Welcome to another engaging episode of the Radio Ranch, where we dive into the latest updates and discussions on various topics. Today, Roger Sayles, your host, along with co-host John Kacarab, brings you insights into the current political landscape, broadcasting updates, and intriguing discussions on historical and contemporary issues.
We kick off with a rundown of the platforms broadcasting our show, including 106.9 WB0U FM Chicago and eurofolkradio.com, among others. We also discuss recent programming changes and server issues that have been resolved.
The conversation shifts to political updates, including the appointment of Don Bongino as deputy director of the FBI and the implications of this move. We also delve into the geopolitical situation involving Trump, Ecuador, and the strategic importance of supporting Ecuador amidst regional tensions.
Our discussion takes a historical turn as we explore the intricacies of the 13th and 14th Amendments, the implications of voluntary servitude, and the historical context of these constitutional changes. We also touch on the impact of tariffs and the potential economic shifts under Trump's administration.
Listeners are encouraged to engage with the show, share their insights, and explore the wealth of resources available on our website, thematrixdocsd0cs.com. Join us for a lively discussion and stay informed on the issues that matter.
This mirror stream is brought to you in part by mymytoboost.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 PhatPhix, 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.
[00:01:47] Unknown:
Yes. Yes, sir, mister Lee, and so would we. And we try along with your music to get us started here on a six day a week deal, to, at least put our shoulder to the wheel a little bit and see if we can have some effect. It's, the Radio Ranch, name of our little get together here for the next two hours. Roger Sales, your host, and John Casear might as well be a cohost on Monday at least for an hour. Old old friend John, one of the real early responders to the message many years ago. It is the, twenty fourth date stamp of February. Pretty close to, I was looking at the calendar a minute ago, and set short month that ends on Friday. So, anyway, we're on a number of different platforms, and we've got some good news on some of those. And mister Beaner is going to, will tell the world about it, Paul.
[00:02:39] Unknown:
Well, actually, it's news to me and the programming changes. So let's just kinda go through it. Maybe we can get an update from Alan in a little bit. We're on, 106.9 W B 0 U F M Chicago. It's easy for you to say. We're also on eurofolkradio.com today. We, we missed those fine folks for, well, a couple of days last week when, there were server issues, which have been corrected as far as I know. We're on Global Voice Radio Network. That is radio.globalvoiceradio.net or live.globalvoiceradio.net when the show is live. We're also on homenetwork.TV, freedom nation TV, go live TV, and stream life.tube.
Those platforms as well as WVOU FM is brought to us by the NET family of broadcast services spearheaded by WDRN production support, Collins, Colorado. Our website is thematrixdocsd0cs.com. And, you can grab those, primary radio streams on that website, or you can join us in free conference call. Actually, join us live on the show. Loads of fun. Lots of room for you. Come on down. Stay the day, baby. Bring
[00:04:04] Unknown:
a lunch. Bring a lunch. Bring a lunch. Why not? Hey, John. Well, the news, I guess, we'll start off with I I wanna hear about what Jack was saying, bring Jack back in a second here, as it deals with Trump and Ecuador and The US. But what some of you may not know because I think it just happened this morning, Don Bongino, the ex secret service guy, has been appointed deputy director of the FBI. Never having been an FBI agent, but a civil but a secret service and very outspoken and, of course, a Zionist, but, he's the number two guy at FBI now, and that him Kash Patel leading it with him behind it. That's a pretty strong lineup.
Show is. So, that's the newest thing I know this morning. I wanna hear what Jack had to say, though. Jack, are you there, buddy?
[00:05:07] Unknown:
Yes, sir. Go ahead. Go ahead. I posted it in the PPN chat group.
[00:05:12] Unknown:
Okay. Well, I'm dated '22. Yep. So date is what? Twenty two? That'd be Saturday?
[00:05:20] Unknown:
Twenty '2 February. Yeah. And, I think that's what John was referring to. Right, John?
[00:05:26] Unknown:
I can't read the chat. What's it say?
