In this episode, we delve into the complexities of citizenship and the historical context surrounding the Expatriation Act of 1868. We explore the implications of the 14th Amendment and its impact on state and federal citizenship. Our discussion touches on the nuances of expatriation versus repatriation, and the significance of understanding one's political status. We also address the challenges faced by individuals navigating the legal system and the importance of education in achieving true freedom. Additionally, we highlight the role of historical narratives and propaganda in shaping societal norms, as illustrated by a thought-provoking video on medieval labor and modern work culture. Join us as we unravel these intricate topics and provide insights into the path to personal sovereignty.
This Mirror Stream is brought to you in part by mymymyboost.com for support of the mitochondria like never before. A body trying to function with sluggish mitochondria is kinda like running an engine that's low on oil. It's not gonna work very well. It's also brought to you by Fatphix, p h a t p h I x, dot com. Visceral fat is weighing your body down. It's causing sluggish response of your organs, and it's gotta go. It's gotta go. It's gotta get rid of it. You just gotta. And, also, iTero Planet for the terahertz frequency wand by Preif International. That's iTeroplanet.com.
Thank you, and welcome to the program. Forward moving and focused on freedom. You're listening to the Global Voice Radio Network.
[00:01:38] Unknown:
Yep.
[00:01:38] Unknown:
Well, we would too. We're trying on a, regular basis, six days a week, anyway. It's pretty regular. Roger Sales, your host here at the Radio Ranch. The show's about your freedom, And, it is the February 6, and maybe there's some new folks that wanna find out how to escape the old matrix of the federal the federal, deep state swamp administrative state. It's very interesting to see it get a little bit dismantled here, Paul. I guess we'll talk about it a bit among whatever else we discussed today. But first and foremost is to, recognize the folks that help us extend our reach all over the globe. And, since you're the one that stays on top of that, hooks them up, straightens them out, gets them fixed, all that, I'll, be so kind as to let you go over and give them not only the, the recognition, but the thanks.
[00:02:41] Unknown:
I could see you would do that. I know you can. We'll do that. And I've seen you do it before. Sure that all the proper buttons are pressed because Yeah. Well, yesterday was a pickle.
[00:02:53] Unknown:
Was it?
[00:02:54] Unknown:
Just just five minutes of missing Roger at the beginning of the program on the archive. I had to take snippets from three different archive recordings and melt them together. It took like an hour. It was no fun. Oh my goodness. Well, I'm so sorry.
[00:03:08] Unknown:
So I don't know. It was my fault. I didn't have the Well, you got too you're the one that set it all up. You got too many buttons to oversee, obviously. Yeah. Glad it's not me. I can't I tried to count the buttons just on one app on on one computer, and I can't count that high. It's because I did go to sleep. Place. Anyway like counting is it like counting sheep? Did you go to sleep before you can finish counting all the buttons?
[00:03:32] Unknown:
Well, my eyes started going a little cross eyed. That I can say. Anyways, we're on RadioSoapbox.com today. Later today, three PM eastern, Paul English live will be on Radio Soapbox as well as WBM three two four Nice Thursday. Dot com. And, he'll he'll also be on the Paul English live channel on Rumble. And, I might be sitting in on that show today. I, I might be joining the the the regular, the regular host of reprobates, I guess Paul calls us anyway. The regular compliment. We're also on one zero six point nine WVOU FM in Chicago for the first hour today, And, that's brought to us by the Net family of broadcast services, which we will talk about more in a moment. We're on eurofolkradio.com.
That's our flagship station. Thanks to pastor Eli James. We're on Global Voice Radio Network. That is radio.globalvoiceradio.net or live.globalvoiceradio.net for the live stream. Or you could just use the links on the matrix docs, which also includes the links to free conference call so you can join us live on the show. We've got room for about a thousand of you. Come on down. We're also on homenetwork.TV and freedomnation.TV, go live TV, and stream life.tube. That's brought to us through WDRN production support, Collins, Colorado, and the NET family of broadcast services.
That's Wow. All she wrote.
[00:05:07] Unknown:
Take up a good part of the program just acknowledging our partners here. At least Well, good morning, Paul. Thank you. Yeah. And thank them, obviously, and Alan and whoever the other folks are building up to the bar. And, of course, we're always, appreciative of mister English. So, has he still got that little Brit guy on there that laughs all the time? Is that one of the Oh, yeah. Eric
[00:05:32] Unknown:
company. Eric Vonestics. Okay. And he has an absolutely infectious laugh. Okay. Well,
[00:05:39] Unknown:
maybe you get to listen to Paul. I haven't been able to catch him in a while, but,
[00:05:45] Unknown:
I'm sure last week's show. What about Speak Freak? Pardon me. Was it? It was a barn burner last week's? Oh, yeah. Last week's show. You gotta you gotta catch last week's show. It was a whole lot of fun.
[00:05:56] Unknown:
Trying try and dial it up a little bit. Well, I just have nothing but high regards for mister English, of course, and, so thankful that our paths crossed and getting to know a quality guy like him. I mean, Paul is just a quality guy. K. Period. So fun to work with, and, we wish him all the best. What happened to SpeakFree? Did you ever find out? I I don't know.
[00:06:24] Unknown:
I don't know. Maybe, Paul listens sometimes. Maybe if we if we talk about him and and, ask about Speak for Your Radio, he might actually join us. He he has an open invitation, but but he usually only takes it on Fridays. Of course. Of course. Hey, Paul. If you're listening, come on down.
[00:06:45] Unknown:
Yeah. Come on over if you don't have he's got a lot of things on his plate. Okay? So, anyway, if not, that'd be great too, but we always love to, inter interact with mister English and all the things he's done. And, it's just sad because he set up, like and I know it must take a little bit of work to set one of these things up, and he set up People's Patriot Network, which was my first stab at this. And, we were over there for a few years, and I just never could get enough people to even have twelve hours of programming a day. As I was talking about the other day, it's a it's a commitment to commit to one of these slots here. You gotta be there. You gotta be consistent and, you know, all those things, and you gotta rearrange your life around that schedule. And, like I said, it's a commitment. A lot of people don't have the ability to make that. So, anyway, we were always simulcasting over on Eurofolks.
And so, when what really happened internally was, they had some software screw up in the scheduling module there. And Paul just didn't have time to go in and trace it down and try and find it and fix it just for the little bit we were doing, so we just moved over here. So here we are at Eurofolks and, of course, known, known Eli for years. And I used to listen to him on RBN, man, when he was back over with the the RBN folks.
[00:08:17] Unknown:
I think you answered your question.
[00:08:19] Unknown:
Did I? Okay. Well, that's not unusual. Yeah. I Yeah. I Okay. Well, what how what question did I pose, and what was my answer?
[00:08:29] Unknown:
What happened to SpeakFree Radio? I think what happens is, you know, that that people go into this. They they well, I'm gonna have an Internet radio station because I can, and they don't know how much work it's gonna be and how much debt it's gonna require. Yep. And they're thinking that maybe maybe if they spend a little time working on it and building it, they get an audience and then they get, like, some products or they get some affiliate relationships that the thing will pay for itself, and then they'll be able to do that full time. But that very, very rarely ever happens. Well, it's a lot of It just becomes a burden.
[00:09:05] Unknown:
There's a lot of commitment involved in it. Most people, you know, they they think they're gonna go in and and be a star and maybe accomplish something. They get in and find out it's very tedious and usually slow and that they've made this commitment, and and they kinda back out of it. So, anyway, that's the way it seems to be, and, it's just that I love radio. I've been in it since I was a young man, in and around it for my entire lifetime. Been in love with radio since, even before that. I remember when I was living in Clovis, New Mexico for about four or five years out there. And, I'm at 10 years old, eight, nine, 10 years old, that kinda age.
And I would, sleep with a little portable portable radio. It was brand new back in the fifties, and I'd sleep, with that portable radio underneath my pillow, listening to those distant stations, K O M O and Oklahoma City and and, x whatever, Del Rio, Texas, Wolfman Jack and all that stuff. I've just always liked it. It's the theater of the mind, a little could I have ever dreamed because I really didn't consciously go out and try and get into the industry. I kinda backed into it really and been part of my life, big part of my life ever since. And here we are at the end of my life. I can look back and I get so much, oh, positive feedback from looking at my my personal history from my side and realizing that it seems like that, the good lord has had me fingered to do this the whole time because all of my experiences in my adult life lead us here. You know?
And, the the ability to do this with some proficiency and, all that kind of stuff, and it's just very cool. It's very fulfilling. If you're not leading a life that's fulfilling, man, you don't can't appreciate what what that does for you. It's like the big You're right. The big war the big, warm fuzzy. You know? Yes. Who is the hay roger there? Is that the call? Before before I interrupted you a moment ago to,
[00:11:23] Unknown:
to talk about what it takes to run one of these. You were talking about Eli and Stadtmiller. You were talking about RBN.
[00:11:35] Unknown:
Yeah. Yeah. Well, Eli, that's where Eli used to be. First first time I ever heard him was on the RBN. He used to do the Sunday morning service kind of thing, and I don't ever remember really what happened there, but all of a sudden, he was gone. You know, it wasn't unusual for Stap Miller. Anyway, he was a character, Stap Miller was. And He was. So yeah. And, so when I moved on and went up to, truth to to the micro effect, well, they needed people, and I suggested Eli over there, and he ended up work you know, doing the thing at, the micro effect for a while. And so we that was not a lot long years ago. K. So we crossed paths back then, kinda knew each other, and then I end up on his, on him and Paul's network, and here we are.
Well, the show is not about me. It's about you, really, your freedom. The messages that we talk about here and convey, and, I think yesterday, we had a conversation brief as it albeit with, with Samuel, and he was talking about this piece of legislation they passed before the, the day before. I think they quote, unquote, ratified the fourteenth amendment. Samuel, you went to the speech. We talked we talked about, reading that. Do what, Paul?
[00:13:06] Unknown:
That was the Expatriation Act. Samuel, are you there? Yeah.
[00:13:11] Unknown:
And, I'd I hope he is. Samuel, you with us here? I'm here. Yeah. There you are. Okay. Hey, man.
[00:13:20] Unknown:
Hi. I'm a little bit out of it right now.
[00:13:25] Unknown:
Well, you wanna wait a little bit? You wanna wait a little bit before we launch into that? We can do that. I got other stuff to talk about.
[00:13:31] Unknown:
Sure. How about after the top of the hour? Alright. I, Okay. So I had trouble finding the document, and I just got it in my hands. And I sort of wanna review it so that I can do a better job of reciting it and such. So
[00:13:46] Unknown:
Yeah. And I haven't seen it in years. I knew it was there. Of course, I I don't necessarily everybody wasn't considered to be federal citizens at that point. They it was pretty well recognized. It was just for the blacks mainly. And and I I wanna know the significance of that because the the real expatriation act is to file an affidavit after the bankruptcy in March the ninth of thirty three. But we'll talk about it and see what they have to say. I've known about it for a long a lot of years.
[00:14:19] Unknown:
So anyway What I'm serious about it is is you've just killed 800,000 of your own people, and now congress is coming out with an expatriation act and telling you how wonderful they are for giving it to you. You know?
[00:14:34] Unknown:
I don't know. Well, I think that what they always in that what they always do, as evidenced by the fiasco, the fiasco that, is represented by USAID And all the crap that's coming up, it looks like, appears like. I'm sure there's other outlets, but this was a main one for them evidently, and it looks like mister Musk went up and slit their jugular vein. Boy, they're squawking and flopping around on like a like a pig that's been stuck squealing. But that little thing, here's just an example. They have found Paul, do you have any idea how many journalists they were paying around the world?
[00:15:16] Unknown:
No.
[00:15:18] Unknown:
Over 6,000.
[00:15:21] Unknown:
Really?
[00:15:23] Unknown:
Over 700 media outlets, including Reuters and the BBC. So you wanna talk about yes.
[00:15:36] Unknown:
Pay pay for play. Thousand prop again, agents.
[00:15:40] Unknown:
Yep. Yep. Yep. Yep. Wow.
[00:15:43] Unknown:
Roger.
[00:15:46] Unknown:
Larry.
[00:15:48] Unknown:
Hey. Speaking of federal a federal citizen, a federal a federal citizen is a US citizen as we know. Correct? Yes. Okay. So has that always been their designation? Yes. Like Well, it's just When it was created, it was called the the free blacks were called US citizens. Is that true?
[00:16:16] Unknown:
Well, let's see. Let's go over it. All persons born or naturalized in The United States, comma, and subject to the jurisdiction thereof, there's a kicker, comma, are citizens of The United States. Yeah. That's what it says right there. And the and the state wherein they reside. That's the fourteenth first sentence or the first sentence of the fourteenth amendment. And, yes, I believe that's correct.
[00:16:41] Unknown:
Okay. So, the, state citizen, which is now called a national, they were also referred to as citizens of The United States before
[00:16:54] Unknown:
the civil war and before the fourteenth amendment. Correct? Correct. Even by chief justice story in his commentaries on the constitution because there was not another option. Yes. That's the equivocation they're really playing on here.
[00:17:08] Unknown:
Right. So, can you go over when you believe it looks it appears that the definitions were were changed. Is that the way you see it? That's the way I'm seeing it.
[00:17:23] Unknown:
No. I see the label is being changed from state citizen to national definition still the same. Just the label has changed.
[00:17:36] Unknown:
Well, I think what did the definition have to change also? Because if a national was referred to as a state citizen or a citizen of The United States before the fourteenth amendment, and then after the fourteenth amendment, now the freed black slaves are being referred to as a citizen of The United States. Correct. Some somewhere along the line, the definition had to have changed too. Don't Well, no. See that too?
[00:18:04] Unknown:
No. I don't. I imagine if you wanted to go back and find it, everybody understood it because it was the only option there was, was to be a state citizen. And if you were a state citizen, you owed total allegiance to a small estate, didn't you? Yes. Okay. Well, then that's the definition. How did it change?
[00:18:28] Unknown:
Well, I'm thinking both the label and the definition changed. But I'm thinking The definition didn't change. Yeah. See, that's the problem. They can't change the definition.
[00:18:38] Unknown:
They can change the of of these different words, but not of that. But so they have to go and change the label.
[00:18:48] Unknown:
Okay. Okay. I can see that now. When do you think that happened at in when the bankruptcy occurred in 1933?
[00:18:54] Unknown:
I think that's what you went over in the past. Well, there were two clear distinctions all the way back to shortly after the passage of the fourteenth amendment. Look at the Jim Crow laws.
