On this post‑Thanksgiving Friday (November 28), Brent and I kept our annual tradition alive with a wide‑ranging, caller‑driven conversation. We opened with holiday reflections (and a little L‑tryptophan lore), then roamed from Anglo‑Dane history and Alfred the Great to the Pilgrims, Puritans, and what “law of the land” really means in America. Brent contrasted common law and civil law, traced the roots of juries, grand juries, and due process, and answered questions on the Supremacy Clause, Article III courts, and the role of the militia. Listeners jumped in with real‑world problems—property theft prevention, off‑grid surveillance, and local law‑enforcement limits—plus practical tips on solar/LTE cameras and neighborhood coordination. We also touched on Dead Sea Scrolls debates, the Westminster tradition, and classic legal texts (Blackstone, Holmes), along with current resources people can study now. If you’re new, our live stream and call‑in details are on The Matrix Docs site; join us, bring a question, and say your piece. We’ll be back after the long weekend—grateful for you and for the chance to keep sharpening one another.
- 'The Matrix Docs' (show site and live links): https://thematrixdocs.com
- Global Voice Radio Network (audio stream hub): https://radio.globalvoiceradio.net
- Global Voice on Rumble (show feed redirect): https://rumble.globalvoiceradio.net
- Euro Folk Radio: https://eurofolkradio.com
- FreeConferenceCall (how callers join): https://www.freeconferencecall.com
- Eufy Security (solar/LTE camera options; by Anker): https://www.eufy.com
- Swann Security (camera systems): https://www.swann.com
- Edwards Air Force Base (regional context mentioned): https://www.edwards.af.mil
- Treaty of Guadalupe Hidalgo (primary doc): https://www.archives.gov/milestone-documents/treaty-of-guadalupe-hidalgo
- Brent Allen Winters / Common Lawyer (books, courses): https://commonlawyer.com
- Dale Carnegie (How to Win Friends & public speaking resources): https://www.dalecarnegie.com
- The Corbett Report (documentaries referenced): https://www.corbettreport.com
- Technocracy News & Trends (Patrick Wood): https://www.technocracy.news
- Govern America (24/7 documentaries stream mentioned): https://governamerica.com
- Dead Sea Scrolls Digital Library (Israel Antiquities Authority): https://www.deadseascrolls.org.il
Forward moving and focused on freedom. You're listening to the Global Voice Radio Network. This Mirror Stream is brought to you in part by mymitobust.com for support of the mitochondria like never before. A body trying to function without adequate mitochondrial function is kinda like running an engine without oil. It's It's not gonna work very well. It's also brought to you by snapphat.com. That is snap,phat,.com. It's also brought to you by the Preyf International terahertz frequency wand through iterraplanet.com. Thank you so much for joining us, and welcome to the program.
[00:01:48] Unknown:
That's
[00:02:06] Unknown:
Alrighty. As would we. And, here we come back on the long weekend for the short two hour segment on Friday with Brent. Doesn't appear well. He may have just showed up up there. Anyway, that's what we do annually, and, always just didn't wanna do four days and don't wanna miss a Friday with Brent and all that stuff. So I know if you're with us, you're taking some time out of your long holiday weekend, and we're glad that you feel like that about us. So, anyway, here we are. I start the Friday edition on the twenty eighth, the day after the big day. And, Roger Sales, your host, cohost Brent Winters on Friday. I hope everybody had a really nice Thanksgiving, and, I certainly did. I'm was really pleased, and, it was just very nice. So, my my poor hosts, Paul, you know, since I have I've been isolated down here from all the social structure here for a few months, and my poor hosts, I go over there and I dominated the conversation the whole afternoon and into the evening. So I kinda felt sorry for him in retrospect.
That'll that'll teach you. That'll teach you to invite me over. So, anyway, it worked out alright and just lovely people and had a a simple but a good meal. And, yeah, everything's pretty cool here on the backside of the four day weekend, second day of it. Paul, I doubt do we have anybody, carrying us today? Anybody anybody we need to give kudos
[00:03:41] Unknown:
to? Well, let's see. It's Friday. So, yes, we have radiosoapbox.com. Thanks to, Paul, our buddy across the drink. Pretty good, Pauling was live yesterday at 03:00.
[00:03:54] Unknown:
I was gonna ask I didn't entirely
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take the day off. I decided to, you know, I had already configured the stream for the week before when Paul wasn't Yeah. Doing a show. So I just, nah, what the heck? I might as well just bring it. Uh-huh. So and, we've got the Euro
[00:04:16] Unknown:
Paul's Thanksgiving show is good? I'm sorry I'm interrupting. You're not finished yet. Yeah. It's No. I'll ask you when you're finished.
[00:04:23] Unknown:
He was I mean, they don't do Thanksgiving, Yes. In England. And, you know, he was he was kinda zoning on the that element in turkey that makes you take a nap after dinner.
[00:04:39] Unknown:
L tryptophan.
[00:04:41] Unknown:
Yeah. Yeah. Yes. That, that wears out more springs on couches than, Carter's Got Bills, I guess.
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It's a We're
[00:04:54] Unknown:
we're on eurofolkradio.com, thanks to pastor Eli James, and we're on Global Voice Radio Network. That is radio.globalvoiceradio.net for the audio portion, and, rumble.globalvoiceradio.net for, static picture and, audio of the show. The Matrix Docs is our website as, is reflected in the upper right hand corner of the splash screen and rumble, and, free conference call is how people join the show. So pick one of those links, come on in, set a spell. That's it. That's all I've got.
[00:05:33] Unknown:
Okay. Did I see Brent pull up and put his order on the on the hidden post up there? I did. Yeah. That that, in in Turkey is called L tryptophan. I know a little bit about it. They outlawed it in The US from The around the the the early nineties for a number of years. I don't remember the reason. It was in some vitamins on some stuff that I was taking at the time. All of a sudden, it wasn't in there. It's wonderful by itself as a sleep aid. And I it the the name of the ingredient is, what do you call it though? Whatever. It's l l hyphen tryptophan, and it doesn't it's not spelled like it sounds.
But you can buy it now. You purchase it in The US. And, yeah. It's good stuff. Morning, Brent.
[00:06:20] Unknown:
Cool. He's still muted. He might he might still be, hitching up to the post.
[00:06:26] Unknown:
He ate so much turkey. He's not awake yet from all the health tricks. Oh, I was talking, and I was muted.
[00:06:33] Unknown:
There he is. Hey, buddy. There you go.
[00:06:35] Unknown:
Muted. Well, any rate, I'd always read that turkey has a massive amount of tryptophan in it and, chicken too, by the way, and eggs. I'd heard that, fifty years ago. Yeah. And I read up on it, and it's true. And, tryptophan, if you eat eggs before you go to bed or chicken, chicken eat chicken in the middle of the day, you'll go to sleep. I've had that happen a lot. It just makes you sleepy, you know? Yes. Yeah. So there maybe there's something to it. I think it's a natural ingredient from what I read, but I oh, okay. You know that too. I didn't follow-up on it. So not like you're doing some kind of drug or something. And No. But it's good. I I'll eat a couple of raw eggs or fried or however I wanna just before I go to bed sometimes because I know I need them and and, help me sleep.
And sleep's an important part of living. Oh, man. But, I've I've been, I was with, five. We were a get together of how many people yesterday. There were about a dozen, 13 of us, and there were five people from five countries there. One from Uganda, one from Nigeria, one from Ecuador, where you're at. Really? One one from North Dakota. I consider that a foreign country. One from, where was the other one from? Shucks. I oh, England. One from England. And, didn't plan it. It just happened. People showed up, and there it was. And I got to thinking about, the influence of what people call today the Anglosphere, the Anglosphere, the influence of the Anglos. And what's an Anglo? Well, I've gotta define that first. What's an Anglo? That was a tribe that lived at the on the lower part of the peninsula today that we call Jet or we call Denmark. It was called Jet Land because it jutted out into the sea, the Jutland Sea. They call it the Jutland Sea where the Denmark jutted out, and the Anglos were the people that live there. Now beyond that, really all we know about where they came from was they came from wherever Noah parked his ark because that's where everybody came from. All all the three major divisions of mankind according to the most the best attested genealogical records in ancient in the ancient world, and that's the Bible. Those are the best attested and the most precise by the way. And we so we see all that there and we can trace it out. But the Anglos were they live there right below them at the base of that peninsula where a people called the Saxons and right above them.
Actually, the angles live more in the middle of that peninsula. And the Saxons were at the bottom of it and then spread out at the base. And then at the top were the, the Danes, what we call today the Danes. The Danes, the Anglos, and the Saxons. And they were all pretty closely related. And all three of those piratical tribes tried to conquer England and Mhmm. Tried to exterminate each other. And Now Yeah. Go ahead. The Danes, we could say is the Vikings. Right? The Danes, properly speaking, are the Vikings, not not the not the Swedes, not the Norwegian. They were all Norsemen and piratical and sordid and vicious and dangerous and just downright evil. But, yeah, the Danes, most properly speaking, the I only know what I read. I mean, I wasn't there. Yeah. But the Vikings, yeah, that's the Vikings. And, man, they invaded the hell out of England. Oh, for centuries. They did big damage.
Well, what happened was they kept invading along the coast as the Vikings would do, and they raped, plundered, pillaged, and burned. Well, they came back next year, and they got to the coast. And the places they burned out and slaughtered everybody, they found, oh, shucks. We gotta go further inland. So they went further inland Right. And did the same thing. Well, after four, five, or a hundred years of that, they got so the pickings are pretty slim. And what are we gonna do now? We we wiped everybody out, raped all the women, plundered everything. And and so they said, well, shut. We'll just we'll just move here and stay, conquer the place, which they tried to do.
And they ended up driving the angels and the Saxons, the Anglo Saxon forces back against the other side of the island in Wales, and Alfred the Great was the over king at that time. And, I think he was a West Saxon, so they call it Wessex now, the county. And, and he went into hiding. His army was wiped out, dispersed, but he made a comeback. He pulled them back together somehow. I don't know. He did it, but he drove the Danes back to the other side of the island, surrounded them, took the son of the Danish king hostage, and said to him, listen, here's the way it works, boys, on this island. It's probably pretty much and by the way, they spoke pretty much the same language. They had the same culture. They had the same common law, what we call our common law. They were all related, but he said, if you fellas, I'll make a deal with you. If you'll get baptized as Christians, we'll let you stay here and we'll just be at peace. How what do you think about that? And I'll return your son to you, but I'm holding hostage. And and so they did. And the Danes, stayed there and then became and this is not spoken of much, but we talked about the Anglo Saxons in England, but they weren't called after that for, as the more the Danes began to mix and multiply, they were called the Anglo Danes, the Anglo Danes.
And by the time we get the invasion of the, the the Normans invaded in October, that's a pivotal point, there was what and Edward the confessor before that, we have what we call the the, Anglo Dane party. They said we're Danish, but we're with the Anglos, and then they're the Saxons, and they all then they started separating. You know, even white folk when they get together and they're all alike, they'll find ways to separate and hate each other. Everybody does that. You know, if you go to Africa today, the tribal people all been slaughtered each other and selling each other in slavery and come to America when all the red man tribes are around. You can't say Indian anymore because so many Indians here, you don't know whether talking about Indians or, you know, so I don't say Indians anymore, Indians and all that. We used to say now I say red. But the red man tribe, they all hated each other till the white man got here, then they tried to confederate, but it was too late. But no matter where you're at, if you go to Texas back in the forties, fifties, and sixties, all they had done there were Democrats. So they split into two parties and, two factions of the Democrat party would run. And it was that way in the Republican places. You know, it doesn't make any difference where you go or who you are.
There will be a split, and people will be adversarial. Now that's not bad. No. No. That's good. Mhmm. I'm just making the point. That's the way it always is and always will be. And if you're not comfortable with that, you need to go bury yourself on a groundhog hole someplace and just stay away from people. That's what makes things tick. Go ahead. Could I get you to talk is there any way you could talk more directly into the microphone? You're there, and your presence is good, but you sound a little faint in as opposed to the normal arm. Right? You told me. Let me try this. Let me try ready? Here. Try this. Is that different? About a thousand percent, please. Yeah. Yeah. Excellent. Excellent.
I'm I'm just playing with it. I don't know what I'm doing. But, anyway, where are we off of what I wanted to where was I going? I was going oh, I know where I was going with this. Of course, we had Thanksgiving, and I said, well, if we're gonna have some people here, I'm gonna say a few words about Thanksgiving and tell the story. People get together and eat, but they do they tell the story? Of course. It was very much an important part of, my education when I was a boy in the grades, as we used to say, to learn about Thanksgiving. And every Thanksgiving in my neck of the woods, in the Wabash Valley, people ate succotash.
Yeah. Well, succotash, you didn't have Thanksgiving. You know? And and, of course, you had the the turkey. Yeah. And white turkey. Well, more turkeys. I mean, it's turkeys are so thick around here that you gotta walk out your back door. I'm not exaggerating. You can shoot two or three a day. Have plenty to eat. You know? People raise them. Shoot. I got a boy that's raising turkeys. He's got a two or three. I mean, he's trying to start a herd or a flock, and and, the wild turkeys come around, wanna cavort with, so people like that because they can shoot a few if they come around. But the turkey, you know, Ben Franklin lobbied hard to make the turkey our national bird for I've heard that. Yeah. The the eagle, he said, of course, number one, it's a Roman symbol, and that's not who we are. We're law of the land, not law of the city. We're common law, not civil law. So he want and the the eagle is a symbol, a Rome symbol. The Nazis later, they thought they were Romans. You know? But then the turkey, not only is the turkey a a purely American bird, He's tough and he's brave.
Then the the eagle is nothing but a lowdown scavenger coward. He wants easy pickings, and that's what he gets. But there's nothing brave or noble about a just in looks, he looks noble, but he isn't. But a turkey doesn't look noble, but he is. And you talk about an animal that won't back down from a fight. You know, the hawks try to swoop in on the turkeys. They got eyes on tops of their head. They they'll make a duck, and then they'll attack if they can before the hawk has time to get any altitude. And if they ever get a hawk down, they'll kill him. That's the kind of animal they are, and that's why Franklin, of course, then they're good eating. I didn't love turkey. I like chicken, but like turkey better. I'm sick today, yet this morning, eating too much of it yesterday. And by the way, I like the dark meat. I like the the leg and the and the oh, the neck. And I about got into a fight over the neck, and this woman from Ecuador came in, and she cooked turkey. Of course, they spice it down there where you are. They spice it up different.
[00:17:02] Unknown:
Roger. No. I'm sure they do. Oh, yeah. And,
[00:17:05] Unknown:
but, the neck was laying there. And I said, can I have that? And she said, no. That's mine. Oh, okay. Tender meat, you know, on the neck. Then she was joking. She split it in half, give me half of it, and I had that for an appetizer. Some people don't like the neck. I just love it. And if you cook the neck enough and, slowly, you can get all the meat off without it. It just falls off. You don't have to dig for it. You know? But that's what I ate yesterday. Of course, we had also, squash, butternut squash, pie and pumpkin pie. Yum. Yum. Yeah. Yeah. Then we had, pecan pie. Lots of that. Oh.
Oh, yeah. Yeah. And then a big, big, bowl of mashed taters with the jackets off as they do it around here. I don't know why I like it with the jackets on. Just smash them up. Don't peel them. But, either way, I'll eat them and put a lot of I'm talking put a half a or at least a stick or a half a stick of butter on top, and then you take then you take your mashed taters, you put them on your plate, then you get over there in the gravy with that ladle, and then you make a hole on the top of your mashed taters and just make a little pond on top of the taters of the of the gravy. And and we had gravy made by the way, I cleaned the turkey meat or the neck meat off last night and put it in the gravy, and, we had gravy. So it was yeah. I was I'm overwhelmed with what happened. Feast.
Oh, yeah. It was. Uh-huh. Do you have any rutabagas? No. We didn't, Roger. And, yeah, with things some things were missing, but it was okay. But I talked about yesterday it was good. It was darn good. But I talked yesterday before we started about about the, pilgrim. You know, the pilgrims were Puritans. They were they were a sect of the Puritan party, but they they were off they were off by themselves more. And, of course, they were headed for Virginia, and they had a land grant from the crown through their connection. See Brewster, I believe it was. He had connections, and he had connections to the crown through some of his high high place friends. And they got a land grant going going to Virginia, but they got blowed off course.
And they ended up in a place a lot of Englishmen had already been, and that was called Cape Cod. Of course, they called it Cape Cod because the Englishmen would come up they'd been coming over there for years and making fortunes, catching cod and Yep. Bringing it back. Well, they'd caught a lot of cod there, and they got into Cape Cod, but there wasn't any permanent settlement there. That was an important distinction. The fishermen were here, but they hadn't settled. They were out to make money. And, well, when the pilgrims got here, of course, there were a 101 of them.
A 101, and, they were cramped on a a little tiny ship. They were in two ships to start with, the Speedwell and the Mayflower. Now when I was a boy, four, five, and six years old, Roger, I don't know about other people, but every kid I knew every kid I knew knew they all knew. We all knew about the speed well and the Mayflower. And I I don't know how we knew. Maybe they taught it to us in school or our parents probably reinforced it. We knew all about the pilgrims. It wasn't something that was foreign to us at all. My brother and I used to go down to horse tank, had a horse tank down over the hill where we'd, run water from the well by gravity down two inch steel pipes and out of the oil field and build the horse tank. And we go down there and catch, you call it, pollywogs, we call them. Yeah. Yeah. Pollywogs.
And then we would build little boats, so we had rails where where our corn cribs were made out of rails, split rails, and you build a corn crib. And that's the way we used to a lot of people did it. Cheap way to have a corn crib, you don't have to buy it. You just make it. You know? And we had rail corn cribs. So if you found a piece of rail laying around, which a lot of that, that had a knot in it, it was shaped like a ship. It was pointed on both ends and fat in the middle. You know? And we would make ships. And I remember down the horse tank playing my brother and I, and we put a little feather or something in it for sale. You know? And we I'd have the Speedwell, and he'd have the Mayflower. We were just little guys. And we knew all about that. So but I realized now that children flat don't know that. And not only do they not know it, it is foreboding to to tell the truth about it. So I go to the Internet, and I I'm looking, and and the truth is not there. People that write about it say, well, there's been a lot of a lot of misinformation about the pilgrims, and they wanna talk about all the other people that were here.
You know? And they talk about the Roman the of course, they'll say the pilgrims were, protestants, hardcore, and they liken them to fundamentalist protestants. And that's not really a good characterization, but then they talk about there were Roman Catholics here. There were Jews here. And, of course, they don't say that, the the amount of Roman Catholics and Jews and even Baptists was so small that it didn't count at all. You couldn't even count them. They weren't even Mezier said they weren't here. You know? Less than one half of 1% were Jewish in America when our country started. And, of course, I'm moving up a century or two because the pilgrims landed in 1620 at at, Massachusetts Bay, and they then assimilated into the pure great Puritan migration that came from then up through the eighteen forties. And tens of thousands of thousands of Puritans came. When the pilgrims came, they were they were, they wanna get out of England because things just got so rotten, and they've gotten very rotten. And they went to The Netherlands.
They stayed there eleven years. And The Netherlands welcomed them, wanted them. They were good citizens. They worked hard, contributed, but they were having a hard time making ends meet. And they missed being being in an English speaking country where there was a English culture. That was who they are. They missed that. And their children were stood a chance of getting drafted into the army and fighting the thirty years war, and they didn't want that. And the Dutch were lax. You know? They're they're use a well worn word, their morals were lax.
And they wanted out. Even though their Christianity was strong, their morals were lax because they weren't a common law country. That's really what it boiled down to. So they wanted to come home, and they did eleven years later. And then they realized they got arrested more than once and thrown into prisons because King James of King James Bible fame wasn't about to allow people, people take the Bible and try to decide what it said, and that's what they were doing. And, of course, the King James had by 1611 had his translation of the Bible in in print, and they wouldn't have anything to do with that.
And they could see that there's possibility of a war coming in England, and they said we gotta get out of here, so they left. Well, then the Puritan migration flooded in on them during that awful war that, 80,000 Englishmen and and Scotsmen, they were in on the act. The Presbyterians and the Puritans controlled the country. They went to war with the king. And, 80,080 British men, boys really, died. And this the this English civil war? Yeah. And that's quite a few for a country that didn't have more than well, England probably had between three and a half and 4,000,000 people in it, and Scotland didn't hardly have a million. Well, that's a lot of folks to die in a war. So but, they've just in case with the Puritans and the didn't win the war, they migrated to New England with a thought that if we lose here, we'll regroup over here in New England, and we'll fight them from here. That's what their idea was. They didn't come here to the thing that drove them here was the war. It wasn't that they, oh, we're going to search for religious freedom. Did they want really yes.
But really, what it amounted to, they called it New England for a reason. They said if, we can't whoop the king on his own ground, we're gonna come here, and we're gonna rule England from here. That was their idea. And they came here. What's funny is, kinda curious, now we do rule rule England from here in many ways. I mean, we've become more influential. No question about that and more powerful. England has taken a dive since World War two. They well, they control a quarter. The English empire controlled a quarter of the land mass of the world at that time. And, through the shenanigans of Churchill, and we know what those are, some of us, and the influence of, Zionism, no question about that, and his, his consumptive habits, in other words, he would deepen death.
He got, some people bailed him out that got him in trouble. The war came. And, after that, the country was lost, and they threw him out of office when they realized they'd lost everything. They lost the empire. They were starving to death. They were starving during the war. You know? Yeah. Well, they finally, they lost everything. And we have to ask ourselves, is there such a thing in the world as the what we call or some have called the Anglosphere? The Anglosphere. Now when the when the pilgrims came to America, they were and and and wanted to be subjects.
I don't don't don't think that's such a bad word. The patriot community talks about how we're not subjects. We're citizens. Listen. The truth be known, if you really knew what a citizen that was, you wouldn't wanna be that either. That's an unfortunate, unhappy word that has crept into our language. In in our common law tradition, we didn't talk about citizenship. We talked about freemanship. Freemanship. Citizen is a Roman word from the Roman Empire. And subject, had to do with being subject in our common law country, being subject to the law. And they perverted, of course, some powerful people. Oh, we're subject to the king and all that. But originally, it was a matter of we are a country, and we are in America, ruled of law, not of men.
And the law becomes the domain of every man who must decide for himself how it applies. That's America. And the rest of the world isn't that way, by the way, the powerful party, the powers that be. They're given the ability to decide, and we we impaneled. If it comes down to push come to show, we impaneled 12 of the least esteemed among us happen to be standing around. Let them decide. But they got here. What they did was they they were blown off course. Well, there were a lot of people on that ship of a 101. By the way, after the first winter, there were only 53 left.
53 left. Two, three dying a day through the winter.
[00:28:20] Unknown:
Very brutal. You know? Oh, it's very brutal.
[00:28:22] Unknown:
And yeah. And then they another 53 left. Well, Thanksgiving, there were about 53 that showed up that they didn't plan it. They were just having a big harvest feast, which is harvest feast, which is, custom. Nothing new. You know, you kinda have that feeling. Once harvest is over, you feel like, hey. We got the crop in. Let's, got the. And, we got things canned up for winter, and we butchered a hog. And let's, let's, relax a little bit, you know, and go to the fair. We used to do that at home. We had what we called the the agricultural fair, and I had two of them in our county. And all the farmers would go to the fair and show off their stuff and have contests and tractor pulling contest and horse pulling contest. And then we'd have the roller not the I always almost said roller derby. Then we called it the what is it? The derby where you have all the cars and they run into each other and the the last part demolition derby. Yeah. Boy, that was a big deal. And then we had then we had the wild cow milking contest. That was fun. That was out in front of the grandstand in the middle of the racetrack. And then, of course, you had the horse races, and and then you had, well, we just did a lot of stuff, and we'd show animals and all that. It was the agricultural fair. Well, that was kind of our our harvest festival type kind of thing, but we also had Thanksgiving too. And we all knew and understood, all of us. And when you have Thanksgiving, you're supposed to give thanks, return thanks. That's what the idea is for the bountiful way. Without land, none of us would have anything to eat.
That's the truth. And so we got this land. We got some beach. You know, I watch on the pictures and films of our boys in World War two going overseas, and then look at the Englishmen when they were in England. A vast difference. Our boys were fleshy and strong looking, and the Englishmen looked pretty pale and weak because they didn't have anything to eat. That's a fact of the matter. I told the story about that German I knew. He captured in North Africa when he was 19, and he lived in Northern California. And he worked on my I had an old Mercedes Benz, and he had a business working on an old Mercedes Benz. Wow. I was standing out one winter. I was in the mountains there, and his boy was inside working. He was standing beside the trash can, had the fire fired up, and I got to talking to him. He's up near 90 years old then, and he was taken prisoner. And, he went to Kansas and Nebraska. I forget where it was. And, he said, first, they took him to England, and he said they were rough on. And he said, we didn't get anything to eat. I said, did that make you mad? He said, no. We weren't mad at the English because we could see the peep the the boys that were guarding us were starving too. They were skinny as we were. They didn't have anything to eat, down to one or two eggs a day, rations, and all that. I mean, for breakfast.
I got to America, and he said they put me out, and we're out out in the, and I think it was Nebraska. And he said every day when I was in this prison camp in America, they'd farm me out to this farmer to work for him. And this guy was of German descent, and he spoke German. Him and his wife, I get there in the morning early, and she'd have a great big breakfast fix for me, hot bread, buttermilk, bacon, you name it. All the eggs I could eat, and they'd feed me good, then we'd go out and go to work. He said, I started putting on weight like I had never put on weight in my life. He said, I was I was skinny in Germany. We didn't have anything to eat. The war was on. Then I went to the army. We didn't have that much to eat. But he said, in America, I started getting fat.