[00:05:30] Unknown:
Okay. This is a Telegram PPN chat. Basically, that, there's been no official word from Trump admin White House to help Ecuador out, But the very last paragraph says, we are strategically important. And with all the commies in Colombia, Venezuela, and Cuba, it would be smart to help us out with our security. Held it.
[00:05:56] Unknown:
Well, they're everywhere. Chile's got one. Brazil's got one. You know, I mean, we're we're somewhat of a stronghold of right wing, government down here. Hopefully, the election, by the way, we had an election. You probably know more about this and the names and stuff, Jack. But the election they had, they were virtually tied. One of them is the son of the banana magnate guy. He's kind of the conservative one. He was actually born in The US. And the other is a female who is the, elected appointed person to represent the communists. And with, Correio, the old communist president, who's been banned from the country, been living in Belgium for a number of years and trying to get back into the country. So, a little bit of hanging on this one.
[00:06:53] Unknown:
Yeah. 44.8% with Naboa and 44.2 with her. It's about a 18,000 vote margin. We've got an Indian label that come in with 4%, and he will decide the next president if all went as we think it's gonna go.
[00:07:13] Unknown:
Alright. And that's what That's, that elections on Patriot Day,
[00:07:19] Unknown:
April ninth. Sunday, third April. Sunday, thirteen, April. It was the first one with Sunday September. This next Yeah. Runoff, and I got a vote because I'm a citizen. So I got a notice where I get fined, and they'll lock down my passport.
[00:07:36] Unknown:
Now, Jack, here, I know in Argentina, they, they did it on Sundays, and you had to vote. If you don't, you can be, I don't know if criminally or civilly, but they can do something to you. And the men and the women voted in different pre different places. Is that the same year?
[00:07:57] Unknown:
Yes. They would go to a schoolhouse and with, you know, 30 schoolrooms, classrooms, and we set up little bitty kids tables, and the ladies go, next door to their lunch, and we guys go to ours.
[00:08:15] Unknown:
Well,
[00:08:16] Unknown:
it's the way it is down here. So, anyway, anything else you got to add, Jack?
[00:08:22] Unknown:
And you you don't drink. It's a dry weekend.
[00:08:26] Unknown:
Oh, yeah. They, they, cut all the alcohol off, which doesn't bother me at all, but as with some folks, I guess. Okay. Well, thank you, mister Jay.
[00:08:38] Unknown:
It coincided with Super Bowl Sunday. Oh, man. There was a bunch of hurt feelings over that weekend. Couldn't have no cold beer at the, sports planet. Oh, well. April 1985. I'm forty years celebrating no booze, coming up shortly.
[00:08:57] Unknown:
Yeah. I just I I don't have an alcohol problem. I just don't particularly like it. You know? I mean, it's alright, but it's just don't go out of my way for it. So, anyway, we'll, thank you there, mister j, and I'll see you at lunch tomorrow, if not sooner.
[00:09:13] Unknown:
Yeah. And I'm, talking with, the lady, Arliss, from Minnesota. She's coming down to see you. She wants to have lunch with you. And I'm still looking for Sam to come on board. Okay. I can leave. Well, yeah, Sam. I told him you were wanting to look poke around down here, and he's chomping at the bit to to get in touch with you. So,
[00:09:34] Unknown:
anyway, you'll we'll we'll we'll chum him up pretty soon here. Alright. Thank you, Jack. Okay, John. Where's John? How is your,
[00:09:43] Unknown:
you got any other up you got any breaking news for us or anything?
[00:09:50] Unknown:
John, are you chasing the cats around? Or John?
[00:09:56] Unknown:
He was feeding him a year ago.
[00:09:58] Unknown:
I guess so. I don't know if he's still chasing. Alright. Let's see what else. I was muted.
[00:10:04] Unknown:
You were muted. Oh. There you go. Gave myself self punishment, you know, put myself in the corner. Yeah. Arliss is a truck driver. You know, she's she's a she's a tough gal. She works hard. Is she? Yeah.