[00:19:05] Unknown:
Would you call that a transition period, though? Like, when when did it get Well, I they
[00:19:10] Unknown:
they can't well, they can't do these changes. Are these major ones? They just can't do them abruptly because everybody that's still alive at that time knows what it was and sees what it's changing into. So, yeah, I guess they have to do everything with gradualism, don't they? Kinda.
[00:19:29] Unknown:
Yeah. So between the, passing supposed passing or ratification, which we know the fourteenth amendment was not properly ratified. So between that time and the bankruptcy, you would consider that to be a transition period. And then after to acclimate people to become a SERF and not know they're doing it. And then right after the bankruptcy, everything was pretty much set in stone. Everybody was just totally not equal to really what happened.
[00:20:05] Unknown:
Well, they didn't know what realized what was happening with the bankruptcy. That was all done undercover, pretty much deep cover. But, for one thing in the Gene Schroeder film, he talks about after the bankruptcy, what was the first noticeable thing that happened? If you were in certain types of agriculture, you had to have a license. We never had to have a license to do that job before. So there's evidence of the bankruptcy and the change, but it was very subtle. And all of a sudden, then Roosevelt starts running in all this, kinda like Trump's doing now. You know? At that time, he's running in all the communist stuff and, starting to set up agencies and starting to issue regulations. And and and and and the people that were still of the old line of thinking on the Supreme Court started overruling some of his, his, what do they call it? New deal, due deal, raw deal policies.
And, that was where the conflict presented itself at the Supreme Court where there only used to be six justices. And so, Roosevelt's answer was to stack the court and put nine up there. And then they went back and reversed all those decisions against this new deal program. So, yeah, yeah, it was a tremendous change, but they had to do it somewhat gradually. But it it faced a lot of opposition. I mean, I think I told Jim, Harvey's cousin, Chris, who's a great guy, there in Atlanta, and we were having coffee one night after our meeting, and and he just we're talking about Roosevelt. And he says, the whole time I grew up, I thought Roosevelt's first name was Dan.
So there were people that opposed it and recognized what he was doing. Brent's father also as he's relayed to us. But most of the people just go along to get along. It's like right now, there's 53% of the people in the country, Larry, can't read above the sixth grade level. Do you expect them to understand all this stuff that's going on or just sit down and, I mean, you probably sit them down in front of our message here and they get it because we've got it so simplified. But, most of the people just wanna get along to get along and make their they they wanna get through the day. They got no big goals. They got they just wanna get the family fed, get the bills fed, and be able to relax for a couple hours a day.
That's the best I can hope for. So those kind of people aren't gonna be actively politically or anything else, necessarily. Maybe some are, but not the majority. So that's that's why I had this kid over the weekend send me, oh, yeah. What what was the first thing? Oh, where's the affidavit? Can I get a copy of the affidavit and and and this, that, and the other? I'm sending one. We're sending the website, and, and and then he he says, where do where do I sign it? And and and then he sends me another who do I send it to? Well, I can tell at that point, he hadn't done much looking into this. He stumbled on it. He sees the big picture, and he wants to get through it for whatever his personal reasons are. I don't know.
But he doesn't see, the real significance of what we do. And I wrote him back. I said, well, you know, Marcus, isn't it isn't a paper. We're not in the condition we're in because of a lack of people filing paperwork. Well, we're in the position we're in because of a lack of education. And all that stuff you wanna go through and do don't mean jack crap if you don't learn the information because that's where everything happens. That's where you change. That's where you can inform others. That's where you can be a real beacon of this. But if you don't, if you and if you just file paperwork and you don't study, I mean, nothing changes.
The world doesn't change. You've got to be the change, and you only do that by learning the information. And that solves the problem, and the greater problem we're in is education. But people don't know this stuff because they've covered it up, etcetera, etcetera. But when you boil right down to it, the whole problem is education. Oh, no. So that's the way I feel You're right about that.
[00:24:30] Unknown:
I've noticed, I've been helping students out, respond to public officials for, like, the last year. And the the public officials are totally ignorant of their own laws and their own forms. I mean, look at even Victor calling in from the State of Washington and they're trying to label him as a nonimmigrant that he needs a nonimmigrant visa. And right there on that very form, it describes his political status. And so they're even ignorant of their own laws, their own policies and rules that they have on their own forms. And I found that when you're responding to a lot of these public officials, you may go back and forth several times, and they're clueless. You got you gotta explain everything.
You're you're educating them, and eventually, they'll leave you alone.
[00:25:28] Unknown:
Well, I mean, the greatest example we've had is this magistrate for Michael Nail in Irondale there that looks at his affidavit and says, well, I don't recognize this. We're not gonna recognize this. Okay. Well, ma'am, excuse me, miss tyrant. Is is she a tyrant or is she a tyrant? I don't know. Miss tyrant, what other, sworn court testimony do you not recognize in your courtroom here? Or you can come back and say, excuse me? Who was the thirteenth amendment written for? I like that. I've been toying with that a lot on this, keying in on the thirteenth amendment instead of the fourteenth amendment because there wasn't any federal citizenship for six months. So who who was that written for?
It was written for the people Samuel gonna tell us about when he gets this expatriation act thing. So I look, Larry. I've gotten to the point where I don't I've just try and find people that this resonates with. Those are the people I wanna work with. And if you don't see it or don't wanna see it, I am not gonna try and shove it up your barracks bag. Okay? I just I've learned painfully the hard way that that's I didn't accomplish one damn thing because they even if you badger them into doing it, they're not gonna study, and so nothing changes. So why do it?
[00:26:57] Unknown:
Okay?
[00:26:58] Unknown:
So Yeah. It's just like the gospel. I tell you every one of y'all. I tell you every day how much you mean to me, and now you're starting to understand a little bit why.
[00:27:09] Unknown:
It's just like the gospel. You can't pound thing, pound ideas and change into people. You you all we're responsible for is to plant seeds. It's up to them to make a decision and act on it.
[00:27:23] Unknown:
Well, Larry, let me put it a little more simply for you. It's easier to pull a rope than to push a rope.
[00:27:33] Unknown:
I agree.
[00:27:34] Unknown:
That's it right there. Yes, Paul.
[00:27:37] Unknown:
Do you remember yesterday when I mentioned that video, medieval slaves worked less than modern Americans? Here's what's happened. Actually, I watched that video, and it was very interesting. Only about thirteen minutes long. Would we have time to shoot it in here? Pop shoot. Pop it in over to a shooting the fat here.
[00:27:57] Unknown:
Alright. Let's do this. Everybody likes that historical viewpoint and to see the roots. Yeah. I like, could take into the roots of all this there, Paul. Yeah. The roots. Medieval
[00:28:08] Unknown:
slaves worked less than modern Americans. Here's what happened.
[00:28:13] Unknown:
Cool. Ever wonder how we got stuck in the nine to five grind? I'm sure most of us worked at least forty hours this week. But did you know that on average, you work more hours per week than a medieval peasant? Most of us are clocking in as many hours as Egyptian slaves did four thousand years ago, Despite our gadgets and technology that's supposed to make life easier, we're actually working more than folks back in the Middle Ages. And it's not by accident. The ones in charge want us buried in work. That way, we have no time left to question their decisions or dig deeper into what's really going on. When you're exhausted from a long day at the office, you're not going to have the energy to research stuff that might shake up the status quo. You're more likely to veg out in front of the TV or scroll through social media, and that's exactly what they want. But few of us know that our fate was forged a hundred years ago with numerous propaganda campaigns fueled by the US government.
So today, I'm going to share with you all the details of these propaganda campaigns, when they happened, and who was behind them all. I've thoroughly studied each campaign and have official documents to back it all up. So buckle up because we will uncover all the World War II propaganda that led us to where we are today. Before we dive into how we ended up with the nine to five grind, let me back up my claim that peasants had more free time with some numbers. Even a thousand years ago, the English crown documented almost everything that happened back then. That's how we know that thirteenth century English peasants worked about sixteen hundred twenty hours annually. And a modern American worked on average two hundred hours more than that. Medieval workers had many breaks throughout the day and up to eight weeks of slack time after harvest, plus numerous holidays and religious feast days.
In fact, Americans who work to places per clocking overtime work sixty five hours on average per week. This is much closer to the workweek of an Egyptian slave. Egyptian slaves actively worked around seventy hours per week. And I remember how when I lived in The US, I topped that with at least fifteen hours. In the nineteen twenties, an American worker could afford to buy a house with just a three year salary. This is a dream come true. The disposable income of households was so much back then that the middle class could pretty much afford anything they wanted. My father came
[00:30:53] Unknown:
from the Ukraine. He went to work in New York City and worked in a factory where they blocked hats, men's hats. And he was making, you know, like, 9 or $10 a week, working a six day week. And he would tell me how he was able to buy lunch every day for 12¢. And the lunch consisted of, a herring, a big schmalt herring out of the barrel and my mouth waters now to think of it. And a big roll with poppy seeds and an onion and life was beautiful.
[00:31:48] Unknown:
Okay. This was all this Let me Let me read what he just typed because you guys don't have the benefit of it. To make things clear, 10¢ a 10¢ lunch out of a $10 weekly paycheck is 1%. To buy an average $18 lunch today and have the same affordability ratio, you will need to be making $1,800
[00:32:12] Unknown:
per week or eighty seven This was obviously quite dangerous for the ones in charge. They realized that and decided to quickly change it. Fast forward a hundred years, today, in most states, you have to get a mortgage and be forever enslaved to the financial system. Now this number has risen since the cost of life has skyrocketed. Most people can't save enough to afford a home for an entire lifetime. And if you have a mortgage and you lose your job, there's a good chance you could lose your home and put your family at risk. So when the government pressures you to do something to keep your job, you're probably going to comply even if it endangers your life or even if you are a test subject. But let's talk about modern women for a second. Just a hundred years ago, nobody forced women to work. They could stay at home, travel, study, watch children, do whatever they wanted, and their husband, just one man, could support the whole household.
Now most men buy their iPhones on credit. So what happened to our lives? The answer lies hidden in the narrative around women entering the workforce, especially in the context of the twentieth century.
[00:33:22] Unknown:
We are still short millions of hands. We must call upon women. All over The United States, women are called upon to leave their homes and take jobs. Among our young unmarried women and among older women whose children are grown, we have a large reserve. They discover that factory work is usually no more difficult than housework. Employers find that women can do many jobs as well as men. Some jobs better. Tens of thousands of women are already at work in aircraft. More are being added as fast as they apply. Female empowerment is often romanticized
[00:33:57] Unknown:
as a story of liberation. However, women were not merely emancipated by joining the workforce. They were subtly coerced into doing so under the guise of freedom and equality, when in reality, it served broader economic interests. Shallow government officials devised an elaborate plan. At the time, only 50% of the population was working, and it was mostly men. To double that number, they needed to push women into the workforce. But that wasn't all. They also aimed to trap everyone in a cycle of spending, ensuring people left paycheck to paycheck for the rest of their lives. So how did they pull it off? Let's trace their steps exactly as they unfolded. Step one, create the demand for labor. They achieved this through multiple world wars.
With most men enlisting them heading to the front lines, the workforce back home was severely depleted. This opened the door for women to enter the workforce, filling the gaps left behind. Step two, propaganda. Many women initially didn't wanna work. They were used to staying at home. So the government used propaganda to shift their beliefs. They promoted the idea of becoming equal even though women were already enjoying a better quality of life than men in many respects. Step three, establish consumerism. The golden age for women ended after the wars.
While men were fighting, the US government enlisted Edward Bernay, the father of propaganda, to reshape the nation's politics, mindsets, and overall ambitions. His influence laid the foundation for a culture of consumerism that would keep people spending and striving for more long after the wars were over. With a series of propaganda campaigns, he meticulously planted seeds in the minds of generations to come. So let's go through all his campaigns, and you'll see that things happened exactly as I described. This is very well documented, guys. I'm not making it up. And no matter how shocking it sounds, you can read it in every encyclopedia.
He was a genius at manipulating the whole world, but he used his powers for the worst possible causes. He overthrew governments, brainwashed Americans, and forced dangerous products into people's lives. In 1917, Edward Bernay was contacted by the US military with a very specific goal, to encourage widespread enlistment for World War I. His campaign strategically used emotional appeals, patriotic imagery, and the demonization of the enemy to rally young men to join the military. Bernie portrayed military service as a patriotic duty and a way to protect American values. His efforts motivated many to enlist, but the next step was to push women into the workforce.
One of Bernie's most notable campaigns, called Tortures of Freedom, played a very crucial role in this effort. In 1929, he orchestrated a campaign to encourage women to smoke, branding cigarettes as symbols of female independence and liberation. Although this campaign was conducted on behalf of the American Tobacco Company, it was strongly supported by the US government. The campaign not only broke the taboo against women smoking in public but also encouraged women to enter the workforce. It promoted the very idea that true equality with men meant participating in both work, consumer culture, and smoking.
While the wars continued, Bernie made sure women kept working with the campaign, the War Manpower Commission. World War two wasn't just about fighting Nazis. It was also the perfect excuse for some next level social engineering, the man ship of the war leaving factories empty, A big problem for the economy. Right? Not for Bernie. While others saw problems, he saw an opportunity to flip society on its head. He created Rosie the Riveter. You know her, the badass lady flexing her bicep saying we can do it. Rosie wasn't just a morale booster. She was the face of a massive propaganda campaign to lure women into the workplace.
Suddenly sweating it out in a factory wasn't just a job. No. It was your patriotic duty. Wanna support the troops? Pick up a wrench. Wanna be a modern woman? Clocking at the assembly line. Millions of women bought into this hook line and sinker. They thought they were just filling in until the boys came home. But Bernie and his superiors had other plans. Seeta's temporary measure was anything but. It was the first domino in the chain reaction that would change society forever. The result? A seismic shift in what society expected from women. And let me tell you, Bernie was counting exactly on that.
So next time you see Rosie, remember you're not just looking at a wartime icon. But eventually, the man came back from war, and then he threw them into a postwar consumerism. In the nineteen fifties, his campaign was called the American dream, but it was what doomed the generations to come. The American dream campaign wasn't just about owning a house or a car. It was about creating an insatiable appetite for stuff. Bigger houses, fancier cars, the latest gadgets, you name it. They made you want it. But here's the catch. To afford this dream lifestyle, families suddenly needed two incomes instead of one.
See what they did there. They didn't just push women into work. They made it so you couldn't survive without it. Both partners had to clock in longer hours day in and day out just to keep up with this new normal. The more you worked, the more you spent feeding right back into their system. It was a never ending cycle of work and consumerism. Pernier worked closely not only with the US government but with the CIA, FBI, and CPI. Of course, to maintain the new order he'd created, the US government asked him to continue working. He devised several other campaigns, all planned years ahead.