And he said, I decided, shucks. If it's this good in America and prison camp, what would it be like if I was on the outside? And so when he finally he got home, and he went to work in Stuttgart for Mercedes Benz. And he kept watching the bulletin board. They'd put up openings, you know, around the world, and he was looking for something in America. Finally, he saw one in Sacramento, California, and he went out work for Mercedes Benz dealership out there. And that's how he he got out. He got to The States and became a citizen and his boy. I knew him. He worked on my car. I was a citizen. His wife his wife told me said, Brent, we people in America, most they just don't get it. Food's a big deal. And most of the world, even in Europe, we we knew that food was scarce. And after the Americans won the war and they and they came in, he said, I kid you not, she told me, I was 14 years old, and I didn't eat a morsel of anything for two solid weeks because I didn't have anything to eat. And we were looking, scrounging for something to eat. And then the first year, I she said, my my mom, dad, me, we put a garden in and a little plot out in front of wherever they lived. It wasn't very big.
They've got some seeds somewhere, and we weren't gonna let that happen again. But, you know, that they were pushing in Germany, the Nazi government, the motto was. In German, that means blood and soil. And they realized that the strength they weren't stupid. They were Germanic people. They understood that the the strength of their country were the farmers. And the more people they could get out on the land, the the more powerful they would be. And they they had government programs to try to do that. But once you try to do that with a government program, you've already lost a battle. I remember I had a buddy here at home. I grew up with him. He was a shirttail cousin through my uncle.
And he, he was a farmer, and, of course, we were in four h and f a. He was big in FFA, Future Farmers of America, and lived down there by Moonshine Store. Well, when he got older, he got into some kind of a business where they would, try to ship farm equipment to the Ukraine. And then he'd go over there and try to show them how some of them how to run it, how to run the equipment. I said, well, how'd it go? He said it didn't go good. He said these Ukrainians have been under communism for so long that when their combine had break down, they just sit along out in the field and wait for somebody to come and fix it. And they didn't know anybody could fix it. And, they said, well, how do you do this in America? He said, well, if a farmer has a combine that breaks down in America, he fixes it. And if he can't figure it out, he'll he'll scrounge around, look around, try to figure us out something. He'll make something. He'll go to the he'll get his welder out, and he'll try to make something.
See, in America, we do that. You know, if the the hog if the hog water or the cattle cattle water wasn't working or feeder broke, we just fixed it. We we didn't go to town and buy parts. We didn't even go to town and buy nails. Mhmm. And we we had a nail pile, and we get to nail it. When I was growing up, I must have spent thousand hours, me and my brother, with a with a regular hammer straighten the nails out so my dad could use them. And that's the way we did the old 10p nail, three penny nails. You know, you lay them down flat on a board and try to pound them after they were pulled, already used. No. And you had they were crooked. So we Yeah. Right. Straight straightened them out. Well, that's the way we did things. I mean, if you're on your own, you depend on yourself, and you can't afford to buy new things. And and that but that's nothing unusual and nothing nothing. We weren't poor.
We just, well, Scotch, as they say. You know? Just tight. You know what? And if you aren't, you don't make it, frankly, in that kind of a business. Frugal. You're really frugal. Frugal is a good word. Yeah. And we didn't throw anything away. We had a pile for everything. We had a lumber pile, an iron pile. We even had a nail pile, but it was inside. You know? We'd throw our nails. And my brother and I, you know, we used to take string and, like, twine or any string. If it was string made of anything, we we started a ball, and we'd tie tie the next piece onto it, whether it be six foot or six inches. And then we just kept wrapping it around around till we had a ball about the size of a golf ball, and it just kept getting bigger as we got older.
I went home. I'm just saying the way things were, not complaining a bit. Now it was great. We always had everything we needed, but I went home after I started raising family, and I was living in the in the home place there. And I went out to the shed where we or a boot slot because it was muddy. And and when a boot got to where it was leaking or you couldn't use it anymore, we didn't throw that away either. We threw it in a bin just in case times got hard. You know? So when I grew up, I was in my thirties, and I went I was just over 30, and I went out there, and there was that bin full of boots that had not been used in years. And I thought, well, I might be able to get rid of them. You know? So I went through there, and I found 80, count them, 80 pairs of boots My lord. That had gotten so we couldn't wear them anymore, but we wouldn't throw them away. Of course, we figured too, well, they might have some leather in them we can use. You know? That Comment. The way we do. Comment. As somebody now this is this comment's coming from, Oklahoma.
[00:37:39] Unknown:
Yeah. Western Oklahoma. Yeah. Yeah. So we wanna let him in. Go ahead. The Thanksgiving out in that part of the country yesterday there, Joe? Yep. It was wonderful.
[00:37:48] Unknown:
Beautiful, beautiful day, very light winds, bright sunshine all day long, and about 53, 54 degrees.
[00:37:58] Unknown:
Good.
[00:37:59] Unknown:
Well, good. But my comment with regard to Brent's boots is I can remember if you not got a hole in your overshoes or your rubber boots or whatever, glosses, I guess, is the city folks call them. But, we'd take and put a tire patch on them. I I remember having several tire patches on my overshoes.
[00:38:25] Unknown:
Dad used to laugh. He used to say he could enter his clothes from any direction. They had so many holes in them now. And in the wintertime, we'd put on just a lot of stuff that was holy and tore up. But if you get two or three of them, there's enough to cover all the parts, and you're good. You know? Just it wasn't a matter of of being we didn't you know, I had a guy tell me one time, poor is not an economic condition. It is not an economic condition. Poor is a state of mind. And if you if you're thinking wrong, you'd be poor. But if, you know, even if you got a lot the people that got a lot, I discovered, are people that save a lot and are frugal and they'll throw things away and they'll waste things. They're that's why they got a lot. And I I felt like we were in that position. I never went without ever. Never went without something for my feet, clothes to wear, shelter, food. We ate well.
Ate well. I had, we ate meat three times a day and at the insistence of my father, because we butchered hogs. He said you're but that was part of the culture. It's not true anymore, but used to be in that part of the world, if you didn't eat pork, you you weren't healthy. People believe that. And we ate pork three times a day and steak too, but I always had pork available. We butchered. Hogs keep better than in the wintertime, or pork keeps better. Whether or not she should eat is another question. But, anyway, I got to thinking about all this and talking, about the the anglosphere And, try to boil it down in my head, what's really important here. And it's not a it's not a a racist statement to say that our common law culture, which amalgamated amalgamated and came to a high degree of use and sophistication on that island we call Britain.
And that's our culture. And it's not any difference where your ancestors came from. If you're in America, you live in the Anglosphere, and that's what's made us who we are. And if you don't get with it, and if that doesn't become forefront, if that doesn't become what you want, you're part of the problem because anything less will destroy us. It's a Christian tradition. You don't like Christianity, it's still a Christian tradition. And if you don't conform to it, you're done. And our country is done too. That's my message to people. And, it's gotten more intense as that as time goes on. There isn't anything better. There's no other options.
Everything else will make you stupid, ugly, dirty, starving, and and without. Almost said poor. That's not the point. Poor is a state of mind. It's not a economic condition. It's a matter of are you willing to do, it really comes down to this, to conform to what God wants. And it's not a matter of, oh, everybody's a Christian. It's not a majority thing, rah, rah, rah. Let's have a big Billy Graham crusade and everybody, worship Jesus and all no. No. No. No. It it'll never work that way. And anything that says that's the way it works, and we went through that in America for several decades, there's no lasting power in any of that. The lasting power is the new birth individually in a critical mass of people who, because they're right, dominate the culture and everybody else conforms.
And the truth will always dominate and others will follow. When I was growing up there again at home and dad, my father, was a member. He was the county secretary of the NFO. In those days, it was called the National Farmers National Farmers Organization and the NFO. And they were the ones there's a fellow out of Iowa that said he had a he I think he was I don't even think the guy went to high school. He'd get out a piece of paper and old grocery bags when they were paper bags, and he'd cut them apart. He'd take his pencil and sharpen it and get to work. Well, he finally determined, using arithmetic, that if farmers could control 10% of any commodity, whether it be pork or beef or or rutabagas or wheat or corn or eggs or milk or whatever, if they could control 10% of the production of that commodity in the country, they would control the entire country.
And not only that, if they could get a fair price a fair price that would support a family at the first point of sale coming out of the field or out of the even out of the mine if it's natural, we call natural resources, raw materials. If they could get what came to be called parity price at the first point of sale, that the wealth of the country would magnify by seven times. That is true. And there have been books written on it since, and legislation has been passed to support it, but it's not enforced anymore. But what my point about this is, that's just by analogy.
If you can control a critical mass of the control culture if a critical mass and a critical mass sometimes is very small, and God does not operate by majorities. But if you can control a critical mass, you will control the culture. That's what we're talking about when we say Christian culture. This is not politics where you gotta have a majority. No. A critical mass. God always works through a critical mass. When Noah went into the ark, as we like to say, he was in the minority. But when he came out, he was in the majority. That's the way God works the critical mass, and he always always wins.
Back to you, Roger.
[00:44:16] Unknown:
Noah. Noah? Noah was the worst preacher that ever lived.
[00:44:23] Unknown:
He still won. Yeah. You're right. He didn't he didn't have that much of a of a hearing, did he? He must not had any charisma.
[00:44:31] Unknown:
Yeah. Let me, I love your stories, Brent. I know everybody else does too. Right before you went on, our good listener in California, Chris, was wanting to say something. Chris, did you have something to say to the audience or, or what?
[00:44:47] Unknown:
Well, I'm here. I'm here today.
[00:44:51] Unknown:
Good. You're Yeah. We're all good. We have,
[00:44:54] Unknown:
we have an ongoing problem that we're working on solving, studying a little bit about conspiracy. Due to the test testimony of some people, we've learned that there's been a conspiracy against us. And, we've had a lot of a lot of things stolen off of a particular people piece of property. In the past, we recovered everything that was stolen because of, people that we know and drones and, tracking devices. But the problem is that the law enforcement, unless there's blood, and they've even said this, unless their blood, it doesn't really interest them that much.
And we wanna get rid of these thieves. So, we're working on, like, for example, there was Sunday morning. Last Sunday morning at 10:00, I relieved my security guard. He wanted to go to church with his wife. I said, go ahead on. So when's the last time you walked the property? He said, around 07:30 or eight. I said, okay. So, I'll take over. And I I went into the house, the house that, we're re rebuilding, and, I heard noise out back. So I took a look, and here's a guy there's there's two trucks. One's a U Haul truck. One's a pickup truck, and both of them have car haulers behind them.
And I see these three guys back there, you know, gathering up stuff, you know, and and they were planning on stealing two cars in particular because, we had a, El Camino, '81 El Camino that, that we had it up on blocks with no wheels. One day, there's two wheels on one side and the jack under the other side. I said, well, something's going on here. So I took the jack and some other tools, and I I took the wheels off and put it back on the on the blocks. Two days later, there's all four wheels are on, and they're only held on with one lug nut each. So they they they were gonna take that out in a hurry.
So, again, I removed all those, put it back down in the blocks. These, these trucks that we saw in the backyard, because they they had just put those those four on, by the way, just put those four wheels on. So they had the car haulers there. They're gonna take that and the Mercedes sitting next to it.
[00:47:21] Unknown:
So we've already lost,
[00:47:22] Unknown:
five trucks and a couple of cars. So, I called the sheriffs. Sheriffs came. They didn't want me anywhere around the scene. They wanted to handle it themselves. Of course, they botched it real good, because all three of those guys should have been arrested. Nobody was arrested. They asked I I called it in. When I called it in, I knew the person who who had the who had the, U Haul truck, and it was a stolen truck. And he had been bragging around town about about had having stolen this U Haul truck, and so I got wind of it. When I saw it in my backyard, I knew, well, this must be the truck.
So, and, another person who I know who I found out now is behind it all, he, his name's Ron, and he had told me two weeks before that, that this person, Chris, had offered him the stolen new haul truck to move some stuff that he wanted to move. So now I see this truck in my backyard. I called it in as stolen truck and so forth. They came there. They found out the truck was stolen. They found out the trailer hooked up to it was also stolen. And, nobody got arrested because they asked the other three guys, well, who brought this one in here? And all three of them said, oh, that was here when we got here. We we all came in the other one.
And and the and the the sheriff's just let that go. Meanwhile, there's containers that are wide open, stuff all strewn out all over the place, a big chest of tools and a wheelbarrow and and all kinds of things that they were getting ready to load in the in the U Haul truck. And there was no investigation or or anything. So, you know, so we need to county. We have to go a little further.
[00:49:10] Unknown:
This is county. Los Angeles County. Los Angeles. Oh, so are you in you're in a metropolitan area?
[00:49:17] Unknown:
Well, no. I'm in a rural area. We're in the upper part where
[00:49:22] Unknown:
Well, give me a county. Oh, I like geography. Can you give me a pinpoint of where the place is or the town or the
[00:49:31] Unknown:
Lancaster.
[00:49:33] Unknown:
Oh. Oh. Well, yeah. I've heard of that place. And that's in that's in LA County?
[00:49:40] Unknown:
Yes. It is. The Northern End of LA County.
[00:49:43] Unknown:
Is that a business there you got? Some kind of a wrecking yard or something?
[00:49:48] Unknown:
Oh, that's just the part. We got we got we got dip we got different places for different purposes. You know, and, this particular, this particular place was rented out to a friend of mine who after fifteen years went the wrong direction. And this place had become a, center for drugs and, and, fencing stolen property. And so, the guy that I had rented to, he's in jail right now. And so we've taken the place over, and we're trying to we're trying to get rid of the, the negative activity.
[00:50:24] Unknown:
So you're you're out by Quartz Hill and out by that part of the world?
[00:50:29] Unknown:
We're we're we're East Of Quartz Hill. Yeah. We're on the other side of the freeway.
[00:50:34] Unknown:
On on 14?
[00:50:37] Unknown:
Yeah. We're East Of The 14.
[00:50:40] Unknown:
Alright. Okay. So and and you, the the cops came out and didn't do anything. Well, it sounds to me like you're running your own security, though. You're trying to to take care of yourself.
[00:50:53] Unknown:
Well, yeah, the, we'll be putting up we're hoping to put up a surveillance system today. It's been difficult to find the right surveillance system because there was a fire in the garage, or near the garage, and it took out the electric meter. And, they won't give us electricity back until, you know, until we, do some repairs. But we could do solar because we're doing solar at other places. We're doing off grid solar at another at another location, and we have, extra panels and so forth. However, anything we put there will be stolen unless it's watched.
[00:51:30] Unknown:
Uh-huh. I would think a U Haul stands out like a sore thumb in California. I'd heard there weren't any more in California. They everybody leaving.
[00:51:40] Unknown:
No. No. This sounds everybody's not leaving. Everybody's coming here.
[00:51:45] Unknown:
Oh, they're coming out of LA, out out out of LA based on the land. States.
[00:51:50] Unknown:
They're coming from all over the world.
[00:51:53] Unknown:
To California?
[00:51:54] Unknown:
People in other parts of the world love California. Absolutely. And we're we're right near the, Palmdale Regional Airport, which is totally it's part of Edwards Air Force Base, and that's where all the f 30 fives in Northrop and Lockheed and everybody are. And they're hiring like mad and building new factories. Thank you, mister Trump. We got a boom going. So and now that the freeways are coming up here and we've got the Metrolink up here, people are commuting from here down to LA.
[00:52:28] Unknown:
Yeah. Well, you can hardly get through on, you know, on 14. I've been in there where I've set for four and five hours, and I gave up and turned around and went back. I was trying to get out toward Banning and Palm Springs out in there. You know? Yeah. I couldn't get through. Well, that that's I mean, that's how crowded it is.
[00:52:43] Unknown:
That's ancient history. It's five lanes both directions now.
[00:52:47] Unknown:
Yeah. Yeah. Yeah. So, I've turned off trying to go north, turned off on 14 to go up through Lancaster and to go over toward, Victorville to try to get around the Banning and and, Beaumont and those places. It it's it's just overwhelming. I I'm glad I'm out of there. I don't think I don't think it's gonna get better. I just tell people to get out. It's dangerous. You like it as you grow up there? No. No. I'm I'm from Mid the Midwest. Yeah. Wow. I can't imagine you're like a guy.
[00:53:19] Unknown:
Yeah. But have you haven't haven't you heard of the, the news the, new a new state of California?
[00:53:27] Unknown:
Or is it? Jefferson?
[00:53:29] Unknown:
No. We're look we're looking to split the state. We're looking to split the state.
[00:53:33] Unknown:
Well, Jefferson is that's been moved been on since World War two to Yeah. Split the northern end off into the state of Jefferson. Right, Roger? Yeah. Yeah. Is that what you're talking about? No.
[00:53:45] Unknown:
No. No. It's a completely new thing. It's splitting the the red and the blue areas.
[00:53:52] Unknown:
Oh, in other words, LA, the whole corridor of LA down to to Tijuana and and then the corridor of of, San Francisco Bay and Yep. Through Sacramento. Yeah. Yeah. I've seen that. I've known people been involved in that. I know what you're talking about, but you're not getting any traction, are you? Yeah. The oh, yeah. This is actually a red state
[00:54:14] Unknown:
except for the, the voting fraud keeps it blue. Yeah. Correct.
[00:54:18] Unknown:
I get it. Well, you know, the far back yeah. So when I I lived there forty years ago or forty five, I forget what it went. And even after that, but it was always a conservative state because of the massive oil production and agriculture. Where there's production of raw materials, politics are usually conservative. And there's no body We're in a highly asked.
[00:54:41] Unknown:
Yeah. We're in a highly axed agricultural
[00:54:43] Unknown:
area. Oh, well, and I even learned this when I was in high school that California was seventh among nations of the world GED. In agricultural income. Uh-huh. That's how and it's still like that. But but but but for the first time in the history of the state, the politics has taken over, but that's true in every state. Texas is that way now, Nevada, New York, Illinois. Big cities are like that, and it's it's going to other places, the big cities. And that's when the when the when the cities extend their terror over the territory about them, that's when things go down. And the because the territories about the cities are areas of production. There's always act there's something out in the country people are producing.
I mean, even out there in the desert, you've got some cattle and you've got some agricultural product quite a bit probably if you got a little water. But in the cities, the cities are fundamentally a a culture of consumption, and the air rural areas are a culture of production.
[00:55:46] Unknown:
Right.
[00:55:48] Unknown:
Go ahead. You wanna say something?
[00:55:51] Unknown:
Yeah. We have free water because we have wells, so we can, you know, do whatever we want. My specialty my specialty out here is land use law, and I prevent, I prevent different jurisdictions from taking control of farmers' water.
[00:56:11] Unknown:
Uh-huh. Are you having any luck?
[00:56:14] Unknown:
Absolutely. Every time. For thirty years. And based on the law based on the treaty law of, the Treaty of Guadalupe Hidalgo and the protocol of Quaterio where, the Mexicans insisted on the words, that, that the people shall have the use of the free use of the land forever and there is no signs. And that and, that was signed. Congress agreed to that. Then we had the Homestead Act. Now we have the Federal Land Patent Act. I pull up people's patents all the time to bring those beautiful words forward, and we stick it in the face of the county, and there's nothing they can do. Unfortunately, we have all the great legal work of Howard Hughes because Howard Hughes, you know, had all the wetlands down there by Marina del Rey in Venice and all that.
And, so what we got to Sumo properties cases and the Venice Peninsula property cases where he based on the land patent, he beat the city, county, and state.
[00:57:14] Unknown:
Well, coming back to the sheriff, so your sheriff isn't helping you and you can't get him to help you, and you don't think there's any chance he's gonna help you?
[00:57:24] Unknown:
Oh oh, I am I do get help, and I'm gonna get more. I I know some people on the inside. I visit with them, and they're concerned about the situation. But it's just a matter of the the problem is the, the violent crimes take the priority, And theft is not a violent
[00:57:45] Unknown:
generally. No.
[00:57:47] Unknown:
So so theft is down here at the bottom of the pile.
[00:57:52] Unknown:
Yeah. Looks like it In order to get
[00:57:54] Unknown:
in the action in in order to get any action, I have to do all the investigation, gather all the evidence myself, and present it to a detective, and then we get something happening. It's just a little more work.
[00:58:06] Unknown:
Yeah. You do the work, and they get the credit. I see how that works. Of course. You know, in Dallas I like that.
[00:58:13] Unknown:
Go ahead. Yeah. You know, Roger knows all about that. When I get publicity and, you know, I was promoting my my recording artists and so forth,
[00:58:22] Unknown:
I mean, I had articles in the LA Times all the time and other other papers as well because I did all the work for them and wrote the article for them and let them take the credit. That's how it works. Well, that's true. Oh, no. That's true. I get it. That's true in journalism. If you do the work for them, they'll print it and get the credit. But it is true too, I suppose. I think Reagan became famous for saying, there's no limit to what can be done for good as long as nobody cares who gets the credit. I believe that's true. Well Yeah. Yeah. That's a good that's good. You know? Repeat that, Brent. Repeat that, please. There's no there's no limit to the to the good that can be done as long as nobody cares who gets the credit. Yikes. That's excellent. Thanks, Ronnie.
Yeah. Well, thanks for calling and letting us know. And
[00:59:11] Unknown:
Yeah. And good luck in all that.
[00:59:15] Unknown:
No. We're looking up, and people that I know were looking up and, you know, I still gotta get together with John Kacera. I haven't done that yet because I've been so busy. But, he wants to get together. This is like like you said, it doesn't take a lot of people when when when the the right good people put their heads together.
[00:59:34] Unknown:
Well, the truth I I hesitate to say anybody's good, but the truth is, that the truth is like light. And as soon as it's there, the darkness flees. The lies, all of a sudden, lose power. And they may scream and holler, but they've lost they've lost power. So, yeah, all you have to do Could you just calmly say the truth. Go ahead. Could you take good out and just put well intentioned? Yeah. That's pretty good. Yeah. Well, you you ever before the other day. That fellow that used to We we we we
[01:00:05] Unknown:
Go ahead. Go ahead. You're gonna lag here. Go ahead, Drew.
[01:00:09] Unknown:
Yeah. We even got it on our cameras, of the guy who came and busted the windows out of my daughter's car, and it was one of the people that don't want us closing down their operation.
[01:00:20] Unknown:
Uh-huh.
[01:00:21] Unknown:
Yeah. And that's just that's just news that they know they've lost.
[01:00:28] Unknown:
Carnegie, I think his name is Dale. Yes. Wrote how to make friends and influence people. And, then he made a fortune teaching public speaking, in the YMCA is where he started. He was off a farm in Missouri. He said he used to go out on the barn and preach to the pigeons up in the haymower or practice public speaking and discovered that people are frustrated. People that had money that were in business were frustrated because they didn't know how to get stand up and and, just speak to people. And that's an important part of of business. And so, I got to thinking when I was a kid, little boy growing up, we used to have to say our peace. Did you ever hear of that, Roger? Yes. Say your peace. Yes. And we said our peace every day. That here on the show. I recognize somebody sometimes who said, say your peace. Go ahead. Well, when we were little children, that was the popular culture. I mean, we didn't think anything about it. Everybody did it. At Christmas time, everybody had to stand up, all the children, I mean. Little children up till they're about 12 years old from soon as they could stand up, three three years old till 12 every year, you had to say your piece. And you'd be given very simple one when you were three and four and then a little more a little longer, but you'd memorize it. And you'd stand up in front of the church, Christmas time usually, and you'd say your piece.
And I didn't think about it until recently how important that was to me. Because as a little boy, I was forced to stand up in front of, well, 20 or 30 people, probably, that little church down here in the country, and say my piece. And I remember other little children standing up and and getting embarrassed and running off, and their parents would then go stand with them and while they said their piece because they want their mom with them or something. But all that was good to teach a fella and just get him acclimated to the idea or start him in that, words are important, and and, there's not nothing to be afraid of to do that.
And I've heard people say older men say that it was one of the most valuable things that ever happened in their education was saying their peace at church when they were little boys and girls. I don't know I don't think that's done anymore, but it was it was just the way it was culturally. Again, we're coming back to our Christian culture, which is our common law culture, which to us is the Anglosphere. We're we're our it's the English speaking culture. No matter what your Give me your, blood lineage is, that's what it is. That's who we are, and we're all part of it. And it's the way God wants things.
Yeah. Because why? Well, it's it's the laws of nature, and the laws of nature is God.
[01:03:16] Unknown:
Growing up in the air force and moving all over, we never really had a church per se. You know? Maybe for the few years we were in a situation. I don't ever remember going through that ritual, but it surely sounds like it would be very beneficial for all children getting up in front of people and not be shy. Yeah. Yeah. Your self confidence, even at an early age,
[01:03:39] Unknown:
I can see that as extremely beneficial. Get your mind off yourself and try to get your mind on what you're saying. Yep. Now I was a hard case just talking about me. I that's what I can give testimony to. And by the time I was grown, then I I I did okay saying my piece up till I was 12, and they got a little longer. You know? And I remember one time I had to say my piece. It was Christmastime, and I had to recite, the, the story of the nativity of Jesus Christ from from the book of Luke. And I still remember that phrase in there, and they wrapped him in swaddling clothes and lay him in a manger.
And I that word swaddling, swaddling clothes has always fascinated me as a word we don't hear much about anymore, but that's an important part of our English tongue, but little things like that. But I got older. I did okay up through, 12, 14. And then, I got older, and I got self conscious about speaking in front of people to where it really bothered me, and I had a hard time with it. Real hard. And all it was all it is, see, is self it's selfishness is what it is. It's part of our we're just not fundamentally good people. We got personal selfish problem. Did somebody wanna say something? The head of this. No. I guess not.
I guess not. And then I ended up Roger, of course. I I tried to get up when I got older. I'd make presentations. People would want me to say things because I I had things that needed to be said, but I struggled with self consciousness. And then I got I ran for US Congress. And every day or two, I was on the radio or the television, or I was in front of a large group of people or a small group of people making a presentation. And, it unnerved me to do that, but I did it. I didn't wanna do it a lot of time. Then going into court, you know, you I got worried about that. Am I gonna make a darn fool out of myself? And the answer is yes. You will. The only way to to get past all that is to make a darn fool out of yourself enough time that you start to come around, but it's worth it to to speak.
