you think that folk ought to read, men ought to read to understand Yes. What you think I I would like that. And I think other people, there are probably books there I haven't read. And if you would do that, that'd be helpful, I believe, to a lot of us. Will you do that? I will. I'll do that. And just to let you know, I've I've started nibbling around reading your book.
[02:59:26] Unknown:
Oh. Okay? Yeah. Yeah. I I am and I am gonna read it, and I've decided you're gonna hate me for what I'm about to say. I'm not going to read too many of the footnotes as I go through. They're overwhelming to me. Right? Yeah. The I mean, it's absolutely it's colossally impressive. I'm going, holy moly. Right? Yeah. And I've had the book for three years. I keep looking at the footnotes going, it's six point type. I can't deal with that. But I've been the thing was we I was looking at Blackstone the other week. You you'd mentioned it. And I went and read some of the Blackstone stuff, and then I was reading a short 14 page essay on trial by jury that got it across to me. I had a big clunk click about this power of juries that they're literally the highest law in the land when they're making decisions because they can redefine the law. And that by going away from that, we have ended up suffering government corporatism and this complete hijacking a movement away from true justice. And, I don't know how we are supposed to return to that, but I'm I'm very keen on it. So that's why I'm gonna plunge into your book, Brent. Oh, good. And, yeah, I just I pick like, slice bread, pick out a section that interests you and start out that way.
Yep. But whatever you like to do. Well, I would talk about that, please.
[03:00:34] Unknown:
Go ahead, Joe.
[03:00:38] Unknown:
And go ahead. What you was talk back to what you were talking about about the Muslim invasion into Europe. You know? That was that was the only thing that saved Christianity as we know it. Because Alright. The the papal government, king Charles and the papal government had amassed their armies to slay all of the protesters, the protestants. And it was the Muslim invasion is the only thing that stopped that. Because he has to divert his he he had to divert his troops to fight the Muslims instead of, beheading and executing the Christians.
Fact.
[03:01:29] Unknown:
Did the Jews start Where where did you get that where do you get that fact from? Could I go and is there somewhere you could point me to so that I could check that out? I'm not I'm not disagreeing with you. I'd just like to know. It it's it's something that I've read in the past and, you know Okay. I've seen it I've seen it done.
[03:01:45] Unknown:
The information's out there. It's just very well hidden.
[03:01:49] Unknown:
You you just kinda have to root it down. I can't I'm sorry. I can't point to a specific deal. That's okay. Don't worry about it. I'm often the same. I It One of the things that I've realized recently in plowing through all my files is that I need to create an a reference archive for myself because I keep looking for things that I know are in my head from, like, ten years ago, and I can't find the bloody things. And I'm going, this is ridiculous. It's getting
[03:02:10] Unknown:
out of hand. It's just like I I'll have a look. I was talking to a fellow yesterday that got his degree in world history fifty years ago. He had never heard of Caesarea. So so, you know, they they bury this stuff. They bury it. Bury it, I guess, is the word. Sorry. Thank you for the time.
[03:02:34] Unknown:
No. No. That's great. It's a really good comment that you make, and you've sparked a few things off there in my head. There's a there's a historian over here. I think he's passed away now called, Julian Norwich. I think that's his name. He's written multiple books on the history of the Byzantine Empire. And, I've got one of them, but the print's too small. I'm getting very cross when I keep buying books and they turn up, and they're like in eight point type. And I'm going, I'm not gonna bend my eyes out of my head to try and read this stuff. So one thing I'm I'm kind of interested in is actually doing my own prints of these books in decent sized type, well laid out so that you can read them for the rest of your life. I think it's quite important. But he's done comprehensive study on on the Byzantine Empire. And that nails back into the observation that Pound, Ezra Pound made about the Byzantines and why it lasted so long. It's the longest lasting empire that we know of, so I am told, so I have read, certainly Pound said that, is that they banned aliens from any positions of power in government, education, banking, and the law. Couldn't get a job there. They wouldn't allow it. And therefore, they were able to maintain their moral code, their ethical code, their Christian code, of course, much duplicity.
Holy moly. It's like Shakespeare on steroids. It really is. You know, it's just nothing but backstabbing and coveting power and all this kind of stuff. It goes with it. But that safeguard was a thing that Pound observed, and he said, this is how you would contain the Edomite issue. They must be forbidden to occupy any positions of power in your nations. They can live there peacefully. But if you let them get power, you're finished. And I think this is true. History would tend to show that. Mhmm.
[03:04:13] Unknown:
Can you spell the last name, please? Thank
[03:04:17] Unknown:
you. The last name. Which last name? Sorry.
[03:04:20] Unknown:
That's the Byzantine author.
[03:04:23] Unknown:
Oh, yes. It's Julian, I think Norwich, as in the city here in England, N O R W I C H, Norwich.