He rebranded housewives as consumers in the nineteen fifties. He is the reason we eat eggs for breakfast. He is the reason some of us smoke, and he is the reason we work nine to five. Of course, the US government would have been able to do it without him. If it weren't him, it would have been someone else. Now that you know, you know how his work continues today. Political agendas, ideologies, and divide and conquer type protests. It's all based on the work frame he developed, a master plan to divide us all and enslave us forever. I know many of you have escaped the nine to five. I'm so happy for the ones who have. But I urge the rest of you, even if you are older than I am, in your forties or fifties, figure out a way.
If you're watching this, I know you're smarter than most people. I'm sure you can dedicate one hour per day before or after work, and within that hour, find your way to financial independence. Because when you achieve that, that's when the fun begins. You have all the time in the world to research and find the true answers you've been looking for your whole life. Recently, I uncovered some startling gaps in our history, ones even bigger than the propaganda we've just explored. I discovered a castle that's 50,000,000 years old. Modern humans weren't supposed to exist back then.
So who built it? Be sure to watch the next video to find out. I'm Dankstersoku, and thank you for watching.
[00:42:00] Unknown:
Wow, Paul. Can we play the next video? A fifteen million year old castle.
[00:42:09] Unknown:
Paul, are you there? I haven't found that one yet.
[00:42:12] Unknown:
Okay. You know, I've been saying for a long time on here, for one thing, even if you win the rat race, you're still a rat. Right. I was very fortunate, you know, in this life to be able to basically retire at about 45 and, have been living a a real nice pretty nice life of since then and no no big work requirements and stuff. There's an awful lot in that video, though. The, the one thing that yes. We just hold on just a second. I'll turn it right over to you. The one thing that he didn't really go into very much, it has a huge effect on everything he talked about was the debt monetary system and the fact that the dollars lost so much of his purchasing power that required so much of that other stuff. I don't know if he doesn't understand that or he just didn't know about it. My sense is he probably didn't know about it. Joe, what you got? What's your observation, buddy?
[00:43:11] Unknown:
Edward Bernays was Sigmund Freud's nephew. Yep. Yep. And he ain't Irish either.
[00:43:18] Unknown:
Nope. And then he didn't cover he didn't touch on that at all in the ain't Southern Baptist either. He didn't touch it that at all in there. But, basically, everything that he was tossing about was gone down to the purchasing power being lost by the currency. Or at 1%, if you got 12¢, you got that, oh, Paul, that delicious herring out of a big barrel, with the poppy seed bun and an onion. Boy, I'll bet your you better I'll bet your breath smell like hell in the afternoon.
[00:43:52] Unknown:
So and Didn't have to worry about people talking and wasting time when they're supposed to be at work.
[00:43:58] Unknown:
I didn't have to worry about them hanging around and just bugging you either. And, and you go to the $10 of of of a day lunch, and you had to make $1,800 a week for that percentage to equal out.
[00:44:14] Unknown:
Well, that's a loss in I thought it was the filter fish, Roger.
[00:44:18] Unknown:
Is Gefel knows a herring? Herring is unfinished Gefelte fish there, Dave. I understand it. So, anyway, that was one observation I made in there. The other thing that came to me was when the the Russo from freedom to fascism, you know, was a friend of one of the Rockefeller children. And, and and he said, we the women we got women to work so we could get an extra load of taxation. That was the Rockefellers, your son's, own admission to, you know, when I was teaching, I had, a, one of our teachers had a student who was from West Palmer down there and knew the Rockefeller children. And they said none of them have Social Security numbers.
I said, I'll bet they don't. So, who else has got some observations on what we just heard? Thank you, Paul, by the way.
[00:45:20] Unknown:
No.
[00:45:22] Unknown:
Nobody? All that valuable historic information, and you nobody's got a Yeah. But, Roger,
[00:45:29] Unknown:
I I bet they got a lot of Social Security, though. Don't they?
[00:45:34] Unknown:
No. You know, not back then.
[00:45:36] Unknown:
There was No. No. No. I mean, the Rockefellas. They don't have the number, but they got the security for sure. Oh, boy. Do they?
[00:45:44] Unknown:
I I can't remember the lady's name. There was one lady who was at retirement age, was the first person to sign up for Social Security, and she never contributed anything. And and I wish I could remember her name.
[00:46:00] Unknown:
Anna Anna May Fuller.
[00:46:02] Unknown:
Hey. There you go. Is that Ken?
[00:46:06] Unknown:
Oh, it's William.
[00:46:07] Unknown:
Oh, hey, William. Anna May Fuller. I knew I'd heard her name before. Evidently, what happened with Social Security was he couldn't get it through congress, and he got it passed through a treaty somehow. I I don't know the specifics of that, only that that's what I heard a long time ago. And that it used to be set up more of a trust fund. You know, they'll say there is no trust fund. Well, that's because our great president, LBJ, that murdered JFK and all those other people and all the stuff that's coming out and about to come out officially here with the release of all that information.
They, that guy well, hell, I forgot what I was gonna say about him. But, anyway, it was it was, it was JFK that did all this stuff. What he did was he not only came up the other day. Not only did he get was his initiative that got the five zero one c three thing passed for churches because he'd gotten so much opposition from churches in Texas when he'd run before. And also during his presidency, to help fund the deficits of Vietnam, he got rid of the trust fund and dumped everything in Social Security into the general fund. So that's been happening since the sixties. But it was, I guess, up to that point, some sort of a trust fund, apparatus. But, good old LBJ just switched it right over so they could just steal all the money, which is what you see evidence now with what's coming out of the USAID.
USAID was started. It had already been started right before LBJ was president by John f Kennedy. And then, of course, it's been totally perverted since. But, boy, some of the stuff they're seeing that that that they're paying out on all over the world, it's just unbelievable. K? And you can see why they're squealing so hard. K? You're right. Yes, Paul?
[00:48:14] Unknown:
As a public service to the people who, joined us in pre conference call, I did find a link to the 50,000,000 year old ruins, and, it is in the chat. And, the description of the video is we believe humanity didn't exist 50,000,000 years ago, but geologists dated this castle to be 50,000,000 years old, was built by a civilization before was this built by a civilization civilization before humans? This prehistoric site consists of 1,000 columns of magnesium calcite cement. There's proof of ancient technology here with the usage of magnesium calcite.
Ancient Romans used a similar cement called Roman concrete. Did they steal this forgotten technology from their prehistoric ancestors? Was this place built by a civilization before humans? Did civilization before humanity exist? Or did ancient humans really exist fifty million years ago, and everyone is wrong? Advanced technology in science in ancient civilizations has always been a mystery. In my channel, I seek to demystify it. And the link to the video, the thirteen minute video is right there in the chat. There's an awful lot of,
[00:49:31] Unknown:
proof around or at least clues that say that that's correct. Never has totally been my bailiwick, but it's kinda interesting, obviously. So any other comments on, what Paul has played for us today? I know that some of you must have heard something in there that stimulated you somehow. It's a tough audience right here. I feel like Rodney Dangerfield. It's a tough audience right here, Paul.
[00:50:00] Unknown:
Yeah. Yeah. I called my girlfriend. She said, come on over. There's nobody home. I went over. There was nobody home.
[00:50:13] Unknown:
Oh, Rodney. What a sense of humor he had.
[00:50:18] Unknown:
Yeah. He had a he had a rest time. Send me a link to that move that video? I missed it.
[00:50:25] Unknown:
Yeah. Yeah. I can do that. Thank you. Thanks. Yeah. He had a restaurant in, Burnsville or Savage, Minnesota, just South of the Twin Cities called Danger Fields.
[00:50:36] Unknown:
That was the very first one he had. Yeah. I thought he was he was from New Jersey or something. Actually, like, he's from New Jersey.
[00:50:44] Unknown:
Yeah. There's a little itty bitty restaurant called Dangerfields down in Savage, Minnesota. It was the first one in the beginning.
[00:50:52] Unknown:
Well, he was, he was quite a character, that bug eyed looky head. So nobody, well, Rodney Rodney couldn't have anywhere near as tough an audience that I've got here. I'm pretty convinced to that, Paul. What do you think?
[00:51:16] Unknown:
Well, I can tread water.
[00:51:18] Unknown:
I can tread water for about another few minutes here, and then Samuel's gonna come. Yes. You may see. I did chum up somebody. Yes. The lady the lovely lady Louise. Yes, ma'am.
[00:51:32] Unknown:
Yes. John Kennedy, he's the, senator from Louisiana.
[00:51:39] Unknown:
I love that guy.
[00:51:41] Unknown:
I do too. Eight years. Well, he's done some and my I call it public service announcements, on YouTube. And he's standing before the president of the congress, and he's going through line item by line item. This was on February 5. This was yesterday. Of why his colleagues, the Democrats, are all in a spin about these, USAID expenses that have nothing to do with aiding the fellow Americans. And I highly recommend that you all look at this because he is a dynamo. He's a dynamo.
[00:52:20] Unknown:
So Yeah.
[00:52:22] Unknown:
He's a senator from Louisiana. I don't know. I have a sense he's from New Orleans because when the New Orleans guy drove up on the sidewalk here, he was there immediately almost on the scene. And I don't know if you saw him in that little conference. He's just so funny. You know? He's got a real dry sense of humor. And he's trying to talk to all these people, and he says, well, I know some stuff I can't tell you and this, that, and the other. And he goes, okay. He's going to get the reporters. He says, okay. At CBS and ABC, you're over here.
And and and, NBC, you're you're on the left over here, and everybody starts laughing. You know? And the dumbass NBC reporter goes, oh, what's so funny? Kennedy says, well, I'm I'm sure you wouldn't know. But, boy, he is he is quick and very funny. He's the one that came up with a great line. Drywall, Christmas tree ornaments, and something else. Name three things that don't hang. And Jerry Epstein, name three things that don't hang themselves. He's he's just a funny guy.
[00:53:35] Unknown:
Yeah. He's lovely. And, Bill Cassidy, who's also a senator from Louisiana, he was, not in favor of RFK. And I encouraged many folks even on this platform to call, senator Cassidy, and he changed his mind. So
[00:53:54] Unknown:
and you you said he was not in favor of what? You said he wasn't in favor of what, Linda?
[00:54:00] Unknown:
RFK.
[00:54:01] Unknown:
RFK Junior. Oh, RFK. RFK. Okay. Well, you know, the real surprise is up there, don't you? The one that's turned on all of them? The only Democrat? Do you know who that is?
[00:54:14] Unknown:
Yeah. John Fetterman. He's Fetterman. He knows his yeah. He knows his people voted for Trump, and he wants to be the pope of Greenland. He's got a good sense of humor also. But he he cannot get why the Democrats out with the program. And he's a a real authentic man. So,
[00:54:37] Unknown:
very unusual. He's really I'm a tell you, he's fooled me. Okay? Honestly, go ahead, Linda.
[00:54:44] Unknown:
Well, kudos to Cassidy for changing his idea because if he voted no, RFK would not have gotten out of committee.
[00:54:52] Unknown:
That's how tight it was. I see. Yeah. All of them are tight. Do we know if they've gotten any of those confirmed so far this week? I know they're pushing on that.
[00:55:01] Unknown:
I guess they got Monday. My sister my sister in the Lord, Beverly, she said RFK was confirmed. She sent me a a text this morning, but I didn't look into it. I haven't been able to, confirm that. But, yeah, Susan Collins from Maine, she, supports She's a student. Which I'm very, very grateful for. So I suggest to my fellow, patriots to call Cassidy and thank him and call Susan Collins and thank her. Because it's one thing to complain to these people, but it's another to share share our gratitude. And, when it comes to John Kennedy of Louisiana, he is a hot he's he's just so great. He's so funny. I just love him. He's I yield. He's just fantastic in the in the,
[00:55:53] Unknown:
in the footsteps of Huey P Long, the kingfish. Okay? He's, he's he's just a he's just entertaining, funny. He's got great points and a lot of poise, and, I I sure do like him. There was something I was gonna say, and I forgot. Anybody else got any observations here? Oh, I this is what I wanna say, Linda. Years ago, when we were still thinking that you could affect something in Congress back in the nineties, And, we would go to the offices of some of the representatives that there they all have home offices. And one of the gals in one of those offices told us something. It was in the days of fax, you know, in the nineties.
And, they said, listen. The email was relatively new. Said, well, listen. We get letters. We get faxes. We even get these new email things. So we really don't pay attention to that because it's so easy for somebody to do that, you know, get on a list and send a fax for me and all that stuff. And they said, well, I'm gonna ask you. So they said there's one thing that we really recognize and pay attention to when it comes in the office. Do you have any idea what that is, Linda?
[00:57:11] Unknown:
Yes. It's the written I can guess. When I when I write to my, well, they're not my representatives now because I'm a national, but still, I'm paying attention. But when I write to them with my own hands, they they they listen and then respond quickly. Well But the The house people call. Yeah. No. Those things don't do anything. Call. When you call Cassidy or the others, they'll say, we want your name and where you're from. Right. Right. And, and so, you know, I did that. And I told them, you know, I was from Boston, but I now presently am in Connecticut, and, I appreciate him being a Republican in Louisiana.
My birth state is North Carolina. So I I called him three times to give him my whole history, and I said I'm begging you to support RFK Jr. And, I don't know how many other people called. I have a lot of patriots that responded to me and said I just called him and left a message. So I'm sure that all these calls from all over the country must have had some sort of, impression on him. Because, normally, you're just here for your constituents, IL. Right. Am I off base?
[00:58:23] Unknown:
Or did you have No. I don't think you're off base at all. What I was gonna say is the answer they gave us, surprisingly, is a simple postcard. Because they said anytime they see somebody that takes the, the time to write something and send it into them, they figure there's at least 40 to 50 other constituents in their district that feel the same way. So isn't that amazing? Just a simple postcard has the maximum amount of effect. K?
[00:58:53] Unknown:
Well, what's so in what's so, gratifying is now with this information age, we can hop on this real quick with a phone call from all over the country. And when a senator from Louisiana is hearing from Arkansas, Virginia, Connecticut, all over the place. That they they listened. I yelled.
[00:59:17] Unknown:
Thank you, Linda. Speaking of listening. Well, this is Well Obviously, we're about to say to our friends in Chicagoland, mister Paul. Yes.
[00:59:27] Unknown:
Thank you, Chicago. One Zero Six Point Nine W B O U F M in Chicago and radiosoapbox.com. Thank you so much for joining us. If you wanna follow us into the second hour, we've still got to talk about the expatriation act that's coming up next hour on the Radio Ranch with Roger Sales. Go to the majorbrickstars.com and click on either the Euro Folk Radio link or Global Voice Radio Network. Thank you.