Well, anyway, Carnegie, he made a fortune that way, but he and he and he wrote a book, a gathering about public speaking, and he and his book a big thick book. How to Win Friends and Influence People was the name of it. The first thing he does in that book is he he makes this categorical statement. Most everybody thinks they're a good person. Most everybody thinks they're doing right or they wouldn't be doing it. And then he got to talking about, I think it was pretty boy Floyd and how the police surrounded his the building he was in, and they had a shootout.
And, of course, he was outgunned, and he got hit a few times. He finally crawled behind the couch trying to stay out of the gunfire coming through the windows. And he had a piece of paper and blood running out of his body someplace, and he took a something, a piece of straw or something or a stick, and he dipped it in his own blood and wrote on a little piece of paper. I know that people think I'm a bad man, but deep inside, there beats a heart of gold. He believed he was a pretty good guy. And, Carnegie said if you're gonna get along with people, the first thing you gotta recognize is everybody thinks they're trying to do right. Most everybody. Now there are exceptions. There are those people that are bad to the bone, and they don't give two hoots and a holler. And they'll they'll hurt they'll kill. As one fellow said, he couldn't who was it? I read about him recently. He couldn't he couldn't rest until he had shed blood, and that's exactly what the Bible says. The evil the truly evil man cannot rest until he has shed blood.
He it makes him sleep good at night. That's what you're dealing with. And there's a lot of that out there, but, you don't always know who they are. I worked for this Jew in Atlanta for a short time named Art Stein
[01:07:43] Unknown:
Mhmm. When I was transitioning out of the music business into whatever life held for me. Mhmm. And, he, had stolen me and cased me and stolen me from another company I was working for. Yeah. Yeah. And I was stupid enough for a few dollars to follow him. Uh-huh. But, anyway, we're sitting in there in his office one day after the store closed, and he pull pulls up a, Uzi from the floor. Bam. Plouncing on the desk. And he looked at me, Brent, and he said, I've got larceny in my heart. Oh, yeah. Straight out of his mouth. Okay.
[01:08:22] Unknown:
Mhmm. Yeah. I've been around fellows who say things like that too, especially they get nursing on the jug a little too long. And the next thing you know, they're talking too much, and they're saying that's what they really wanna do, and they wanna hurt people or steal or and then you realize, well, I better get away from this fella. But you don't know who they are. They hide it well. And and so the the video thing went by the wayside, and we parted ways.
[01:08:47] Unknown:
Where do I see him show up on one of these Make A Wish Foundation programs that you start? Yeah. Yeah. You know, I'll send the poor girl to Disney World, you know, and all that. And then you he's pocketing every penny that came in there. Thieving son of a bitch.
[01:09:04] Unknown:
A son of well, don't need to create his mother in that, Roger. You know? I'm sorry. Well, she's a she was a Jew or he wouldn't be a Jew, so that fits over there, I think. Well, it and it's a religious thing. It's a religious thing. Is somebody trying to talk or am I just hearing a I don't know. Let's see. Let's check and see. Does somebody wanna say something? What's the little ambient noise coming in?
[01:09:28] Unknown:
I don't know. Nobody talking. Okay. Guess not. Yeah.
[01:09:31] Unknown:
Well, people think they're pretty good, and we all do. We think we're doing right, and we are. The light we're given, most of us are trying to do right. But a lot of what we do is wrong even when we think we're right. And that's why Christianity and the revelation of God, God has broken through, friends. This is the big thing that separates the deist from other people. The deist does not believe God has broken through and given us revealed himself to us. But, Christianity says he has broken through in about three ways fundamentally. Number one, God has broken through, but the recording, having his words recorded, we call that the Bible, is broken through by entering the stream of humanity, and, becoming reducing himself to the span of a man called Jesus Christ.
And then we have the revelation of his creation. We can see around us that there is a designer. There is a creator. There is an author of laws that do not change, the laws of nature. He's broken through and revealed himself. And because he'd broken through and revealed himself, the Bible observes that as Francis Bacon said the same thing. I'll quote Bacon on this one. Atheism may be on the tongue, but it's never in the heart. In other words, a man that says he's an atheist is a liar. He he he didn't believe that. Yeah. Now there does come a point when you've seared your conscience so much because you've been saying that enough. Pretty soon, you're you're a goner. Well And you can't help yourself, and you're just pure evil. That does happen. Go ahead. Well, you know, the old old saying there's no atheist in a foxhole either. Yeah. Same kinda thing. Right? I'm with you. Yeah. And then the Bible then says, all men know the creator. It just that's an indicative in the Greek text. That means it's true from the viewpoint of the speaker. Well, who's the speaker? Well, the superintendence of the spirit to God, the person of the spirit to God, pour in his truth, and that's the that's the picture the Bible uses, pouring truth through a personality.
And when the the man that penned the Bible penned the Bible, god was the spirit was pouring the truth of the godhead through their personalities, preserving their personalities, preserving their passions, preserving their voc their vocabulary, whatever was in their consciousness, preserve that. And you can see that that God preserves all those things while preserving what is being said from error of fact. God has broken through, and he has spoken to it. As that one old song says this is Andy Jackson's favorite song, by the way. President Andy Jackson, he demanded it be sung at his funeral at the at the Hermitage in, yeah, in Nashville.
And the the lyrics go this was his favorite song. The lyrics go like this. Though through, see, though through fiery trials, my your pathway should lie. My grace, all sufficient, shall be your supply. The flame will not hurt thee. Thy own my only design, thy draw'st to consume and thy gold to refine. To the soul who on Jesus hath leaned for repose, I will not, I will not desert to its foes. That soul, though all hell, should endeavor to shake, I will never, no never, no never forsake. But the lyrics I'm I thought if I said enough of the words, the the lyrics I wanted would come to me. The lyrics, though, were this, but I can't fit them in. But they say, what more can he say than to you he has said, than to you who for refuge to Jesus Christ have fled?
Yeah. That that the the lyrics, I forget where they go. But the point being and then Jackson, funny thing about it, when they were singing this song at his funeral, yeah, I told you about the parrot that lived in his house. Yeah. But tell him again. Tell him again. The pet parrot lived in the house. And during the performances of the funeral, the parrot started talking and stringing off cuss words. Well, of course, everybody knew if the parrot was cussing up a storm, that's what the parrot was hearing in the house. See? There were Right. Right. Well, that that that's just a testimony to the reality. Number one, Andy Jackson tried to be politic and hide his faults while he lived like all of us do.
But isn't it something that his faults all came out without him knowing it and nobody foresaw it through that parrot? Some of his faults. Have you ever had a parrot, Brent? No. I had a neighbor had one. No. I can tell you stories about parrots. You had one? I had one for a while in Atlanta, and
[01:14:39] Unknown:
a friend of mine lived down by, the park down in in downtown had one, and he wanted to get rid of it. And I was interested in it. It was a green greenhead parrot. Yeah. And, and he says, well, I I won't sell it to you until you've had it for a month. Mhmm. Mhmm. Smart guy.
[01:14:59] Unknown:
Okay. What happened?
[01:15:01] Unknown:
Well, I bring the parrot home and it's in a cage and it's on it's it's really nice. You could bring it out and it it it put it on your shoulder and stuff. And it just without motivation, it just bites your earlobe or something. Oh, yeah. Well, I don't know if that's some kind of caressing thing in parrots necessarily. But at the time, I had a wonderful dog. Best dog I ever had. Little, West Highland white terrier. You know, that's odd, Westies. And, that dog was so fascinated with that parrot and the parrot's in a cage. And he could look down and, and Mcavish would get down around the base of the cage, it was on a little stand, and he'd get to the edge of the cage and bend his head over where he could see him with one eye and his eyes would start dilating.
I mean, he he loved that dog. Okay. And so I'd get the parrot out and put it on the floor and and McTavish would kind of start playing with it and it and the dog would start running around the parrot, you know, like a figure eight or something. Yeah. Yeah. Yeah. And the parrot would go, And then what the defining the defining moment was it was in the spring, I guess, had the windows open and my house sat down from the street a little bit. And Uh-huh. And that parrot would start that god awful jungle stuff. Yeah. And, I'm I'm looking out and some people are walking their baby in a in a carriage out in front of the house and they're, like, just stopped and staring at the house. Finally, I called the guy back and said, listen. I can't handle this. They're kinda messy. I mean, they're kinda messy too. You think it'd be a clean pet, but they they throw it when they eat seeds and stuff. They throw all that all over the place.
And but, boy, I can remember my dog, Chase, doing those figure eights around that parrot. And and then the dog had stopped and then he'd start stalking him again to get him to do it again. It was just really cute. You know? I'll never forget it, really. Thanks for bringing that number up, actually.
[01:17:07] Unknown:
Fascinating critters. And but like you say, dirty, and they stink in my humble opinion. They're dirty. They stink. I'm sure they do. You have Yeah. And at a when I was a a member of the armed forces of the United States, I was had to go through a decompression chamber once, and, the chief that was taking me through, he he's a sailor, so he think he's got this idea that if you're a sailor, you ought to have a parrot, and he had one. And, he brought this thing in the where the decompression chamber was. Oh. And we were gonna go down, and we're still gonna go down to a 114 feet of seawater. That's what we they we'd call it because you get in this thing, and then you put the pressure on. You know? Uh-huh.
But this chief, this parrot was on his arm, and this darn parrot, I noticed scars on his other arm. I said, what? I get bat. Looked like fresh wounds. He said, darn parrot. He said he sets him arm, and then he decides, like you were saying, you're gonna bite your ear or something. This thing just latched on with his claws and just rip holes in his arm. Yeah. You know? Why keep an animal around like that now? If I had one, I'd just shoot it. See? That's what I'd do. It was just the unpredictability of it that I couldn't Yeah. Couldn't eat. Well, he cold cocked this thing with his fist. Yeah. Knocked him flatter in a flitter and a dumb of course, a parrot's a parrot that he didn't know why he got cold cocked. He just jumped up and fluttered up and sat on his arm again. So you're just dealing with it. They're just being the way God made them, but, you can't change them. You're not gonna train them except train them. They're just gonna learn whatever they want. I thought I thought, you know, boy, that'll be a great pet.
[01:18:46] Unknown:
Yeah.
[01:18:50] Unknown:
Okay, Roger. Here. Listen. Listen, Roger. It's eighteen minutes it's eighteen minutes after the hour. Okay. If we could get people, which we haven't been doing that as much. I've been doing that much, but people wanna ask, what does Roger think or what does Brent think? Or make a comment and see what we think or ask a question and see what we think because we'll probably comment on whatever said or asked. But Alright. Well, I think that's good. I have no idea how many people are in the room or with us live today. Of course, it is the Thanksgiving weekend, understandably,
[01:19:20] Unknown:
if we're light. Does anybody have any questions for Brent or myself or anything you'd like to say? I don't know, Brent. It doesn't say that. I I dropped the rock and it hadn't hit the bottom of the well yet. But that's how that happens a lot, I noticed. I've noticed. When you do that, it's silence on the other end, then somebody will come in later and say something. You got you gotta chum them up. It's like going fishing. There's one we chum see there? A chummer up right there. Chummer.
[01:19:49] Unknown:
Yes.
[01:19:50] Unknown:
Hi. Yeah. Hi, Murmer. You know, this is happening place. Thanks. Shut life. No. Hold on. Hold on. Do you have a good Thanksgiving? Oh, I did. Did you?
[01:20:00] Unknown:
Yes. Wonderful, actually.
[01:20:03] Unknown:
Yeah. I had a big butternut squash.
[01:20:07] Unknown:
Okay. Cool. Oh, good. So it was appetizer,
[01:20:11] Unknown:
sides, entree, and dessert.
[01:20:14] Unknown:
Oh my god.
[01:20:17] Unknown:
You tell me. Who? Everyone tell me. Yeah. I had some other stuff too. But, reason I came on here, I see Cody has his hand up, and he left something in the chat. So Oh. Yeah. So I don't know. There's there's several, hosts and co hosts, but I don't know if his hand is stuck up there or if he got to speak before I came or what. So I just wanna open the floor for him. Alright. Well, I think we'll get that. Idea code Cody, are you there?
[01:20:44] Unknown:
I think so. I think they unlocked it for me. Oh, there you are. Hey, buddy. Happy Thanksgiving. What's going happy Thanksgiving all. And, yeah, the no. I I think all I put in there was, I've been testing out a new security camera that's four g LTE cell phone with a cell solar panel. You know? So you can pick one of those up if he's having problems out there and you don't need power. It just it'll charge itself, and it'll send you notifications on the app within a few seconds of a vehicle or somebody coming into frame. And so if he's having problems out there yeah. They might I thought they could steal the camera, but you should be notified and get, you know, pictures and everything before before that would happen.
And there's there's a cheap cheap ones out there, and then there's some more expensive ones. What's that, Brad? Code it. That fits really well because
[01:21:40] Unknown:
this fellow that called in lives in the godforsaken Mojave Desert. A lot of sun. And that ought to work for it.
[01:21:49] Unknown:
Yeah. You don't have to go through the effort of that. You don't have to go through the effort of trying to engineer, you know, a different solar panel and make it fit. You can buy them less than a $150 for the really good ones, and I guess there's some cheap ones. I see some cheap ones on TikTok called c vision, $20.20, $30. I guess they make their money on the 15 a month cellular plan, and some of those, they don't let you use your own cell phone carrier and then some the more expensive ones do, so you can play with them. But, yeah, that'd be the way to do it. I've it's not working too bad. The one I've got, it's a Eufy, kind of a weird name, e u f y. It, it's made by Anchor Technologies, I guess. I don't know why they don't use the the Anchor name. Eufy kinda sounds like Goofy to me, but the excuse me. The it's been working pretty good and, you know, not too bad. The motion detector only goes out about thirty thirty, 40 feet, but it's got some AI stuff built in it. You can turn off being notified on vehicles. You get too many vehicles going by or whatever, but you can it'll only notify you on humans, and you can set up a target area and all that kind of stuff. So I didn't really know about them. I'm I'm surprised these companies haven't marketed these. You know, you get all these goofy ads all the time online, and I'm surprised these companies haven't promoted these with more advertising.
And but maybe it's all word-of-mouth. You know? And Mhmm. The one I've the one I've got does both, Wi Fi and then, you know, cellular. So if somebody tried to cut my Wi Fi lines or whatever, then it would go to to cell phone. And, Mhmm. So, anyway, maybe that'll help them out. You can probably get a cheaper one on Amazon. Of it?
[01:23:33] Unknown:
What's the name of it, Cody? Chris, ears up, Chris, out there. Cody's trying to give you some info. Well, that's the name of it. The cheap one that's got two two k camera on it,
[01:23:44] Unknown:
which is, like, under $30 that I've seen on TikTok, and I've got some coming to see how they perform is just called c e vision, s e e v I s I o n. And the higher end ones that are over a $100 are called e u f y, Eufy, supposedly made by Anker Technologies. I don't know why they're using such a goofy name. But
[01:24:08] Unknown:
Well, it sounds to me like the from my experience. And you're in the oil field there, and and, oil field oil field equipment is often stolen because the oil wells are out on the lease and nobody's out there, and people just pull up steel pipe and tanks, and I've watched that all my life. But in a day when we've got security cameras, that can be curtailed with security cameras,
[01:24:35] Unknown:
I would think. Yeah. I I've had some I've had some higher end camera systems, and I was never really happy with a lot of the the software. And the great thing about these nowadays is they're they're actually using some kind of AI analysis built on the chips. So you don't even have to, you know, pay for some very expensive cellular plan where it's constantly sending the video to a server to let it analyze it and then notify you. It's just it does it within the camera based on, you know, analyze it and then notify you. It just it does it within the camera based on human or or vehicle, and you can choose either one or both and, some other different parameters. And then, you know, it kinda just only problem I'm seeing with them, they only go out about 40 feet. So you might have to put one on every corner of your house or every corner of a, you know, lease or road or whatever to make sure it gets triggered. But, I guess some of the some of the ones that are on all the time go back to then a base station box that does some AI analysis before it bothers you. But the only problem with that I see is, you know, if somebody can break into your facility before you get notified, which it actually notifies you so quick. That probably wouldn't happen nowadays, but that would be the only thing to be aware of is make sure, you you know, if they cut your you can get routers that have got cellular backup also, so you can still use Wi Fi, save money. And if they cut your, you know, they cut your fiber optic line or your cable line or something, then you'd still get Mhmm. You know? You'd have to be real high end thief to have some kinda Wi Fi interference system that are out there, but you know? Oh, yeah. Yeah. Those are all the Chileans.
[01:26:11] Unknown:
Those are all the Chileans that have come to The US. They're the specialists at that stuff. Oh. Come they got some kind of a blocker. They can walk in. They'll block everybody's Wi Fi and and all that alert stuff, and they go in and Wow. I had some guy out of LA. Some I don't remember who it was. Some very famous guy that had won a won a Rolex, you know, had his custom Rolex and something, and it ended up in Chile.
[01:26:37] Unknown:
It certainly I don't know. I mean,
[01:26:39] Unknown:
there's gotta I don't know. You know, sometimes the engineers, they screw up and they don't think everything through. But you can I mean, you can get systems out there that'll constantly ping a server? And if it doesn't hear the ping, you know, every few seconds, then it'll alert you also. But I don't I don't know if this consumer semi pro grade stuff it probably won't because it's on a cell phone because it's sitting there trying to preserve battery unless the thermal and the radar, you know, motion detection goes off. It's probably, you know supposedly, some of these are supposed to detect if somebody's grabbing it to steal the camera, but one of the guys on YouTube couldn't get it to work. So I don't know. That seems like that would be a pretty simple system. You just have a little mercury switch or something in there that detects that it's getting in a weird position. But, hell, you wouldn't even need a switch. You could just do it based on the the video.
[01:27:28] Unknown:
But, anyway coming back to Ecuador, Cody?
[01:27:31] Unknown:
Oh, I haven't decided. I don't know. Maybe, you know, I don't I don't go there very often. I don't believe the need to. I know. I've noticed. Okay. Susie, you're doing alright? Yeah. She's doing fine. Okay. Yeah. She's doing fine. And,
[01:27:46] Unknown:
we had a we had a great Thanksgiving, so that worked out nice. And Well, listen. I'm a tell you, folks. His wife is a fabulous cook I've experienced. I have too. The turkey deal personally at their lovely home there. I have I have too, Roger. I have too.
[01:28:02] Unknown:
The girl. I think she's gotten better also. I think I think she's improved since she's had her turkey last night, I think, Roger.
[01:28:08] Unknown:
Mhmm. That's good.
[01:28:10] Unknown:
Was that Samuel trying to say something? Somebody said Cody, I thought. Yeah. It sure was. I wanted to know what the wireless transmission distance is.
[01:28:19] Unknown:
Well, it's going cell phones. So as long as you got a, four g LTE connection, it'll work. Any distance, you're saying? Well, any any as long as you're not in no man's land with no cell phone signal. Yeah. Okay. Cool. As long as you got a digital digital signal for, you know, for smartphones and stuff work. If you've only got an audio signal because you don't have it says four g. God, I don't know what's wrong with my my throat today, but, yes. As long as you got a four g, which is not five g, so four g LTE is pretty common now, and that shouldn't be a problem in most most areas. Cool. The the only thing you might check I'd I'd just have to ask him if you had a thanks give a good thanksgiving. Go on with what you're saying and answer that later. Yeah. I was gonna say, you know, there some of the reviews on that Eufy one showed that it the the theft thing didn't seem to be working. I don't know if they fixed that.
You know, maybe you wanna get the cheaper ones that are two k resolution instead of four k in case they do disappear. But if you put up enough of these in in the different angles, I mean, you're gonna get notices within three, four, five seconds. So there's really not enough time unless somebody shoots the camera to, you know, with their shooting and that stuff, you're gonna hear them and and all that. So, you know, then you could get a you could get motion detectors to stick, you know, in your buildings or, you know, on those, you know, different things that probably go longer distances and don't consume much power, you know, that you can get. But I think those cell phones are more independent, you know. If you're gonna go back and put a whole system up then and feed it back to a central deal, that's a little different. You'd probably have to get a, you know, a cell They they they call it what do they call it? They call it a router with a there's a term for it. It's kind of a goofy term. Was it fairs?
I forget. It's just a router that's got, you know, the cell phone built into it so that somebody cuts your, you know, your high speed, you know, line coming in, it'll go to go to, you know, cell phones. So if you really wanna be safe
[01:30:20] Unknown:
Go ahead. Here we are talking for minutes on cameras and safety and everything, which normally would be okay. Some people have an application. Listen, everybody's got an application for this now. You know, you you know what happened, Wednesday, Brent, I'm sure about the two national guard guys getting killed in DC. I heard about it. Didn't give it much thought. People die every day and who knows if it's true? Tell me what you know. No. No. It's true. And I heard yesterday, I hadn't heard it from another source that it was an Afghan guy, I think came over with the botched Biden Afghanistan fiasco with somebody that was helping the Americans over there as a translator or something. And they didn't go they couldn't. They didn't have the manpower to vet all those people. And this wacko comes. Well, we didn't know until yesterday. That's what it was. You didn't know if it was an Antifa person or but, you know, we're real close to some well, some horrendous times in our country, unfortunately.
And this this camera thing that y'all are spending a bit of time on here today ordinarily, it'd be okay. People wouldn't be listening. But folks, you better start listening. You better start preparing. We don't know what's gonna happen Monday with this thing on Monday afternoon. And both of those people yeah. Just a second, Joe. Both those people being shot in the head and and killed. I think they're both from West Virginia. Alright. Hold on a second. Joe's first. Joe?
[01:31:48] Unknown:
It's been widely reported that he was he worked for the CIA in Afghanistan and The US. Wow. There you go. That isn't that isn't from just one source. So what does that tell you?
[01:32:03] Unknown:
Well, I mean, I mean, you know, we're drawing conclusions. He wants to make Well, we do we're we're right on the cusp of something big, either false flag or, initiated or whatever, but the players are being put in place and the stage is being set. Just be careful. Get yourself prepared. And that's why I say, the comment, this discussion on all these cameras and stuff, as is is very viable.
[01:32:30] Unknown:
So This this is Chris. Heads up. Heads up. Hey, Chris. Chris Chris from California. Yeah. I just got back. I had to take off for a little bit, go up the street here, and see how that particular trouble place is. There's no activity there. One of the, peep one of the main people that have been stealing there was seen by the lady across the street taking the front window of the house out and carrying it down the street to his house. So that's what he did. He put that in. So, we we nailed that one with the sheriff, and he's being prosecuted, for that as a grand theft.
And so, that's really shaking everybody up because he's one of the main people among this den of thieves. And so it seems like they're staying away for right now. But, you know, the previous guy you mentioned about the Eufy cameras, we're just we decided to go with the Swan because Eufy has no bat no tech support to speak of. Okay. It's a complete standalone system. Doesn't require electricity. Everything's solar. And it reaches out, 2,000 feet, which is far enough for us to monitor this location from our other location. So that's that's what we if the if this works, we're gonna try and get the thing set up and working today. If it works, it would be exactly what we're looking for, and they're four k cameras.
[01:33:54] Unknown:
Well, the the game changer is is not having to sit there and watch a camera. So if you can get systems that that, have some kind of AI analysis, so it only sends you an alert when there's something weird going on or you put motion sensors hidden in different places. You know? There's you don't wanna have to sit there and watch the camera all day. You want it to, you know, you want the other camera to Chris's point of having neighbors watching is even better than cameras. Well, I don't know. A camera gives you the evidence to when something is missing, if you don't catch somebody right away. You know?
[01:34:27] Unknown:
Well,
[01:34:28] Unknown:
Most likely. The the chefs wanna see evidence. They wanna see video. Alright. But in this case in this case, the neighbor worked out fine.
[01:34:39] Unknown:
Was that Waheed?
[01:34:40] Unknown:
First time call.
[01:34:43] Unknown:
Well, there's a first time caller or anything. Yes. It was. Okay. First time caller, just on the back burner. I'll get you a second. Our our our
[01:34:51] Unknown:
Oh, I'm sorry. Friend Wahib has something to do with it. We had a first time caller. I didn't know we had a first time caller. I didn't know we had a first time caller. I didn't know we had a first time caller. I didn't even hear you. Just said, Wahid, you were first. Go ahead.
[01:35:01] Unknown:
I thought Wahid was I was just wondering
[01:35:07] Unknown:
Okay. You were wondering what?
[01:35:14] Unknown:
Wahid. Okay. And for the latest call? The latest the late
[01:35:19] Unknown:
Wahid, you're cutting it out. We can't hear everything you're saying. Can you get a better close to a router or something?
[01:35:31] Unknown:
Oh. Roger, he might have been trying to tell you. Sarah Beckstrom was the National Guard that died from West Virginia. I I think the other one lived so far. Oh, it was a female? Yep. And, this guy, this Afghani is was in Washington state and drove all the way across country. That sounds like some kind of CIA motivation. That sound that's weird that's weird right
[01:35:56] Unknown:
there. Okay. Ginger girl. Know being this is a four day weekend, we don't know what's gonna happen. But, boy, is this gonna break big on Monday, I would think. Okay. Waheed, did you ever get in a better position? Is that what you're trying to tell us or what? Okay, Waheed. Sorry. I'm a have to put you on the back burner. First time caller?
[01:36:18] Unknown:
This is Chris. Yes. We had a meeting with Paul the other day, and we took a vote about Waheed that he wasn't gonna be allowed on the forum anymore.
[01:36:29] Unknown:
No. We did not. Anymore.
[01:36:31] Unknown:
No. We did not. No. That was Farris. Oh, we did.
[01:36:35] Unknown:
Oh, oh, sorry. Okay. My mistake, Farris. Okay. So what what's the final decision on Ferris?
[01:36:42] Unknown:
I I heard I doable. He's just Majority
[01:36:46] Unknown:
do worn my patients out.
[01:36:49] Unknown:
I'm gonna be sitting here.
[01:36:51] Unknown:
Let's go back to the first time caller, Anthony.
[01:36:55] Unknown:
Please. First time caller. Let's not bring him into all this dirty laundry. Can you please talk right in your phone? You're a little faint. Yes. I can. Can you hear me now? I hear you fine. What's your name, if you would, please, so I can address you properly? And what part of the country are you in, and how did you find us?