[03:04:32] Unknown:
K.
[03:04:33] Unknown:
Which which is also a vulgar acronym over here, which I will not say on public radio and shock all the ladies, but it's actually it's an acronym for something.
[03:04:41] Unknown:
And the title of the book again that, Julian wrote?
[03:04:46] Unknown:
There's a just look for a search on him. He wrote many. Okay. Thanks. He wrote you'll just search for him or search put in Norwich, the Byzantine Empire. He's he's he's noted as I mean, he died only recently about ten or fifteen years ago, I think, and he was a lord over here. So he had his entire life. I I don't hold that against him. He he he strikes me as a great guy, and he wrote all this kind of stuff. And it's extremely detailed, from direct sources and all this kind of stuff. You build up a very comprehensive view of what was going on in that part of the world at the time.
[03:05:18] Unknown:
Thank you, Paul. And one more comment on the Cathars. I think it was the Cathars where the term kill them all and let God sort them out came from. And I was just Is that right? What I heard was that the the knights came back from the first crusades, and then they wanted them to go back and kill all the Cathars. And, they the pope said, yes. You you should go back and kill them, and you can take all their property, but you have to swear allegiance to the pope to that the the land
[03:05:55] Unknown:
is owned by the pope. I yield Yeah. I think I'm gonna get into that. I think, yeah, there'll be something in there. I know that they could have had a crusade. I mean, certainly, Stark makes the case. It's not that they were unaware of the Muslim slaughter of these Christian coastal cities. It it went on for a long time. It began about 06/1950 because they got all the way into Spain and elsewhere, all over the place. And so he was fully aware of it and they were trying to actually get a crusade going, I think, in the August or even the early nine hundreds. Couldn't because the knights were extremely keen on booty.
They were extremely keen. They would go off and fight as long as they could pick up all your stuff. That's what most warriors did at the time. And there was no promise of that. And the difference, certainly, with this first crusade incited by Urban, Pope Urban, who was a Frenchman, I forgot his real name, was that it was about actually, defending the people of God, whatever one may think of the Catholic church. And I've got views about it as well. It's not perfect by any means. But this is our history, and you need to look at it for what it was and the people under those circumstances. So, you know, you can we can point the finger in every direction at every group of people all the time, I think.
We can, but there's a thread of good people through all of these events. So yeah. The from from the first eighty or 90 pages that I've read of this thing, these guys basically almost like mortgaged their entire family farms to equip knights to go down there. It was very, very expensive, incredibly expensive. They were away for two years. And they had to feed all their all their retinue and all their servants for two years while they're just walking around not creating any wealth, but just killing people. They were very good at it when they got there, by the way, which is one of those things. And there's all this talk about technology and stuff. There's some very interesting things as well about the architecture that we assume the Moors designed and built in Spain.
This is probably not true. They didn't do that. The people that designed and built it were the Byzantine Christians that they had already overrun, and they roped them into their services, and this is why they gained more power. They also had massive fleets. There's one battle, I forgot the name of it, a sea battle, where they had a thousand ships, the Muslims. A thousand. They didn't build one of them. They were all built in shipyards in Italy and and in the Byzantine Empire. And most of these galleys were actually captained by Byzantine and Italian captains whose heart wasn't in the fight for the Muslims, obviously.
They lost every single ship. All 1,000 got wiped out at some series of battles. It's I just didn't know any of these details. So it's it's a fascinating, view of what a part of history that basically I'm I'm very unaware of, but less less unaware of than I was a week or so ago. So it's, it's very it's very invigorating read. It's very useful, I think. Cool. Paul, I'll go. Are you still there, Paul? Everybody's gone.
[03:09:07] Unknown:
Hello, Paul English.
[03:09:09] Unknown:
Hello.
[03:09:12] Unknown:
May I ask may I ask when when, Monica Schafer was on with you, may I ask, did did she say that the only reason they put her in jail for six months was because she was the reason because she denied the Holocaust?
[03:09:33] Unknown:
No. I don't think it was that. I think that was to do with her brother. I can't remember the specific reasons. I think it might have been that she was playing songs or something, and they never liked that. Maybe the next time I get her on, we'll go through that. Although, she's spoken about it so many times that she's probably a little bit sort of worn thin on the topic. Yeah. She has got a website. I think one's Justice for Germans and a few others. If I could find out what they are, she probably recounts the true background to all of that sort of nonsense, accurately or in her own words. So I can't really speak for her. I'm not fully familiar with it at the moment, which is a bit embarrassing, isn't it? But I'm not. So yeah. Sorry. I can't be of no use. I vaguely remember that. I think she has mentioned it before and but I just couldn't remember what it was, and I thought maybe she might would had a I thought she might have mentioned it on
[03:10:24] Unknown:
your show, on your class, on your program yesterday or whenever she was on recently. Thank you.