[00:59:58] Unknown:
See you. Okay. So we're into the second hour here. We're still kinda hangover from the, from the little audio track Paul played us, and I'm still somewhat, I'm not intrigued, but it's just interesting that he didn't grasp the money supply aspect of all these facts and figures that he laid out because that's what was doing it. I've thought for many years, quite frankly, that, you know, if you go back to biblical stuff, which we often do and I'll find the roots of all of our things there. When Moses came down off of the, Mount Sinai with the 10 commandments, you remember that story, Paul? I'm sure you do. What did he find?
[01:00:45] Unknown:
When he came down off the mountain with the 10 commandments, he found the people that gotten impatient, and they constructed themselves a little idle down there, and they were worshiping it.
[01:00:57] Unknown:
Yeah. The golden calf. Right? Yeah. Yeah. Well, isn't it could could I say the golden the people are worshiping the golden calf of materialism?
[01:01:08] Unknown:
Could be. Yeah.
[01:01:10] Unknown:
Ain't that what it is, really? And then the our our enemies, well, they've enslaved us. We create the money supply out of debt. They get multiple layers of, compound interest on top of compound interest there. Then they go out and see their shenanigans on Wall Street. They steal and own all these companies that make all this stuff. Well, they're they're making another layer of profit and another probably layer or layers of compound interest because a lot of people had to finance those things in those days. And, you can see how they built this thing to become so uber wealthy.
Okay? Yeah. And it all Well, you know being enticed in with materialism. And I understand that stuff. And he was talking about Rosie the Riveter there, how she finally came out and got a job and everything. And, and, yeah, and then they were in the war factories. And then after the war was over, what'd they do? They couldn't make tanks and bombs and stuff anymore, so they started making refrigerators and vacuum cleaners and dishwashers and, all these new modern conveniences. And the monetary system was still at a par a parity where, the man could work and and and support mom and the and the kids there. They could have a little ranch house and all these modern appliances. And, well, everybody was just happy as a bug in a rug, weren't they, Paul?
[01:02:38] Unknown:
Yeah. Well well, you know, people were just sitting around on their leather couch waiting for the return of Jesus, and they figured it'd be it would be more enjoyable doing it in front of a 72 inch TV. So what can I say?
[01:02:51] Unknown:
Without the 72 inches back then. In fact, I can remember the very first color broadcast that I ever saw. I remember black and white TVs, and then the color things came along. And what I really remember about that is how some of these guys and you can see that they don't know the medium yet, you know, and that they're out there with their very colorful tie, for example. And you look at it on this color TV, and all those colors are, like, scrambled because they didn't have it to technical part yet where they could differentiate the color spectrum. And and all those days, I've I've had memories of that stuff. I have memories of watching one of the conventions. I don't remember. I think it was Adlai Stevenson who was running for president back in the fifties.
Adlai Stevenson's name was up there. Right? It was in my memory, but I remember watching some of that stuff, many moons ago.
[01:03:49] Unknown:
Yeah. So And and and like some of the weather
[01:03:53] Unknown:
some of you were still a twinkle in your daddy's eye back then. Go ahead, Paul.
[01:03:59] Unknown:
And some of the weather forecasters that didn't understand the concept of green screen that would wind up wearing Michigan on their lapel.
[01:04:09] Unknown:
Oh, okay. Wow. I don't think Michigan could fit on. Is that back in the fashion days when they had the big wider lapels and the Nehru jackets or something. Yeah. Something like that. My goodness. Okay. Well, enough trivialities, I think. Anybody else have anything they wanna pile on here with this? It's kind of a good little nostalgia retroactive view. History is very important. No. Nobody's got any comments. It's a tough audience, Paul. Samuel, did you go get your, expatriation act thing and get it read and everything? Hey, Ross. Be off. I'm ready.
Okay.
[01:04:53] Unknown:
Alright. Well, give us One thing you guys won't be able
[01:04:56] Unknown:
one thing you guys won't be able to see is capitalization. And in the title of the document, they have American citizen, and citizen is an upper case. Yep. And thereafter in the document, it is always in lower case. So, anyway, this this happened on 07/27/1868. This was one day before the fourteenth amendment took, what you call it, was was enacted. I think they they passed it on the ninth, and it went into, power on the, twenty eighth, a day after this.
[01:05:37] Unknown:
Anyway So they passed it on the '9 hold on a second. They passed it in congress on the July 9? Yes. I believe that. Mhmm. And by the twenty eighth, they had decided which states had ratified that?
[01:05:53] Unknown:
It would went into effect on the twenty eighth. It was passed, I think, on the ninth. It was passed on the ninth and went into effect on the twenty eighth.
[01:06:06] Unknown:
Okay. Well, there's something missing here. Because if it's passed by Congress on the ninth, it still got to be passed by three quarters of the states, two thirds or three quarters. I think it's three quarters for it to be officially an amendable amendment to the constitution, and they couldn't do that in nineteen days.
[01:06:27] Unknown:
I don't think. Yeah. That may have taken place prior to the that may have taken place prior to the ninth, and I'm quite Okay. I'm not quite sure about that, Roger. Okay. Well, just to throw in a wrinkle in there because I understand how some of these things, at least in theory, are supposed to progress
[01:06:44] Unknown:
and get rubber stamped. But go ahead with, with your info, Samuel, please.
[01:06:49] Unknown:
Okay. This thing is titled, Rights of American Citizens in Foreign States Preamble. Now foreign states is is really where this thing whole whole thing teeters. What are they talking about? Are they talking about England and France and Germany, or are they talking about the Confederate States and anybody that doesn't agree with them? Anyways, here we go. Talking about all all of the states.
[01:07:16] Unknown:
They're all foreign to Washington, DC and the federal jurisdiction.
[01:07:20] Unknown:
Go ahead. Roger, if I may, none of those places that, Samuel just mentioned are called states. They're countries. We are the only place that have states.
[01:07:32] Unknown:
What territory are you talking about? America, you know, The United States, those are the foreign countries, I believe, he's talking about. And so now you well, I do too. Well, you know, it's right right around the civil war time that, Lincoln wanted Robert e Lee to command the Northern Forces. You can see where Robert e Lee lived from the White House over the Potomac. Okay? And that's now Arlington National Cemetery, by the way. And so Lincoln wrote to Lee and asked him to lead the Union forces and Lee wrote back, I cannot fight against my country.
Virginia. Go ahead, Samuel.
[01:08:12] Unknown:
K. This is what the Pharisees had to say back then. Whereas the rights of expatriation is a natural and inherent right of all people, indispensable to the enjoyment of the rights of life, liberty, and the pursuit of happiness. And whereas in the recognition of this principle of this government, of course, this is Congress, has freely received immigrants from all nations and invested them with the rights of citizenship and where whereas it is claimed that such American citizens, lowercase citizens, with their descendants are subject of foreign stakes owing allegiance to the governments thereof. And whereas it is necessary to the maintenance of public peace, and this claim of foreign allegiance should be promptly and finally disavowed.
Therefore, be it enacted by the Senate and House of Representatives of the United States of America in Congress assembled that any declaration, instruction, opinion, order or decision of any officer of this government, which denies, restricts, impairs or questions the right of expatriation, is hereby declared inconsistent with the fundamental principles of this government. Section two, and be it further enacted that all naturalized citizens of The United States, while in foreign states, shall be entitled to and shall receive from this government the same protection of persons and property that is accorded to native born citizens in like situations and circumstances.
Section three. And be it further enacted that whenever it shall be made known to the president that any citizen of The United States has been unjustly deprived of his liberty by or under the authority of any foreign government, it shall be the duty of the president for with to demand of that government the reasons for such imprisonment. And if it appears it to be wrongful and in violation of the rights of American citizenship, the president shall forthwith demand the release of such citizen. And if the release is demanded is unreasonable, delayed, or refused, it shall be the duty of the president to use such means, not amounting to acts of war, as he may think necessary and proper to obtain the effectuate, and that effectuate, such release and, all, I'm sorry, and all the facts and proceedings relative thereto shall, as soon as practicable, be communicated by the president to Congress.
Approved 07/27/1868.
[01:11:33] Unknown:
It's a lot of things to discuss in there, isn't it? That last part, was executed, around the, turn of the turn of the century. Again, no. I'm thinking thinking back a bit. But what he's talking about, it would have been really, appropriate around the War of eighteen twelve. Because they were going out, the English were stopping ships and impressing sailors into basically servitude on the English ship. And that was one of the reasons for the War of eighteen twelve. So the other thing, there was something that that came to my mind. They're talking about naturalization there in the second section, I think. Yep.
Remember that before the fourteenth amendment, new people were naturalized in the state. And after the fourteenth amendment, everyone's been naturalized into the federal government state. Born or naturalized. So they took over the act of naturalization as opposed to the states. And it seems like well, I can't remember exactly what they said there, but there's a differentiation there. And a pretty big one, really, when you think about
[01:12:57] Unknown:
it. Well, they don't save The United States Of America in here either. They save The United States.
[01:13:02] Unknown:
Well, so did Chief Justice Story back, you know, I mean, and I know it's all confusing. And I would say again that this is the main equivocation that they wrote this whole thing into town on right here.
[01:13:18] Unknown:
Yeah. The gross feeling about this is what they're doing is Congress is giving themselves the out because the next day, they're gonna do something illegal and take all the people and make them federal citizens. So this was their way to expatriate back into their state.
[01:13:38] Unknown:
I don't know that what they did was illegal, because there was a growing and the and it's right there in the slaughterhouse cases. There was a a big sense. The people that lived and had been born and raised in DC and the territories, they were stateless. They had no country. They had no political status. They were literally stateless. The only people that had a political status were the people in the states, the smallest states. Okay? So there was a need for it. And as it says in the slaughterhouse cases and prefaces it, it was brought up again. Here it is. The controversial case that is still controversial over a hundred and fifty years later, Dred Scott.
And it was the the conclusion was by the Supreme Court that because of the Dred Scott decision, an African could not become a citizen of The United States by anything short of an amendment to the Constitution. And the other people, and it says right there very distinctly, it was a subject of much discussion of the day in the newspapers, in the public journals of whether a person who was born and raised in the DC or the territories was or could be a citizen of The United States. So there was a big void there. They found this void, understood it, realized they could solve their problem by nestling it under the label of voluntary servitude and set up this system and this plan and this scheme. That's what I see, Samuel.
[01:15:16] Unknown:
Well, why call it the expatriation act then?
[01:15:21] Unknown:
I don't know. I I don't know why they did it because for their plans, I don't really see how it applies. It's very easy. Okay. Why they just say file an affidavit with the secretary of state?
[01:15:33] Unknown:
K? Okay. So I I had a discussion with, AI on this, and here's what AI finally had to say. Says, in exit in essence, the Expatriation Act of 1868 may have been a way for Congress to say, if you don't want to become a federal citizen, you have the right to expatriate and remain a citizen of your state. This would have allowed individuals to opt out of the new federal citizenship and retain their state citizenship if they so chose. This perspective adds a new layer of complexity to the understanding of the Expatriation Act of 1868 and the fourteenth amendment and highlights the engagement
[01:16:18] Unknown:
Okay. Yeah. Cool. Cool. I I was just gonna say they weren't asking people, are you a citizen of The United States back then? If you were black, you were considered to be a federal citizen. If you were white, you were considered to be a state citizen. So my problem is with all this is, what about the people that were not of African descent in DC and the territories? Which bathroom did they go to?
[01:16:43] Unknown:
Well, I don't think that's what they're covering here and now. Well, I'm just trying to bring up something.
[01:16:48] Unknown:
I know that. But it is what the essence of this is. They knew what they were by their color, and that was pretty much well established. I mean, now look, Samuel. Out of all the court cases and all the study I've done of all this, there's never a mention of this in any subsequent court case that I could find. Nobody brings it up. We're sitting here knowing so much about this and understanding it so well that we can go in and delve into these things that the courts never even damn covered.
[01:17:23] Unknown:
Well, the there were free blacks and everything at the prior to this. Or a few? Or a few?
[01:17:29] Unknown:
Well, look. It was all an excuse. It was all an excuse for them to set up the feudal system so they could bankrupt the country and get us all in at 80 later. They knew what they were gonna do back here.
[01:17:43] Unknown:
Use them, please.
[01:17:45] Unknown:
Let me read section two one more time, Roger. That's got the naturalization
[01:17:49] Unknown:
in it. Section three something for Samuel.
[01:17:52] Unknown:
Well, hold on.
[01:17:54] Unknown:
Go ahead, Dave.
[01:17:56] Unknown:
I I just wanna say it you know, no matter what anybody thinks, if you look up the the word citizen, it's a slave. So you they want us to be they want us to think we are either a citizen slave Dave. That's Or the state of law.
[01:18:12] Unknown:
Saying that's what you're saying. That's right, Dave. The capital c citizen in the Declaration of Independence was not a damn slave.
[01:18:20] Unknown:
It's not right. I don't care what the they're going off Romans. Okay? And in the Roman times, the Philistine was a sent east slave.
[01:18:29] Unknown:
Well, he didn't get his laws from God, and the original people in our country did, Dave. They were considered every man a king. That conclusion of yours is wrong. That's what the capitalization is. Differentiation.
[01:18:47] Unknown:
For sure, Roger. Lincoln adopted a lot of Roman law. That he did.
[01:18:53] Unknown:
Okay. Alright.
[01:18:54] Unknown:
Anyway, let me read section two one more time.
[01:18:58] Unknown:
And be it further enacted that all naturalized citizens, and this is both lowercase, of The United States, of course you know that is, while in foreign states, that could be the states of The United States Of America, shall be entitled to and shall receive from this government the same protection of persons and property that is accorded to native born citizens in like situations and circumstances. Oh, god. Anyway.
[01:19:35] Unknown:
Roger, like I said, I've known about this for a long time, but as I've come to understand it, I've I really, questioned the significance of it. Yeah. Larry, go ahead. I understand what you're saying, Samuel. Go ahead, Larry.
[01:19:51] Unknown:
Yeah. I don't agree with what Dave said that I don't either. The only the that well, not the what he said about the citizen, I don't agree with. But what he said about the states only referring to The U small U, United States Of America, that they're the only states that no other foreign countries are considered states. And I found this on history.state.gov on the archives, and it's titled Creation of Israel Nineteen Forty Eight. Oh, yeah. And it says this, on 05/14/1948, David Ben Gurion, the head of the Jewish Agency, proclaimed the establishment of the State Of Israel.