[01:37:19] Unknown:
For right now, I'm in, I'm a say in brother Bell. Shout out to, Tom d.
[01:37:27] Unknown:
Okay. Okay.
[01:37:31] Unknown:
Mother Bell.
[01:37:33] Unknown:
B e l l?
[01:37:35] Unknown:
That is correct.
[01:37:37] Unknown:
Okay. Hi, brother.
[01:37:39] Unknown:
Well, this is a great day to be alive.
[01:37:42] Unknown:
Yeah. Well, it is. We're glad to have you, along. What do you what do you need? I've been with
[01:37:49] Unknown:
I've been with you ever since Tom d came on. Oh, okay. I'm just now calling. But, anyhow, I need you to expound a little bit on the supremacy clause. How did can that help us or hurt us? For Brent I'm a turn that I need I'm a turn that over to Brent.
[01:38:09] Unknown:
Oh, okay. Well, I'll just tell you what I know about it. Simple is simple. Nothing complicated. Supreme supremacy clause, supreme law of the land, all that. What it means is that that that the general government in Washington DC has been been given a very, very narrow scope of jurisdiction to act. Very narrow. It's limited to whatever the constitution of The United States expressly says, the powers that are given the states have given to the general government in Washington DC. But the general government in Washington DC, within that narrow scope of jurisdiction has full power right out to the edge of whatever that scope is.
And if there's any state law that a state legislature passes that, contradicts, that power at any point, then that state law to that that, extent is null and void. That's what it says. For example for example, the general government in Washington DC, the courts of that government are given exclusive jurisdiction over Admiralty cases and bankruptcy cases. The state governments in The United States have absolutely no jurisdiction over Admiralty, navigatable waters, or bankruptcy for obvious reasons. And for example, if they had jurisdiction over admiralty at Cairo, Illinois, they'd have toll stations set up, and they'd stop all river traffic. And some whoever thought they had jurisdiction would be, collecting fees from the other states.
Bankruptcy, same thing. If one man went belly up on a on another man from another state and it went into the man's state that went belly up, he he'd have the unfair advantage, and they'd they'd cut him a lot of slack. So bankruptcy is a federal jurisdiction exclusively and admiralty. For that reason, having to do with the free flow of commerce. In all cases, that's what comes back to the commerce clause, the same principle. So the supreme law of the land means that among other things, but this is the simple part of it. It just means that in that narrow scope of jurisdiction of the general government in Washington DC, It has absolute authority in there, and any state law that tries that impedes what the general government is doing is null and void to that extent.
I guess the the big case that's taught in used to be taught in law schools, I don't know what to teach now, was a case about migratory birds. Oh, yeah. Migratory birds are flying from way up in Canada, way down to Louisiana. The boys down the Cajun boys down in Louisiana were shooting them by the hunters and selling them on the black market. The sheriff's department was buying them. The judges were buying them. The state senators were buying. They were boy, the Cajun boy has been cleaning up for years, and finally they them we're gonna get them done. Yeah. And they they would. Boy, it was it was, mayhem. They just hide behind a dike.
I saw the videos when they got caught, by the way, of the behind a dike, and they'd wait till they all hunt thousands of them landed. They'd all stand up with their pump shotguns and just, collect them by the, no kidding, by the I saw them. They loaded up pickup trucks. They
[01:41:50] Unknown:
they take and put some real low gauge shotgun, like two odd or four something four, ones you never heard of. Yeah. And they put those things on the front of Piro's,
[01:42:02] Unknown:
and they get them out in the bayou with that thing. It's just exactly what Brent said. Well, they're down there. Anyway, so the feds finally set they made a treaty with, the Americans made a treaty as a power under the constitution of the president of The United States, and then, of course, the US Senate has to ratify it, make a treaty, and they made a treaty according to the constitution with Canada about migratory birds because the Canadians want those birds to come back. Sure. For some reason, I don't know why. There to be some birds. Yeah. Yeah. Those darn Cajuns. And by the way, those Cajuns, you know, they're from Canada. They I'd like them. Anyway, they figured, well, they're down here. Anyway, yeah, let me finish, then you can talk. I'm about done. And so, they they the Supreme Court of the United States said when and that came up. They said no.
And the state of Missouri, I I think the case was that really the what the Supreme Court people were hunting ducks or geese or whatever it was in Missouri. My god. It was Arkansas. But Well, maybe it was. But, anyway, one of those states in the state legislature said there was a season on those birds, and the Supreme Court of the United States know, said the supremacy clause give the power treaty power according to the constitution with other nations. And so that state law that you passed that said there's a a season on those birds is null and void. That's the simplest at the end. Of it. Mhmm. But some That's one of Beecraft's cases that he writes in his briefs. I've I've seen that there. Somebody's saying something, Roger. I
[01:43:32] Unknown:
were they? Who I thought I said something. Yeah. Brent. There it is.
[01:43:37] Unknown:
Yeah. I was trying to see if you could tie that into a article three court. And another thing before you answer that, there's a federal judiciary vacancy, and it seems like it's very big, and it's weighing might be weighing on the article three court record. And I'm out.
[01:44:00] Unknown:
Let's make this simple. I I try to make it simple. There are only two kinds of federal courts. There's the and that there's the Supreme Court of the United States, and then there's everything else. Yep. The Supreme Court of the United States is the only court that our constitution establishes directly. Our constitution establishes three branches of government, the Supreme Court of the United States, the presidency of the United States, and the Congress of the United States, period. And every other court, a court in the constitution gives Congress the the power to establish other federal courts, and they've done that.
And people call those article three courts. Don't I don't I don't like to use that article three court stuff. Just say the constitution gives Congress to establish other courts beside the Supreme Court of the United States, and they're under the appellate jurisdiction of the Supreme Court of the United States. Yeah. Congress does that. And that Congress could get rid of every court in The United States, every federal court in The United States with a stroke of a pen if they wanted. Or they could make a new one, and they've done that. You'll be next. Hang on. So, yeah, that's the simplicity of the situation.
Roger, I now see, one fell asked a question, and then I responded.
[01:45:19] Unknown:
Yes. That was brother Bell. He's new guy. And then and then Joe
[01:45:23] Unknown:
has a comment too, but I think, Joe, let let the fellow who's answering the question respond to what I said and then and try to make it short, get to your point, and then Joe will be next. Okay. Go ahead, brother Bell. You got a response?
[01:45:38] Unknown:
Yeah. To that, article three courts, I'm I'm looking for, you know, also the constitution under the, bill of rights. Shouldn't it wouldn't it have also applied to the, first supremacy clause?
[01:45:57] Unknown:
Why to what?
[01:45:59] Unknown:
Supremacy clause? The supremacy clause pretty yeah. No. The bill of rights uh-huh. Go ahead.
[01:46:07] Unknown:
Yeah. The constitution under the bill of rights.
[01:46:10] Unknown:
Well, the bill of rights is the constitution part of the constitution. So what are you saying?
[01:46:18] Unknown:
Does this supremacy call kind of?
[01:46:21] Unknown:
Oh, well
[01:46:25] Unknown:
But
[01:46:26] Unknown:
Yeah. You know? But not yes. But not in the way. Yes. But not wait. Wait. Wait. Wait. Well, hold it. Both you're talking. Hold on. Yes. But not in the aspect I was talking about. But the aspect I was talking about is the is the gravamen of the supremacy clause. There are other things it touches. But, for example, the bill of rights is there. Originally, the intention was that it wouldn't apply to this those wouldn't apply to the states at all. We we're putting this in here just so to limit the general government in Washington, DC, so as states, we could do any blasted thing we want. In other words, the first amendment says there'd be freedom of religion or the congress shall make no law respecting an establishment of religion. Well, that's just directed to congress. That's right. That's what was intended. Didn't apply to the state legislatures and all 13 states, when our constitution was ratified, had some form various forms of state supported religion, and they wanted that. That was their local rule, and they didn't want the general government interfering with their religious preferences. And so that's why it says Congress. It doesn't say anything else, just Congress.
But we have applied it to the fourteenth amendment to the states. I don't know that that's a good idea, but that's what we've done. But then, no, the supremacy clause doesn't directly apply like I I said. And but by besides that, the supreme law of the land, that that phrase law of the land means due process, and the phrase due process means our common law tradition. Those are synonyms. It's who would be ridiculous enough to say some people say this, that they intended for it to trump the Bible? That that's so absurd, silly, and stupid. I I don't even wanna entertain it. Good lord. Nobody in America had that in their heads at all. If we're gonna go by the intent of what people want, nobody would agree to that. That's clear. And that's not what it means. Those that phrase is lifted out of Magna Carta, and it means our common law tradition, which is the way we go about doing things, due process, not the outcome standard, but the due process. I wanna get to Joe before he forgets what he was gonna say.
[01:48:41] Unknown:
I'll be brief unless I miss something. This has nothing to do with the domestic courts because as I understand it and have always been told, treating law overrides all other law and all the other courts. And back in that day that you're talking about, Missouri, Arkansas, one of them made a treaty with England on migratory waterfowl, which that's when all of this became that's how they started doing the machine guns and outlawing them is because of treating law, and they put all that in there. It's been a long time since I've been involved in that, but there's something in there about that. But it's treating all of it, making all that happen, not domestic law or Well, go
[01:49:41] Unknown:
yeah. When recheck that. I don't believe that's true because the states have no power to make treaties,
[01:49:47] Unknown:
whether they get together and make a treaty or make one themselves. Go ahead. I may be mistaken on that, and it could have been moved through the federal legislature. Mhmm. No. I I know that not a state can make a treaty, but, it was massaged into a treaty is how all that happened.
[01:50:09] Unknown:
And the Sullivan Act of 1930 or whatever that had to do with machine gun Tommy guns, really, because that was a popular one. Yeah. They they did that under the interstate commerce clause. They said we have power. Congress has power to regulate. That means to keep things flowing across state lines, and we're we're stopping machine guns from going across state lines without our permission. That's how that happened. My question My permission
[01:50:33] Unknown:
is is day old old, and I am old old. So I am too. Forgive me forgive me if I error, but Becraft was the one that was talking about all this. And I followed that pretty carefully thirty years ago.
[01:50:48] Unknown:
Yeah. It's on his website, that brief he wrote using that example. Well and and Beecraft. You know, I I know Larry. I've known him for a long time. A good guy. Yeah. I'm he but he's not anymore he not the final word on anything anymore? No. No. No. Or you or anybody else? He's just a very good researcher, but he's very good. Yeah. And so we all look ourselves. Somebody wants to say something. Oh, say hey? Who's hey hey?
[01:51:12] Unknown:
It's it's Mary. Again. Oh, it's Mary. Oh, never mind. Go ahead.
[01:51:18] Unknown:
Okay. Again. I understand that. I'm wondering if Go ahead, brother. You know, by by by national, could you in invoke the international, treaty with the supremacy clause because it's basically on federal and, you know, the bill of rights and the constitution. Well, hold on. Hold on. Let me let me say this because I wanna I wanna get away. Oh, okay. I looked around and and ran into federal judiciary vacancy, which has a lot to do with the article three court. I'm reading I say article three courts because the three courts uphold the constitution with the bill of rights.
So that's what and then now it it seems weird because there's a lot of states got vacancies and they're mostly in the the blue state. So are they trying to hold down the the article three code or what?
[01:52:21] Unknown:
Are you saying the vacancies in the blue states are federal vacancies or state vacancies? Federal. The federal's in the state. Well, I can tell you this, and we're suffering the blowback of this right now to some extent, is last December, a year ago last year, after Trump had been elected, Schumer and the and his bunch got in there in December, and they put 200 and something federal judges on the bench in one month.
[01:52:51] Unknown:
Well, if Congress doesn't wanna make sure a vacancy filled, that's their constitutional prerogative. They are the masters of all the court all the federal courts in The United States, not the state courts, all the federal courts, except the Supreme Court of the United States. Why? Because the Supreme Court of the United States is a coequal branch of government with Congress. That's why. Congress has no power to get rid of the Supreme Court. Only the militiamen of The United States, as it says in the preamble, have the power through the machinery that the constitution provides to change that and do that.
But that doesn't happen very often. It's hard to do. So Congress whatever Congress creates, it has the power to destroy. And every federal court except the Supreme Court is under that power. I object to the use of article three court because all that does is leave everybody hanging that doesn't know what's going on. Well, what's an article three court? Right. They think it's some technical no. No. Just say the courts that Congress all the other federal courts except the Supreme Court that Congress has created. Yeah. Congress creates those courts. They've created bankruptcy courts. They've created federal district courts. They've created federal appellate courts. They've created federal courts of claims. I mean, I know I've seen where they've created some court some courts and said, this court only has jurisdiction over this one little tiny matter that has to do with timber on federal lands.
They've done that too. Whatever they wanna do. Right. And whatever court they create, they're in total control of the rules of evidence, the rules of everything that apply to those courts. Congress is the master of that. Do we understand that? Well, who's supposed to carry the judicial load in this country? I'll tell you who it is. The state courts. Do they? Yes. They do. By comparison, it's just overwhelming the number of k. See, a a state court in America has unlimited jurisdiction. It can hear a state court can hear anything. The courts of The United States, their scope of jurisdiction is narrow, narrow, narrow. It has to be a matter that arises under some provision of the constitution of The United States, to put it simply.
And there was a time until very recently, our federal yes. Just a minute. Our federal courts didn't have much business at all. All they had the only only things they handled were piracy on the high seas, felonies, admilty law, admilty cases pretty much. You know? Yeah. Somebody wants to say something. Go ahead. I think it's Samuel.
[01:55:20] Unknown:
Sam? Samuel? No. It's brother Bell.
[01:55:23] Unknown:
Brother Bell. Go ahead.
[01:55:26] Unknown:
Brother Bell. Got some Oh, it's brother Bell again. Okay. Just not used to your voice yet. Go ahead.
[01:55:33] Unknown:
Yeah. The reason I'm mentioning the article three courts because that's what hold. Now I may be wrong. You're the man. It upholds the common law court.
[01:55:44] Unknown:
Well, I'm glad you brought that up. That's why it's important that, you know, people come on and say things. Common law court, every court in America is a common law court. Even the ones in the place like Louisiana, we've talked about that. Louisiana is not a common law jurisdiction, but they still have the provisions of common law because the Supreme Court of the United States has laid some of them on. Need to say, every court we're a common law country. Common law is not even something that's always enacted. It could be. It's just who we are. We use the jury, 12 man jury. We use the grand jury. Those are all features of our common law. Remember, our common law is not outcome standards. Our common law is how we go about doing things. How do we go about prosecuting people? Grand jury. How do we go about deciding who's guilty and who's innocent and who wins and who loses?
A 12 man jury. That's how we do it. That's just a couple of fee. How do we let how do we let evidence in? Can a man say I ain't taking the witness stand? You have the right to remain silent. What about free speech? Do we have that in court? If we don't have free speech in court, we don't have it anywhere in America. That's our that's the common law tradition. What about the independence of people in Congress, the three separate coequal branches branches of government, and we can't prosecute people in Congress for saying the n word or anything else they say? Oh, that's our common law tradition. They have absolute unfettered freedom of speech. Congress is absolute control of all our proceedings. The Supreme Court of the United States has nothing to say about it, and neither does the Congress have anything to say about what the Supreme Court does, and neither does the president of The United States, the executive branch, have any absolute control over the other two branches and vice versa. That's our common law tradition. All of these things, I suggest, and I could tell you're interested for what it's worth. I just had a guy send me a book he'd written, and it was about our common law. And he said there are three people I want to evaluate here. It made me feel real smart.
He said one of them is William Blackstone and his commentary is on the laws of England. The other one is supreme court's justice Holmes and his book on the common law, and the other one is Brent Allen Winters, and he compared the three. Well, I'll be you're pretty high cotton right there. Well, this guy, I don't this guy wasn't famous. He's just a guy that's trying to figure things out like the rest of us. Yeah. They're yeah. And he wasn't famous. I don't know. I doubt that he'd be selling. I'm just making the point. What is our common law? And we've lost track of it. We've lost track of even saying what it is. And I can talk I've talked to lawyers. I've talked to judges all of my life. And if I knew them when I was younger, I'd say, well, what is our common law? And the answers I got were all over the board. Truth is nobody knows. And so that's why I wrote the book. Because I said, I gotta get to the get to the bottom of this, and I spent decades doing it. And I put it down on paper what I found under the guidance of people that were older than me and smarter than me, and we've heard me talk about that, for forefront, and that was the comparative lawyer, William Franklin Frascher, former prosecutor at Nuremberg. But once it grasped me what the difference is between the law of the land and the law of the city, our common law, and the civil law, once it grasped me, I didn't grasp it. It grasped you. You got it. But lawyers and judges do not know. I'm telling you. I mean and the only reason we still have a semblance of freedom in America is because by habit, we still use the machinery of our common law. The principles.
Yeah. We think but we don't stop to consider where does freedom speak? Where does the right the the right, that means a duty at common law. Where does that come from to keep and bear arms? That's part of our common law tradition. By design. What?
[01:59:25] Unknown:
It's done by design.
[01:59:27] Unknown:
Well A lot of it is no doubt about a lot of it. Do you hear what he said? It's done by design.
[01:59:33] Unknown:
It was done by design.
[01:59:36] Unknown:
Well, why do you think we're having so much problems going into these local, state courts, and they're telling you you can't bring up the constitution because they put that common law into a box where you can't get to it? And I think the only chance you probably have getting to it is by by a national or or man and woman.
[01:59:57] Unknown:
No. No. And the central control will wipe us out. That's our problem now. We're we're getting more and more of that. We don't even have courthouses anymore. We have we have counties county, what do you call them? County centers. Everything center come, focus on on government centers. That's what they call them. Or even we're changing our language. That nor our common law tradition is the and it's up to you to say it, but you cannot say. You cannot say and insist upon it unless you know what it is. And I dare say, we're all intelligent people, and we we can learn, but our problem is all of us are ignorant. What does the Bible say? I wanna ask you. It says I'll quote the verse. My people, that means my militiamen, by the way, that doesn't have anything to do with the girls.
That means my militiamen, ham, the Hebrew word, my people are destroyed for what? What does it say? Being dumb. The lack of knowledge? The lack of lack of knowledge, I knew he'd know. I had a feeling he was some kind of a bible teacher, preacher, or something. Yeah. You called him brother, didn't you? Well, that's what he called himself. Well, yeah. He so he knows. He knows that. And here's and those of us that know that verse, we're no different than anybody else. We got a problem. We're stupid. And there's no shame to be stupid? That's different. No. We're ignorant. There's a shame to being stupid, but there is no shame to being ignorant unless you just wanna stay that way. Yeah. We're all constantly trying to figure that. So I recommend go to the website commonlawyer.com.
My my stuff, I'm not the final word on anything, but I will say I've taken decades out of my life to write a book on the subject of our common law, comparing and contrasting it with the law of the city. And I've been practicing in the courts for many, many, many years, a number of decades. And so I I don't think I'm the smartest guy in the world, but I think I've hit pay dirt. I think it's grabbed me. You wanna know what the difference between our law or our, know what our common law is? The only way you're gonna know know is compare and contrast it with this great antagonist, which is the law of the city. And remember, every country in the world is under the code of Justinian, the canon civil laws of Rome, every country in the world with the exception of the few common law countries. Even the Islamic countries are under that code in principle, but not in not directly. But still, most all countries are directly under some form of that code, including the eastern and western churches as well. It's a it's a code of tyranny. It's a code of dictatorship.
It's imperial at bottom. Well, that's not us. That's not who America the English speaking world does not do that. We are common law countries, and the machinery is still in place, but we must learn what it is. And the only way to learn let me say it again. You cannot know our common law tradition unless you compare and contrast it to its antagonist, which is the law of the city. Yeah. So I I encourage you to go to commonlawyer.com. I didn't say that an hour ago. Now we're at the top of this hour. Commonlawyer.com.
[02:02:57] Unknown:
I think the show's already off the air. It actually must the exit music must have gotten turned down. Go to go to commonlawyer.com
[02:03:04] Unknown:
and, take advantage of what I've done there. I may as well offer it to other people. I spent my life doing it, living in poverty. I'm not complaining. I wasn't I wasn't out to make a lot of money. Apparently, I was driven to get to the bottom of things, and I think I did. Take advantage of it. That's why it's there at commonlawyer.com.
[02:03:24] Unknown:
There's a fellow in the other chat room who's looking for the name of that book of yours.
[02:03:30] Unknown:
Oh, it's called Excellence of the Common Law. You can get it on Amazon, but go to the website and get a description of it. Commonlawyer.com. Go to books, and then you can find the book, and you can get it. By the way, you can take our law courses. I'm teaching law courses with sheriff Darleaf. Oh. And, yeah, we're doing we're going through clause by clause declaration of 76 now, a common law document. Go ahead, Roger. His name came up the other day on Alex Jones. He had this,
[02:04:00] Unknown:
really attractive blonde girl on there, big researcher. I think she's on Lindell's channel. And there was something came up about, he got some emails in the discovery case that applied the election fraud stuff and turned them over to him or released him. And she gave him all the credit and everything. I mean, well, way to go, sheriff Darr. Oh, yeah. They tried to indict him just because he was looking into voter fraud. Yep. It's a sheriff's job. This is common law. A sheriff is a common law
[02:04:29] Unknown:
office. It's not in our constitution, not mentioned, but it's fun And our constitution is just a very thin slice of our common law tradition as it applies to government. The rest of our lives are governed by our common law. The way we go about doing things, it's not a matter it's fairness fairness in in a fight sums up our common law tradition. And as a lawyer, I've never done anything but go into court and scream and holler about that ain't fair. You didn't do it right. That's all I've ever done. That's all that's all a lawyer can do. But a lawyer is supposed to know the courses of the common law and what is fair so that he can meaningfully defend his client or gain an advantage, and that's what we're supposed to do.
So we're supposed to know our common law tradition, and we think it's in our constitution or some goofy thing. No. That's not it. Our common law tradition is God's will for how, h o w, we are to go about doing things. Not the outcome standards, do not covet, lie, steal, commit adultery, or murder. That's the last five of the 10 commandments, reverse order as it is applied horizontally man to man. That's not our common law tradition. That's God's jurisdiction to declare the outcome standards, not ours. We're trying to do it. That's stupid too. But our common law tradition is to make sure everything is done fairly, that the adversarial process is not is not unfair, and that and we have a shot at the truth.
Cross examination. Cross examination doesn't appear it doesn't exist anywhere in the world except in common law countries, and there are very few of them. The engine of truth we call cross examination. A greater surety of truth than the oath by far. We have all these things and, because we don't understand the difference. We don't know the difference. You can't the the the our common law tradition will never come home to you hard until you see how evil things are in France and South America when you go into a tribunal. You're just you're just at their mercy. There's nothing. Lawyers can't do anything for you. In Sweden, France, South America, all those countries, all the communist countries are under the code of Justinian. Always have been.
There's not anything you can do. There's there is no individual liberty. No. There isn't freedom in Europe on the continent. They have a shot of it shot at it in England, but less than they used to have by far. They even got rid of their grand jury. They do still have the jury there. So God help us. Our common law tradition is our second greatest blessing. Our greatest blessing is the bible. Yeah. But the second greatest blessing. And and the and the and the bible becomes inoperable among a people without our common law tradition. You know, when the reformation occurred in Europe, it in on the continent of Europe, it occurred, in in it was a reformation of the church.
But in England, on in the Isle Of Britain and into Scotland and Wales, it was a reformation of not only the church but of the government because they reestablished our common law tradition. We went to war. That but that happened in the reformation. We went to war with England over one question. What was it? Our common law tradition. We were, but king wasn't king here. He said he was emperor. The second amendment didn't apply. Well well, what we call the second amendment. They did we didn't have a second amendment, but the the responsibility to keep and and carry a gun is part of our common law tradition, as is the right to remain silent. That's been around for centuries. That's nothing new. That's part of our common law tradition. Here in America, we have two constitutions. In Britain, they have one.
And here in America, we have, our common law which governs everything without limit, our common law. That's our constitution. That's the same constitution they have in Britain. They call it their constitution. They call it the English constitution. In America, we called it our constitution, little c. But then we put to writing how that common law applies to government, our general government, and we call that our constitution, and it has eclipsed everything. I I can tell when people talk. They think the constitution of The United States covers everything. It didn't hardly cover nothing. It doesn't cover our lives. It doesn't even apply to me. It applies to the scoundrels that find their way into politics, not me. I'm to use it against them. They aren't to use it against me. Why do we say that? That that is not the foundation of our freedoms, the Constitution of The United States. No.
The foundation of our freedoms is our common law tradition, the laws of nature, and the laws of nature is God. The Bible, that's the laws of nature is God. The laws of nature, that's our common law tradition. That's what those phrases meant. I can show you that going way before the declaration of seventy six. William Blackstone used those phrases that way.
[02:09:28] Unknown:
Made those points. Well, Roger, I better go. Yeah. I which it is Friday. I'll the rest of y'all, I hope everybody has a good have a long weekend. Be safe, and we'll be back on Monday. I'm gonna do a replay tomorrow. I'm sure there's a good one for Paul to choose somewhere.
[02:09:44] Unknown:
Mhmm. Hey, Brent. Thank you, Brent. Okay. We have one more question.
[02:09:48] Unknown:
Joan. Hey, Joan. Hi, Brent.
[02:09:52] Unknown:
Hi. About the hi. About, thirty minute, twenty minutes ago, did you say that the militia is the only people who can take out the Supreme Court, or how did you word it?
[02:10:10] Unknown:
The constitution of The United States says we it starts out we the people of The United States, and then it says the things it says, and then it says at the end, we the people of The United States, dot dot dot do ordain and establish this constitution for The United States. So who established the constitution? The framers? No. The people of The United States. And who are the people of The United States? The militiamen. That is repeated, stressed over and over and over and over by writers of that day. The people are the militia. The militia are the people. The militiamen are the ones that put it in place. And because they're the ones that put the constitution in place, they're the ones that has the power to get rid of it or alter it according to the machinery that they ratified and put in that document or approved of.