[00:10:19] Unknown:
Oh, I know what I wanted to tell y'all. I don't think I I mentioned it. So we had, well, I didn't yeah. I guess when did I must have been last Tuesday I found out about it. We got a guy down here, Danny. He had a place a condo on the ocean down there, one of one of the coastal towns, and and he's been trying to sell it for a while. He rents it out and whatnot. And, last Tuesday, he said, well, I finally sold, finally sold my condo. And we yeah. Oh, wow. He sold it to a female helicopter pilot who bought it, John, with the overtime that she made on the fires.
[00:10:58] Unknown:
Yes. Hey. Fires pay well. They really do. I'm you know, when I was at March Air Force Base over there in the hospital and stuff, I volunteered and, was on their ambulance crew. And, I got out there on the fire line one time, and that was the last time. I stayed in the medical tent, after that. Yeah. That I don't wanna be out there again, these guys. I'm telling you. And I'll tell you, in California, you know, they've got the prison crews that come in and fight the fires. Uh-huh. And these guys are just fantastic because they have got it down.
And you talk about being buff and getting out of jail and doing really good work. They have a team. There's about two guys and they all go in a row. Uh-huh. And the first guy takes out his piece, the next guy takes out his piece, and by the time the last guy comes through, there ain't nothing there. It's all dirt. And, they get in there and really do it. I was down there in Pasadena yesterday, and we didn't have much fun. The guys decided they wanted to create a, a free energy device. It didn't really go well. They couldn't they couldn't even get the soldering gun to work.
[00:12:15] Unknown:
Uh-oh. Well, if you can't get the soldering gun to work, you're you're dead. You ain't gonna make it.
[00:12:23] Unknown:
And I've been seeing these free energy devices, and the magnetic ones really work. And the ones where they use the flywheel with the springs, those things really work good. But these guys, there are people out there showing you a couple spark plugs and a little coil and a magnet, you know, and you can't create a current in a wire unless there's a movement, you know, up and down somehow. Either the magnet's got to move through or you've got to do an AC current kind of thing. Yeah. And, they couldn't even get the coil made to attach to the spark plugs. So and I just I got tired of watching them do that and do like I can believe that. John. Yeah. Yeah. What they needed was a free energy device to to power the soldering iron so they could build them a free energy device. There you go. Well, they they had a a good battery there that they but it was is they just got a little tiny soldering, stick. They they didn't really have any power there. So it was it was fun watching these guys do this stuff.
I used to do a lot of that stuff when I was a kid because I was involved in CB radio and stuff like that. So Oh, yeah. Did you build some Heath kits back then, John? Oh, man. Oh, yeah. That's that's how I gotten I gotten CB real early doing that kind of stuff. Uh-huh. Yeah. But it's really fantastic that I'm seeing
[00:13:44] Unknown:
I get 60 watt pencil soldering irons from Timo for, like, $2. They're
[00:13:51] Unknown:
you can't beat them. So Really? I've never ordered anything from Timo. I don't know much about it.
[00:13:57] Unknown:
Yeah. Yeah. I know. Prices are attractive. Bad bad fall. I'm supporting China. Whatever.
[00:14:03] Unknown:
Do you remember in the comics, they would show you about these tanks and things you could order, you know, and it they came, and they were pieces of cardboard?
[00:14:12] Unknown:
Kinda. I I do remember here another story dealing with importing from China. Trump's Trump's, tariffs are already working. Apple is is moving, gonna build the AI servers in The US and hire 20,000 people to avoid the tariffs.
[00:14:34] Unknown:
And they're not gonna be in any center like, you know, up in the in the valley up north in California.
[00:14:43] Unknown:
Yeah. There are no he said some will be, one some will be in Texas, and some will be in Michigan and some somewhere else. Yeah. Kinda decentralizing.
[00:14:54] Unknown:
Right. What is amazing to me is all the people that I knew before, that were fighting against the deep state and stuff are now in the government. I mean, what a switch.