US President Harry S. Truman recognized the new nation on the same day. And it goes on to say a couple more sentences. Elihu Elath presenting ARC to president Truman, although The United States supported the Balfour Declaration of 1917, which favored the establishment of a Jewish national home in Palestine, President Franklin D. Roosevelt had assured the Arabs in 1945 that The United States would not intervene without consulting both the Jews and the Arabs in that region. The British, who held a colonial mandate for Palestine until May 1948 opposed both the creation of a Jewish state and an Arab state in Palestine as well as unlimited immigration of Jewish refugees refugees to the region.
Great Britain wanted to preserve good relations with the Arabs to protect its vital political and economic interests in Palestine. I
[01:21:41] Unknown:
see. Maybe that's why, Trump is claiming it right now as is.
[01:21:47] Unknown:
He's not claiming Israel. He's they're floating the idea that we may control Gaza, not Israel.
[01:21:54] Unknown:
It is right there. State of The US.
[01:21:59] Unknown:
Well, it the the key to this this thing is what is a foreign state? And I think what the congress is saying at this particular time is anybody who isn't voting for the fourteenth amendment to let them expatriate.
[01:22:13] Unknown:
Right? I think that's what it's about. Well, not the and fourteenth amendment doesn't automatically throw everybody into that status. You've got to volunteer and
[01:22:23] Unknown:
subject to jurisdiction thereof.
[01:22:25] Unknown:
Well, those they weren't doing this back then. They weren't saying are you a citizen of The United States or a resident to my knowledge. He they knew. It was predominantly black and they had the the black services, and the white people had the white services. That's my question. What did the people in DC and the and the territories who were of some other ethnicity other than black African orientation, which bathroom did they go to? Yes, Paul.
[01:23:00] Unknown:
I can kind of not jumping completely on board, but I can kind of see where Dave is coming from because a citizen of a state is a subject of that state and is entitled to the protections of the state. Well, that's right. This was talking about the states.
[01:23:23] Unknown:
Yeah. Well, they've And naturally, everybody that's a citizen is a slave, but that's not true. Because in the declaration of independence, they got their rights from god and owed god their duties. They're they're enslaved by god. Are you saying that, Dave? But they're not enslaved by man because they don't owe anything to them. Well, they owe So, you know, they're not they weren't slaves and we're not slaves. We have done what it requires to remove ourselves from that. And the federal government, as screwed up as they are, they recognize it. Or else you'd have people on here every day. Come on. Man, you wouldn't believe what they're trying to do to me. Well, we never hear that, do we? Accepting traffic crap.
[01:24:09] Unknown:
Right. Well, if you expect protection from your state, you owe that state allegiance allegiance for protection for protection for protection for allegiance. That's what you signed on for when you send in the affidavit.
[01:24:20] Unknown:
I'm gonna owe total allegiance to a small estate. That means I get god given rights. I owe god my duties, and I'm not a slave. It says exactly the opposite to to j. Now there are small small c, I agree with you, but this is a carve out.
[01:24:38] Unknown:
Yeah.
[01:24:39] Unknown:
If I may?
[01:24:41] Unknown:
Yes, ma'am. Who is it? Muse? Is that you, Muse?
[01:24:46] Unknown:
Music.
[01:24:49] Unknown:
So how much protection would one need if, well, we're talking about blacks and whites. Right? So if the blacks came in, you know, seduced your family and abused your family, how much protection would you need even if you forgave them? Okay. And how many times? 70 times seven? How much protection would you think you would want if you turned in all of those bad guys?
[01:25:19] Unknown:
Well, the I think maybe this a little out of context could that stay
[01:25:27] Unknown:
okay. Go ahead.
[01:25:29] Unknown:
So you don't know everything. You don't know what I've been through, and and I don't know what you've been through. Okay? Nobody knows. And I believe God puts people where they're supposed to be. Okay. I do too. And there's a lot of sarcasm in the world and there's a lot of unforgiveness.
[01:25:48] Unknown:
Yeah.
[01:25:50] Unknown:
And when I turned in my paperwork, they sent it back. Okay? Okay. Who And when I send it back for a report First of all, can I a request? Get your name? Can I get your name first? Michigan. What
[01:26:02] Unknown:
Muse?
[01:26:04] Unknown:
Michigan.
[01:26:06] Unknown:
We have a girl from in Michigan named Muse. This isn't Muse.
[01:26:11] Unknown:
It's Pam Rogers, Pam.
[01:26:14] Unknown:
Okay. Pam, when you sent your paperwork in, what paperwork did you send in?
[01:26:22] Unknown:
To the District Of Columbia in Washington.
[01:26:25] Unknown:
What? What? What? W h a t paperwork did you send in? Which? W a I c h? Paid. The cover paid. Did you send it? Did you send in our sample? Did you send in our sample affidavit?
[01:26:43] Unknown:
Well, it was before I met you, but, yes, I did.
[01:26:47] Unknown:
Okay. That's what I'm looking for. So they send it back to you. Well, whose paperwork was it? What did it say?
[01:26:53] Unknown:
And and it was stamped with some red words on it. Whoopee. Stamped it with red words.
[01:27:01] Unknown:
I don't know. I don't know whose it was. I don't know what you sent into them yet and answered that question yet, so I can't answer yours.
[01:27:10] Unknown:
And I think It was a presumption
[01:27:12] Unknown:
that they thought that we were a citizen.
[01:27:16] Unknown:
Okay. Where'd you get that?
[01:27:22] Unknown:
At the bottom of the page on the passport four page article when you apply for a passport.
[01:27:30] Unknown:
On the instructions?
[01:27:34] Unknown:
Correct. Yep. Okay. Because I read everything.
[01:27:37] Unknown:
Okay. Good. And you did you draw this document up yourself off what you read there? Pretty much. Yeah. Yeah. Okay. Because there's somebody that's going around. Okay. There's somebody that's going around, and they're using in the oath the unless explanatory statement is attached. And that's for terms and conditions. It's not for status. They don't tell you to do anything there, except they now make you check a check under your signature that says you've read and understand the warning box on page so and so of the instructions. But that doesn't relate to the explanatory statement attached in the oath. So what did you say? Send an affidavit.
[01:28:26] Unknown:
And you may send an affidavit.
[01:28:28] Unknown:
Yes, ma'am. It does say that. You send documentation, comma, including affidavits. Correct. So what did you write this off of that, or were you taking direction from somebody and wrote something?
[01:28:44] Unknown:
You know, in school, I learned never to copy anybody's words. Yeah. Never. To take anybody else's words because that's a copyright infringement.
[01:28:56] Unknown:
Well, it's plagiarism.
[01:28:59] Unknown:
Correct.
[01:29:00] Unknown:
Okay. So I'm I I still haven't got an answer. I'm getting frustrated. What did you write? And you wrote it on your own off of reading that? Were you getting direction from someone? I wanna know what you said to them. And was this in a passport application? Because sometimes they will send you that paperwork back. I've never heard about them stamping one with red, but let let's hear the rest of your story if we could.
[01:29:28] Unknown:
And not not too many people have heard about that red stamp, you know, and what those numbers and letters mean. So but I looked that up too because I think, you know, we are supposed to do more homework. And if we don't do the homework, you know, it might just apply to you or me. But even when I would go to work and people would say, why are you smiling? You know, what's so great about being here? And the fact of the matter was I wasn't working for any man there. I was working for the man above because I had a family to feed. And there were other men that I worked with that didn't want me working there. Okay?
I had more to feed than they had to feed. Okay? Okay. So they were divorced, but still, they only had one to feed. So there should be no prejudices of anybody. Okay.
[01:30:17] Unknown:
Well, what has spawned what has caused this whole conversation is you saying that you sent in the paperwork and it was returned. And ever since then, I'm buying trying to find out what direction did you write it off what you read? Were you listening to somebody else? It was it in a passport application, which it sounds like it might have been. And and and more of the full story. I'm sure I'm trying to get here.
[01:30:43] Unknown:
In 2016, I had to study quite thoroughly how to get back into working because I was fired from a job. Okay? And I had to learn how to get back to work. Okay. So they would not hold my, my retirement that I had worked over twenty years for.
[01:31:06] Unknown:
Right. They weren't gonna hold for retirement. 45 people.
[01:31:11] Unknown:
Yes, ma'am. Excuse me?
[01:31:16] Unknown:
I've I've forgotten what was going on with the retirement.
[01:31:21] Unknown:
Will they will they gonna steal your retirement? Were you trying to get work back to the same company?
[01:31:28] Unknown:
When you're fired, yeah, you lose your pension. Mhmm. Okay. Yeah. It's not easy. Yeah.
[01:31:37] Unknown:
Alright. Well, I don't think that's ever with everybody, but maybe with some companies.
[01:31:45] Unknown:
And so, you know, we take an oath for a lot of things, you know. But when you get married, you take an oath. When you join, you know, this, you take an oath. But you know what? There's only one real thing that we need to honor, and that is the creator. And I think if we go back to the conversation where it started, it was, you know, about citizenship. And I only Well, that's
[01:32:11] Unknown:
you know, go by my creator. So I don't wanna take up a lot of your time. So Well, I I'm trying to still get it what the reason you you're you're talking to us is. You send in an affidavit and it got returned. That was what we started the conversation with, wasn't it? Well, so you can see my curiosity. Was it one of ours? Where did you get the information? What did you say? What was the context you used to send it in with? I I I I'm still trying to understand what your point is.
[01:32:47] Unknown:
Your conversation earlier was about expatriation and that sort of Well,
[01:32:52] Unknown:
no. We didn't really get no. We didn't really get into expatriation because that's something entirely different from what we do. We repatriate.
[01:33:01] Unknown:
I thought that's what he read. I'm sorry. Well, that is what he read. I thought that okay. That's what I was talking about. I just responded to Samuel. Okay. I took up so much time. Well, that's okay. No. Listen. That's okay.
[01:33:15] Unknown:
There I don't know what the condition was on expatriation back in the middle of the eighteen hundreds. Okay. I know how it is now. And I know it's a totally opposite thing from what we're doing. And when you expatriate, you I guess you could expatriate by answering the questions yes and going over into federal citizenship and agreeing with their fraudulent contracts. But expatriation is a very involved and expensive and time consuming endeavor now. I don't know what it was back then. I don't know if anybody even wanted to do that back then. Might have been. Okay? But, he did say that in there. It did raise a red flag in my, consciousness when Samuel was reading it, and we just flat hadn't gotten a chance to get back to it. So for that, I thank you. Okay?
[01:34:07] Unknown:
So no problem. Roger, if a whole state leaves, if the whole state leaves, we call it succession. But if a person leaves, it's called expatriation.
[01:34:16] Unknown:
Right? Yeah. Right there. And of course, as doctor, oh, the guy from the League of the South said, doctor Livingston, he said, well, evidently, after the Civil War, states cannot secede, but counties can. And the reason for that and the background for that is West Virginia. They took one county out of West Virginia or Virginia and created West Virginia. And that still stands because about five years ago when they were having all the gun riot gun demonstrations in Virginia, there and everybody's at the State House with their with their semi automatics on their backs and all that. And that night on on Tucker Carlson, he was still on Fox, and a legislator from the West Virginia legislator came on Fox and said, any of you counties that wanna come over and join us, call me.
So evidently, any county from Virginia can secede and go join West Virginia.
[01:35:24] Unknown:
Oh, by the way, Roger, this first time this morning I heard about, California and succession on the local news, because of the rift with Trump right now. So that's gonna give Paul Preston, who wants the new California state, a lot of court power
[01:35:42] Unknown:
to be recognized by Congress. Well, I'm trying to figure out which Californians don't want water that would oppose that.
[01:35:52] Unknown:
Well, that that water coming from up north is is silly. I mean, Oregon said a long time ago, we'll give California all the water it wants through a half inch pipe.
[01:36:04] Unknown:
Yeah. Well, evidently, according to Trump Does it really come from up there? It Well, that's what Trump said. So I don't know. I wondered about that myself, but which of the Californians don't want water? You got billions of of gallons up in those reservoirs up north, but more than more than enough. Right now, all you're doing is dumping it into the damn Pacific. Well, why don't you wanna send it to Southern California? And who in Southern California that's now getting water doesn't want it?
[01:36:38] Unknown:
Yeah. There's always been a water battle over how much should go south, but what they're really doing is sending it to the ocean, which is really stupid. I love
[01:36:47] Unknown:
the history of the West. The history of the West is battles over water.
[01:36:53] Unknown:
Well, the the the fact of the matter is when they build some of these big reservoirs, they were built with the future in mind, and they were supposed to be able to supply water in the case of a drought for seven years. And they they they released that water to the ocean. That's pretty much the bottom line.
[01:37:14] Unknown:
Yep. Because of the smelt, which even isn't even an indigenous unique fish. It's all over the world. Smelt. They're they're they're too small to make gefelta fish out of, Dave, Smeltz. So, okay. Where else? Who else has got something to chime in on this? What Steve, what, Samuel read or anything we've discussed? Oh, tough audience, Paul. If I had a tie on, I'd be wiggling the knot back and forth. Yes.
[01:37:55] Unknown:
Hey, Roger. This is Jerry Garcia in Carl Hey, Jerry. From Mexico.
[01:37:59] Unknown:
Yeah, man. Hey. Have you Hey. Have you y'all were talking about,
[01:38:04] Unknown:
states that were seceding from the union. Has anybody pulled up the government dot, website and noticed up there on the left hand corner where it has a flag with nine stars in it?
[01:38:19] Unknown:
Nope. Hadn't seen that. Yeah. I think there was originally at least now have Well, oh, well, there's no telling. Maybe some of these wackos and what they were trying to do before they got Biden out there. I have no idea, Jerry. And, originally, weren't there 12 states originally? What are they doing with nine?
[01:38:41] Unknown:
Yeah. Exactly. That's what
[01:38:44] Unknown:
So no. I hadn't seen that. Anybody else seen that? A flag on the top left with nine stars on any government sites. Anybody seen that in the audience? Well, Jerry, they're you're very observant. K? Evidently. Anyway No answer. We don't have an answer for you. I don't know, but I know if you got nine stars on your web page that Elon Musk may be coming to visit you.
[01:39:15] Unknown:
I wanna help him.
[01:39:19] Unknown:
Oh, God. Thank God for Elon Musk. Has he been an outsider game changer or what?
[01:39:27] Unknown:
Yeah.
[01:39:29] Unknown:
Yeah. Is that a female there who's trying to say something, ma'am?
[01:39:34] Unknown:
Oh, she was showing me. Tracy. Oh. It's a cross message. What? Yeah. It's Tracy Rogers. Hello. How are you?
[01:39:42] Unknown:
Hi, Tracy. How are you doing?
[01:39:45] Unknown:
I'm lovely. And yourself?
[01:39:47] Unknown:
Pretty good. Pretty good. It's clouding up a little bit, but that's normal this this time of year. I've been to your town before. I used to visit those caverns because I used to live in Clovis for five years.