[02:11:11] Unknown:
I'm I'm telling you, Stuart Rhodes is really appealing to Trump to do a national speech and invoke the militia clause for the whole country. Just saying that. Sorry to step on you, Murr. Mhmm. Yeah. I was just gonna say
[02:11:25] Unknown:
I'm sorry. I'm losing my voice here. But, you know, there was a recent example of how the supremacy clause is used and the constitution by the government against the people. And, do you remember in Missouri, I'll just read a couple paragraphs. On 03/06/2023, federal judge Brian C Weems, the age is appointed by Obama, ruled the Missouri Second Amendment Protection Act was unconstitutional claiming the act violates the supremacy clause of the US constitution invalidates federal law and violates the doctrine of intergovernmental immunity.
On 06/12/2021, governor Parsons signed the Missouri Second Amendment Protection Act, SAPA. The act prohibits state and local officers from cooperating with federal agents to enforce certain federal laws mostly to do with firearms. Now there was an appeal, and the appellate court also ruled against the state, basically, is what it is. They nullified their law using the supremacy clause.
[02:12:33] Unknown:
Uh-huh. Well, that that's not a use of the supremacy clause. That's a misuse of the supremacy clause. That's easy. I agree. Yeah. That's all that is. And people have been misusing the Bible. People have been misusing people have been misusing the bible for a few thousand years. They've been misusing the our constitution for just as long. That doesn't surprise me. Does that a surprise? Does that surprise you, Murr?
[02:12:56] Unknown:
Well, it's no surprise, but it's just an indication, another indication that you can look at to see that the constitution was formed to protect the government against the people, and it's only gotten worse. No. No. No. No. A thousand times, no. Myrrh. No. Never.
[02:13:13] Unknown:
No. But you could make the same argument about the Bible and the misuse of it. That's silly. You could take the same argument and say, well, guns kill people. Well, the constitution is destroying us. No. No. No. No. No. The constitution is not destroying us. Guns are not killing people. As we say, people are killing people. And the constitution of The United States is a tool, and it's being misused. It's been misused a lot. I'm in the courts. I watch it. I've argued against the misuse of it. But the supremacy clause is declaring that the our common law tradition within the narrowest slice of the constitution is a separation of jurisdictions. And one of the things that we're not getting as Americans, as patriots, is this idea of what jurisdiction is.
Romans 13 says all authority. King James says all power. That's not that's a mistranslation. It's maybe they it meant authority at that time, but it means authority, and it means jurisdiction. There's a synonym. What is jurisdiction? Jurisdiction is the right to act respecting a given matter. That's what it is. Does the general government in Washington DC have a right to act respecting admiralty cases? Answer, yes. The militiamen of the several states when the country started said, yes. You do have the right. Does it have a right to act and to annul responsibilities of contract?
Yes. That's what bankruptcy courts do. It has a right to do that. And the constitution of The United States says so. That's a Christian idea, by the way, in that case. And does the government of the United States have a right to act respecting interstate commerce? Yes. But I've noticed that they have overstepped their bounds. The Sullivan Act that applied to tommy guns had nothing to do with regulating commerce across state lines. Now regulation means free flow of commerce, not limitation of commerce. That's that's the difference. There's a lot of that going on under the commerce clause and other other claw and under other clauses of our constitution. The first amendment is maligned terrible, the religion clauses.
The second amendment, the third the fourth amendment, and the fifth amendment are misused and have been for a long time. But, again, I say to you that the Bible I went to a meeting one time. The Bible's misused. I went to a meeting one time. And, Murr, tell me, have you heard that verse that says, the borrower is slave to the lender?
[02:15:59] Unknown:
Yep.
[02:16:00] Unknown:
Sure. You've heard it. We're we live in a Christian culture in America, and those of us that went to Sunday school, we've heard that. I I went to a meeting one time, and a man said, well, it says here the Bible is slave to the lender or the borrower, not the Bible. The borrower is slave to the lender. Therefore, I've lent you money, and you are my slaves. And he was a money lender. Now had you ever thought of it being applied that way, Murr?
[02:16:28] Unknown:
No. But you know what? This is the whole root of it. Root of all evil, right, is the love of mammon and Oh, yeah. The love of Well, yeah. Hell. And Uh-huh. Yeah. People I mean, when people argue against, different jurisdictions that, okay, vote locally but not federally and no, it all come because I've I've seen local corruption here. Alright? So it all comes down to this usury system. You don't change that. You don't change anything.
[02:16:57] Unknown:
Okay. We're we're changing subjects, but, yeah, I agree with you about that. You it's not this usury system. I just say it's just usury. That's just flat usury, not this system or that system. Usury is usury. Right. And the bible forbids it. You agree, I think. Yeah. I I see your point, and that's true too. That's true too. But anything we can we have it better here even though people we have we got problems. We have it better here than they do in in France and South America. We have a shot. I like to say this. We have a shot at justice here. We don't always get it. But if the machinery is in place, all we gotta do is prime the prompt. The pump's sitting there, pour the water in the top of it, and start swinging the handle and see what happens. I I say this, again, personal experience. I have been sprung. I have been sprung by a 12 man jury in a criminal trial.
It can happen. It did happen. I gave myself fifty fifty chance, and it happened. That doesn't always happen. Sometimes they go the wrong way. But our common law tradition gives us those opportunities. And we this the Bible calls this age, the age of man. And in contrast, in the bible is what the bible calls the not the age of man, the day of man, the day of man, and the bible contrast that with the day of the lord. And the right now, God has delegated jurisdiction to us to do these things, to ensure due process, and to to, to pursue justice.
It's our day. We're not doing a perfect job, obviously, but we do have God commands us to keep working at it. But the day of the lord is coming. The day of Yahoah, he happens. And when that gets here, everything will be done at perfect justice. And as one fellow said, due process will be meticulously observed. When when the lord himself tells you tells somebody, go have a seat in that handbasket over there, if you know what I mean, he won't just say it as a matter of decree. Due process will be be meticulously observed, not because he needs it. He knows everything.
But because he wants to show all of his created beings from men to angels that he is absolutely just and due process has been followed and he has been patient. That's what it amounts to. And when rewards are given for what is good, due process will be followed there too. The bible makes that clear. But what he wants us to do why why does he want us to do this? Why does he allow us this opportunity for all this trouble and to make stupid mistakes and and miscarry justice? I don't know all the answers about that in every case, obviously, but I do know this answer in every case. He does it to glorify himself. That's why he does everything he does. And that's why the Westminster confession, I recommend it to you to go read it. Very simple. The first question of the catechism that arose out of that is what is the chief end of man?
What is the chief end of man? And the answer the student has to give is in two parts. Number one, to glorify God, and then the numb number the second part of that answer is the result, to enjoy him forever. It is your chief purpose according to the bible in everything you do, whether it be something as mundane, said Paul the apostle, as eating and drinking. Do all do all to the glory of God. Calculate your intentions that way, and you will reap the enjoyment. But remember, God puts rulers up, and he he puts them up. Sometimes he says so just so I can tear them down and show my creatures how powerful I am. That's what it says about Pharaoh in Egypt too. The sovereignty of God is what is missed here, and all of the nonreformed world ignores the sovereignty of God thinking that man has the final word on anything. He doesn't. He never has had.
I don't understand that. I just know the decrees of God in the Bible that say that, and they're clear as crystal crystal. They're not they're not ambiguous, and they're not open for discussion. That's Paul the apostle says, who are you to answer back to God, the sovereign creator of all things? Just recognize what he does, he does for his glory, and is the only one in the universe that has authority to do that. And when you have no competition, it's not arrogance. Even if it was, it's just the way it is. Everything he does is right because he has no competition. And all of that sovereignty and all of that glory has been handed to Jesus Christ, the Bible says, in heaven and on earth.
So here we are at the creatures. What do we owe him? To calculate all things. Be respectful to him in all things because you don't know everything, obviously, and you don't know what to do in a lot of situations, but you can show respect. Do that. The fear of the lord is the beginning of wisdom. Did I hear you say eating a minute ago? Eat. Let's go eat. Yeah. Yeah.
[02:22:09] Unknown:
Yes.
[02:22:10] Unknown:
Thank you for your time. You turn evil into good. Yeah. Uh-huh. We gotta clean up all those leftovers. Wow. Occasion for for us to have a two and a half day weekend. So enjoy it. We'll be back on Monday, and, just be thankful. You know, it's a Thanksgiving time, and we got a lot to be thankful for. Alright. How about this? Yeah. How about this? And I heard that that that blonde girl say it. This is Cicero quote if I can remember it. Gratitude is the greatest of all virtues and the parent of all others.
[02:22:50] Unknown:
Oh, that's good. That's my fault. Cicero. He didn't say that, but he be thankful in all things, the Bible says. All things means all things. Yeah. God help us. Well, y'all have a super weekend, and I'll see you on Monday. And Brent, we'll see you next week and
[02:23:07] Unknown:
get back in the regular swing of things. Thank you, Rodney. Yeah. Thank you. Talking to all of you. Always a pleasure to be with you fine people. Love all of you. See you soon. Graditude
[02:23:16] Unknown:
is a superpower.
[02:23:18] Unknown:
Greg Grease says it. It is. It is. Yeah. We I why I watched that Greg Reese thing yesterday. And, Murr, thanks for sending me that
[02:23:26] Unknown:
e Michael Jones and the Arab guy on usury. That was Yeah. They're gonna do month they've done a couple now, and, they're planning to do monthly once, but he he left it out there. Yeah. He was really talking about you three this time. Yeah. Yep. So thanks for sending that to me.
[02:23:42] Unknown:
Brent, take care, buddy. We love you. Thank you, folk. You've been Alright. Best best to you and yours. Alright. Ciao.
[02:24:07] Unknown:
Yeah. The Sapa thing I was talking about here, it doesn't, prevent feds from investigating whatever federal crimes, but it prevented agents of the state and local governments from assisting federal agents in doing so. But the locals, sided with the feds. So what's that tell you?
[02:24:28] Unknown:
The yeah. That surprised me. But, fortunately, we have a ground zero, a standard put on paper. We must invoke it, invoke it, invoke it. And I'm encouraged. The second amendment the second amendment is more powerful now than it's ever been, just as one example. So there are good things happening in the midst of the false things, and Zionism is having a rough time.
[02:24:56] Unknown:
Alright. Thank you for talking to you. Yeah. And it's really bad that they have to try to enforce that antisemitism speech.
[02:25:05] Unknown:
Yeah. Who made that speech?
[02:25:09] Unknown:
Right.
[02:25:10] Unknown:
Who made that speech, Murrah?
[02:25:12] Unknown:
Oh, who made that speech? I don't know. What are you talking about? Oh, you said antisemitism
[02:25:17] Unknown:
speech. Are you talking about hate speech or
[02:25:20] Unknown:
I'm just well, that's what they call it, hate speech, but, of course, it's not. Yeah. I got it. You know, you're you're categorized. And in 2014, they brought in all this hate talk. We never used to talk hate talk all the time, and we never used to talk generational divides. Those were two divisory things brought in on the hundredth anniversary of the first World War, and also the sixty sixth year of the founding of the state of Israel. Mhmm. Yeah. Okay. Alright. Thanks, sir. Also, when the, the, Donald, Cook went into the Black Sea and the planes flew over, Russian ones that nullified, so to speak, their electronics, and it had to be towed to a Romanian port.
And 27 sailors quit. So, there's things out there that, we don't know they have.
[02:26:13] Unknown:
Okay. Wait a minute. Wait a minute. You said Donald Cook? Yeah. USS Donald Cook. Oh, USS Donald Cook, c o o k?
[02:26:23] Unknown:
Yes, sir.
[02:26:25] Unknown:
Okay. Thank you, Murr. We'll be talking. Mhmm.
[02:27:06] Unknown:
Now he's trying, Murr. He didn't get it.
[02:27:11] Unknown:
You think? I don't know. Yep. Yep. They worship that constitution. Sorry. They do. You know, I was gonna bring up the article of Confederation and Professional Union, but I'm sure that wouldn't have flown either. But, you gotta go there because that's what was usurped, and it's still on the book.
[02:27:31] Unknown:
How dare you?
[02:27:50] Unknown:
I think he left out that first constitution. When he said there were two constitutions, he left out the articles of Confederation, which are still
[02:28:02] Unknown:
well, there were two constitutions too, but most people, just totally ignore the articles, Confederation and Perpetual Union. They really don't wanna say that last part. Mhmm. And Guggeniere Morris and the committee of style and arrangement, later confessed, basically, bragged that he had, changed it to how he wanted it. Things that weren't to be in there, you know, agreed on, so he's right in the final draft and, he fixed it, quote, unquote.
[02:28:48] Unknown:
Mhmm.
[02:29:42] Unknown:
So, Mara, you'd figured out what kind of show you're gonna have set Sunday?
[02:29:49] Unknown:
Sunday's a replay. But you might like it. I, left it as a surprise, but it's two separate hours from, with the same guest. You'll if you listen, you'll you'll figure it out. And I like to have him around this time of the year. I contacted him, but I didn't hear back from him. So, anyway, we'll hear from him from the past.
[02:30:24] Unknown:
And if you'd wanna hear something different, you can listen to governamerica.com. They do twenty four seven documentaries, really, really powerful stuff. Governamerica.com.
[02:30:42] Unknown:
So, Dave, what are they gonna be talking about, lately?
[02:30:48] Unknown:
Well, they like, this morning, I was listening to Myron Fagan. You ever heard of him?
[02:30:55] Unknown:
Vaguely. Refers to the memory. Playwright
[02:30:58] Unknown:
born in nineteen o seven. He had plays, on Broadway in in Hollywood, and they asked him to to write a play to, to counteract all of the the communist stuff that was going on, in in Hollywood. And, they they blacklisted this guy, and he he made three record albums. That's how he put his information out to the public on a record album. And, it's probably two sided because these things are three hours minimum. The the they they play those occasionally. They play some Michael Gaddy. They play, James Corbett. You know, his documentaries, they play and everything from soup to nuts.
There's some really great fluoride ones. It's just stuff to, you know, reawaken you to the tyranny or to share with other people that are just learning this stuff or that think they know something. Man, there are some powerful, powerful documentaries. You know, they play inspiring in the midnight.
[02:32:17] Unknown:
What's that? I don't much like listening to nuts.
[02:32:22] Unknown:
Well, they talk about how nuts these freaking, Jews are that are controlling the world for, since the beginning of time?
[02:32:33] Unknown:
Don't stress Well, you got my you got you got my attention when you got my attention when you said, Michael, Corbett and, Bugatti.
[02:32:42] Unknown:
Oh, yeah. There's some really great, great stuff. I I listen to it. I find myself when I'm not on here, that's pretty much my go to, you know, unless I'm and and they they loop stuff in, more often than others, but they a lot of technocracy going on right now. You know? They're playing, Patrick Wood. You know, he wrote Technocracy Rising. He's got a website, technocracy.news. And, there he's done a ton of shows and interviews. They play a lot of that because I think he he Seven zero five You know, Darren Weeks, he's got his own show called Governor America Radio on RBN on Saturdays when Roger's on. But he's three hours, and, he you you'll hear him that show in that mix.
But, he wants to get the word out, you know, to escape that I think we're in we're in dire straits, and he wants people to wake up to what the hell is really going on. And, really, Technocracy, that's Zbibnu Brzezinski, I think. Yeah, he might not have been the one that that coined it, but in 1934 is when that term was coined, or that phrase, technocracy, and that's how they're taking over the freaking world.
[02:34:15] Unknown:
Yeah. He's the the, guy that wrote that book,
[02:34:18] Unknown:
Technocracy. I think Rising.
[02:34:21] Unknown:
Or rising. Yeah. He he was a regular on Rents for quite a few years. I should have listened to him more back then.
[02:34:28] Unknown:
Oh, man. Yep. Yeah. I didn't listen to Rents, but he was on, he filled in a lot for Daniel Brigman when he used to do the power hour after Joyce Riley died.
[02:34:39] Unknown:
Yeah.
[02:34:40] Unknown:
They play a lot of those, replays on Governor America. I said give her a call. And they're they're just as, you know, poignant today as they were when they were on. So break the action here. Let's go ahead and I highly recommend it. Check for weather. Yeah.
[02:34:57] Unknown:
Sand Land Broadcasting World Headquarters. You're in Downtown Sandusky. What's the breach of the cloudy skies? Keith Rollins, John Murray has the details you're forecasting up here at WMIC.
[02:35:10] Unknown:
Yes. That's for this Friday, mix of some clouds with some Anyway, I yield.
[02:35:20] Unknown:
Did any of y'all, listen to Jimmy Dormach?
[02:35:32] Unknown:
I don't go looking for him, but but Darren's been playing his clips, on, on this govern America too. So I've been hearing more of him, Gregory.
[02:35:45] Unknown:
Yeah. I follow him. I like doing him live because he cuts out a bunch of his stuff when he just go to his web pages, you know, on he got well, I've just listened to the YouTube and the rumble one. But, yeah, it's, told you how the cow eats the cabbage in a humorous fashion, which is a lot more palatable, I suppose. Over.
[02:36:18] Unknown:
Yeah. If you like cabbage I like beef with my cabbage myself. Maybe a little rice too.
[02:36:35] Unknown:
Yeah. Cabbage is good for a lot of different things. I like my sauerkraut as well.
[02:36:43] Unknown:
Oh, yeah. I also, you know, I I've shared, mytotalnutrition.com. Brett Basuati, he's the president of GoodHerbs tincture company, and he does a Zoom call every Thursday, 10AM for an hour, and it's it's pretty powerful. He had a he shared a nugget that wasn't recorded a few weeks ago that he learned long time ago for knee pain, but I think it might work for any pain. But he says get get a, you know, a nice, leaf from of cabbage. You know, rinse it, pat it dry, and then put it on your knee if you have knee pain and then wrap it with Saran wrap for a couple hours, take a nap.
And he said it works pretty pretty well. I haven't had anybody try it yet. I've shared it with some people. But they haven't nobody's done it that I know of yet. But most of his stuff is pretty pretty powerful. It works, or he wouldn't share it.
[02:37:56] Unknown:
It's Bartok, but not Well, I would just
[02:38:01] Unknown:
on that, I would switch out the Saran wrap with, either tinfoil or that silver cloth.
[02:38:09] Unknown:
Well, right. He's talking to people that don't have any of that stuff. Well, may they might have, the tinfoil aluminum foil, but he doesn't know what he doesn't know. And I need to share that with him, about the, you know, the silver lawn and how you can use aluminum foil shiny side down with silver on the leg or whatever part of your body. But, yeah, instead of the Saran wrap wrapping it with that, that's a good point there, Gregory. Thank you. How was your Thanksgiving, Gregory? Did you and, doctor Phil eat any turkey?
[02:38:58] Unknown:
Oh, yeah. She she was able to make, I think four pies, the turkey. Nice. Dress that.
[02:39:06] Unknown:
She's got her feeling pretty darn Sprite these days,
[02:39:11] Unknown:
She was she loves her turkey day. I tell you. She I do. She really love on it. I I try to get thanks for every day, and I I don't, you know, I don't make one day more special than the next or try not to because they're all special. That's what I've been trying to, you know, wrap my brain cell around.
[02:39:37] Unknown:
Alright. Right.
[02:39:42] Unknown:
Oh,
[02:39:45] Unknown:
I I sometimes my dad gets paid to do this. I can't possibly complain about it.
[02:39:51] Unknown:
So how was your Thanksgiving day?
[02:39:54] Unknown:
Oh, it was wonderful. We actually got to have two. One with our son and grandson and his friend for breakfast, and then the second one with our daughter and grandson and and her boyfriend and and didn't for dinner.
[02:40:14] Unknown:
That's kind of fun.
[02:40:15] Unknown:
Yep. Did you weigh yourself before and after? Are you kidding me?
[02:40:21] Unknown:
Eight ten six No.
[02:40:23] Unknown:
Zero six? No, sir. I did not. It is But I I definitely had my fill.
[02:40:32] Unknown:
Yep.
[02:40:33] Unknown:
Alright. Well, thank you. You're And I drank enough coffee that the the tryptophan did not knock me out.
[02:40:42] Unknown:
She's an indicator. She doesn't Yeah. I I kinda overindulged on that that turkey last night. I got quite a it was a good turkey too. It's really moist. Went down Yeah. Very good.
[02:40:59] Unknown:
We go to this, we have a friend that has a farm, and they raise about 300 turkeys, organic. And they used, doctor Wallach's minerals. They're you know, they came from that Good Herbs company into Youngevity. And, so we we got some, some vegetables from them and a and a nice 25 pound turkey. And, we get our turkey from them. Well, we don't do it every year from them. Sometimes we get one from the Amish. We actually got a 53 pound turkey from the Amish one time. That thing was wow. What a giant. It's really neat.
[02:41:52] Unknown:
That's a big bird, man. What kind of turkeys are they?
[02:41:57] Unknown:
How did you buy that turkey, Dave? What did it fit in? 53 pounds.
[02:42:01] Unknown:
You know what? I bought this I I used to buy stuff on HSN and QVC, you know, back at the old house and because I couldn't shop at the store, and I didn't want my wife to have to, you know, go do all my shopping. And and they had this stainless steel roasting pan that it's beautiful. You should see this thing, man. It just gleams. And, it that freaking turkey fit in it with the lid on. It was pretty big. Most of our turkeys kinda swam around in it, and we cooked the 23 pounder in it and, or 25 pounder. And, it yeah. It it was quite moist and, delicious.
[02:42:51] Unknown:
Alright. Eight ten
[02:42:53] Unknown:
Do you ever, deep fry a turkey?
[02:42:58] Unknown:
Thank you. No. I always wanted to, but I'm glad I didn't because, you know, Doc Wall talks about fried food that's on the bad food list. I used my next door neighbor here out here in the country, he's gone now, but he used to have a party, every year with a big two big daddy big fry daddies or whatever they're called. And, he'd fry everything. He'd clean out his fridge and freezers and, have a bunch of people over and and just fry pickles and, you know, butter and all kinds of crazy stuff. And, and then that right. That was right when we moved here when he when he did that the first time, and my kids bought me a fry daddy for for Christmas and a gallon of peanut oil. And then, you know, I learned that year about doc and and the we never opened that thing.
[02:44:02] Unknown:
Never got to use it.
[02:44:05] Unknown:
And we only went to one of his parties. His wife. And, I love fried food, but I don't eat it anymore. Yeah.
[02:44:21] Unknown:
I, I did it a couple of times back in the day with the peanut oil, and you definitely don't want any, part of your bird still being frozen. And I kinda learned that the hard way. Fortunately, it wasn't a very big fire or explosion, but yeah, there are some tricks to doing that.
[02:44:50] Unknown:
Yikes.
[02:44:53] Unknown:
Yeah. I've heard some horror stories, man, where people Yeah. People using them things in their house and tipping it over and oh my god. Five one five Yikes.
[02:45:05] Unknown:
Yeah. It's not a indoor activity. I would not recommend.
[02:45:12] Unknown:
No.
[02:45:14] Unknown:
Nor very close to the house. Anything. I forgot the next to know. Or anything flammable. Yeah. Make sure you have fire extinguishers and, you know, your phone handy for nine one one, I suppose.
[02:45:32] Unknown:
And and sober guests.
[02:45:37] Unknown:
Well,
[02:45:37] Unknown:
yeah. At least one or two, you know?
[02:45:41] Unknown:
That was one of my biggest downfalls, I suppose.
[02:45:46] Unknown:
Just remember, Gregory, drinking and frying a turkey doesn't mix.
[02:45:54] Unknown:
I learned that the hard way too.
[02:45:57] Unknown:
Yeah. Friends don't let, friends fry turkeys drunk.
[02:46:04] Unknown:
Well, I wasn't drunk. I was getting lit just on a precipice. So how's the weather up there in the sun, Dave? It's beautiful here.
[02:46:59] Unknown:
Oh, it's 30. Wotten snow, you know, freezing rain, snow mix last couple days, and, we don't really have any well, I actually I haven't been outside, so I haven't I don't know if there's snow on the ground. We were looking for an inch or so the last few days, and I don't I know when we got home last night, there was a little covering on the driveway when I walked from the van into the house. So maybe a quarter of an inch or something, and it was a little mix of, you know, I guess it would have been sleet and snow, but it wasn't treacherous or anything driving home. We had a 40 mile drive home.
Wasn't a whole lot of people. We got a beautiful freeway that's, you know, splits the state, east to west by us, and
[02:48:05] Unknown:
there's hardly anybody that uses it. Says register is just in So Thanksgiving. All the Mississippi Department, we have 8106229622. That's 810.
[02:48:17] Unknown:
Do you, suffer many ice storms up there? I would suspect you do.
[02:48:24] Unknown:
Oh, yeah. We get those a lot. We had one man a few years back that my neighbor, Scott, on my west property line. They've got woods that's probably even with our house to the front of the, you know, the property, maybe 400 feet on the other side of their driveway. Their driveway comes up the property line sort of. And I'm telling you what, man. The next morning, you the the breaking branches, the ice was so heavy. They had a it was unbelievable how much destruction there was. You know, it sounded like a a horror movie hearing all that timber breaking under the weight of all that ice. But last year, up north in the Northern Lower Peninsula Of Michigan, we had an ice storm, man, that was a five hundred year storm they claimed, and they it it decimated a lot of trees out there, and it's still not cleaned up all the way.
There's still roads that are blocked. You know, the people just pull up and start clearing the roads because the crews, there ain't enough of them. You know?
[02:49:56] Unknown:
But A geoengineered storm, you mean, Dave?
[02:50:00] Unknown:
Yeah. You better believe it. Hey, Rich.
[02:50:03] Unknown:
Hey, Dave. Yeah. That was a bad one.
[02:50:06] Unknown:
Yep. How was your Thanksgiving?
[02:50:12] Unknown:
Oh, good. And then I had leftovers this morning about 10:30, so I'm stuffed and then kinda rest and work. Nice. Yeah.
[02:50:23] Unknown:
Good deal. 66 hungry. Your dog's cellular phone with love here. Good deal.
[02:50:29] Unknown:
Did you find anybody to move your stuff?