[00:15:10] Unknown:
Oh, you mean with oh oh, yeah. No kidding.
[00:15:14] Unknown:
They're now in charge.
[00:15:17] Unknown:
I'm very excited about Kash Patel, now with Bongino, although both of them are Zionist. You can't you don't get a cabinet position with Trump unless you're Zionist, evidently. Well, you're not gonna get anywhere fighting the Zion Zionist right off the bat. You just But look at but look at what they're doing and how they're handling all this stuff with the Ukraine and the other side of the Zionist sword and and cutting them, down to nothing. So, you know, like, everything's got a dialectic in this world. K? So maybe there's good Zionists and bad Zionists.
[00:15:56] Unknown:
Well, no, Raj. You know, it's kinda like you if you look at the whole history of this thing, it's been more than a century where they put this whole thing together since the Balfour Declaration.
[00:16:05] Unknown:
Well, it goes about a hundred years before that.
[00:16:08] Unknown:
Yes. Yeah. Yeah. Well, 1840.
[00:16:11] Unknown:
Well, in the early, teens in, maybe it's the thirties, Rothschilds put the first, kibbutz in Israel in the eighteen hundreds. And, you know, the ironic part of it, the and I don't remember the name of it. But, in the false flag they had, October 7, what, year before last, that was the village they invaded. It was that first village the Rothschilds put there.
[00:16:37] Unknown:
Oh, really? Okay. I didn't know that. I all I know is I I learned a lot from Europa, and I learned a lot from listening to, the guy the people that were around Spingola because she was really concentrating on that, quite. And she wrote those books about the World War II, which is good. The only thing I think she's kind of off on is that Sandy Hook deal. But anyway, that's all past. That's old news. But I'm really it's a maze who is actually in control now. It's just all these guys that have been really fighting fighting pretty hard are in the government. What a switch.
[00:17:19] Unknown:
He is. And, Flynn, Trump's offered him 10 or 12 positions as he's turned he's turned all of them down, but he's working with them on the outside.
[00:17:32] Unknown:
Right. Right. He's more effective on the outside than than being in government. Yeah.
[00:17:37] Unknown:
Very exciting times. I'm I'm just, I'm overwhelmed with what Trump has done in thirty days, thirty three, whatever, four now.
[00:17:48] Unknown:
It just shows you how controlled the other presidents were. He,
[00:17:52] Unknown:
he has a determination and obviously a goal in mind that he is just going straight ahead. Did you see him confront the governor of Maine over the weekend or last week at the governor of Maine? That was incredible. Okay. We're gonna see you in court. Well, good. That ought to be an easy one.
[00:18:13] Unknown:
Well, then what I liked was what he just said right back, if you don't if you don't cooperate, you're not gonna get any any federal money. Period.
[00:18:20] Unknown:
Yeah. And why? A female above all. Well, wait a minute. She hold on. Let me finish. Why would she hang the position of allowing men and fem in women's sports? A female governor. That makes no sense to me other than just antagonizing vitriol.
[00:18:44] Unknown:
Well, a lot of this stuff is crazy. There's there's an evil component to it. And when you're in the evil situation, you you're not in right mind.
[00:18:53] Unknown:
And this is the beauty of of where he is and what he's able to do is he's got to get them defending something like men and women's sports where there was one in volleyball where the guy hit the ball so hard it broke the eye socket around the gal's eye. Yes. Yes. I forgot about that. Yeah. I mean, that kind of stuff. And she's got to defend that. And and her stupid remark while I'm following state and federal law, you go, I am federal law. So anyway, there's a, it's just a wonderful, well, it's a very encouraging situation. I don't know if it's wonderful. Yeah. I guess it might be where we can hold these people's feet to the fire on these things that are so absolutely out of any kind of consciousness, reality is insane.
Okay? Other stuff is just insane. Yes, please.