[01:40:01] Unknown:
Nice. I'm trying to make her a a free,
[01:40:07] Unknown:
A free woman? Person, Roger.
[01:40:09] Unknown:
Yeah. A free woman.
[01:40:11] Unknown:
Alright. Well, Tracy, we'd love for you to be free as you have an inclination to want that. Absolutely. Well, good. I mean, I had to ask. Some people don't want it. Okay? Hard to believe but it's true. Well, we're the place for you to find it. So, I however Jerry walks you down the path, I don't know what you've been exposed to already but if you got questions and confusion and stuff and that's very easy to get when you're trying to understand this for some folks, we're this is your this is your one stop shop for answers.
[01:40:46] Unknown:
Alright. Did you get your passport? She she applied for her passport, I think. Yes.
[01:40:53] Unknown:
You haven't have you gotten it yet?
[01:40:57] Unknown:
Have I gotten it yet? No.
[01:40:59] Unknown:
Yeah. Did you apply for a book or a card or both?
[01:41:02] Unknown:
A book.
[01:41:05] Unknown:
Just yesterday.
[01:41:07] Unknown:
Okay. Okay. Well, I wish we'd called talked to you yesterday. I just said to apply for a card too. You could just apply for a card, and it's only $30 versus what'd you have to pay? A hundred and 40, hundred and 60, something like that? And, then the card just as well well, I could've saved you a hundred and $30 if you'd talked to us yesterday.
[01:41:31] Unknown:
Oh, wow. That would've been nice. What you may want
[01:41:33] Unknown:
what you may wanna do because I can't save you that now unless you wanna did you send them a check-in the package? You could cancel the check, then they'd send it back. You could reapply. But at some point, you probably will want to apply again and include your affidavit again. Every time you have any dealings with these people, include a copy of your affidavit. Okay? Yes, sir. And then just order the card because a lot of our folks carry that as identification. And you don't really wanna be carrying your passport book around. Like down here, the folks that are out in the country, we we never, unless we absolutely have to, carry our passports.
What we do is go to a print shop and get them to shoot a a photo of the cover, the picture page, and then laminate it, and we carry that around because everybody accepts it. Oh. And then you don't have to worry about loot. Okay. And if you lose it, it's a pain in the ass. Okay? Right. And and I had one stolen in Argentina and had to go through that, and I can absolutely assure you it's a pain in the ass. K?
[01:42:44] Unknown:
Oh, wow. I was trying to give her your, citizenship affidavit.
[01:42:51] Unknown:
What'd you send what'd you send in with your passport application? Didn't you put one in there?
[01:42:56] Unknown:
No. She didn't.
[01:42:58] Unknown:
Oh, my lord. Well, okay. Just as She's getting barely learning about this stuff. Okay. Well, now what you'll do is you'll do another was that your first passport, Tracy?
[01:43:11] Unknown:
No, sir. Okay. So you used one probably, like, twenty five, thirty years ago.
[01:43:18] Unknown:
Right. So you used the 82, or did you go back to 11? Okay. Let me rephrase that. Did you have to go in front of somebody to sign it? Did you have to go in front of somebody to sign it? Or okay. We used to that's a 11. Okay. So what you'll do is you you could probably wait till you get that one back. You should get it back pretty quick. And then go get a d s 82, which is a renewal form that you don't have to sign in front of somebody and order you a passport card and put the affidavit in the package.
[01:44:00] Unknown:
Okay. Okay.
[01:44:02] Unknown:
Alright? Yes, sir. And and you'll be golden because right now, you didn't put the affidavit in the passport package, so they don't have any record of you wanting to be free. And you gotta get that to those people.
[01:44:19] Unknown:
Yes, sir. I understand.
[01:44:21] Unknown:
Okay. Okay, Tracy. Well, welcome to the clan here. Bunch of free folks. Thank you. And, Yeah. I'm just saying to be honest part of the good club. Well, you're part of the free club, and I say you should feel special. There's only been two times in the entire history of the world when an organized society had God given rights. And that was the first two hundred years of Rome and the first two hundred years our country, you should feel special about it.
[01:44:51] Unknown:
I do. Okay.
[01:44:54] Unknown:
Well, yes, sir. And I thank you for your time. Thank you so much. Alright. Welcome. Join us again, Tracy. And, we'll if you get questions, now we'll tell you, the amount of your freedom and the quality of your freedom is gonna be absolutely directly commensurate to how well you understand and internalize the information and have control over it. It. Because your freedom is not in the paper. Your freedom is be able to defend your position if it's ever challenged. To be able to go out and tell Tracy and all her friends so you got spread this around. Say, well, look, I got free from these monsters. And they go, how'd you do it? How'd you do it? Well, if you don't know the information, you can't tell them. I followed this guy who's down in Ecuador. You can get him over here.
[01:45:41] Unknown:
You know?
[01:45:43] Unknown:
Yes, sir. It's just like, you know, if you get stopped on the on the road and some by some, cop there and, it's not gonna be, oh, I can't I don't know. I can't explain it, but this guy in Ecuador here, let me get him on the phone. Well, that ain't
[01:45:58] Unknown:
gonna happen. Okay?
[01:46:00] Unknown:
No. I won't do my due diligence
[01:46:02] Unknown:
and do my research, sir. It is your freedom. But I will try to get you on the phone in case of emergency.
[01:46:10] Unknown:
Well, no. You can call here. Call here. It's like Patrick Henry. Patrick Henry says just don't don't lose the thought of that jewel. He calls liberty that jewel. And man is Absolutely. K. Well, I'm a tell you how powerful it is. It makes the most powerful son bitches that have ever walked the face of this earth stand mute. That's power.
[01:46:37] Unknown:
Yes, sir.
[01:46:39] Unknown:
Okay. So welcome, Tracy. And as you progress Thank you. In your understanding, you come visit us. Okay? Absolutely. Thank you. And then even after you after you understand it, I I well you're sweetie, you're very it's my duty. See? Laws, rights, and duties and remedies. This is my duty from being privileged enough by whatever means the good lord put me in front of this information so many years ago and tweaked my curiosity and he he put a gold ring right in my nose and he tied a big old rope to it. He said, come here boy, you're following me and I'm still following him. And now I consider it my duty because nobody else has ever figured this out on our side. Well,
[01:47:27] Unknown:
we certainly appreciate you. Thank you.
[01:47:29] Unknown:
Well, it's great. I mean, it's been a wonderful part of my life. You know? It's like having it's like, remember when Rubik's cubes first came out and people would get those Rubik's cubes, man, they just get totally infatuated with that thing till they solved it. Well, this is the Patriot Rubik's cube. Okay? And we solved it, and they agree with it. And we just go on about our way. If if it didn't work and it wasn't right, you'd have people you just in the short time you've been with us, you probably have people you'd hear people calling. Oh, Roger Manley came into my door and hauling me off. You call that stuff. Well, we never hear those kind of calls. We've never had one of those calls from the feds on this show.
Never. Not once. Now, again, traffic crap, a whole different deal, right? Because every jurisdiction is different. But the federal jurisdiction recognizes this, and they recognize it to the jot and to the tittle.
[01:48:32] Unknown:
Most excellent.
[01:48:33] Unknown:
Well, thank you so much. Well, nice to meet you, girl. Come see us.
[01:48:37] Unknown:
Yeah. You too. So, Roger.
[01:48:41] Unknown:
Yes. Samuel.
[01:48:43] Unknown:
Yeah. The the reason I read that to begin with was because of your eyesight, and I I wanted to get your opinion on where you think they're coming down and what they're talking about here. I don't understand why they wrote it, quite frankly.
[01:48:57] Unknown:
It was recognized differentiation between what was the predominant new federal citizen and the old state citizen. The states were considered foreign to there. If there was any question, all you'd have to do is write out an affidavit. I don't know. What do they I mean, I don't understand all that why they were doing it, quite frankly. Roger. Yes. Yes.
[01:49:26] Unknown:
I guess. I I I think I know what they were doing. They were they were giving congress an out like they always give themselves, like, with one ninety two so that they can't be, taken to court for it.
[01:49:38] Unknown:
Okay. So, why don't they just say we'll file an affidavit saying you're a state citizen?
[01:49:45] Unknown:
Same thing. The people are the lobbyists, wouldn't it? And they why didn't they say that in the fourteenth amendment?
[01:49:51] Unknown:
Oh, because they were planning on you bringing everybody in under that. That's why the thirteenth That was the day before the fourteenth amendment, though. Yes. But it was after the thirteenth amendment. They knew what was coming. It's those two work in tandem. Those are the state citizens in the thirteenth amendment, but they want them to all be under their jurisdiction and have this federalized control of the country. And there it is in the next amendment and subject to the jurisdiction thereof.
[01:50:20] Unknown:
That's the qualifier. Yeah. And That's what you got And they were in rebellion. The fourteenth talks about rebellion and that these guys were in rebellion. Right? So Who was who was in rebellion? The states? Well, some of them.
[01:50:33] Unknown:
Some of them weren't in rebellion because the new black federal citizens used to have their own battalions and and and and and and fight for the southern generals.
[01:50:45] Unknown:
Well, the Reconstruction Act made forced them to change their constitutions as well.
[01:50:51] Unknown:
Well, they changed the constitution with the fourteenth amendment, didn't they? And they did have to change their constitutions. And the way you can go back and tell some of that is they change the boundaries of the states. They would change the boundary wall markers. K? The lot lines, if you will. So, hey. Look. I don't know if you it's become painfully evident to me that I now know an answer to a question I've had my entire life and many others have had too vocally is what started and caused the civil war. Oh, we've heard about the free and the black. Well, that's a bunch of crap. And and we've heard that in what really did aggravate the situation to start, it was tariffs.
The same thing that Trump's railing on, tariffs again. But underlying all that, if you look at and you understand the end game, and you look at the two ways that these amendments were written, and you see how they ride together like a train with a with a train, engine and a caboose. And what they're trying to do and want to do eventually, as we've seen, is throw that slavery cast net over everybody in the country. They did that by the thirteenth amendment because it was set up and written for those people. And you go to the fourteenth in the very first sentence, all persons born naturalized in The United States. Well, there may be some that are born naturalized in The United States that aren't subject to the jurisdiction thereof.
So there's a differentiation right there. There's a qualifier there. And they knew when they wrote that, that years down the line, they were gonna bankrupt the country because that's the international bankers usual way of taking over countries, getting control of the money, supplying bankrupting them. And they knew that was gonna happen and that they were gonna take this new position, this federal citizenship, which, unknown to everybody at the time, the feudal system is hiding underneath, and they're gonna pop everybody in that position as surety for the bankruptcy they're gonna create in the future. You just see the whole thing lined out. Now that we know the timeline and we know the end game, you can put these pieces together, folks.
Have you ever heard anybody say that the thirteenth amendment was written for state citizens? Has that ever come out anywhere in anything you've ever read or studied? Court cases, statutes, any of it? Because I've never seen it before. So I'm assuming you haven't. Here's your reason right there. That's the big elephant in the room. Who was the thirteenth amendment written for and what happened to them? Where are they? Oh, they've all been converted over to federal citizens under this little scam. And now they're the basis for the world reserve currency. So through this little scheme, a hundred and fifty plus years ago, we can control the whole world. And that's what they've been doing.
Roger? Yes.
[01:54:11] Unknown:
Hey, Flari. I'd like to go back to Pam. Yeah. She's I was helping a customer. She was saying that she wrote the state department, and they sent back her affidavit. Is that what you heard?
[01:54:25] Unknown:
That's what I heard. Well, I I know, and I don't know that it was an affidavit. But whatever she submitted, they did something and read to it and sent it back to her. Now if that was a passport application, you know, they do say on the state department's website that your passport and citizenship evidence will be sent back to you under separate cover. In other words, in separate mailings. And I've had people call in before that did get their affidavit returned and they were real freaked out because they thought that by returning it means that it wasn't recognized. But it says right in the state department instructions in the back office that they may return it to you. I don't know under what circumstances why they don't do it with everybody's, but they they can do that, Larry. So I'm not quite sure about what Pam's situation
[01:55:17] Unknown:
was. Yeah. And she also said she doesn't believe in, what's what's it called, when you copy someone's writings, what's the word she used? Plagiarism. Plagiarism. Yes. And yet,
[01:55:32] Unknown:
when you go to I don't necessarily agree with that because it's something It's not bad copying other people's words as long as you give them credit. It's when you take credit for those words that is plagiarism.
[01:55:48] Unknown:
Well, then we should give the state department credit because, you know, you you're always, instructing us students over and over about the travel.state.gov website, certificates of noncitizen nationality. In the very last sentence, they give you the remedy how to get out of the federal system. And all she had to do was write, I, Pam, being duly sworn, hereby declare my intention to be a national but not a citizen of The United States, sunset in to the State Department, the Secretary of State and she's out. You're golden. You're golden. And we don't know if anyone has ever had their affidavit returned like from Blinken or any, you know, state department agent. Hey. We we don't accept this.
[01:56:35] Unknown:
Well, we haven't seen that, and that her incident happened back in 2016, almost ten years ago. K? Well, that's Larry was asking her. Who gave you direction? What did you write? Who'd you send it to? All that kind of foundational information, and I I don't know that I ever got an answer for it, but I hope she got an answer for what she was looking for. Alright. Got, not many. The minutes are ticking down. The the sand is going through the hourglass, and there are only a couple of minutes left. If you've got a comment, I would suggest you get it in right now. Right now, r a t, right now.
Got a question? Better get that in right now too. Boy, I tell you. May I ask you? Even to lose Yes. I welcome you with open arms.
[01:57:32] Unknown:
Where it says foreign states in section two, would that mean the several states?
[01:57:38] Unknown:
Yeah. Well, that's what I think it means and all the others. I mean, not only were the states foreign to Washington, DC, England was, you know, all the other countries were too foreign.
[01:57:51] Unknown:
Correct.
[01:57:52] Unknown:
So I don't they don't differentiate, so we don't know, do we?
[01:57:57] Unknown:
No. That was purposeful. I'm sure I yield. No doubt. No doubt. Thank you, Linda.
[01:58:03] Unknown:
Okay. Well, tomorrow, obviously, is Friday, I think, unless I'm really screwed up. I'll tell you in this Trump world, there's so much happening. It's hard to keep the days differentiated, quite frankly. But, tomorrow, I think, pretty sure is Friday the seventh, and that would mean mister Winters will be with us. And I I have no idea, Brent and I never hardly ever occasionally maybe coordinate something we wanna talk about. But, I insist on being spontaneous spontaneous. And as you guys know, I just kinda bring Brent on here and turn him loose. You know? Maybe give him a carrot, dangle a carrot in front of him. And it's like his wife says even his wife and Francine, they say, Roger, like, lights Brent on fire. He's like a a fuse for him. And I'll say something. Brent runs off for twenty minutes on some subject.