[03:10:31] Unknown:
Have a good day. Thank you. You too. You know? Thanks, everyone. Oh, yeah. And,
[03:10:38] Unknown:
yes. So so 1812, it does the British have or maybe they're called English. I don't I don't know. Correct me whichever way it is. But on eighteen twelve, is the version of history great greatly different than the the in than the American?
[03:10:57] Unknown:
And what's the about the second war when the when the British marched on, Washington, was it, and burnt the White House? That one? Yeah. Yeah. Yeah.
[03:11:08] Unknown:
Is there any That was good books on the subject?
[03:11:11] Unknown:
I yield. It's a good question. I've only read essays, which I don't have in front of me and probably couldn't tell you who wrote them. There there probably is. It's probably okay to write about it now, 1812. I think the main reason was to actually the the reason this is very thin. What I'm gonna say, it will just open up more questions than I'm than we can answer. But, they marched on it. There was something to do with paperwork. They were trying to acquire certain bits of paperwork, contracts, treaties, and other things. And this is why they went to Washington very quickly and then legged it, I think is what happened.
They had to get back to Europe anyway to fight Napoleon, because that was going on all the time whilst this was going on. The French, of course, were the little rascals were helping you a lot. I don't mind. It's a long time back. But, you know, it's almost like a war by proxy in a way and that the French were obviously, providing a great deal of support to the Americans as they were shaking off the shackles of the evil the evil Brits. But there we go. Yeah. Oh, it's a bit more I'd like a book on that.
[03:12:17] Unknown:
Do you know the only, government building left standing from the British?
[03:12:24] Unknown:
What? In 1812? No. I don't. Do you? Yep. I think you're gonna tell us. Yep. Yeah? What was it? Yeah.
[03:12:30] Unknown:
It was the commandant of the Marine Corps' house.
[03:12:35] Unknown:
Is that right? They burned the whole city down, did they?
[03:12:39] Unknown:
Yep. Bastards, Except for the pump. Except for the commandant's house. Because out of respect, I guess it was Royal Marines that were sacking the city, and they didn't wanna do our commandant's house.
[03:12:55] Unknown:
It's a weird thing. All of that period of history is very weird in a way when you get the other hidden reports from different people. I still want that book by, it's called Legions of the Damned by Williams, John Williams, who was an American during the War of Independence. No one can get a copy. Apparently, it's an amazing book because it's got a more full blown notes about the exchanges between Cornwallis and Washington. Because, at least we know part of that exchange. Cornwallis didn't seem to give a tinker's cuss that you'd won. It wasn't important to him at all. It it was almost as if it's kinda weirdly by design. We are dealing with some very cunning bastards over here, and they're not really British, although, obviously, they are. But, yeah. There's a lot of, political intrigue. Let's put it like that. Like a lot.
Anyway, look, I hope to return in a few weeks' time. We'll do some more if I get this crusade thing in my head, it'll be a great topic to talk about, I think, and we can kick off with a few things. But I'm going to go now. It's quarter past seven here, and I'm gonna go and eat some food if I can. So, thanks Thank you. Everyone for your time and questions. Yeah. And thanks to Roger and Brent and Paul for letting me on. And I'll see you in a couple of weeks. I probably won't be here next Friday, but I'll come back in a couple of weeks' time. So, that'll be great. Have a have a cracking weekend, everyone. Lots of love. See you soon.
Bye for now. Thank you. Bye bye.
[03:14:28] Unknown:
Thank you, Paul. Hope you feel better soon. And thank you, Paul Beener. See you next week.
[03:14:41] Unknown:
Bye bye. Bye bye. Bye bye.
[03:14:47] Unknown:
Bye, Sketch. Okay. It was God's, my goodness, battalion. And the next one I have is Charles Patel, but I forgot what book he had written. And Julius Norwich, and the last one was Legion Legions of the Damned. So does anyone remember Patel or Charles Patel? What was that about? I forgot.
[03:16:05] Unknown:
Was it Martel?
[03:16:07] Unknown:
Oh, yeah. You're probably right. Thank you. Let me let me correct that. Hold on. You're probably right on that. That that probably that's probably right. I heard it wrong. Do you hey. Do you remember what the what it was about? What is that the same author as God's Lesions? Or no. No. God's I'm sorry. God's, Battalion. Is that the same is that the author?
[03:16:37] Unknown:
I'm not sure.
[03:16:39] Unknown:
Okay. Thank you.
[03:16:41] Unknown:
He was throwing stuff out rapid fire.
[03:16:45] Unknown:
Yep.
[03:16:49] Unknown:
But I'm sure Paulie has recorded this.
[03:16:53] Unknown:
True.
[03:16:59] Unknown:
Well, it's about an hour after the show, so somewhere in that last, probably forty five minutes, it's gonna be there.