[00:19:47] Unknown:
Hey, Roger. Carl, it's me. Hey. On that,
[00:19:51] Unknown:
companies coming back to The United States, including Apple and whoever, I imagine and they haven't said this, at least I haven't heard it, but I'm sure that it's coming at the cost of taxpayers to bring them back just like the chip maker two years ago with, Biden giving them a $20,000,000,000 incentive or whatever that amount was.
[00:20:16] Unknown:
Do you mind having done that, to get the, you know, when you're you ever siphon gas, Carl? You know, you gotta suck a little bit, get that inertia started. Maybe that's what this is. And, okay. Taxpayers, well, hell, he's already saved them. They're gonna save them a trillion dollars, taxpayers. So so what if you encourage your company to come back and avoid some tariffs? Maybe. Alright. Alright. With me. Yes, Paul?
[00:20:46] Unknown:
After you're after you're done with the with the companies coming back, I wanna circle back to the to the whole Trump and the governor thing.
[00:20:56] Unknown:
Alright. So any anyway, Carl, more? You got more, Carl?
[00:21:03] Unknown:
No. That's all I got. Thank you, Richard. Okay. Thanks, Carl. Okay, Paul. Launch on.
[00:21:09] Unknown:
Yeah. I think that's kind of a slippery slope now. Yeah. I'm not for or against. I'm not condemn or condone, but I think that's gonna be a slippery slope for Trump because, I think the angle that they're gonna take is discrimination, sex discrimination, and that is prohibited by federal law. So Oh, so you mean you mean it So it's not gonna be Yeah. In the sports Like, you can't discriminate against a man that wants to wants to, engage in women's sports because that's discrimination.
[00:21:48] Unknown:
And that's against the law. That's that's that's taking it way out of line.
[00:21:54] Unknown:
And what okay. And what else can we expect these liberals to do? They did everything they do. And they're not they're not okay. Well, they're not gonna get any kind of court traction on that. Well, I'll show you two places they have.
[00:22:07] Unknown:
Women's sports are for humans with two x chromosomes.
[00:22:11] Unknown:
There are two places they did succeed in that, and that's where the, girls can be part of the boy scouts, etcetera, and vice versa.
[00:22:20] Unknown:
Well, yeah. Yeah. Well, it it, hopefully, Trump's gonna undo a bunch of this. We'll see as we go forward. Hell, he he can't all do it all undo it all at once. And as evidenced by just last week, he got rid of the last of the Biden, federal prosecutors. What else? He got rid of the Biden somebody.
[00:22:45] Unknown:
Well, it's hard to keep track, Raj, because they're firing all these legal people in all these different agencies.
[00:22:51] Unknown:
Yeah. But this was specifically DOJ.
[00:22:54] Unknown:
Oh, okay.
[00:22:55] Unknown:
K. But it's it's great to see. And, you know, as I've said numerous times on the show here, I don't I never thought I'd see this in my lifetime. So it's really rewarding to see it. Well, neither did I.
[00:23:09] Unknown:
I didn't think so. By the way, I got your stuff into the local police department through that ticket that I had. You know, my little mini cop?
[00:23:19] Unknown:
Well, you got my stuff into the police? Yeah. Yeah. What you what you teach. Okay.
[00:23:24] Unknown:
So I've I wrote an affidavit up, and I sent it to the cop. I didn't send it into the court. And I let her know that if if for some reason I end up having to pay for a a fine and a and a increase in my insurance, that she's gonna we need to, cover that cost for me because she committed a crime when she stopped me. And, anyway, I got my so I sent her that affidavit, then I included as an add on for information my list of state citizen cases, you know, the ones that we use to show that there's two different statuses. Yes, sir. And I also included my affidavit to the federal secretary of state.
I can imagine that the that's quite a talk inside the, police department.
[00:24:09] Unknown:
Well, I hope so. I mean, that's part of why we do what we do to cause that reaction.