And that's kinda true. But, boy, what an honor to do shows with that guy right there. And, all of us should be grateful that we have access to him. So he'll be with us tomorrow, of course, and bearing anything happening, which I don't expect. And, hopefully, you'll be back with us. And, if so, great. If not, we'll be back Saturday. We do this thing on Saturday for any of you that are gainfully employed. You can't join the show and during the week, and Saturday's for you. Now granted, most of the people that come are not in that category, but we'll hold it and reserve it for them anyway.
I'm not sure what we'll talk about this Saturday. I don't have anything planned out just yet. But by the time tomorrow's show over, there may be some subject pops up. Trump may do something new. We might have some new students. One never knows at the radio ranch is the basic basic theme here. So, we'll get close to wrapping up the show. Pam, good to hear from you in Michigan. And, it's Tracy, new new new girl. Great. Glad to have you. And tell all your friends, and we'll see if we can help get them educated and free too. It's a very simple process.
Never have an objection. Nobody ever has any blowback. So some people just don't wanna be free, folks. They think they're free already to fall into the famous Goethe, quote, there are none so helplessly enslaved as those who falsely believe they're free. Thank you, mister Gerta. Okay. We're gonna lay our bodies down. We'll be back tomorrow with Brent. Hope you have a great day, and we will see you then. Ciao. Okay. I think Paul may have had the time to find the right button. So now were all the questions that you were too scared to ask. Now where are they? Roger Roger Roger Roger.
Mighty mighty quiet crowd, Paul. Is there anybody here, actually? Nobody.
[02:01:28] Unknown:
I'm still here, Roger.
[02:01:30] Unknown:
Okay. There's people here. Alright. Well, it's like, you know, you drop that well, rock down the well, and it never hits bottom and kinda leaves you with your head cocked. Okay. Does anybody else have anything for me?
[02:01:44] Unknown:
Nope. Yeah. Roger, I sent an email to you about just requesting information where we can study, learn for ourselves, and know how to defend ourselves if things ever were to come down on this.
[02:01:57] Unknown:
Yeah. Well, the the website, I don't expect those kind of things to happen now that, we're in this new administration, but they could. That you can download a bunch of those. We've got a number of very good interviews on the site, the matrixdocs.com. There's all kinds of information on there. I'm not expecting that to go down. If it was gonna go down, it would have been taken down long before now. See, here's the problem they've got. This information is so powerful that they don't want any kind of spotlight brought to it. So I think that's one of the reasons, not only because they can't, but because they don't want attention brought to this. They're scared to death of it. They lose everything if somebody really gets on this.
So I don't believe they're gonna go do anything to provoke us. They just leave us alone. I mean, I get on here and call them kikes and everything else. I beg them to put me at the top of their hate list. They know. They've been very well of this information. Well aware it's out there for fifteen years since I started putting it out on the radio. They obviously knew about John and Glenn already because they had them raided. And so I don't ants anticipate any kind of adversarial actions coming to us. K? But if you're freaked out about it, I'd download some of those videos and all that, and we'll always be around somewhere.
[02:03:28] Unknown:
Yeah. No. I just wanna know for myself and understand and being able to explain it because that's the best way I know I understand what's going on than just sending the documents. Yeah. Right. This is Tracy. Right? Yeah. I don't advise people to start sending.
[02:03:42] Unknown:
Pretty. Oh, pretty. This is pretty. You're back. Yeah. I was the see. Yeah. Well, you didn't identify yourself. How was, the inauguration for you?
[02:03:52] Unknown:
Crazy and a lot of twists and turns that wasn't planning and a lot of an organization, but I got a best to be part of it. And it was historical and, you know, gotta make the most of it because it went indoors. But then I got to spend time with my congressman and senator and went to the Capitol and all that.
[02:04:10] Unknown:
Oh, good. Well, good for you. Well, welcome back. And, maybe you can give us a little more of a detail if you think of anything. Wanna talk about your trip and the experience. But, I this this didn't go. It's like Bitcoin, pretty. It ain't going nowhere except in people's in the public.
[02:04:29] Unknown:
Right. Yeah. Because I sent the affidavit, and I was there where I send the affidavit because I was in DC. Right. And then I saw the passport office. So I was like, maybe I should go in and get my passport because it was a work week. But, I'm still kinda learning all the information and trying to see if I can get it.
[02:04:47] Unknown:
Uh-huh. You're in Tampa. Right? Some either Tampa or Miami yeah. Tampa or Miami will have a passport office. I'm sure. There's one in almost 12 BC. Post office.
[02:04:59] Unknown:
I've been in my port office for a matter.
[02:05:02] Unknown:
Well, no. You can do it there too. They're authorized agents, obviously. But big cities have a passport office where you can walk in and get your passport same day. Okay?
[02:05:15] Unknown:
So I would assume there's one in Miami.
[02:05:18] Unknown:
I don't know. Pardon me?
[02:05:21] Unknown:
I said, do I just show them the affidavit and say I want a new passport? Like, You don't just show them to it. You tell them to include it in with the package. Okay. But what if you already have a passport or passport card? Well, doesn't matter. You can redo it again.
[02:05:37] Unknown:
All you're doing is canceling and superseding and adding the affidavit. I wouldn't do it necessarily with a passport book, but I would do and have a passport card that's attached to your affidavit. So if you've already got one passport card. Okay. Well, how how long is it good for? They're good for ten years. How long is it good for?
[02:05:59] Unknown:
I got it the same time when I renewed my passport, the book, so I don't I haven't got the updated version. I'll update it after I send in my affidavit.
[02:06:08] Unknown:
Okay. You haven't received that yet?
[02:06:12] Unknown:
No. I haven't received it. I sent the letter or the affidavit to the secretary of state,
[02:06:17] Unknown:
and then I'm just now waiting. I haven't heard anything back. Okay. Okay, Britney. Hold on. I'm getting confused. You sent the affidavit to the secretary of state, but not with the passport application. Correct? Not with the passport application. Were they supposed to? That's why I've been sending this to Well, let me let me finish asking my questions. So when you send in the passport application, you didn't include a copy of it in that package?
[02:06:46] Unknown:
No. I didn't.
[02:06:48] Unknown:
Okay. Well, what I would do just to make sure that you're registered that way is I'd go ahead and and you haven't got the new passport and passport card that you ordered and paid for yet. Correct?
[02:07:02] Unknown:
No.
[02:07:03] Unknown:
Not yet. Okay. Well, at some point, you're gonna wanna redo do a d s 82, that's renewal, and input the affidavit in the package and just order a passport card to replace the one you've already got
[02:07:20] Unknown:
or you're gonna be getting. Okay. I can do that.
[02:07:23] Unknown:
Alright. Well, that's the best way. But you just wanna do the passport thing because then you know it's on file, And it's attached to the highest form of ID that's issued by the federal government. That's why you wanna do that. K?
[02:07:40] Unknown:
Okay. I can do that.
[02:07:42] Unknown:
Alright. Great. Well, I think we're alright then.
[02:07:47] Unknown:
Yeah. Absolutely. Sorry. I'm just still kinda learning and processing all this. It's just a lot to Right. Well, I'm sorry. Repeated. That's how I learned.
[02:07:55] Unknown:
Right. Well, I'm sorry we didn't get you before you send in that passport application, because that's the time to do it right there. So, anyway, well, good. Come alright. Well, come back and visit us, and maybe Saturday, come on and tell us about your experience. Be on Saturday. Alright. Well, maybe you can tell us about the District Columbia up there that night. Should I'm sure there would go a lot of great parties and all that kind of stuff, probably very festive. And I'm really glad I wasn't there, but I will be there vicariously when you tell us about it. So how about that? Yeah. No. Absolutely. It was great. Good to hear your voice. Alright. Good to hear your voice again, girl.
Congratulations on, on your Bitcoin price going up and, all of those things.
[02:08:45] Unknown:
Yeah. So who else has got sir, big euphoric move. I think it's gonna be good. But sorry. I'll Yep. Get off.
[02:08:52] Unknown:
Yeah. Well, you'll be fine. We'll talk to you soon, and welcome back. Thanks for checking in. Who else has got something here today for me? Hey, Roger. I got something. There's somebody very distant. Yes, sir. I'd like to find out where I can find the link. Can I get you to talk, sir? Could you talk right into the microphone? You're it's almost hard to hear you. Okay?
[02:09:22] Unknown:
Can you hear me now?
[02:09:23] Unknown:
A little bit better. Yeah. Could you speak up a bit too? So your your question was find that
[02:09:31] Unknown:
where can I find the audio that Paul was playing at the beginning of, today's program?
[02:09:38] Unknown:
Paul, the audio? You mean the the the little snippet he played for us thirteen minutes?
[02:09:47] Unknown:
Yes. Yes. Paul?
[02:09:50] Unknown:
Paul? Oh, Paul? Yeah. Chasing the cat? Paul?
[02:09:59] Unknown:
It's on YouTube, Roger.
[02:10:02] Unknown:
Well, I know I know that, but I don't know the title of it. Paul had I thought he said he put it in the chat or something. Paul, are you there, buddy? Do you have to run off and drain your radiator? What's where are you?
[02:10:13] Unknown:
I have the I have the title
[02:10:17] Unknown:
if you want. You do? Okay. Go ahead, buddy. Is it on YouTube? Yeah. Hold on with me. I'll let her read it for you. Oh, go ahead. What is it, please, Linda? It's medieval
[02:10:27] Unknown:
slaves worked less than modern Americans, exclamation point. Here's what happened. Medieval slaves worked less than modern Americans, exclamation point, parenthesis, here's what happened, close parenthesis.
[02:10:52] Unknown:
Okay. You get that, sir? Okay. Good. Yes. Anybody else? Thank you. Okay. You're welcome. Anybody else? Thank you, Linda. Anybody else?
[02:11:02] Unknown:
Hey, Roger. Scotty.
[02:11:04] Unknown:
Scotty, where the hell have you been?
[02:11:07] Unknown:
Well, I have been, really at war. It's really been almost nineteen years, but here in the city, in the hood, it's been about seven. And everything kept turning, so I had stopped listening to RBN to you to I just didn't have time for anything. I've been listening for, like, today's the third day. It's been the deal is I had success finally. And I and it turns out well, the deal is I don't know. I'll give you a little refresher. I don't know if you actually know. The deal is I've been in battle with the courts. I filed one document December 18, a year ago, for the seven year, second time Adult Protective Services provide a temporary guardianship to the owner.
And this time, they were ready to sell this house. I had two documents supporting that and I stopped them with that one document I filed in the case in response to the eviction stemming from the case of me. Now what I never knew until September is that the owner here, not only is cheap, selfish, nasty, and a user scammer, but I didn't actually know what a narcissist was. In her case, she's a covert psychopath narcissist and the sister who lives in the Bronx is a right in your face narcissist. That I found that in court on November, sixteenth in the hallway. The guard had to come out. She was practically foaming in the mouth. What so narcissists are have the ability to paint false mirror images of a false world they conjure up like a scribe mirror, and that's what these ladies have done with the courts all these years. I gave them the courtesy not going to court, not giving them jurisdiction.
And here, I gave them the privacy when agents came, the guardian, you know, I would leave them alone to talk. And the whole time, they're turning that everything's Scott's fault. I don't have heat because of Scott. I don't have tenants because of Scott. And it's unless you really know what a narcissist is capable of. So the deal is even though I stopped the case, the reward I got was they continued and escalated exponentially the attacks on me to continue with the eviction case stemming from a false guardianship. They had no right to sup supply adult protective services because this owner doesn't qualify simply for the fact that I'm here. If you have somebody there responsible to help you, you're now eligible. So the deal is even though I stopped, they continue to evict me and things got bad including my health. I'm practically bedridden. So I haven't had a chance to do anything. I lost my business, my truck, my scooter, my and I I didn't figure it out. So to sum it up, I moved the court and closed the guardianship case a a couple of months after I filed last December.
And then I had other things going on I won't mention why I was suing the lawyer. Then in the eviction case, I thought I didn't file. I handed the judge the a document, a four page document, asking him to dismiss it, dismiss the case with prejudice without prejudice, because of all kinds of. And he was because they they provide, support for the owner usually. Usually, the tenants get screwed. So he was saying he didn't have to read no affidavit and this and that. Just explain in my own words. I can't explain all this craziness for seven years. He didn't so the deal is he didn't read it and we all left. Then I showed up for trial, January third of this year, twenty twenty five. They sent and the the attacks coming from the the, I guess you call them flying monkeys like in the Wizard of Oz, of all the ex tenants and people I knew coming here trying to kill me because they she's been saying she's freezing for a year because of Scott and they're ready to kick in it. So I'm the s all the tax escalated.
Like, great guys, I knew for fifteen years, he never put his nose in anything. It's not my circus is what he always and he was here ready to kill me with 10 other people, 10 other so the deal is I didn't even know what the hell. So it turns out January 3, I show up in court. Those two show up for court. They're all committing fraud on the court. They're knowingly, willingly lying to the court saying Scott's a demon to Scott. And I didn't know it all along. I'm being being duped because I'm here doing the right thing. They're always doing the right and not never understanding why she wouldn't allow me to fix anything.
So it's very complex. So the deal is January 3, we show up. The judge was nasty, saying all kinds of bad stuff to me in the morning, but I did get to speak to him a little bit. And, apparently, I moved him enough that during lunch, he obviously read my four page document that he didn't read three months earlier. So we come back from lunch. He was totally different. He totally reversed what he said three months earlier on that day with the sisters there where he had some technicality because the lawyer was taken off the case from the judge who shut the case due to my paperwork.
So I know it's very complex. So the deal is he did what I wanted, and those two left the court didn't know what the heck's happened. They never ever ever thought they would lose because this lady is very intelligent, and she's evicted many, many tenants over the years. She's had many properties in all cuts sorts of nasty ways. But so they never thought that and they were just shocked that they lost. So the judge so I moved the court. The reason for this is the paperwork is essential. Even though I'm not going with the national stuff, I moved the court the first time, and I moved the court the second time. And then I had a third paperwork that day I didn't get to submit. So I didn't even submit the second document to the court. I merely handed it to the judge. I didn't file it. We all went home during lunch. And, the first document he never saw that I did file. So the deal is that's an update on me. I haven't been here. It's very good to be back. Now I have to get the demons out of me that got into me. Because if I wasn't angry and on the verge of violence, I would be crazy to endure what I've endured. I I don't know how many people on the call understand what a narcissist is capable of. It's very difficult to stand up to them. So I now have no cases against me. The courts did what I asked twice, and now I'm at the point where you provided me an amazing, look into something. It was over a year ago where you were talking about a case that's old or over five years that they didn't do it, that you can have it closed down or removed from the record.