[03:17:09] Unknown:
Well, probably toward Go ahead. I'm sorry, Britt.
[03:17:13] Unknown:
Probably towards, the beginning of the end of the show. It'll it'll be right about there.
[03:17:21] Unknown:
How long has Paul been Paul, English been on? Today? Yes.
[03:17:31] Unknown:
Over the last hour, I know that. Probably about half an hour before the end of the show.
[03:17:39] Unknown:
Okay. Gotcha. Thank you.
[03:17:44] Unknown:
I think he made his presence known then, but he'd been on, I guess, for a little while.
[03:17:57] Unknown:
Is is there anyone in the audience that's listening that knows of a good book on, 1812, the history, you know, just to kind of, a good history, you know.
[03:18:14] Unknown:
My daddy yesterday.
[03:18:17] Unknown:
Yeah. He brought up, let me think. What did he bring up yesterday? Well, that's what he got me looking at.
[03:18:24] Unknown:
Why they attacked, it was because we had let the contract for the bank lapse.
[03:18:31] Unknown:
Oh, yes.
[03:18:34] Unknown:
This is Chris from California. I once studied about the War of eighteen twelve. I don't have any references I can give you at this point. But my understanding is that the attack was to destroy the records of the ratification of the original thirteenth Amendment which forbid anyone who held the title of nobility from being a part of our government here in America. There were to be no Well,
[03:19:04] Unknown:
quite a few of them survived even the Civil War.
[03:19:09] Unknown:
Mhmm.
[03:19:12] Unknown:
That's why they that's why they tried to destroy the Southern, plantations because they had libraries that rivaled the Library of Congress.
[03:19:23] Unknown:
Oh, wow.
[03:19:27] Unknown:
Well, the Book of the Hundreds does a pretty good job of exposing that history and all of Lincoln's shenanigans.
[03:19:47] Unknown:
It was good to understand more of the destruction of the original thirteenth Amendment, I think, occurred in 1812. So that's a great question, like what is a British is there any books that the British wrote and what were they really after with that whole 1812 overture? And then what developed later, right, with Jackson's fight at the banks and then, of course, the new trust that Lincoln set up and the resulting reconstruction and blood sacrifice that was the Cousins War. I think the Cousins War probably has more legitimacy than the revolution. It seems like the revolution was a planned I think Washington never wanted to be not under the majesty.
[03:20:53] Unknown:
Well, the king wasn't his cousin.
[03:20:57] Unknown:
Right. There you go.
[03:20:59] Unknown:
And he was the richest dude in America.
[03:21:04] Unknown:
And they all all those guys had huge assets over on the mother country too. So why would they do anything to risk all that wealth, right, that was on the other side of Atlantic?
[03:21:20] Unknown:
Yes. All quite interesting.
[03:21:25] Unknown:
It
[03:21:27] Unknown:
gets curiouser and curiouser. Y'all white folk got some bullshit in y'all's lives.
[03:21:47] Unknown:
I have a little update on something more that I learned about disclaimer, you know, how they can claim things. And, of course, with, a lot of times, there's those that if we don't clarify, like, through national status, things are claimed about us. But in every state, there's, you can actually there's a statute. There's a uniform statute that you can disclaim things. So if you wanna disclaim a particular portion of a just use the use the the name and the number of that particular account, and you can disclaim things. So let's say let's say you had a driver's license, but you didn't wanna be, part of the the, the statutes, you could disclaim whatever, piece of that.
And you can use basically the state laws to do that. So I thought that was quite interesting.
[03:22:57] Unknown:
How do you want to in the context.
[03:22:59] Unknown:
Yeah. I was listening because I hadn't seen anything from Boris lately, and, I found another channel that's out there on Rumble. Mhmm. So this was a September this was a September presentation that they did, and they were helping a guy or they actually there's a Telegram channel. I'm not on Telegram, but there was a Telegram channel. And this guy had been using kind of the same the same things that you can surrender, you know, benefits, if you will, to back to the state. And, he he was on parole, I guess, in Texas. He was sick of, you know, reporting and doing all this. So he just jumped parole, went to Oklahoma, but he ended up getting picked up in Oklahoma.
But what he had filed, they sent him back to Texas, you know, after nine days or whatever. But what he had filed was a disclaim a disclaimer, and, you know, he went before the parole board in Texas and the magistrate said, you know, just dropped everything and said on the warden, I guess, on the way out said to him, you know, what are you going to do? You got basically seventeen years of good from good behavior, but it was only a five year deal. You got seventeen years of good behavior. So he says, what are you going to do now? And he says, well, I think I've got to go rob a bank being that state of Texas just gave me seventeen. Good. Yeah.