[00:24:17] Unknown:
I haven't had the kickback yet, and I'm gonna see what happens with that. But,
[00:24:21] Unknown:
we've got a we've got a new listener that's been hanging around for about a month or so, Chris, who's out there in California, John. I think up north of you, you know, how they got some acreage out somewhere. Anyway, he, knew Richard McDonald, and he got Richard's Law Library.
[00:24:40] Unknown:
Yeah. I I, you know, I was trying to get a hold of that myself. And, did he get a website?
[00:24:47] Unknown:
I don't.
[00:24:48] Unknown:
Who, Chris? Or or he may have Somebody put up a website who said that they had the, materials from McDonald, and I you know, he wanted a thousand dollars for that library, that stuff.
[00:25:00] Unknown:
Okay. Nice.
[00:25:02] Unknown:
I couldn't pay it in those days. Yeah. Right.
[00:25:05] Unknown:
Yeah. Well, I just remember stopping by there in the you know, I've told the audience before. I've got that picture of you and Richard that you sent me together when you went by and met him. And, he had a house, and he built on a law library. And there was a big tree out there, an oak tree or something
[00:25:22] Unknown:
like that, hardwood tree. And so he built the law library around the oak tree. So Well, the house had the a big oak tree growing in it, and they built when they built that house, he rented that house. Oh, did he? Yeah. He didn't he didn't really own anything. And, he was heating his house up there with a kind of, you know, like, 50 gallon barrel, only a smaller size one. Uh-huh. That was his heater. You know? He had a wood stove there, and he had this big tree that grew up in the main part of the house. And, then he had a multilevel when we went up to see him, he had us watching videos and stuff in his TV down on that level, and you were constantly smelling smoke like you're around a campfire.
Yeah. But but his office was on another layer, like a mezzanine kinda layer where he could look down into the area. Right. And he stayed up there. And, I asked him, you know, I said, you're getting really old, Rich. Who who goo can we even go to see back up if, you die? And he said, well, there's two guys, but he never did give me the two guys, and he wanted a thousand bucks for that for that that book. Uh-huh.
[00:26:34] Unknown:
Well, Chris must have been one of them. Anyway, I just thought I'd mention that to you because you knew him. And, for the audience or one of the old timers, California state citizen guys, sir sir Richard McDonald is what we refer to him as. He's just a wonderful personality, always happy and joking and just, fun to be around and, nice guy not with us anymore, but paved the way for California folks, on state citizenship a lot. Oh, yeah. You can still see some of his videos out there. Yeah. Yeah. His videos are around. So, what else? We got any other comments from the audience? Any news breaking that I haven't been able to have keep up with? Well, there's Larry. He's got something. Hey, man.
[00:27:18] Unknown:
Hey. What was John saying? He was stopped, and he considers that a crime for being stopped.
[00:27:26] Unknown:
Yeah. In California, there's there's this case called the Sava case, and, it's the the penal code says that a police officer can only stop you if you are committing a crime or they have reason to believe you are about to commit a crime. But the Sava case was a supreme court case that said that infractions of the vehicle code cannot be considered crimes. So when a police officer stops you, you know, and they wanna go through the routine of giving you a ticket and all that kind of stuff, they've actually committed a misdemeanor.
[00:28:02] Unknown:
Have nobody technically arrested you when they pull you over? It's it's called a warrantless
[00:28:07] Unknown:
arrest. That's correct. That's what the determination was. And so that's what I put back in the affidavit and sent into the officers so that all people in the department can read this crazy letter that was sent into this this minicop. I guess she's kinda famous because they knew exactly who I was talking about when I called in to find out where to send the affidavit, and, she's kinda cute.
[00:28:33] Unknown:
Okay.
[00:28:34] Unknown:
So we're gonna see what gonna happen with that. Then I'm learning about a a demure. I don't really know much about demurering. And Yep. Well, I understand that, but there's been a situation where if when you go to traffic court, they insist that you take a plea of either guilty or not guilty or guilty with exception or explanation, and they don't wanna hear anything else. Well, if you plea at that point, you can't put in a demurrer. And demurrer allows you to say, well, even if they're right, there are conditions that are involved here that are not that mitigate the situation, and they don't kinda let you do that. So, I talked to my brother-in-law who is an attorney, who's always running me down for the state citizen stuff, all that kind of thing. You know?