[02:50:34] Unknown:
I got my pickup truck running. Yeah. Oh, good. Yeah. The tire pumped up, and I took it for a maiden voyage since I have it drove in it, driven it in months. Oh, you got the battery in it then? Yeah.
[02:50:49] Unknown:
Yeah. Good.
[02:50:51] Unknown:
A friend of a friend came over and pumped up my tire and changed my battery, and I was gonna let them take it for a ride, and I said, no way. Gosh. Well, I haven't driven it since the middle of summer. So
[02:51:13] Unknown:
Excellent.
[02:51:14] Unknown:
Yeah. But we're supposed to get all that snow now. I'm supposed to move my old camper the first part of the week, but we'll see how that goes. Might get up to ten ten ten ten ten ten I found a storage that's real reasonable compared to most.
[02:51:38] Unknown:
Okay. Good.
[02:51:42] Unknown:
Just until springtime. Hopefully, by then, I'll know what I'm doing with my wife.
[02:51:48] Unknown:
Yep.
[02:51:50] Unknown:
Cool. And the world to be in chaos.
[02:51:55] Unknown:
Alright. That's 87484882.
[02:52:00] Unknown:
Is that your location?
[02:52:10] Unknown:
Yeah. Will this be selling again here? Okay. Yeah. Go ahead. You just got to look for the tractor? Okay. Ready to take down the number? 587498479. Thanks. I appreciate that.
[02:52:49] Unknown:
Alright. So I know that call is a little bit on the quiet side. I got maxed out on the board here, so I'll I'll keep it quick rundown.
[02:52:54] Unknown:
These will be for a quick work. They also tractor parts, Stella three point HD, sleep number bed, a, a, 500, 810648. 48.
[02:53:15] Unknown:
There's 500 what?
[02:53:18] Unknown:
I would have.
[02:53:25] Unknown:
What's that, Dave?
[02:53:27] Unknown:
Oh, I'm listening to the swap shop. I thought I was muted. You're fine. On a later. Yeah.
[02:53:36] Unknown:
I've been asked about this, and I did a little reading on it, but I'm not really familiar with it. A company called Syrona, s y r o n a, Are you familiar with them? They're a they're a nano based, nutrient supplement company.
[02:54:00] Unknown:
Nope. I know that song, my Sirona. Make sure they got all the stuff right here. Never heard of them, Samuel.
[02:54:11] Unknown:
Yeah. They're they're saying they're using nanotechnology to break down the nutrients
[02:54:19] Unknown:
Yeah. You can't get more nano than than our trace minerals. They're not those are 98% bioavailable. So, yeah, I don't like technology. How are they doing it? What are they doing? I don't trust anybody.
[02:54:37] Unknown:
Yeah. I sort of sort of feel the same way, yet I trusted doctor Marshall on some of this stuff on how to break down the bees and stuff like that to make them more bioavailable that he's been doing that with Nanos, and that's a long time ago already.
[02:54:54] Unknown:
Yeah. But
[02:54:57] Unknown:
Anyways I do a quick search on Sirona Health, and the first one that comes up, Sirona Health, gender inclusive, employee well-being benefits. I don't think so.
[02:55:09] Unknown:
It's sairona.org.
[02:55:15] Unknown:
Okay. This is sairona health dot com, so that's different. Yeah. Interesting. The library is the rifle code. But that other one comes up first, though.
[02:55:29] Unknown:
That's that's Dave's my Sirona.
[02:55:32] Unknown:
Must be.
[02:55:37] Unknown:
Not sure what?
[02:55:47] Unknown:
Regarding, the constitution, you know, according, if you read Brost, he said that, when they decided they were going to not amend the articles and bring in a newer system, They made the convention secret because they didn't want the British to know the system that they were gonna use and a lot of it was about how it was gonna run commerce according to him. But, of course, you've got guys like Hamilton leaving the convention who is probably an agent for the crown and, of course, gets his banking system in past Washington using the necessary and proper clause, which is, like, pretty big hole you can throw any cat through. Right?
And Washington bought it. Jefferson and Madison opposed it. But that was supposedly actually backed by gold and silver. So technically, you could say it was constitutional. So I think there's a lot of things going on there that we don't really understand. But that system that they came up with was not very detailed, and he gave them these stupid clauses like necessary and proper. Well, you can argue anything's necessary and proper. Right?
[02:57:31] Unknown:
Yeah. That's where get listening to Gaddy is interesting because he goes back to those original correspondence between those men and they knew what they were doing. And and yeah. I've heard other like law. And I can see professors or whatever saying if if if the Constitution wasn't created to enable them to do what they've done, it definitely has nothing in there to prevent it.
[02:57:58] Unknown:
Yeah. And and I can see sort of like Washington's point about wanting being sold a system that's going to fund the federal government because he was never funded during the war. I mean, men without boots in winter and not enough supplies, etcetera. So I could see where he would have the propensity to want to try a system that would have been better. But, you know, when the charter wasn't renewed, what happened? Because people want to say that Alexander Hamilton wasn't a British agent. Well, as soon as the Charter ended we had the War of eighteen twelve, which some people say Rothschild himself funded for the British.
I don't know.
[02:59:04] Unknown:
Yeah. Those are things I've heard as well, so I don't know also.
[02:59:18] Unknown:
I think the main thing that held the whole thing in check was the country in general were honest, hardworking people and Christians. And when that got more and more undermined and greed set in and I mean, it it really started to, change everything. And a lot of these founders are definitely were deists. They Under an honest monetary system, though,
[02:59:52] Unknown:
controlled by the government, not private banks, as far as, like, funding the military. Isn't that one of the ways that, government could spend the money into circulation by buying, you know, purchasing what they need for that versus borrowing it?
[03:00:13] Unknown:
Yeah. I don't know much about how well the system was working up until the the first charter dissolved, which was about 1811. But at that first system, which Hamilton came up with, was supposedly backed by gold and silver. I wonder how true that is.
[03:00:32] Unknown:
But even if it's backed by it or not, it's a matter of is the government borrowing the money from the banks, or is the government issuing the money interest free?
[03:00:45] Unknown:
Well, that and and and I think they also had state banks
[03:00:50] Unknown:
at the same time. You
[03:00:53] Unknown:
Nazis.
[03:00:54] Unknown:
I tried to see were also issuing paper currency, and I doubt if a lot of that was actually backed. So but, I mean, it's such a complicated subject, really. A new nation that was definitely having England as an ad an advocate for, I think, a lot of Tories, that were in the population. Probably Hamilton was an agent. I I I bet you many of them were that signed that document. So as far as being secretive about it, I don't think there was any secret to it at all, really. Not to the powers that be.
[03:01:47] Unknown:
No. It was secretive to the American people. We supposedly sent them there to amend the articles. Right? And then they turn around and
[03:02:01] Unknown:
Well, that's why Luther Martin leaked it all. He got there late and didn't agree to this nondisclosure.
[03:02:11] Unknown:
Yeah. Hey. Breaking news, guys. That the that Afghani that shot these, two guardsmen.
[03:02:22] Unknown:
First party.
[03:02:24] Unknown:
Yep. Yeah. Well, they just had a guy on the ABC News saying he was a highly trusted, member of an elite, Afghani anti terrorist group, and they're blaming it on PTSD. Uh-huh. Right.
[03:02:47] Unknown:
I'll bet they are. He was part of a murder squad in Afghanistan from what I've heard.
[03:02:55] Unknown:
Hey, Dave. Did you hear the caller on Mark Stowe? I don't know what day it was. He was over in Afghanistan twice, and he said that guy is not Afghanistan. He could tell by the way he had his beard that he was not from Afghanistan. He's Oh, really?
[03:03:17] Unknown:
I missed that. That must have been in the August.
[03:03:21] Unknown:
Yeah. It was. He's I don't know if he suspected he was from Syria, but he said he definitely because it was more like an Amish guy would have his beard.
[03:03:31] Unknown:
Oh, with no mustache?
[03:03:33] Unknown:
Other than he had a mustache.
[03:03:35] Unknown:
Oh, I see. Okay. I gotta take a call, Rich. I'll be right back. I'm sorry.
[03:03:41] Unknown:
Okay. That's that's all I had to say.
[03:04:11] Unknown:
So I have no idea, but, Rich, what do you think, you know, like, how Afghanistan is? Like, I know a lot of those countries over there, and I'm gonna I think it's like the Shiite and the Sunni that if there's different tribes or whatever, that they might have a little bit different practices of how they keep their beards and whatnot. I I don't have any idea myself.
[03:04:35] Unknown:
That's what this guy was explaining, and he's he knows Mark. He's a regular caller on his show, and I can't remember which his name is, but he spent a lot of times or a lot of time over there. And I don't know what he was in the military, but he stopped the. And he said just from the pictures he saw, he's not Afghanistan. And I just wanted to throw that out there. So in case anybody else hears anything or sees anything of it could be something else. Hey, Mer. Was that guy on psychotropic drugs too?
[03:06:38] Unknown:
I don't know. I'm kinda looking into him now a little more. Interesting. To come all the way from Washington state, just too hokey.
[03:06:53] Unknown:
Yeah. Very hokey. What's gonna depart all these people?
[03:07:21] Unknown:
They're calling them an Afghan national, so that'll be fun. They'll use that word a lot, I guess, national and dirty it.
[03:07:30] Unknown:
I think CIA is international. Right? That's why he'd be protected here.
[03:07:40] Unknown:
And you know they have to be monitoring these people. So
[03:07:47] Unknown:
Yeah. He could be an MK Ultra, and this is just to keep things like Epstein, Epstein, Venezuela, Ukraine, and whatever off of the, front lines. You know?
[03:08:01] Unknown:
They're always trying to set something off. You know? So
[03:08:07] Unknown:
A lot of people don't realize that the, the so called
[03:08:18] Unknown:
I'll be back. My neighbors are here.
[03:08:21] Unknown:
Ceasefire that, the Israelis are keeping, they assassinated one of the highest Hamas leaders in Lebanon. And the Iranians said they're not gonna let that go unchecked. So somewhere in the future, they're gonna attack Israel.
[03:08:49] Unknown:
Have have we asked ourselves quie bono? In other words, who benefits any indication that there were no soldiers killed in Washington?
[03:09:02] Unknown:
Sorry, Samuel, if you wanted to converse with him, but no. Sorry. No. No. No. So you got me all wrong.
[03:09:11] Unknown:
I wasn't gonna say a word. Thank you. Oh, god.
[03:09:23] Unknown:
Yeah. I don't I don't know about that. Iran doing that. If anything, it would be a tit for tat type thing, not on Israel itself. I I don't see that. But that's where like, when you were saying the distraction of this, of the guards being shot from Venezuela, this, that, and it's like, yeah, the biggest thing is the distraction from Israel and their crimes.
[03:09:48] Unknown:
Well, what are reigns are saying about this? Is this gonna be it's like one of their true promise. I guess this would be three now or whatever. It's gonna be a punitive missile strike.
[03:10:02] Unknown:
Well, well, I guess An infrastructure.
[03:10:06] Unknown:
And and the argument is within, I guess, Iranian is, at what point how harsh do they make it so that, you know, that country doesn't go nuclear on them.
[03:10:27] Unknown:
I know they took out Israel took out a lot of big people in Iran when they did that counter attack on them that was just kinda crazy from what I had read about it itself. You know? To not have people that high within
[03:10:45] Unknown:
that was done with from within the country by agents.
[03:10:49] Unknown:
Right. And to have so many of those very high up pretty much unprotected like that.
[03:10:58] Unknown:
Well, that sort of goes to their system is not as dictatorial as, our government would like to say it is. Right. Or all of all of that would have been, you know, secret police kind of not allowed to happen.
[03:11:15] Unknown:
And so much of it anymore too. I just don't know what all of it is. Just distractions being, you know, who are participating willingly and the distractions of the financial systems, which is how they really control everything and that they're needing to do a reset because my understanding of BRICS in general is that they wanna do the same thing with the central bank stuff that, they'll call it the western countries wanna do. It's just a matter of who gets to be the top dog in it. So I don't know.
[03:12:01] Unknown:
Well, having all the eggs in one basket is new world order. So if there's opposition and there's at least two sides, maybe that's a good thing. I mean, I can't I wish there was more than that. You know, I wish all our countries were using their own systems. But
[03:12:27] Unknown:
Yeah. Me too. That's where it's like even the two sides, it's like that's just too easy of a controlled opposition. We need to have many, many, many sides, each country being still sovereign.
[03:12:42] Unknown:
Yeah. We've we've taken our system and stuck it in every country we've we do business with. And, I mean, everybody's sick of it. That's why you're getting bricks.
[03:13:04] Unknown:
I know. It'd be nice if, which I've heard some speculate that a rule, I don't know, believing too much in Trump, but but, you know, some of some of the analogies would be great to have Russia, China, and America as sovereign countries going against the bankers. That would be a beautiful thing. I will see. I
[03:13:42] Unknown:
that would be a beautiful thing. It's just the currency. It's so corrupt. Okay. And all you have to do is get rid of usury. It's it's so simple. It's mind boggling.
[03:16:03] Unknown:
Have any of you seen the interviews with, Jonathan Pollard lately?
[03:16:15] Unknown:
I have not.
[03:16:18] Unknown:
Devastating. This this guy is basically pointing out that, Israel in the past and recently has used nuclear blackmail on The United States.
[03:16:34] Unknown:
Yeah. And what was Mike Huckabee doing over there visiting him too?
[03:16:39] Unknown:
Yeah. Mike Huckabee had him invited in to see him, on which would be American Ground. They should have been he should have been arrested. Another thing that Trump did, Trump's the president that let him out of jail in his
[03:17:27] Unknown:
first term.
[03:17:33] Unknown:
Correction. That was Barack. Trump, let his, you know, his, movement status, you know, lapsed, and that's when he took off.
[03:17:48] Unknown:
Okay. Yeah. Trump allowed him to leave the country.
[03:17:52] Unknown:
Yeah. Well, they let his, movement, you know, stuff, lapsed. I guess his paroles, you know, rules or whatever.
[03:18:08] Unknown:
Yeah. I think it was Jimmy I think it was Jimmy Dore that that said since he was put in jail every time, an Israeli prime minister would be here in The United States, they would petition for his release.
[03:18:22] Unknown:
Mhmm.
[03:18:36] Unknown:
They they said he stole enough top secret documents to fill, like, a six by 10 storage room. Yep. And those and a lot of those were sold to the Russians to let Russian dissidents, Jewish ones, out of jail so that they could come to Israel.
[03:19:04] Unknown:
And I wonder how many of our people got killed.
[03:19:08] Unknown:
Oh, yeah. Supposedly, even the nuclear codes. Yep. Hard to believe something like that can even happen, but that's the scuttle button.
[03:19:32] Unknown:
Yeah. Those things should be set up to be automatically changed very regularly.
[03:19:41] Unknown:
You would imagine they are, but maybe sort of for a certain period of time, they were open to the Russians, which would have made us, you know, vulnerable, which we are anyway. But this this whole idea that we have a missile defense system that can protect this country is a joke. The chances are pretty much zero about our Minutemen missiles shooting down anything the Russians have.
[03:20:17] Unknown:
It's quite obvious they do not want to save this country for any of us. And, you know, they're already in league with the devil, and that that it's just another way to steal more money from us. Our current c or whatever the hell you wanna call it.
[03:20:40] Unknown:
Sorry. Least go ahead. Forget.
[03:20:43] Unknown:
They wanna depopulate the planet. Right? 95%. So, yeah, get ready. The ride just getting started.
[03:20:56] Unknown:
Yep.
[03:20:59] Unknown:
I always wonder what kind of technology because they talk about, you know, how we don't use a lot, like how China and Europe and so many different places have these high speed railways, and we don't have them. But do we underground? And what do they do down there?
[03:21:20] Unknown:
Beg for sun?
[03:21:25] Unknown:
I don't know. I don't know. I think they have greenhouses and and I don't I don't know.
[03:21:31] Unknown:
Eloy and Morlocks.
[03:21:34] Unknown:
Exactly.
[03:21:37] Unknown:
Doctor. Love the bomb.
[03:21:43] Unknown:
Lisa, speaking of greenhouses, you know how, like, ExxonMobil and all these other big oil companies are doing carbon capture? I wonder if it's to feed their underground greenhouses.
[03:21:55] Unknown:
I thought of that exact same thing when I first heard about it.
[03:22:00] Unknown:
Yeah. Makes sense.
[03:22:01] Unknown:
Yep. There's a there's a bill, in South Dakota that, Chrissy nomenclature signed. It was s b two zero one, or s d. I don't know. Anyway, just a few years back while she was still governor, and apparently, North Dakota tried to pass a similar bill, and it's just they they couldn't steal your land for no matter whatever reason they want, without due process. And, you know, because they got that pipeline that they're fighting all the farmers a lot. Well, not all of them, but some of them are fighting to bring in that, c o two, pipeline through South Dakota to either North Dakota or, Minnesota or something, but Minnesota just tried to pass it and the people, you know, went. They said, hell no. And it it got shot down, but they modeled it after South Dakota's and they they passed it. But my my buddy lives there, and he said he thought they shot it down too. So who knows what they're doing? You know, they do whatever they want. Just like, you know, Brent saying, oh, aluminum or whatever.
Yeah. The supremacy clause, it is supreme. I don't care what anybody says. I hope Mer challenged him on what happened in Missouri. I had to get off the call for a bit, so I missed the whole back end of that. I yield. Did anybody here last week, Brent or Brett Brent, whatever his name is, Winters. He I was listening to him talking, and I always questioned, you know, his vernacular. I I'm like, nobody talks like that. This guy is putting on a show. This is this is fake. Anyway, he said he was talking about how he would he was running for senate or whatever.
And, and he said he was running against, and then immediately after he said against, he changed it. And he said again. Again me. And he just kept flowing. And I was laughing real hard. I'm like, oh my god. I knew that that has to be fake. Nobody talks like that. I know people from that area. They don't talk like that.
[03:24:46] Unknown:
That is
[03:24:48] Unknown:
It's just shit.
[03:24:50] Unknown:
Yeah.
[03:24:52] Unknown:
He's he was running against again me. He just kept talking and talking. I left pretty hard. Anyway, I yield. Sorry.
[03:25:17] Unknown:
Roger says he's a national treasure. Don't forget that.
[03:25:27] Unknown:
Roger stole that phrase from me when I first used it on the show long, long time ago for Jennifer Daniels. All of a sudden, Roger started saying it about Brent. I was like, oh god.
[03:25:51] Unknown:
Yeah. He's a comm and a tweeny.
[03:25:56] Unknown:
This this is music to my ears. I'm glad I'm not the only one that doesn't worship Brent. God. I just have a hard time. I I often don't even listen on Fridays. And, I know today. Today was exceptionally bad, especially when the guy was asking about article three courts and Yep. Brent was going on and on. And it's like, I'm either retarded and I have no clue or Brent is way off his mark, one or the other. And I may be retarded, but I He's Brent is a master at not answering questions. Just saying. Oh, yeah. Oh, yeah. He's protecting
[03:26:33] Unknown:
his profession. Remember, he is an officer of the court.
[03:26:40] Unknown:
Yep. First. And it's
[03:26:42] Unknown:
it's amazing how, Roger well, I mean, I love Roger. We all love Roger, I think, because Roger's great, hard, good, but but he he has some some weaknesses that he, you know, the all cap thing and all that. He has some some blind spots. And, but for him to the way he worships Brent and every time a new person comes on and he talks about, oh, you gotta go on Friday. I'm like, oh god. I wanna intercept and say, hey. You know, just keep an open mind when you listen to Brent. You know?
[03:27:12] Unknown:
So, anyways, I yield. Thanks. Well, remember, Roger is a trained paralegal. That's why he's got, you know, one foot in and one foot out. And, you know, he loves attorneys. And in my book, yeah, you know, you stay as far away from it. If you hire an attorney, you're telling the court that you are an imbecile and you can't handle your own affairs. Yeah. I don't know. That's why they make it so damn difficult because they want everybody to be an imbecile and not be able to handle their affairs in a court of law.
[03:27:46] Unknown:
By you.
[03:27:47] Unknown:
Yep. I think we're all I think the group that's here right now, I think we're all on the same page. I just wanted to comment how refreshing it is because it gets it gets hard for me to even listen to because I feel like I'm doing, you know, programming my brain backwards. I I think I'm doing more damage sometimes listening on Fridays, just because I I like this is like this is like, like learning a new language and then you just wanna stay immersed in it a little bit. And that's why I love listening to Roger's thing in every day or whatever, just to keep it fresh in my head and, keep everything. And and and when you get to a certain point, you rarely you rarely learn anything new or get anything. More often, you're giving more than you're getting, but it's keeping everything fresh in your head. And then, Do you remember, Matt?
[03:28:34] Unknown:
Do you remember the Sunday morning and afternoon movies and stuff and that remember Ma and Pa Kettle?
[03:28:41] Unknown:
I
[03:28:43] Unknown:
I I don't. I know the concept. Oh my gosh.
[03:28:46] Unknown:
No. I That Pa Kettle. That's Brent. Yeah. Yeah. Pa Kettle.
[03:28:52] Unknown:
Yeah. The the other scam that he's got going on is and that didn't happen in the beginning because we used to actually give him a lot of crap, is he's got this thing now that if you answer if you ask him pretty much a yes or no question, and after ten minutes, you try to interrupt him, you get yelled at because you're not supposed to do that. Those aren't the rules.
[03:29:15] Unknown:
Right. Right.
[03:29:17] Unknown:
Yep. What a joke. Yep.
[03:29:21] Unknown:
Well, I gotta get off, but thanks, guys. I yield.
[03:29:34] Unknown:
Like, you never did answer my question on when the Mazarites wrote their final version of the Old Testament. It was the year January, And these are the same people because the after the temple went down in seventy AD, it went from Pharisees to rabbis. They're the same people, and we take their word for what the canon is supposed to be. I don't think so. Jesus basically called them white sepulchers. The synagogue of Satan. And and the reformers, even though they debated it a little bit, pretty much bought that cannon. I think it was a big mistake.
And that's the question that Brent wouldn't answer because he knows that he's gonna get caught in his circular reasoning. So you just demurrer and you demurrer and you demurrer, and, you throw in a little humiliation for who's ever asking. Like, why should you ask that? You don't know anything about the subject on top of it? So yeah.
[03:31:28] Unknown:
And who really does know anything about the subject? Because it was thousands of years ago. I wasn't there. Or if I was reincarnated somehow, I don't remember. But, yeah, it's, I I do know for one thing for sure is that we've been lied to all our lives for near about everything, and that's all I've got to say about that. Gregory, the people that were there
[03:32:00] Unknown:
were in Qumran, and they wrote the Dead Sea Scrolls. Totally in opposition to the Pharisees and the Sadducees because they were thrown out of there around January.
[03:32:22] Unknown:
They had to get rid of the Nag Hammani scrolls, you know, that were found in 1940
[03:32:29] Unknown:
that crap up. There's plenty Paul said there's more literature out here that's Gnostic than we're writing in his time. You got to get the differences. Some of this is the Word of God, and some of it goes against it. And it's easy to tell the difference. In that respect, they were relatively right because you have every book of the canon in the Dead Sea Scrolls except Esther. But they have the additional books, first Enoch, Jubilees, and Ezra as some of the key ones, and Tobit. These things look like canon, yet they were rejected by the Pharisees because of that they were doing, which weren't considered the law by the Levites, and they weren't Levites.
That's the difference.
[03:33:49] Unknown:
You know, I was listening to a video the other day about the Ethiopian Bible and how it has maintained all the books in it forever. And and the claim in the video was that Ethiopia was never under the Roman Empire. Was a big thing, so so it never had that imposed on it. And then it's language that it was written in, and I can't Geats or something like that. And they they didn't have people that knew that language to be able to mess with it, to take it away. I thought it was it was interesting, but I don't know if anybody knows anything about Ethiopia and the Roman Empire or if it did maintain its sovereignty.
[03:34:44] Unknown:
Well, what we call Ethiopia today, at one point, probably in ancient times, was the Continent Of Africa.
[03:34:55] Unknown:
May I rudely interrupt?
[03:34:59] Unknown:
Sure. You can interrupt that you're not being rude. Well That's rude. I I like that rude.
[03:35:07] Unknown:
I sent two video clips to Samuel. One's the first one have to backtrack on what we were talking about now, on Jonathan Pollard and Mike Huckabee. If you wanna post that to the chat. I'm up for you, Lisa, and I didn't see your name, so I sent it to Samuel.
[03:35:30] Unknown:
I can't do that, Joe. I I'm I'm like you. I'm sort of technically What about Samuel?
[03:35:35] Unknown:
Samuel, go grab it and send it to me.
[03:35:38] Unknown:
Okay. I will. Okay. Well, I think I sent it to you, Lisa,
[03:35:43] Unknown:
as well. You might be Then then I'll just go get it. Never mind, Sandy.
[03:35:47] Unknown:
Well, take a look in case I didn't, but I thought I didn't. I sent it to Andy. I saw his name up there. Anyway and then the other thing is I sent this to Samuel, sent it to her, and it's called the Jesus way. And this fella goes into, biblical history, and Peter and Paul both no, Peter and John were both illiterate. They couldn't read, and they couldn't write. So where did their scriptures come from? I haven't listened to the whole thing, but it's kind of an interesting discussion, something that you might wanna take a look at. But he and I can't quote where he said it. The spelling said it, but he said in the scriptures, it does say that Peter and John were both illiterate.
So take a look if you like. I'm sorry for interrupting. And I do hope that I can dig out that information on the treaty with Britain and the migratory waterfowl and what that was all about. I remember that a bit about that from way, way back in the early nineties. Beecraft was talking about it, making an issue about it. It'd be pretty deep in the pile.
[03:37:56] Unknown:
So, Joe, the link you sent me is from redacted news.
[03:38:06] Unknown:
I don't remember, Lisa.
[03:38:08] Unknown:
Well, what was it pertaining to? Make sure I have the right thing to do. It's pertaining to Jonathan Pollard and Mike Huckabee. Okay. Yep. And that's probably it.