But, what Boris did this three section Rumble thing that they did, and I have to tell you that I can tell you the name of that Rumble channel while I'm on, I believe, here. But they, they talked about the book of Job and how Job gets back three times what he lost, right, I believe at the end of it. Didn't he get restored three times or whatever? So roughly 17 to three times five, I think. But they talk about the actually they talk about the new way to do the mortgage with the UCC in there too. And this is a three part series. The channel is whoops, I just opened up the wrong one. So there's one rumble channel that's called the Law of Boris, but then this one is called this was a Zoom call that they do, evidently, keepers of the faith and defenders of and that is cut off. And my phone I try to turn my phone, landscape in a my mind's I gotta go to the iPhone store because it won't turn.
But it's basically keepers of the faith, the defenders of I could text this to somebody. But, they go through that whole they go through the whole idea of the use of fraud and all that and surrendering, but then they also they do cover how to do I've been just taking notes on the thing, how to do the UCC to retire the mortgage without foreclosure. The other case where they had retired a mortgage and a foreclosure case, it was already in foreclosure. But here they're showing they're telling you how you can do the UCC to retire the mortgage. You're basically turning it back to the bank, yes. Quite interesting. So and then they get down and go further with this idea. And it makes sense that they would have a remedy in every state. And they just talk about the difference in the states versus the difference of being the federal citizen.
[03:26:41] Unknown:
So where do you get this information on retiring your mortgage?
[03:26:51] Unknown:
They discuss it on this. I don't know. I haven't done it. Who is that? On the channel I just said, the Keepers of the Faith and Defenders of, it's a Rumble channel. They've got a Zoom call. Basically, if you probably put that in, it's called Part two Zoom call 9.12.2003. So I guess it's two years old now, sorry. But that Zoom I don't know if that Zoom call is still active or how to get on it. I think someone on our channel knows somebody that's on that call. There's a guy called Lex that's on there as well.
[03:27:31] Unknown:
Is it law of force, F O R C E, force?
[03:27:39] Unknown:
I don't know about that one. This is Boris like Boris, remember the comic, the cartoon Boris and who is the lady there?
[03:27:51] Unknown:
Natasha.
[03:27:53] Unknown:
Natasha, thank you, yes. That's how you spell this word. I don't know about borscht, is that the borscht that you would eat over in Hungary?
[03:28:03] Unknown:
I don't know.
[03:28:04] Unknown:
But, yes, so anyway, the idea of disclaimer is kind of like surrendering, you're kind of surrendering the benefits that they presume on you. And you do want to go through kind of the use of frac stuff if you do want to it basically repeals back onto the articles of Confederation, which is the articles of Confederation were really meant for We The People. And then of course, the constitution came along and that brought in all the commercial activity and all that. So it's pretty interesting study and they're kind of forensically going back into the state laws and kind of getting at stuff that's remedies that are set up there still.
[03:28:55] Unknown:
Well, thank you.
[03:28:57] Unknown:
Thank you, George. Is that George Mitehoven? Yes, sir. Thank you so much for bringing that up again. I think everybody should look over that information from Boris. And he he is on YouTube. You can look up Boris Explains the Strawman on YouTube, and he there's a series of, I think, six videos you can find. And very interesting information. I was trying to get other people to listen to that because he he talked about the whole system and why it is the way it is. And, I just really appreciate you bringing that forth again today. And I'd love his comment on userfrucks.
Anybody use uses userfrucks on you, they they're they're use a frut.
[03:29:52] Unknown:
So I yield. Hey, Gretch. Before you go, Boris I heard Boris and I heard straw man, but I didn't hear in Boris explains. Oh, thank you.
[03:30:03] Unknown:
Explains the straw man. I think you can find with that title search, you can find it. I don't know his his channel page, but, I'm on a walk. And then when I get back, I can probably put it in the chat. Somebody else can find it and put it in the chat. It'd be helpful. Thank you. You're
[03:30:24] Unknown:
good. You're good. You know, it would be kind of interesting
[03:30:38] Unknown:
if oh, go ahead. I'm sorry. Go ahead. Oh, I'm sorry. Also, I just wanted to say, I just never want to be user front. I yield.
[03:30:51] Unknown:
Yes. If anybody this is Chris from California. If anybody knows, there's been some mention in the last few days of of a man in Arizona who successfully came off the tax roll. And I'm looking for information along that line.
[03:31:16] Unknown:
Are you talking about a land patent or are you talking about the IRS?
[03:31:19] Unknown:
Well, no, it would be I do a lot with land patents and it would be the land patent is what would give you the strength of the ownership of the land. And you go back to the original patentee who then took his land patent and recorded it with a county. And what you want to do is get it back from the county, which you technically have the right to do based upon proving the chain of title that you are an assignee. If you are a current assignee of that chain of title, you have the same rights as the original patentee. But I've not perfected the process to get it out of the county's hands.
[03:32:15] Unknown:
Interesting.