And I I was able to get my material to him because I asked him, well, how do I do a demur when they're demanding that I only take a plea? I mean, how do I do that? What did you say? He was he didn't quite remember what a demur is about. He says it's never really used. The hell it's not. So I I was able to send him my stuff, and he ridiculed me really bad one time at Thanksgiving table. So I spent hours researching that stuff. You know, you're crazy and all this kind of stuff. He did that in front of the whole family.
[00:29:58] Unknown:
Yeah. Well, now ask him. Hey. Here's a good one I've come on lately.
[00:30:02] Unknown:
So now he's gotta read my affidavit and the state citizenship case law and the secretary of state affidavit because I asked him to help me demur.
[00:30:12] Unknown:
Okay. Here's a new one I've stumbled on lately, John. Who is the third if that's true, who is the thirteenth amendment written for? There wasn't a fourteenth amendment federal citizen for six months. Who was that? And it's constitutional. Who who was who was that written for?
[00:30:30] Unknown:
You mean the new thirteenth amendment?
[00:30:32] Unknown:
Yeah.
[00:30:33] Unknown:
Yeah. I don't understand
[00:30:34] Unknown:
really how they got rid of the rig of the original I don't either, but that doesn't have any bearing on what I just asked you at all. Right. That's correct. They hit it. So I knew it was a war. Oh oh, could have been? They They had to declare a war to get rid of that thirteenth amendment. Well, may have the bloody amendment. I've never studied it. I know about it.
[00:30:55] Unknown:
Hold around Spingolas. Spingola actually had the guy that has been fighting this and had wrote a book about it, about the thirteenth amendment, trying to get people to pay attention to re reinstate the thirteenth amendment because it kept lawyers out of government. Well, now Brent says that that's the,
[00:31:12] Unknown:
titles of nobility is not attorneys.
[00:31:16] Unknown:
He does. Well, what's an esquire?
[00:31:19] Unknown:
You know, I'm just telling you what Brent said. And a lot of times, he he doesn't jive with us on stuff. I mean, he's, kind of, I'm from Missouri show me guy. And even when you show him, sometimes he won't admit it. So,
[00:31:32] Unknown:
anyway but I'm just telling you Well, he lives out there by La Porte, Indiana. So, you know, that just take that into consideration. Okay. Well, I don't know anything about that. So,
[00:31:41] Unknown:
but, he doesn't make any difference. Okay? The for what we do in our purposes, okay, they swept it under the rug, whatever they did with it. They wrote this one. They let all the members of congress, even the southern legislators, back to vote on it. And, it it it's very seminal because when you really understand that, it was six months before they did a federal citizenship, so it couldn't have been written for anybody but the state citizens. And you'll look at the bottom of it. It says their jurisdictions. Where in the fourteenth, it's subject to the jurisdiction thereof, so it's plural. It had to be written for the state citizens.
What do you mean they're not the is hooey? There's no other option.
[00:32:30] Unknown:
Well, I never really noticed that. I haven't heard you talk about that before. Well, I'm just something I've stumbled on recently. Yeah. Fairly.
[00:32:39] Unknown:
That's why I tell people, look. This is a process, man. I I've been in it third more than thirty years, and I'm still figuring stuff out. So you're not gonna know anything by sitting in a couple of shows and listening to a couple of interviews. Alright? Yes. Who's wanting to say something there?
[00:32:56] Unknown:
This is Carl again. Hello, Carl. So
[00:33:00] Unknown:
just real quick on top of that, Joe Lustica did a video just recently. This in fact, I think it was just last this weekend anyways.
[00:33:10] Unknown:
It's labeled the fourteenth amendment voting and minimum contacts. And in that, he points out a, court case out of California Supreme Court. It's Van Valkenburg
[00:33:24] Unknown:
Brown Yes. For the Supreme Court of California. Yes.