[03:38:21] Unknown:
Did I send it to you? Yeah. I'm gonna guess.
[03:38:26] Unknown:
That's what this is. The headline is holy SHI. This is getting bigger by the minute? Yeah. That's it. Okay.
[03:38:45] Unknown:
I think there's others who would like to read it or say it. It's not very long. It's twelve, thirteen minutes long.
[03:38:58] Unknown:
I also sent it to you, Lisa.
[03:39:01] Unknown:
Okay. Well, I already had it, but thank you. K. And it's posted in the chat now.
[03:39:07] Unknown:
Thank you, ma'am.
[03:39:11] Unknown:
You're welcome.
[03:39:25] Unknown:
You have people like Helena Loboski,
[03:39:32] Unknown:
which
[03:39:35] Unknown:
is one of the scariest people out there.
[03:39:42] Unknown:
Spirit cooking.
[03:39:44] Unknown:
And her doctrine. She had a third education, yet she was putting out volumes of work that she said herself that were coming through her. She was the writing tool. So if that's the spirit doing it, the Holy Spirit can definitely do it. So whether people weren't versed in language or not, like John and Peter, I would assume that they were allowed. I mean, they were doing things like speaking in tongues, etcetera. So a lot of miracles were going on at the time. So, I mean, that's that's the problem with most Christians is when it comes to the supernatural, they don't wanna accept that because we've become so science orientated that we don't think that this place is a spiritual place?
That's the problem with, like, a lot of old doctrine like in jubilees. This isn't just the law. It's the spirit of the people who are trying to uphold it.
[03:41:09] Unknown:
We fight not against flesh and blood. Right?
[03:41:15] Unknown:
Yeah. There's when God divided the nations, supposedly, there was a prince put over each one of these places. I get I forget what Psalms that Psalm 82, 83. Michael, Heizer got a lot into this that, God's basically telling these guys that you've done such a bad job, and these are spirit creatures. I'm gonna kill you just like men. Because killing a spirit creature in the Bible is not an easy task. That's why we have a lot of these demons, which are the disembodied spirits of the Nephilim according to the bible. So even though they may have killed off the giants, those and those types of creatures that were not of God's creation, their spirit wasn't taken out along with it, just the body.
Or at least that's what the Bible says. But Western Christianity, especially doesn't wanna go there and acknowledge those kinds of things.
[03:43:04] Unknown:
Well, why why do you suppose they purposefully hid that other than to, I guess, squash people's spirituality and belief in god and stuff. But, you know, back like I'll call it at the supposed founding is what you see in a lot of the the videos and stuff. You know? And and the government being so involved, the Smithsonian being so involved in in going and gathering up the skeletal remains and stuff and disposing of them so the people wouldn't know. What are you supposed to point to that was?
[03:43:41] Unknown:
To invalidate the Bible. That's what everything's done for. I mean, the Catholic church used to kill you if you had a copy of the Bible because they didn't want people knowing that their doctrine and what they were telling you was a bunch of lies. And then when it got out there and the reformers printed it, and they called the Bible their pope, then the Catholic church had to change its its maneuvering by creating all kinds of gnostic and other books and problems and to discredit the Bible, so that people would not believe that it was without error.
And that's what all these knockoff versions of the King James are about. They're to create doubt in people's minds. It's like Brent the other day, the Lord's prayer in his version of the Bible. He says, well, it's in mine. And then and what does he do? I think the New American Standard is what he recommends. But what Brent doesn't tell you is that they put it in parentheses with a footnote that says not in the earliest editions, which are those critical texts. And the N80 is the one that only puts it in parentheses. All the other translations drop it completely with thousands of other words. So
[03:45:18] Unknown:
Don't you know my grandmother said if the King James version was good enough for Jesus Christ, it's good enough for me? She she was serious when she said it too.
[03:45:34] Unknown:
Well, I don't know if you've ever heard me talk about, that book by Brandon Peterson called Sealed by the King. Joe, did you ever hear me talk about that?
[03:45:45] Unknown:
No. I haven't, Samuel. Brandon Peterson, the young
[03:45:51] Unknown:
still young. I I bet he's not 40. But he said that he noticed the difference between becoming a real Christian when he started to not read his other versions in the Bible and reading the King James version. So then he got into doing research on the King James Version, and he wrote this long book called Sealed by the King, which shows, and it's sealed by the King, the seven seventy seven. He shows all of the mathematical proof that it's God's approved Bible because of all of the references. And it and the only way you can find these references is with computer programs today. So nobody came up with these in antiquity.
[03:46:56] Unknown:
Yes. I remember you speaking of this now now that
[03:47:00] Unknown:
you're fresh in my memory, Samuel. I remember that. But don't you find it curious that the king isn't the King James Bible written to counter the Geneva?
[03:47:11] Unknown:
No. It was an expansion on the well, the King James didn't like the Geneva because it pointed out in scripture what authority the king should have and what excoundrel that he was, right, as far as English kings go, which isn't hard to do, and he didn't like that. And there was division. So what he did is he brought both sides together, basically, the Puritans and the Anglicans, and got them to, like, 47 of them. 54 were approved by the king. 47 were allowed in, and then they pretty much had to agree unanimously on the translation.
So the 47 people agree, it's a miracle in itself, on what the translation would would be. And if there was one person who wouldn't adhere to that and held out, then a footnote was put in on that verse. But when you look at you know, this is the back of Brandon's book. He says, Jesus and Christ appears 777 plus 777 times in the Bible, in the King James. 777 mentions of the father plus the word plus Holy Ghost. Seven times seven times seven mentions of the gospel of in the gospels only of father and son. 777 mentions of the first and last words of Genesis and Revelations.
Jesus mentioned mentioned 70 times seven times in both even and odd books, and the word count on those books is about one third difference. One book is a lot longer than the other, yet you get 70 times sevens in both even and odd. You get seven times seven times seven words spoken by God in Genesis one. You get 7,777 mentions of uppercase names of God plus Jesus. It just goes on. You know? Just And that's why he call he's calling it sealed by the king. And that's the King James Bible. Now was King James a probably gay?
Well, actually, he would had have been bisexual because I think he had, like, eight or nine children. But he wasn't a very affectionate, they say, to his wife. Yet he gave this one guy a whole lot of goodies, and he was a nobody. And he was, like, ten years younger or something like that than him, maybe fifteen. Forget his name. But there definitely was probably that going on, but doesn't mean God can't use them for a good purpose. But he was also a very intelligent man with quite a good deal of theological background. In fact, some of them said his prowess is so high that he could have been one of the translators.
And these translators were no mean, these guys actually could converse in Greek and Hebrew amongst themselves, many of them. This wasn't like something that they had to learn to do a translation. They grew up with it. I mean, this is a very, very, very, special time when the English language is being solidified. England is gonna end up being the world power, and this is gonna get transmitted all over the earth because of that. And, of course, I think the Creator knew this, and he used it as a tool. But then if you watch specials like on Parable, the great Bible hoax of '18 I think '88 was the year.
This is where the critical texts start. And they're all based on two codexes, Vaticanus and, Sinaiticus, and both. They make a very good point of pointing out that they're forgeries. I mean, when, what was the first scholar to do the comparison bible? He's a Catholic theologian and the around 15 hundreds. He was offered the, the Vaticanus, and he refused it because he he felt it was an error. And he he wrote the first translations between Latin and Hebrew and and Greek and and showed them together, which was the beginning of the end for the Catholic monopoly on the truth. And he was a Catholic.
[03:53:11] Unknown:
But
[03:53:13] Unknown:
the church has always tried to belittle the Bible and show it that it's an error, because of course the Pope is supposed to be the one that isn't an error. And of course the Bible doesn't ever rarely agree with the Pope. So they had that hurdle to always get over throughout time. But it. Once you start to get into it, it's pretty clear that there's a lot of Gnostic literature, a lot of that came out of Egypt. And that Masoretic text that, Brent's relying on, it's called the Alexander codex or nova. Yeah. No. Not Leningrad Codex, which makes you think it might be from Russia. Well, that's where it ended up. The the it was given or bought by a curator of the Russian government, but it was written in in Alexandria, Egypt where most of the gnostics would hang out as well as this is a word, the rabbi.
And and it's not that it's inaccurate. I I wanna say that. Where I think the real error is in it is from antiquity, the from the Pharisees' time or actually the prior to them, they left out books that didn't agree with them. And I think you can prove those books to be canonical. And then, you know, the other day, Larry said, well, Jesus didn't quote Jubilees. And, technically, that's true. Okay? But Jesus quoted Genesis twice, and Jubilees is basically a rewrite of Genesis with lawful and theological details. So the two quotes by Jesus in Genesis are covered in Jubilees.
So indirectly, Jesus was quoting jubilees as well. And there's other books that aren't canon, like Enoch, that were quoted by guys like Jude. And these are the books that are found in the Dead Sea Scrolls. They were keeping according to the God culture. These guys were keeping the complete law of how to run the temple, etcetera, because that wasn't being done. And that's the reason they had this Qumran community, which really should be called Bethabara. Qumran is a translation, by the Muslims or change just plain changed name and place.
But this is where John the Baptist was from. And this is where Jesus was actually baptized, was in Bethabara, not in the Jordan River. And that John was one of these community leaders, if not the main leader, and was keeping scripture. Jesus did call him the greatest prophet. Well, people want to say, well, John didn't write anything. Well, the entire Dead Sea Scrolls may well be part of his lineage because he was there to protect them and to see to it that we got them in the future. So in a way, maybe that thing that Jesus said about him being the greatest prophet ever that ever lived came true in 1947 when they found this stuff.
February And believe you me, they didn't wanna release that information for fifty years, even after they found it. Anyway, I don't want to Bogart the joint here. Some people find this somewhat interesting but, I sure do. I love history, and I hate being lied to.
[03:58:36] Unknown:
Samuel. I appreciate the words that you share with us. Don't always agree and don't always understand, but it's all good to ruminate on and think about. You sure brought forth some very good history and information, and I appreciate it. And I thank you.
[03:58:59] Unknown:
Well, thank you, Joe. I appreciate you too. Like I say, I appreciate everybody here. Even if I disagree with people, that doesn't mean I don't appreciate them. It should be an open source thing for what we find interesting. And, our little community here, I I think, gets some of the most interesting subject matter that there is. That's why I hang around. Even for guys like Brent, every once in a while Brent gives me something to, as Joe would say, Rubenade on that I find a value.
[03:59:42] Unknown:
I appreciate you guys too very much. You know?
[03:59:45] Unknown:
Well, you know, no one knows it all. There's a few think they do, but no one knows it all. And sharing this information and passing it around many times, you pick up on things that you didn't the first time. I do anyway.
[04:00:10] Unknown:
One of the the big things I find fascinating about what was in the Dead Sea Scrolls is they had a thing called the Damascus document, and they were talking about the same people that Jesus was talking about, the Pharisees, in the exact same way. And they were also saying that God gave us a calendar. It was a three hundred and sixty four day calendar, so every year all the festivals fell on the same day. No rabbi had to tell you what day it was, or whether there was a full moon involved or not, or this or that, because it wasn't a moon system. It was a sun system, and the day was from sunup to sunup.
Not what the Pharisees practiced, which was night, dust to dust. And they point out in several videos, I think two in particular, the God culture, that when Jesus was crucified, the timeline of Jesus followers, and what a Sabbath was, and the timeline of the Sadducees who were like buying, the burial cloth for Jesus, his followers couldn't do because it was already Sabbath, yet it wasn't for the Sadducee who was doing it, Joseph of Arimathea. And they show the timeline of when they went to the grave, etc. All this matches that calendar, and that's why there's so much confusion about some of these things I think, is because you you're debating what day it is based on whether it's sunup to sunup or dusk to dusk.
But anyway, the thing I'm trying to figure out, and it it seems to be hard to figure, is how do you make up for what the full cycle of a year is, which is like, I think, three hundred and sixty five point two five days. And it looks to me like they probably made those adjustments every seven or fifty years with the Sabbath and the Jubilees.
[04:02:38] Unknown:
I thought it was March and a quarter or March and then you have or March and then you have leap year every fourth to cover that that.
[04:02:51] Unknown:
Pretty sure it's March that I could be wrong. And a quarter is the real solar year.
[04:03:01] Unknown:
But then the the the year time from God is supposed to be 03/1964?
[04:03:09] Unknown:
According to the Qumran, the Beth Libera, a better way to say it, but then people don't know what you're talking about. The Dead Sea Scrolls, that was God's calendar, was a 365 calendar that's and the day was from sunup to sunup. Another reason that these so called Pharisees would have had to drop books like Jubilees that bring that up. Plus, there's a book in there called Sirach, which was after Malachi and the Pharisees, and that was in the Dead Sea Scrolls as well. The Pharisee says there's a four hundred gap between Malachi and Jesus.
So that would destroy that in their beliefs as well. And there's an another point here where you get Jesus saying that John the Baptist is the greatest prophet. Well, that also screws up their timeline. So you've got these prophecies that aren't fulfilled in their traditions, and a lot of this stuff they they dragged out of Babylon. I mean, in jubilees, the months were one through 12. The Pharisees brought back the Babylonian names for the months. It's just I don't know. I think there's plenty of evidence to say that John the Baptist was from that community. In fact, when the wilderness of Judea, that that's that area, that's where the two Mary's met.
While Jesus and John were still in the womb, they went to the Judean wilderness, which is where this Bethabara is. And all of our scholars today try to say that these are the Essenes at that location, which is totally untrue as well. The Essenes and John the Baptist would not have wanted to be in the presence of each other. And it's it's paired out by the God cultures that the clothing that the Essenes wore were weren't what John the Baptist wore. The food they ate was not the food that John the Baptist would eat and, of course, their theology was totally different. These esteemed people worship the sun.
They were just another sect of the Pharisees and Sadducees at the time. But our scholars wanna put put these people in Qumran, and the God culture does a good job of shooting all that down as well.
[04:06:52] Unknown:
Well, Samuel, I have enjoyed your dissertation very much, but I must go. And I hope to hear you elaborate more with your ideas and thoughts. And I thank you. K. Good day to y'all.
[04:07:10] Unknown:
Thank you. And the other thing is if you wanna make the canon only what Jesus quoted, which is, you know, our current canon is 39 books, probably from what I'm saying should be more. But Jesus only quoted, directly, direct quotes, only 14 of those 39 books. If you throw in the rest of the apostles, you get a lot closer to 30 or more. Jesus himself, you get 14 but like I said he did quote Genesis. And those exact quotes are covered in Jubilees with not the exact wording, but more theological detail. And what Jesus was doing in both those quotes was supporting marriage to one person.
So it's sort of like everything else around here, you know, most of it's lies, but the truth is in there somewhere. And, I think that's probably the case here too
[04:10:40] Unknown:
that
[04:10:42] Unknown:
we got a truncated canon because it wasn't going along with the Pharisees, which are still running the world.
[04:11:13] Unknown:
Daniel, how many year did you say that, they held, oh, the Dead Sea Scrolls before they revealed, you know, what they actually said?
[04:11:30] Unknown:
Well, a lot of pressure was always on them to release stuff. But it wasn't until about fifty years later. So they found them in 1947. So it's almost up to the year. 2000 before we start getting more information in detail and seeing what was really found.
[04:11:58] Unknown:
It's like,
[04:12:00] Unknown:
Sorry, Gregory. Go ahead.
[04:12:03] Unknown:
No. Please.
[04:12:05] Unknown:
What is up with these people always wanting to hold inform withhold information from us for fifty years? Raise up with that that.
[04:12:15] Unknown:
Well, this is what the God culture pulls, pulls out about the canon. Who had the authority to say what the canon was. According to the Bible, only the Levites, the sons of Zadok from Solomon and David's time had that authority. And it certainly, they say it wasn't the Catholic Church, and it certainly wasn't the Pharisees that become the rabbis. They all had agendas. The only agenda the scribes in Qumran had was to keep the word of God, because these guys were the true Levites. They had been exiled out of the temple by the Maccabees, which basically wrote Maccabees one and two to put their slant on why they were overtaking the temple and knocking off the high priest,
[04:13:15] Unknown:
which Those are books that are in this Ethiopian Bible. I have recently gotten the Maccabees.
[04:13:21] Unknown:
No. The Maccabees are making up a story there, blaming the Greeks for desecrating the temple when it's in fact them who take it over. And these people are not from the tribe of Israel. They're not any of the tribe of Israel. They have an influence of all kinds of peoples. They basically were the Sumerian area was a vacuum after they were exiled. The the the tribes were taken out of there, and the vacuum was filled in by all kinds of peoples. Most of them not of the, tribes, and these are the people who end up taking over the temple and writing the story in Maccabees.
The only place you find this story about desolation of that temple is from the Maccabees, and from Josephus, which claimed himself to be a Pharisee. So the Greeks don't write about it. Nobody else writes about it. So and, of course, you don't find those books in the Dead Sea Scrolls. You don't find Esther in the Dead Sea Scrolls. But Enoch and Jubilees were two of the most copied books that they had. First Enoch, not second and third, that's Gnostic. But that first book, this is really the oldest book that would have been in canon, but it wasn't accepted by the Pharisees.
They're even quoted in the New Testament by Jude. And it used according to the God culture to get copies of what was there. They put a price tag on it of something like $35,000 So after they blocked it for the longest time, then they also blocked it with a price tag. But it's become in pretty common knowledge these days. So you can keep the cat in the bag, but just so long.
[04:16:25] Unknown:
Well, that's like all these, archaeologists and all these new finds that they're finding all over the world that, that, the modern the so called modern day archaeologists, they pooh poohed away. They don't wanna hear about man being around x y z longer than, they claim. And it's our story or nobody else, and they occult it like, you know, the Smithsonians, and how they've sealed off those caves in, the Grand Canyon and well, all over the place, really. But, yeah, they're just, they're occulting the knowledge from us, hiding it like they're so good to do.
That's what they do.
[04:17:16] Unknown:
Yeah. But the the ability to discern what is and what isn't because like Paul said, there there's more literature being floated around out here in his time that is not their teachings and to be aware of it. That's really the crux to the matter. What is the word of God and what isn't? And so if you don't have a foundation of some kind Gregory, then you're going to be open to buying anything. And Paul pretty much said that too. If what I'm teaching isn't true, then nothing matters. I'm paraphrasing. Of course, I'm not a very good Bible quoter.
[04:18:10] Unknown:
I always feel like Jesus taught more, which when we talk about all these different Bible versions that it's not any written word that through, I'm gonna say, fasting and meditation, it's all within us that we need to know.
[04:18:31] Unknown:
Oh, he basically said that only through me do you get to the father. And without the father, he was nothing. So, essentially, he was also the father, which I still have a hard time wrapping my head around. But,
[04:18:51] Unknown:
That's a fact. John 14. Read it.
[04:18:55] Unknown:
That's another one they like dropping from the scripture.
[04:18:59] Unknown:
Mhmm.
[04:19:01] Unknown:
Yeah. I talked about that last week. But, what do you think about these that that by the, and it happens to be a Jewish guy, of course, that writes it that they try to nullify Paul. They it's false doctrine because because of the, Dead Sea Scrolls. I don't buy it.
[04:19:21] Unknown:
I don't think there's any conflict. Paul was basically the reason Paul gets a lot of chaff is because he's speaking primarily to the Gentiles, and he says that he was given a revelation directly from Jesus Christ, right, to teach this mystery to the gentiles. So he wasn't speaking to his brothers, which he tried a lot, which usually got him jailed or almost killed when he was trying to speak the message to the, to his brothers and sisters. Right? The the Israelites are probably not even Israelites. A lot of them are just phonies at his time as well. But, I think when he was getting off his message, Jesus was reminding him that he was sort of breaking the rules here. You were supposed to be talking to the Gentiles, not these people who wanna kill you.
[04:20:29] Unknown:
Well, it started out both, but, yeah, that was that was his mission. And, you know, the ones that push the homosexuality and stuff, they like to say Paul was false because he he calls that out. And, also, some of the things he supposedly had written don't seem to be in his style, but all it's although it's his message, which may have been his followers afterward. You know? But it's still it's still inspired by God. That's the thing.
[04:21:03] Unknown:
Oh, yeah. A lot of people wanna say Moses didn't exist. So,
[04:21:07] Unknown:
Oh, right. Right.
[04:21:09] Unknown:
Of course, Jesus said, he if you believe in me, you believe in Moses and vice versa. Yes. Because that was the law. He says Moses was about me.
[04:21:19] Unknown:
He said Moses, why did they want me? Yeah.
[04:21:22] Unknown:
Yeah. And then some people have a problem with when they overtook Cana and did all this killing. What an evil god to kill all these people. Like, he was killing off creation that was not his.
[04:21:38] Unknown:
Well, they would have corrupted them. They were wicked. Yes.
[04:21:43] Unknown:
It would have corrupted them their size society. These were the Nephilim and and and peoples who had married into these genealogies. That's why he wanted to get rid of them, and God doesn't change his personality. I mean, that killing is nothing what's gonna come in the end if you believe revelations. You're not talking about thousands of people. You're probably talking about millions and billions of people.
[04:22:13] Unknown:
It's singular there, Samuel.
[04:22:16] Unknown:
Which is what?
[04:22:18] Unknown:
Revelation.
[04:22:20] Unknown:
Let's do that. It's a little bad at it.
[04:22:22] Unknown:
But Yeah. It means apocalypse. Same thing.
[04:22:30] Unknown:
And that's that's the other thing is, the the book of Ezra or Esdras, I guess that's the Greek. It agrees with Revelations. Gives it a little different detail, more detail in some cases, but a lot of these books that the God culture is looking at, they have a very strict criteria to deciding whether it's canon or not, and I respect that, and they do a good job of saying that, you know, the Torah should have been six books.
[04:23:25] Unknown:
You know, god knows what he's doing. Those 66 books, they're what we need. And I agree with Lisa, and you have to know inside, but he also tells us to read his word. And think of it as a love letter from God, from Jesus. You know? And he tells the stories of how man went wrong. That's what it's so much about in the Old Testament, how they didn't listen, how they, you know, went their own way and suffered the consequences. Go his way and enjoy the consequences even if they're not enjoyable at the time.
[04:24:51] Unknown:
Bible in Thessalonians says we're to prove all things, and it also says that, in the end times, more information will be revealed. So I'm thinking that maybe some of this stuff is those revelations. I agree with Mer that the King James version is plenty of bible for your salvation, but I think there's more.
[04:25:21] Unknown:
I I like how would do. Yeah. I like how Brandon calls it numerics. Right? Because I was like, it's not numerology, and it's not just mathematics. It's numerics, a good way to phrase it. You know, and how it's confirmation of who it's about, who it's from.
[04:25:45] Unknown:
The, God culture also likes the King James version, yet they have their criticisms. One is the not using god's true name and replacing it with lord. They have a bit of a problem with that, but, that's their main gripe about it. And then sometimes when it comes to real critical things, and you wanna get the true meaning, you really have to check it out in the Greek or in Hebrew. That's that's the other thing about the Dead Sea Scrolls. 80% of them were written
[04:26:37] Unknown:
in Hebrew.
[04:26:46] Unknown:
Funny. On x now, I guess, it's at or AI x, I guess. Anyway, it won't translate Hebrew anymore because it's these rabid Jews going on there and talking about all nasty stuff, how they wanna kill everybody. It's So that's the one language they won't, translate anymore. They can get away with their code between each other, I guess.
[04:27:12] Unknown:
I don't know if I sent you some of that Johnson Pollard stuff on the nuclear threats, but that guy is and Huckabee's without permission speaking to this guy in one of our embassies over there. Right? Wow. What a joke.
[04:27:28] Unknown:
But I think what they're trying to do here is flush Huckabee out, you know, reveal that he had done this. And, you know, they asked him to meet. He wouldn't have met otherwise. And so then that way, they can make him unqualified because he complained about now he had, taken, like, I guess, over a 100 different trips, with tours, with Christians over there, you know, before he was ambassador and over the years. And, more recently, these Christians are complaining when they go over there that they're spat on and everything. Right? You know?
So, I remember Jim Ella Daugherty talking about that. She before she knew what was going on, and I probably said this here before, but she she was went to a kibbutz. And, anyway, some Jewish man spat on her. And, she thought it was because of the t shirt she was wearing, which I don't know if it said something or if it was just because it was a t shirt. But, no, it was supposed she's a Christian. You know? This Judeo Christian stuff, just no prefixes or suffixes. Christian. Let it stand alone.
[04:28:40] Unknown:
Yeah. I like listening to this guy. I don't know if you've seen him. I think I've probably sent some of his pieces too. He goes by Mahmood.
[04:28:50] Unknown:
Oh, okay. Let me see. I think I'm behind him watching all the stuff.
[04:28:54] Unknown:
He he Uh-huh. He's quite clear about how wonderful they are to Christians over there as well as Muslims. And he says it I think it was the year 1973. The there was a Christian community that was trying to get their land back from the settlers, and the courts agreed that they should have it back. Of course, this is '73. Right? So a little more lenient than they are today. So before they could get back to their cities, the Israeli military bombed the crap out of them. Even after the court said they would, they were to be able to go back well they went back to rubble. These are Christians, the whole town was Christian.
Says a lot.
[04:30:12] Unknown:
And the word Christian to begin with was derogatory. Yeah. They were followers of the way. Christ didn't follow himself.
[04:30:28] Unknown:
I've heard God culture mentioned that, I I they have I haven't heard a place where they have their explanation of it, but they're saying the the term Bible is actually pagan term.
[04:30:42] Unknown:
Mhmm. But,
[04:30:44] Unknown:
that because everybody knows it so well and everything, they still use it, but they're not. Not saying.
[04:30:55] Unknown:
It's how how God turns evil into good. Right? I mean, people say, oh, about King James being a homo and all that. Yeah. But he had the money, and he got these 70, you know, translators to translate. It wasn't him. Is he 70? It's a lot of people to try to agree on stuff. You know? So
[04:31:16] Unknown:
Yeah. The the king actually, approved, I think, 54. And he was a theologian himself, they say. And what they ended up with I don't know what the reason is yet, but they ended up with forty seven that did the translation.