[03:32:17] Unknown:
You may be able to use the Fruct thing may work because you could return the interest to the county and return the interest. They talk about revisionary interest that you send send to treasury and everything. So, it might be something there where like in this recent series, from 2023, there is even a case where a guy just asked the judge in court what interest do I have in this matter and the judge said actually nothing and dismissed the case. So something about it makes sense like we're the principal, right? And then they use that word interest to us, like even when you get a loan, right?
But if they have an interest in you and you unbeknownst to have given them that interest because you haven't disclaimed it, then they can kind of you can be the they're use of fraud. But I it might be something there with that that may may release that and, so it might be worth, you know, going through. I mean, I don't even what do they talk about the trivia? Right? Understanding the grammar first, then you understand the logic, then you're able to to do rhetoric about it, you know. You first have to kinda understand the meanings of the words that they're using. And then logically deduce, like, what, you know, what how to do the filings and all that and then you can actually explain it, right? That's the third when you can actually teach it or explain it. So that series might be helpful in this matter, I don't know.
[03:33:48] Unknown:
What I normally like to do in law is I like to research and spend a lot of time researching to find an identical case as to what I'm pursuing. And then I will pull the entire case file and look over all the filings, all the pleadings and use that to create my own case, which is guaranteed to be as successful as the original once it's presented. And so rather than reinventing the wheel all the time, I prefer to spend more time on the resource or the interaction or connection with other fellow people that are involved in law or the Patriot Movement that may have heard of or know about an actual case that succeeded, then find that case and find those people, find whatever filings or whatever is available and begin to understand the principle that it turned on that gave the victory.
That's the key. It's the principle that the law principle in law that the case turns on. I have one that we've just we've just been successful with where a neighbor stole property from another neighbor. And the one that they stole the property from was a very elderly gentleman, and he was not aware of what they were doing because he never got served. They ended up they they were very clever in avoiding serving him so they could go to publication so they could get their default judgment and then went all the way through and got the land resurveyed and granted to them. And, we found out about it when his secretary did not receive a tax bill.
And so we inquired to find out why is there no tax bill. And we found out it was because it was in the process of being subdivided and there would soon be two tax bills. So we looked that up, found out there was a court case and we ran it all down, did a motion to quash that was very extensive and complete. And the, it's not completely finished. It will be soon, but the judge has already said that she's inclined to grant the motion. And she she she declared her basis for that. They have to grant the motion because it's too complete and too well documented with case law.
And so What's the DBGBs? We will end up getting the property that was stolen back. We will succeed. But this is what we do. We we look for, case law that cannot be touched.
[03:36:27] Unknown:
Was it he bejeebies that did it?
[03:36:30] Unknown:
What's that?
[03:36:32] Unknown:
Was it he bejeebies that did it?
[03:36:36] Unknown:
It's it's unscrupulous people trying to steal who are in the habit of trying to steal land from elderly people.
[03:36:45] Unknown:
Yeah. Yeah. It was he be g b's. Small hats. Yep.
[03:36:51] Unknown:
But when this is done, we're thinking of because there's so much, it's amazing how much the plaintiffs and even their attorney perjured themselves in their verified statements. And so when we get this done, we may just sue everybody to recover some some remedy for our pain and suffering.
[03:37:19] Unknown:
Sounds like they used adverse possession. My neighbor tried doing that to my parents' property, but I figured out what he was doing by talking to his son and his uncle before he did it. And we wrote him a certified letter to no more trespassing. He was trying to maintain the lawn for so many years. Well And he would've succeeded.
[03:37:45] Unknown:
Yeah. Wow. Possession. That was a classic thing in our case where, the plaintiff actually stated that she should be forgiven for not having paid the taxes because you can't pay taxes on part of a parcel and she still stole part of the land, not the entire piece. Everest possession does not work that way. It's all or nothing and you have to pay the taxes consecutively in California for five years uninterrupted. And furthermore, if you're claiming to be there by adverse possession, it cannot be by permission. The easiest way to break somebody from adverse possession is give them permission officially. Give them permission to use the land, and you'll you will they will not be able to maintain the claim of adverse possession. But you must make sure you're paying the taxes or that you get a prescription easily. But not It's not like They cannot get ownership of they pay the taxes.
[03:38:48] Unknown:
It's not like that, Michigan. All you have to do is maintain it can be a strip of the property or it can be part of the property. All you have to do is maintain it and go to the courts and prove that you maintained it for so many years, and the courts grant you the property. You don't have to be paying the taxes or nothing in Michigan.
[03:39:09] Unknown:
They actually grant title to the property? Yes.
[03:39:13] Unknown:
Or that part of property that they maintained.
[03:39:18] Unknown:
Okay. I could see where they could get an easement, but I don't understand how they could get ownership.