Do you remember that conversation? It was certainly over a year ago. No. Oh, no? Because I did ask you that one other time. So where I'm at now is I wanna get my suspended license back that's been suspended with a warrant for my arrest since before the Sandy Superstorm from being on a cell phone. I actually was going to get my new van I paid for out of the junkyard, and I made a call. I was gonna pick up the title first and then get anyway. And I lost my van that day to the Sandy Superstorm, and I've had a suspended license and a warrant ever since. So, that's, why I tried. And you had specifically said something about an old case you can get it totally erased from the record just because it's old, and and now I have to start research, because all the doors open for me now. I have to I think you're getting
[02:19:03] Unknown:
I think you're getting me confused with somebody else. I don't ever remember telling you that or have any recognizance of the topic at all.
[02:19:12] Unknown:
Old Yeah. Yeah. Cases where any right. Yeah. Yeah. That might be correct. Yeah. I listened to a lot of stuff. Alright. Well Alright. Well, anyway, it's been a pleasure to listen Okay. For three days. Alright. Well, glad to have you, Scotty. Welcome back. Anybody else got anything for me? I hesitate to ask.
[02:19:30] Unknown:
Okay. I'm gone. Gonna go eat some lunch, and I will see y'all tomorrow with Brent. Ciao. Ciao. Have a fantastic day,
[02:19:41] Unknown:
I think. You too, Rod. Now? I was just gonna say something. Sometimes the confusion
[02:19:46] Unknown:
will be.
[02:19:48] Unknown:
Yeah. Go ahead now. What were you gonna say with the confusion?
[02:19:52] Unknown:
Yeah. Sometimes the confusion between citizenship, I think, is there was an Anglo Saxon kind of concept of citizenship with the free man, and then there was a Roman citizenship, concept of the the slave.
[02:20:03] Unknown:
So Yeah. And that that's why that's why Jefferson capitalized it in the declaration. So, anyway, I'll, I'll see y'all tomorrow. It has a confusion. Thank you, Roger. Okay. Always a pleasure, Julie. Have a great day. Okay, sweetie? Bye bye. Great day.
[02:20:21] Unknown:
Samuel, I'm kind of confused. I'm kind of, wondering if what the AI would say about the d s 11 form. Someone was saying that the the front page with all the blocks where you put your name, then you flip it over, and it's just a free form that you put your name. What kind of document where you put your name twice and, what's the meaning of that? One guy was hypothesizing that that was, you know, one side was the slave citizen, one of the, the state citizen of the free the free man.
[02:21:20] Unknown:
Hello? Are you there? Yes, George. I'd help. Yeah. I'm not sure, what you're talking about. I've heard I haven't done my passport yet, but I'll be doing it, that on the DS 11 or the DS, I think it is, the 82 or whatever, on the upper right hand side, there's, like, a white box. And I've been told when I do mine to write the word national in there. And then below that there's something that says END number, which I guess is the endorsement number and you put nine, which means that's a national, but I haven't heard about anything where you turn the form over and put something on the back of it on the backside, but I could be wrong. I think maybe Larry might know something about that I yield.
[02:22:11] Unknown:
Yes. You do fill it out a certain way. I it's kinda new new that I hadn't heard of before. But, basically, the gentleman was saying on the form, the front of that form, which is their existing form, has blocks for where you print your name or put your name on the front of the form, but on the back of the form, you rewrite your name. So it's like what what kind of form ever had two places where you put your name and and basically in a different format. So he was hypothesizing about that. I haven't listened further on his teaching on, you know, any of the nuances of the form, but it was the first I heard that that and thought about that that the which I had recently done. He said if you did do it wrong, you could always do, like, say you lost your passport and do an 82 and send in, you know, correct it. But I but I haven't listened to his full, like, explanation of how he's telling you to fill it out. But, basically, one gets at the nationality and one is the presumption of The US citizenship is what he his theory is. So what are you?
[02:23:18] Unknown:
Julie.
[02:23:25] Unknown:
Anybody else help? Let me let me
[02:23:29] Unknown:
let me, weigh in here just a little bit, if you don't mind. I've been I've been following a lot of people for many years on this passport issue and trying to everyone trying to get a passport, and your names, proper spelling, all that. I have yet to see one. I don't believe they exist, the proper spelling of your name. I think it's because the government that's issuing it is a corporation. They can only deal with corporations or corporate entities. So they're always going to be from my, you know, to this point, this is what I believe and this is what it unless someone can prove differently, they're always going to issue you a passport in that all all capital letters just like everything else dealing with the government because that's all they can.
As long as your paperwork is with them, I think that that shows who you are, the explanatory statements, you're good. I did a FOIA request when I did mine. I got it back. It took me a year to get it back. And in that FOIA docs, it was all grommeted, beautiful to who these present shall come, and it says we process the application for and then it had my name in its proper form. They process it for Matthew William Dakin, so all properly spelled everything. But the passport came in all capital letters because that's all they can do. So I'm just the authorized representative or authorized agent for that all capital letter entity. So it's it's like we're all when we're dealing with the government, I look at us as all acting in a role. We have to that that's the role. Okay. To to deal with them, we have to act as that all capital letter entity, and we separate ourselves as, you know, being authorized agent, authorized representative or whatever. So that's that's my take on the whole thing. So with that, I yield.
[02:25:29] Unknown:
Julie, this is Larry.
[02:25:34] Unknown:
Hi, Larry. How are you?
[02:25:38] Unknown:
Good. Thank you. Just fill out you're gonna do a d s 82. Is that correct?
[02:25:43] Unknown:
I'm gonna do the d s 11. Oh, so you're gonna have to go before an agent? Yeah. But it'll be okay because I'm I can go to Washington DC. I'm, you know, six miles out for there. Yeah. I can find a form, but I also have a passport office, like, literally one mile from my existing home as well.
[02:26:02] Unknown:
Well, then you can get it instantaneously.
[02:26:04] Unknown:
Right? Yep.
[02:26:06] Unknown:
Yeah. You might wanna do that. But, yeah, just fill out the passport just like you would any other form. Nothing special. You don't put anything in for the endorsement codes. And the the main thing is just to attach your affidavit. And
[02:26:21] Unknown:
then, you may have to Don't put anything in those white boxes, Larry. Nothing. Just leave them blank.
[02:26:28] Unknown:
Yeah. The the at the top of the page where it says, it has these, like, little boxes for for codes. Yeah. And a lot lot of students will put o nine or whatever in there. Is that your what you're referring to? Yes. Yes. I left mine blank. Okay. Yes. We're not really supposed to touch those. Roger has come to that conclusion. We've discussed this over and over over the years. Yeah, the passport agent will fill all that in, if applicable. But the main thing obviously is attaching your affidavit and you might have to bring your birth certificate. So you may have if you don't have one, you can't just copy a birth certificate on a copy machine.
You have to get a certified copy from the state. And so when I went to do my passport, that's what I took with me. And be careful because they did update the passport applications late last year sometime. So if you go into a post office and get an application, you know, if just be sure that you have the revised version because I had mine all filled out. I walk into the courthouse, and I went before an agent, and he was looking at it and he said, Oh, I can't accept this. I said, Why? He said, because this is the old version. They just updated it. So I had to I had to sit down and it took, you know, takes a lot of time showing all of the blocks. So I had to do everything all over again. So just make sure you have the most recent revised version of the application.
And you'll need the birth certificate. You'll need,
[02:28:09] Unknown:
Oh, Larry, the birth certificate, if I'm born in a different state, I have to call the Vital Records and pay and ask for a a paper certified copy from the state where I was born, right?
[02:28:22] Unknown:
Yes. Yes. Okay. You could do that. But I think, that that is in a list. If you read the instructions, there's a list of a lot of forms of identification that you can bring in. And to me, the birth certificate is the most credible. And I went and ordered mine and, you know, I had it ready to go when I went to go before the agent with the application. So, I always wanted to have a certified copy anyway, because the copy that I had was when I was literally born, my mother and father gave it to me. But I wanted something up to date. You know what I mean? Right. And so I ordered one. I think it costs like $20 and a couple of dollars to ship it to me. Okay. Thank you. To me, the having the birth certificate is is the most credible way to do it, you know, even though there's a list of of,
[02:29:18] Unknown:
you know, identification that you can use. And then do you can you can you bring your own picture in or they just take one there of you and I went to,
[02:29:27] Unknown:
I went to I went to a Walgreens, I think it was, and, they do passport pictures. And you just go in there, and you gotta watch what you wear. There's you can only wear certain colors of clothing, and, and you can't have, like, you can't wear you can't wear different things. You just gotta go through the instructions. Okay. And just have those ready to go. You know? Thank you.
[02:29:53] Unknown:
Yep.
[02:29:54] Unknown:
Hey, Larry. I have something to add.
[02:29:58] Unknown:
Sure.
[02:30:02] Unknown:
When she brings in her affidavit, if she's talking to a real person, they may refuse to accept the affidavit. They re they may refuse to attach it. Just make sure that you remain firm. The warning box in the instructions says I can, provide, explanatory statements, including affidavits. This is an affidavit, and it must be attached. The secretary of state says so. Don't take no for an answer. And if they refuse, go to a different window, go to a different post office, go to a different, passport office. Keep going until you get somebody that does it because they've been instructed not to accept additional documents.
[02:31:03] Unknown:
Thank you.
[02:31:05] Unknown:
Welcome. Right. And don't staple anything. Use a paperclip. And, yeah, you can always be familiar with your paperwork and you could always everybody has a boss. You can always ask for the supervisor. So if you have an ignorant agent there that says, what what is this affidavit? I've never because most most people don't do this. They did they're they're filling out the application as a US citizen, and that's all they're handing in and plus the required other papers like your birth certificate or whatever. And so they're not used to seeing this affidavit. And so if anyone gives you trouble, you just you just point out on the form, just like Paul said, that you can attach affidavits.
And then if they still, you know, give you trouble, ask for their supervisor because I forget what the title is, but it like, at a post office, there's there's a name of a the title of someone that's, like, the highest person there, the postmaster or something like that. Ask for that person. You know? Exactly.
[02:32:10] Unknown:
Yeah. Just tell them just tell them that, their job is to make sure that the application is filled out correctly and any attached documents as referenced in the instructions are attached properly. Now if you can't do that, let me speak to your supervisor.
[02:32:31] Unknown:
May I? Lady Linda Louise, may I?
[02:32:37] Unknown:
Are you gonna disagree with what I just said?
[02:32:40] Unknown:
No. I wanted to add something. Oh, okay. Then you may. You got ticket here. Julie, in, Boston, that's where I'd have to go for Springfield, Massachusetts, which is six miles from my home in Connecticut here. Their federal building does not do passport, so I'd have to go to Boston, which is 82 miles from my house, but that's not a problem. But, anyway, Lewis from Boston, he, enlightened me with you call the passport office first, and you tell them that you're a national. And then they'll make an appointment for you. And so they're expecting you.
And, that's the most expeditious way to get your passport without any hassles. So from Lewis' mouth to my ears to your ears. So I haven't done it yet, but that's one of our 2025 goals is to, because my husband and I, we have a a passport from the World Service Authority. So we've been using that, successfully. And now it's time for us to update our passports. So now that we know how to do the passport for The United States Of America, we're gonna do that passport. I yield.
[02:34:01] Unknown:
Thank you, lady Linda Louise. Yeah. I think you had mentioned that to me on the phone before. My post office box that I have is actually in the central sorting facility here where I live, and so the Passport Office is connected to that because I could just pop my head in, one afternoon while when they're not busy and just ask those questions and make sure I'm prepared when I when I go. But thank you so much. Thank you very much, Larry and, Paul. You're welcome. My passport my,
[02:34:30] Unknown:
post office here at the airport, the one that I use, the post, lady who does the passport, it's imperative that you make an appointment with her as well. But I don't think she knows what it matches. So my husband and I are just gonna make a day of it, go to Boston, make a day of it, have lunch, ask for it to be spent. That's it. Okay. Thank you. Thank you.
[02:35:00] Unknown:
George is still on here.
[02:35:03] Unknown:
When you're down in central sorting, can you make sure that the Treasury Direct gets put into my mailbox?
[02:35:16] Unknown:
That was a passport for The United States Of America?
[02:35:27] Unknown:
George.
[02:35:31] Unknown:
No. It was a joke because she's near the central sorting.
[02:35:36] Unknown:
Sorry.
[02:35:52] Unknown:
Anyway, if anybody other than George saw that video that he sent me about going out page one or page two and hoping that that would get through. Here it is from the horse's mouth.
[02:36:17] Unknown:
Okay. Or she will accept it?
[02:36:19] Unknown:
Yes. Okay. Thank you very much.
[02:36:23] Unknown:
There you go.
[02:36:25] Unknown:
Yeah. I wasn't, Sheldon, just to clarify, the the gentleman in the video, I don't think was saying it's one or the other. It's both, but there's a way the way that he was explaining it, there's a way to fill it out to make sure that your citizenship is clear. I mean, I think, obviously, the affidavit is how we do it. So I'm not sure what he was alluding to in that video specifically about each field and all that. But his his, thesis was that what's that in the form of flex, you you're kind of you're submitting both. You're submitting the state the state citizenship as well as the The US citizenship. And then it's up to us to know how to, do the affidavit, but then he was probably claiming different fields, you know, to fill out certain ways. But he did he's not a he's not a Roger student for sure, but it definitely had both of the form. So I'd say the idea was that why do they have one thing with blocks and then the other side is a free form. You know, what where what other form would you put your name twice? What other government form?
Really good point. So that's why he wasn't saying it was an either or thing though.
[02:38:04] Unknown:
On the surface, that could have been one of those things that was, just a little too good to be true. You know?
[02:38:16] Unknown:
Yeah. I think he's he's basically saying kind of what we all think about these forms is they they hide the stuff, the obfuscate, and they presume and assume until you know either how to do an affidavit or fill in a particular forms a certain way. But again, I haven't gotten into the granular way that he's stating about each particular field or whatnot. I don't know if he has a separate video on that, but his big thing was like, geez, why don't you freeform your name on one side of the farm and put blocks in on the other side?
Introduction and Show Overview
Radio Broadcasting and Personal History
Discussion on Freedom and Citizenship
Historical Work Hours and Modern Society
Propaganda and Economic Shifts
Expatriation Act and Citizenship Debate
Listener Interaction and Passport Advice