[04:31:31] Unknown:
Forty seven. You're right. I don't know where I got the 70, I guess, just listening to Brandon too much. Yeah. 47. Let's
[04:31:41] Unknown:
see. We got one seven in there.
[04:31:44] Unknown:
Yeah. Right? I mean, that's almost four dozen. Right? That's a lot of translators to research and come together on stuff. So it's it's pretty good. But, I mean, you know, every now and then, you'll have some funky stuff like they talk about, and they they put in the, the, Italian version there, the movie Jesus from Nazareth, right, where they have John the Baptist out there in the rocks and the puddles and stuff. And and he's, you know, it's a Catholic movie. Right? So he's baptizing them by smearing water across their forehead.
[04:32:21] Unknown:
That's a problem
[04:32:22] Unknown:
right there. But then they also have him supposedly eating, you know, locusts and wild honey, when in fact, there's a wild honey locust tree. It has beans we call carob. You know? And it has just about the same nutrients as, chocolate, but without the, stimulant.
[04:32:47] Unknown:
We got a culture points out that the locust was a food that they could eat, and there was a way to prepare it either doused it in water or roasted it, I guess. And, but that's in the scrolls as well.
[04:33:07] Unknown:
Yeah. But you have to look at how they how they twist the story sometimes too. Like I'm saying about that, you know, and the baptism stuff in particular.
[04:33:17] Unknown:
Now that means Oh, yeah. Once it gets to to the to the big screen, it's
[04:33:22] Unknown:
Yeah. Yeah. Forget it. Right. Yeah. And and we know who runs all of that stuff, and that that's why you would have more conversos to Catholicism. You know, they're gonna put up with having some water smeared across her forehead, not so much about dunking you. And in fact, the poor lower level Jews when they were, you know, bringing them to, Germany, and they were delousing them. And, one reason they had showers is because they thought baths might baptize you. Yeah. They keep doing people dumb like that. You know? Like, they try to keep everybody numb. And Oh, by the way, well, the honey locust, beans is even called Saint John's bread.
Just to be clear.
[04:34:48] Unknown:
Interesting. You know, the Dead Sea Scrolls actually had the most copies of Enoch of anything. It's 25 copies. Jubilees is 21.
[04:37:14] Unknown:
Just looking at this, mudra, rudra. I like to say mudra, but I think it's mudra, m u d r a, which are, the hand Mudras. You know, we think of the symbols different ones are doing. Right? How they're holding their hands. But when in fact I've I've mentioned this a little bit. I wanna get into it some more on another show. But, just pressing your hands together when you're, praying. That's a namaskar mudra. It's important to have the hands together, but it's where we're electric beings and the fingertips have so much going on there, you know, with the nerve endings and blood vessels. And, I mean, you can see an aura when you pull your fingers apart.
You know, it it's interesting anyway. Yeah. I don't buy the timeline, so some of these different Easter ones say all these long timelines, and it's the same excuses of evolution just because we say so. Also, my neighbors that came by, they had told me they were going to, and they stacked, hay bales around the Northwest Corner here on my trailer for me. It was so nice. They brought me a jar of fresh honey, you know, hives we have here on the property. So, yeah, toasted some sourdough bread and put honey on there and some coconut milk and, cinnamon.
It was delish.
[04:39:45] Unknown:
Wow.
[04:39:45] Unknown:
The coconut milk, when you get it in a can, it's, like, solidified at the top. There's a little moisture. You know, you could mix it up right away, but I like to scoop it out. It, you know, kinda looks like ice cream or something. And, you know, you could use it like sour cream on, say, baked sweet potato or something or you know? It has a nice delicate kind of flavor. I like it. Something I've more recently gotten into. I was kinda craving something like that. And then down a little local organic Valley store, I saw coconut milk. I thought, so I bought one can of it at that time. And then since then, I bought a couple more cans, but, yep, till I wear out the newness of it, I guess I'll enjoy that.
Yeah. Really tasty.
[04:40:38] Unknown:
Murr, the lady in the wilderness. Yeah. You didn't like John.
[04:40:49] Unknown:
Yeah. I have this one room where I can keep it warm enough and, hopefully, keep the water from freezing up, but that should really help putting those, bales around the that northwest corner. Really appreciate that. And one of the daughters and her husband are out here hunting, and they're gonna babysit the children. They have two, and she's pregnant again. And, which I think will make, maybe that one will be 13. Number 12 is gonna be born in February from another from a son. Be fruitful and multiply. Beautiful children too. I've seen most of them.
See, I haven't met, I think think there are, like, couple of them I haven't met yet. Got to tickle the feet of one of them most recently. It was fun.
[04:42:25] Unknown:
Where were they or or are they Amish or Mennonite folks?
[04:42:31] Unknown:
Neither. Just American, German, and, I'm not sure what else. You know, European. Yep. There's a homeless around here, though, and and they do have a lot of children.
[04:42:58] Unknown:
Hey. What kind of book do they, reference? Do you know?
[04:43:12] Unknown:
Sorry. It's getting some water. It helps. I'm not sure which I just assume it's, King James, but I'm not sure which version. Is that what you meant?
[04:43:26] Unknown:
Yeah.
[04:43:27] Unknown:
Yeah. But sometimes, they'll start conversations and and, you know, the Amish, and we'll talk about giants and all kind of fun stuff. Yeah. Good people. You know, for the most part, there's ones that will beat their wives, you know, and don't respect, you know, how it is in
[04:43:55] Unknown:
society, different cultures. And So I did a search for what it's worth. I'm gonna say German Martin Luther Bible is what it says a lot of the Amish use. I've never heard of
[04:44:16] Unknown:
them. Yeah. I don't know. I hadn't asked them. That's interesting. Because they do speak high German. You know? They're basically bilingual. They learn German at home first.
[04:44:30] Unknown:
I'm sorry to interrupt you, Marv. No. Thanks. That's helpful.
[04:44:35] Unknown:
I was gonna say the Amish around here learn German as their first language, and they learn English in school, but their Bible is in German.
[04:44:44] Unknown:
Yeah. That makes sense.
[04:44:47] Unknown:
Because they sell them at the hardware here, the Amish hardware.
[04:44:52] Unknown:
So but it says a German Martin Luther Bible. That's different than King James, I'm taking it? I don't know.
[04:45:02] Unknown:
I would think so to some extent, anyway.
[04:45:07] Unknown:
They don't like talking to us English very much detail about I mean, I had one one couple that did a little bit, but
[04:45:21] Unknown:
Yeah. I looked it up too, and it says that they use, primary primarily the German Martin Luther Bible for church services and the English King James version for personal and home reading? Oh, it says some of them use the NIV.
[04:45:54] Unknown:
Yeah. The more you look into that, more clear it becomes that these other versions are basically negating Christ's divinity. Very sly.
[04:46:15] Unknown:
Yeah. Jesus without Christ.
[04:46:20] Unknown:
Right. The Christ. Yep. That's that's why I was reading that that, John 14 on the show because, you know, one of these things that, I guess I subscribe to at one point or they just send them to me. But, anyway, they'll have bible verses, and I always look them up. It doesn't say what version it is, but I always look them up to see. And sometimes they're you agree with the King James. But last week, I guess it was or so, maybe before that, but it was and I'd heard this before, and I'd probably looked it up and forgotten. But, anyway, if you have God if all you have is God, you have all you need, you know, which doesn't even sound biblical, right, the way it's worded, but it sounds good.
Right? So that was supposed to be John fourteen eight. And, of course, fourteen six, you know, is is, where he says, you know, the only way to the father is through me. And, so I just read from six down through, I don't know, several verses there because he's Philip's the one that had said that in in the King James, it just says, tell us something about tell us about God and that's the fight suffice this. That's a tongue twister word. But, anyway, and so Christ is basically kind of scolding Philip for saying, what? I've been with you all this time, and you haven't seen God in me? You haven't seen the father in me and me in him? And, you know, it goes on like that. Right? So that's kind of a perfect, chapter to show to show what's going on there.
[04:48:03] Unknown:
Well, that's it's one of those things, Jesus and Christ that's part of the seven seven seven by Brandon Peterson because he says that appears seven seven seventy seven plus 777 times.
[04:48:21] Unknown:
Okay.
[04:48:24] Unknown:
God's God's putting a man on six sevens on his point.
[04:48:30] Unknown:
Mhmm. Yep. Yeah. And all of that shows, you know, that God is so powerful. He's everywhere all the time, and he knows everything. So don't even think your thoughts are you know, we talk about the thought crimes now and how they wanna control everything. Well, yeah. They're trying to be God. That's what antichrist means. Not necessarily they that they act like the devil, but they try to replace God. Try to replace Christ. And that's what they're doing. I mean, look at all the surveillance and the databases and everything, and it's that's what they're trying to do. And so for people to try to separate the physical and mental from the spiritual, it's it's laughable, actually, because you can't or the metaphysical, if you want to call it that instead of spiritual. But it is the spiritual.
Well, I was looking at came across something last night that I was going through. It's pretty interesting. Vobes. Somebody Vobes, I forget, on b o b e s, Charlie, Richard. Anyway, YouTube channel. And I guess he's blind in one eye, left eye. But he's interviewing, you know, other people. But what was presented to me is often happens when I go look at YouTube and the breath of holiness says, look at this. But it was all these different stumbles and how, three and four are the, common points of, how to get things across. And, you know, so there would be pyramids and squares and and, circles are basically, a pyramid's part of it, so that's considered in there too. So you have those, you know, basically, just few items that,
[04:50:40] Unknown:
subconsciously get to us.
[04:50:48] Unknown:
But one of the interesting ones, they have something over there, KLM. I forget it was about cars or what. But as they got into it and, you know, they relate it to the Bible. And, that's the other thing. People trying to separate the spiritual from the physical and don't realize that all of these things they do, these foot wakings, are biblical. They take stuff out of the Bible all the time. But, you know, they turn the MLK around and, of course, you've got Moloch, but you also had Melech, which means king. And, I was wondering if they're gonna get into the other, and sure enough, they got into the Moloch too. Yep.
You see all these streets named after MLK and go ahead.
[04:51:38] Unknown:
According to, what I'm reading here, the, that Luther Bible does, contain the Apocrypha or the non canonical books. I don't know which ones, but, it doesn't state that. So they got that in there too, which is bit of a blessing.
[04:52:04] Unknown:
From the beginning of this country, the the country was divided spiritually. You see the 1620, the main flower, and they use word very general. The Puritans in the and the congregation from the English church, the Puritan was basically the separatists trying to separate themselves politically, from the very high influence church of England from Catholic. And they arrived here with the main flower. And half of the of the main flower, I think it was a 100 and something, were from a from a congregation. They were not even Puritans. In fact, they were always called radicals, because they did not follow the the separatists or the the one that you want certain authority from government.
And even William, William Bradford became mayor And, he was just complete different compared to the tens of thousand that started arriving. And they even started the Harvard University, 1646 when they created the Satan Act that they wanted everybody to read the bible. And most of our problem here in United States started from the beginning. That's why you have the the northerners or unitarian or or more of a Puritan mentality of, the English church. No matter what congregation, they would call themselves Presbyterian or or Lutheran.
And, Salvo is more of a individual congregations, and thought about the authority with God and have their own elders without any, let's put it this way, home based, somebody else, or the Southern Baptist, or Rome directing all their congregations. And that's why, basically, those who determine attack the Southern so it's more complicated. When we say Puritans or we say pilgrims, it evolves like an umbrella of many other congregations and usually the smaller number. And half of that congregation, the main flower, was from a church. They they went from England with, Brewster, then, William Bradford took as an elder at that church and then went to The Netherlands. And then we came back and they basically had a, some, forgot the name of the owner of that, Maineflower.
And, and the other half, the Speedwell, ship almost, went down the hill. So they changed all their, their the people they had in that ship, and they just transferred to that one. So they have problem from the beginning. It was a big it was a big excuse me. Right. So all that just evolves. That brought all the European problems. They brought it over here through there. Nobody's well, but that's how it started.
[04:55:08] Unknown:
Yeah. None of it is pure. John Todd, whose real name was Collins, bloodline, and trying to get the world out word out, and it was all satanic and stuff, and he became Christian, and you can find stuff from him. But, anyway, he said his ancestors came over on the Mayflower too. And if you think about the word Mayflower and Illuminati is May 1. Right? You know, the Mayflower has a lot to do with the Illuminati. So, you know, and then you've heard, Brent Winters talk about the Puritans, how they were basically Judaizers.
[04:55:44] Unknown:
Yeah. But we gotta make the difference because those that were just trying to separate from the politics of the Church of England, and they call themselves Puritans or or separatents, but they really are separating just from a certain, politics, but they really were not following God anymore. And most people that left from the fifteenth, sixteenth, seventeenth century left with a Geneva Bible, now the King James. And, and that's and they and and the real, we're looking for religion, freedom was very few in between. Like the William if you follow and you study the William Bradford, there were, the The Netherlands outlaw again, freedom of religion were there because, they were being pressured by England because a lot of people were fleeing from England to there. So they they were hired. They hired this company. I forgot the name of it, a bench or something. And, that's why they became a main flower. But they were really not part of that.
Remember, when they found out the new America or the new world, whatever you wanna call them, they were trying a lot of people didn't wanna leave to to Australia or South Africa, and they were being paid or or criminals or whatever. And in the case of Australia, they were basically criminals or or freedom fighters, and they were sent to Australia by force. But some people were really, really trying to to live their lives spiritually, and they were forced to do certain things. But the rest, 80%, they saw opportunity and they came down there. And so so after 1620, if you look from 1620 to about 1700, tens and tens of thousand was really not looking for no freedom or a religion or freedom of faith. There was they just saw a profit in the new world to start something new.
[04:57:30] Unknown:
Mhmm.
[04:57:32] Unknown:
You can see Is it?
[04:57:33] Unknown:
Work there. Right? It's not it's never it's always mixed in like that. You have to have the temptation to know that, what's wrong. And you don't do it. You know? It, honed you like a sword. Right?
[04:57:51] Unknown:
So it's you know? Yeah. They they preferred the Geneva Bible because, you know, that was from 1560, and they had fled to Geneva because queen Mary was killing them off. And, even though the sixteen eleven, 50% of those guys were Puritans, They stuck with the, Geneva because it had Calvinist study notes incorporated into it as well.
[04:58:20] Unknown:
Who might have might have actually been named Cohen.
[04:58:26] Unknown:
Yeah. But Calvin Calvinist and all those people, they were separatists. They were just another division, the English church with minor things here and there. But the the truth is it was all about politics. And the real the probably the real, believers would, as soon as they got there and they saw the record, they were those are the one that kept on going west, you know, for the next couple of century, all the way to the Midwest and those and they were really looking because every time what they saw in those cities and when they saw from the beginning, from 1620, they were really, really never part of that, New England, whatever you wanna call it, religion activists or politics. So they were always trying to you know, like us, with many of us, we're trying to separate ourself from the city or go to the mountains.
And, and they didn't trust nothing about, the English church or the king or anything. So they didn't want to do nothing. Plus, I don't think the King James at the beginning, you know, 10 miles away or another another region of Europe, they may they may not existed a a King James version, because, printing machine didn't go. Internet didn't exist at that time, so people would not find about there's another version or whatever, updated version, maybe ten, twenty, thirty, or hundred years later. Once you would buy get a Bible, you will hold on that for generations.
[04:59:59] Unknown:
Yeah. They they all got unlike what Jesus would have wanted them to do, got turf orientated and then protect their little groups and territory that they were sitting on, and you basically couldn't live there unless you were one of them. And it got to be a real problem between them. That's why by the time we get to the constitution, they're trying to eliminate it altogether because now you've got these deists who, by the time we get to the constitution, don't believe in, in Jesus Christ at all in some cases, other than he was maybe a a good philosopher.
[05:00:46] Unknown:
Another thing is that, their faith was also influenced. Even the good ones, even the one that we were trying to really worship God and follow God and and said, mercy, live a godly way was definitely influenced. You know, if they were Scottish, it was basically a group of congregations, Scottish or Englishmen or Netherlands, whatever. They came out. They were very influenced of their culture. And as, Peter said in eleven and first 11 Corinthians and said, you know, you have this custom, but we don't. So it was influenced by the custom. Nothing wrong, but whatever you know, if you're from the Wales, if you're from any any the Northern part of England or the Southern part or whatever, And then that, that would influence their the way they would see things through their Bible or whatever or the or they were very trusting in the in the, that congregation. But it's it's really interesting that Maine Flower, about 50 members out of a 102, was, based on one congregation.
So it's not five here, 10 there. You know? You go to cruise ship and then you say two people go, three here, one from England, one from North Carolina. No. There was half, 50% almost, was one congregation.
[05:02:01] Unknown:
My understanding is some of them were pretty much atheists. That that they were there because they had special skills or just wanted to get out of town by sundown brown.
[05:02:13] Unknown:
Probably the the 50%.
[05:02:33] Unknown:
The way is narrow and steep.
[05:02:39] Unknown:
For example, in my studies that I have done many years ago, I don't remember most of it, but, that faith, they they were they did not believe in baby baptism and like many of the Puritans also bought the difference. They believe in believer baptism. A lot of people got killed, Hagenas and, many other from France and many that were baptized or re baptized or anti baptism. Most of those people who were arriving there did not believe in that. They believe in the Lord's Supper. Some people, some of the religion were coming. They only do it twice. So we in that congregation would do it, like, basically, every Sunday or something like that or every first day, whatever.
Wrong ride, but that's what I thought. And, they did not believe, even the tie like the other one. What was the other thing? The, they were the the one that were they were being called by the same period that they were calling them, ran a go because they believe in acapella. No instrument whatsoever. I forgot a couple more things. So they're basically only five or 10% that that when they arrived that, in the first ten, twenty years of the of Plymouth, the group that arrived there, believed that way. The other 90% are all over the place. Nothing that was influencing them in anything that had to do with any organization, government. They believe in elders.
So they were directed by a couple of elders, at least. And William Bradford was one of them. He replaced, Brewster, I think it was, that, died, and then they replaced the congregation, decided to put him as an elder, and then he became mayor of some like that. So there was a divide completely.
[05:04:38] Unknown:
Yeah. Once you look at Europe and all the wars and stuff, and most of that is over religion and killing people, where does Jesus say that you convert people by the sword? And we're still doing it.
[05:04:57] Unknown:
That was the other thing. I'm glad you you mentioned that, Samuel. And that was they didn't believe in being, wars or becoming part of the of, military or anything like that. That was the William Bradford section, but the rest, they believe all that. So they were bringing that all. And the unitary did not bring they did not believe in in the Trinity. Willingly did. So and you fast forward a couple hundred years, we have a civil war and basically, so I look at it as not the northern attack in the South. It was also sort of the same thing as as all, Europe. It was a political relations war.
[05:05:41] Unknown:
Yeah. That was the blue bloods versus the, Scott Irish, pretty much.
[05:05:52] Unknown:
When they call here the great USA rednecks, most people don't understand that rednecks started in England. They were with scarf or something, around the neck and red used to identify each other when they were fighting. So you knew who to stab with your sword or not.
[05:06:53] Unknown:
In the in the early colonies after slavery comes into fashion, some of these people actually practice the slavery rules in the old testament. Could only be for a certain time. There had to be some compensation. Fine for you if you went over your time period. And people actually practice that. So if more of the country would have done that, slavery would have been a transitional period of time for these people to become part of the culture and not turn into the awful stuff that it did.
[05:07:38] Unknown:
Well, during the jubilee, they would actually, you know, free them, but they don't, reverse the roles too.
[05:07:46] Unknown:
They did Well, they didn't have the the advantage of that book. But
[05:07:50] Unknown:
Right. But the master would serve the servant.
[05:07:53] Unknown:
Of course, the Apocrypha would have. I'm pretty sure Jubilees and Enoch were sort of universal in most of the Apocrypha's that didn't did did exist.
[05:08:08] Unknown:
We're still practicing slavery in one way or another.
[05:08:14] Unknown:
Amen.
[05:08:23] Unknown:
And the same thing is going with Russia now. It's a religious war. Basically, the worst is Catholic and Rome and all this compared to the schism, in the eleventh, tenth century. And, they're really upset. Well, if you go back back, you see how upset they are with Russia since the tenth century because they do not accept the pope and and and many other things. And it's divided because they were trying to make the third Rome Moscow, or Kyiv, whatever after the after, the real Rome fell and the. And it's just the the English from the, you know, the fifteenth century and then you fast forward to the eighteen nine. Whoever's directing them, the Jewish, whatever, always hated that, that Russia could have been a superpower.
All the mass territory and all the wealth there.
[05:09:24] Unknown:
Yeah. The rest of the story on, Jerusalem ended up going to Constantinople and crushing the place. That was two hundred years before the, the the Turkish took it over, but it was weakened critically weakened by that attack by the Crusaders.
[05:09:55] Unknown:
And that is absolutely true, Samuel. It was just the Turks coming from the East and, but the Catholics sometimes didn't reinforce them. They didn't. They wanted us to remove those that thorn from their power. And they did eventually. All seven shirts all seven churches in Revelation, when the Lord criticize again, tells them the good part and the bad part they're doing, work from there. From that, especially through one of the problems, Galicia.
[05:10:37] Unknown:
And we're almost running out of time for the stream, so let's shut it down. This has been the Radio Ranch with Roger Sales with an extended after discussion. Catch us here Monday through Saturday, 11AM to 1PM eastern, if not a little later than that. Go to our website, thematrixdocs.com. That is the matrixdocs.com, and you will find links to free conference calls. So you can join us live on the show, find links to the streams, the archives, downloadables, exhibits, resources, you name it. Check it out. Ciao. Blasting the voice of freedom worldwide, you're listening to the Global Voice Radio Network.
[05:11:39] Unknown:
Bye bye, boys. Have fun storming the castle.
Opening, syndication notes, holiday setup
Hosts return from Thanksgiving; Brent joins
Stations, streams, and show housekeeping
Tryptophan talk, sleep aids, and food lore
Brents multicultural Thanksgiving and the Anglosphere
Angles, Saxons, Danes, Vikings, and Alfred the Great
From Anglo-Saxons to Anglo-Danes; factional rivalries
Mic check, then Thanksgiving traditions in the Wabash Valley
Turkey as American icon: Franklin, eagles, and courage
Feast details, pies, mashed potatoes, and gravy
Rutabagas missing, but gratitude abounds
Pilgrims, Puritans, Speedwell and Mayflower memory
Childhood boats named Speedwell and Mayflower
Correcting modern retellings of the Pilgrims
Religious minorities and migration context
Netherlands sojourn, King James, and departure
English Civil War, Puritan migration, and New England plan
Decline of British Empire and the Anglosphere idea
Subject vs citizen; freemanship and common law
Mayflower hardships: 53 survivors and first Thanksgiving
Harvest fairs, rural contests, and community life
Food scarcity memories: POW stories and abundance in America
Blood and soil, farmers, and self-reliance vs. communism
Frugality lessons: nail piles, boot bins, and repair culture
Listener check-in: Weather and thrift fixes
Pork three times a day and changing food culture
Anglosphere as Christian common law culture
Critical mass vs majority; shaping culture
NFO parity pricing and commodity control analogy
Call-in: California theft ring, lax enforcement, and security
California politics, migration, and state-splitting talk
Land patents, water rights, and treaties in the West
Reagan maxim: Good gets done when credit doesnt matter
Public speaking roots: saying your piece at church
Overcoming stage fright: campaigns and courtrooms
Dale Carnegie, Pretty Boy Floyd, and human motives
Anecdotes: larceny, scams, parrots, and pets
Audience Q&A prompt; Thanksgiving weekend lull
Security tech tips: solar LTE cameras and AI alerts
National Guard killings news; warnings and preparedness
First-time caller: Supremacy Clause questions
Migratory birds, treaties, and federal-state powers
Federal courts: Supreme Court vs. congressionally created
Common law vs civil law; juries, due process, and rights
Brents book, courses, and Sheriff Dar Leaf mention
Supremacy Clause misuse; jurisdiction and Romans 13
Commerce Clause, misuse, and Bible analogies
Day of man vs day of the Lord; justice and due process
Gratitude, Westminster catechism, and sovereignty
Wrap-up: Gratitude quotes, weekend sign-off
Post-show chat: Missouri SAPA, courts, and enforcement
Military tech anecdotes and media chatter
Alt-media, technocracy, and documentary recommendations
Health tidbits: cabbage poultice and silver cloth
Organic turkeys, giant birds, and kitchen gear
Deep-frying turkey: hazards and humor
Weather, ice storms, and grid vulnerability
Swap shop interlude and local classifieds flavor
Nanotech supplements skepticism and minerals talk
Constitutional convention secrecy, Hamilton, and clauses
Breaking: Afghan suspect narrative and skepticism
Speculation: CIA, MKUltra, and distractions
BRICS, currency control, and multipolar hopes
Jonathan Pollard, nuclear blackmail claims, and politics
Underground systems, carbon capture, and greenhouses
CO2 pipelines, eminent domain, and state fights
Friday guest critique and legal strategy debates
Canon debates: Masoretic text, Dead Sea Scrolls, and KJV
Links shared: Pollard clip and Jesus Way discussion
Supernatural, authorship, and Gnostic texts
King James translators, numerics, and textual wars
Alexandria, codices, and debates on canon authority
Group appreciation and common ground
Calendars, Sabbaths, and Qumran timelines
Babylonian month names vs. Gods calendar claims
Dead Sea Scrolls release delays and control of knowledge
Archaeology, Smithsonian, and occulted history
Prove all things; revelations in later times
Using scripture and inner witness together
Terms and labels: Bible, Christians, and language
Counts in DSS: Enoch and Jubilees prominence
Mudras, prayer posture, and subtle energy
Homestead life: neighbors, honey, and warmth
Amish, Luther Bible, and bilingual worship
Translations, NIV warnings, and divinity debates
Numerics again; 777 motifs and authorship
Pilgrims, Puritans, Geneva vs. KJV, and motives
Early American sects: baptism, communion, and warfare
Biblical slavery rules vs. American practice
Orthodoxy, Rome, and long memory of schisms
Revelation churches geography and the stream sign-off