[03:39:27] Unknown:
I don't know. What you're gonna have similar laws with adverse possession where you can maintain it and say he's neglected this property. I've been taking care of it, keeping it up kept. He don't care about it, and it's like twelve years you gotta do it for. And this guy was nine years when he done it. When my dad got sick and I moved into my parents' house. Yeah. And, actually, his son told me, oh, my dad wants to put a garage here and put our new drain filled here. And I asked him how to do how is he gonna do that? Because my dad owns a property. Oh, I'm hoping my dad will buy it from you or buy it from your dad.
And then
[03:40:18] Unknown:
Well, the easiest way to gain property by adverse possession is that I'm aware of and I've done it. Is it a neighbor or somebody in the area or you just find out about property that, the owner died and he has no heirs? Oh, yeah. Nobody's paying the taxes. And you step in and pay the taxes and start maintaining the property. And after five years, you do a quiet type of action, and you will be the owner.
[03:40:46] Unknown:
Right. Well, then about six months later, this guy's uncle, same age as him, walked into my camper while I was in there doing some clean working on it and pretty much told me, well, this ain't your property. I thought this was Mike's camper because this is his property. I've been partying at the campfire pit for, like, eight years now. So he was telling all his friends and neighbor or not neighbors, but his friends and relatives that came over that that was his property long before he even and the cops are the ones that told me just send them a certified letter to not be trespassing no more, and that will stop him from any further action since he had a few years to go.
[03:41:38] Unknown:
Right. Yes. As long as you're breaking the chain yes.
[03:41:44] Unknown:
Yes. Because my neighbor has a they came over and told us when we moved in, oh, we're using your foot of property over there for such and such. So I probably should send a letter to him just to say that not I mean, can you say we're aware that you're using that, but it's not forever possession or do you have to just tell them to leave it?
[03:42:12] Unknown:
If they're making a claim as to how long they've been doing that?
[03:42:19] Unknown:
No. They just, you know, when we moved in, so we've been we've been using this. So, yes, I don't remember if you said anything verbally about how many years or whatever. But would they have to notify you in writing or?
[03:42:33] Unknown:
No. They don't have to notify you in writing. If they notify you verbally, that's sufficient. You've been notified. However, they have the burden of proof. Like, for example, I'm maintaining a piece of property next to a house that we bought that's vacant. It's vacant property and it's actually a nuisance because the wind blows the sand up against our fence and knocks it down. We've got these sand dunes coming right up to the top of our Redwood fence from their side. And so I've got my front end loader. I have to clear that sand away so I can even set my fence back up straight again. And I've completely fenced off that area, as you know, to also for another reason because people in dirt bikes and horses will just come riding through there. And this for security purposes, I put up a three strand barbed wire fence all around the whole place. Now that barbed wire fence has been there for more than for eight years now. I've been maintaining that property for eight years now.
And, I'm thinking about doing a an adverse possession or or quiet title in court, to claim a a prescriptive easement on that piece of land. Got it. Yeah. Then I can develop it, get rid of all the sand dunes, put up a wall or something. And, another problem too is I can't get by the side of my house with anything very wide. There isn't room. So I come around from the other property and into my own gate in the back, which I've been doing again for eight years. And I have proof of that because eight years ago, building a safety came and walked they went over my three three strand fence and they went up to they walked up to Dune all the way to the top of my, six foot, Redwood fence and took pictures of everything and, and and sent me a notice. Well, that's my specialty.
I get rid of those notices based on the land patent immediately. Okay? Because I know that they have law authority. I know that they have a Dun and Bradstreet number. I know that they're privately funded and that they're a corporation for profit. Therefore, they have unclean hands. They never come back.
[03:45:02] Unknown:
That's great. Somebody was talking about leaning Dun and Bradstreet numbers. Have you ever heard about that?
[03:45:08] Unknown:
No. I haven't. I've heard about it, but I don't know what that is.
[03:45:14] Unknown:
Yeah. You're putting a lean against their number, I guess, and rather than reorganize the whole kit and caboodle, like it could be even a county government, whatever, they'll just call, like the attorney general will call you to settle.
[03:45:29] Unknown:
I like that idea. That would hurt their credit rating.
[03:45:36] Unknown:
Exactly.
[03:45:38] Unknown:
You said about you found out that the notices was from a private corporation. Repeat what you said with that. I didn't catch all of it. Building and safety, code
[03:45:53] Unknown:
enforcement, animal control, the health department, they are all private corporations and they have private investors who are invested. Could be judges, sheriffs, could be anybody. Could be a local banker. They they are they are all private corporations that are licensed to do business in the county and the county shares are part of what they collect. But what they collect and signs and whatever is is for profit. That's that's that's their enterprise. And that's an unlawful enterprise. So you have to call them on it and you have to demand to know their authority. The key is the key is I demand to know by what authority do you claim to have regulatory power over private land that is held and protected under United States land United States Of America land patent number such and such and such and such signed by president Harding on such and such a date and time.
[03:46:52] Unknown:
Thank you.
[03:46:54] Unknown:
Now they cannot get around that because, the land patent has always withstood all attacks. Right. And that The famous cases would be, if you wanna look it up online, would be the Venice Peninsula property cases and the Summa property cases that were maintained by Howard Hughes against the city, county and state and he prevailed against all three.
[03:47:24] Unknown:
Appreciate it.
[03:47:25] Unknown:
Yeah. They really went after Howard Hughes. Right?
[03:47:28] Unknown:
But he did a lot of fabulous legal work for us.
[03:47:32] Unknown:
Well, at the time Howard Hughes had more money than God, so he could buy them.
[03:47:41] Unknown:
Well, it's interesting because they were also saying on these Boris One's videos, conditionally accepted upon proof of claim of territorial jurisdiction. Throw that one out because basically they're just a foreign invader. All these cops and stuff are just salesmen for their enterprise. And it's exactly if you could defend it with the patent or it was going back to the original trust that we the people were entrusted with, starting with the Articles of Confederation,
[03:48:16] Unknown:
we've got a superior claim. Yes. Can you repeat those words, please?
[03:48:22] Unknown:
Conditionally accepted upon proof of territorial jurisdiction.
[03:48:33] Unknown:
I just wanted to make a short comment on good old Howard Hughes. The myth is that he was a germophobe, but he was being poisoned, and he didn't know who was poisoning in him. So that's why he isolated from everyone except a few people because he didn't want to be poisoned anymore, I yield.
[03:48:59] Unknown:
Well, the well poisoners and the vaccine poisoners, same same group, I I would imagine.
[03:49:05] Unknown:
Well, I think yeah. I think it was more of the, petroleum poisoners that were involved with Howard, you know, because they wanted to take over over his, oil well, drilling bit business, I think, but not sure who who it was. He didn't know who it was, I think, but, he was he definitely found out he's being poisoned. That's why he was a germaphobe. He didn't want to he don't want to be poisoned anymore. I yield.
[03:49:43] Unknown:
I know it was of a different time, but I think it was rocker front fella that was contributed to saying, competition is in. Hey, Brent. Remind me Friday night's call, I think it's 787-3840 I'm sorry 3874 and I know the access code, but remind me that number again.
[03:50:24] Unknown:
Getting ready for work and I can't get
[03:50:29] Unknown:
Never mind, Brent. No. No. I don't want to disturb you. That's okay. I have it somewhere, so I just kind of lost track of it.
[03:51:32] Unknown:
Hey, Annette. You want Steve Kino's phone number Friday night with Katie?
[03:51:37] Unknown:
Hey. What what's go ahead and give, is it, the number that I can call to listen in?
[03:51:44] Unknown:
Yeah. Let me see. I got it right here, I think.
[03:51:48] Unknown:
78, 78 I'm sorry. 708. I know it I think it begins with that.
[03:51:55] Unknown:
What I've got is 717.
[03:51:59] Unknown:
Oh, okay. Hold on. Got it.
[03:52:02] Unknown:
908
[03:52:05] Unknown:
Okay.
[03:52:06] Unknown:
+1 834.
[03:52:10] Unknown:
Okay. Got it. Thank you. And The other one the other one ends in 7. That's to listen to the old old ones, old shows, or the last show, I should say.
[03:52:22] Unknown:
Yeah. Thank you. Yeah. You have a week to listen to the last show, and you you have that home number that ends in +1 837 for to listen to the Oh, I do. Yeah. I do. Okay. Well, let's say I I knew just to change the 4 to the 7. Let me rephrase that. Yeah. Thank you. And and you have the access code? Yes. 665599. Yes. Okay. Good.
[03:52:48] Unknown:
Thank you.
[03:52:51] Unknown:
Sure thing.
[03:52:56] Unknown:
Thank you.
[03:53:21] Unknown:
Hey, Sketch. I sent you a PM.
[03:53:37] Unknown:
Okay, Joan. I'll get it when I get home. Thanks.
[03:53:44] Unknown:
Okay.
[03:54:53] Unknown:
Okay.
Introduction and Hosts
Discussion on Platforms and Networks
Paul English Live Show Recap
Women's Roles and Voting
Historical Perspectives on Voting and Suffrage
Constitutional Law and Prohibition
Slavery and Common Law
Trump Administration and Women in Politics
Men's Responsibility and Society
Christianity and Government
Nazi Ideology and Homosexuality
Religious Convictions and Politics
Trump's Political Strategy
Race and Politics
Worship and Idolatry
Catholicism and Christianity
Women in Government
Animal Stories and Instincts
Current Political Climate in the UK
Social Security and Historical Context
Cultural Observations and Humor
Historical Perspectives on the Crusades
Discussion on Land Ownership and Legal Strategies