[00:33:28] Unknown:
And specifically states, we, state citizens are not fourteenth amendment citizens and are Correct. Non resident aliens.
[00:33:36] Unknown:
Yeah. That was a case that was in our study book, Carl, but we never really went over it very much. But it's in the original study book that I got from John and Glenn. That was one of the cases in there. So, anyway,
[00:33:51] Unknown:
go ahead. I thought it was one of the best I need to look that case up. Me, it was one of the best videos that he's done. I mean, that Okay. I've been to Well like, five times since then,
[00:34:00] Unknown:
but pretty good.
[00:34:02] Unknown:
Okay. Thank you for alerting us to it. And audience, you can go to rumble and just front slash Right. Elastic. Yes. Yes, Boris?
[00:34:12] Unknown:
Hi, Roger. Good morning. I was, watching a a guy talking about the 14 amendments yesterday, and he showed, the congressional record of 1957 where it says the congress, opposed the fourteenth amendment, and it wasn't ratified by 24 That was, states.
[00:34:35] Unknown:
There was a guy named John Rarick that put that in the congressional record. He was a congressman from Louisiana. Yeah. I'm aware of that.
[00:34:46] Unknown:
Okay. Okay. Because he said they there is the proof that, white people cannot be, Fourteenth Amendment, citizens because,
[00:34:56] Unknown:
the Fourteenth Amendment was made just for the black slaves. Well, that that that's not correct too. Well, that's not correct either. Okay? They it wasn't just blacks, because there were whites. It was whoever that was in Washington, DC and the territories. If they were born and raised there, they were stateless.
[00:35:17] Unknown:
Whether they were black or black. Puerto Rico, Juan, Washington, DC, and
[00:35:23] Unknown:
Exactly. Yeah. And US did deny that. Yes. Right. Well, you can't tell me that everybody in all those territories in DC were were black slaves because they weren't. They were people that were that were there, born there, but they were stateless. They didn't have any state over them because the only states, quote, unquote states, were the original states in the in their jurisdictions. So that was part of the reason that they could get this through. But when they they passed the thirteenth Amendment with the legislators and let them in. And why? Why'd they do it this way? Because they wanted to be able to cast the big cast net over the states and pull the state citizens into this new federal citizenship that they were gonna propose six months later.
That's the setup. Okay? And the the what's obvious there when you're really looking at it, although it's not totally obvious, is the fact that voluntary servitude is legal by omission to one of two places in the Constitution where you've got slavery. The other is they can't impair your ability to contract. So you can give your rights away. You can contract those rights away, but it's got to be voluntary. And the thirteenth Amendment is voluntary servitude, legal by omission, and then the word there at the bottom. So it had to be for the states. Okay? Now what they did, Boris and and and and audience, is they went back then and they took the states that had been trying to secede from the union, Georgia, Alabama, etcetera, etcetera, and they kicked them out if they wouldn't ratify the fourteenth amendment. So when the fourteenth amendment came to be ratified, this is what you're talking about that Reerick's talking about there in the congressional record.
They kicked all those states out, and they wouldn't let them back in to vote unless they ratified the fourteenth amendment. So there there's a lot of ambiguity. It probably was not done, properly, but you're not gonna go back and undo a hundred and fifty years or well, hell, whatever of government being built on this. You just can't undo all that. Now Trump's trying to do it, and that's what makes what we do so important is we can do it with no problem individually. He he's gotta go through all kinds of stuff to do it, yanking agencies out and everything else. All he'd have to do is sign away the war and emergency powers act. But as even doctor Gene Schroeder said when we asked him that question, what do you think it happened if you did that? He said, well, the whole world economy would crash.
[00:38:07] Unknown:
Ron Paul said same thing. Yeah.
[00:38:10] Unknown:
So, so that's kind of the the the the rock and the hard place that you're in. But, see, that's what makes us so important is we can do this individually.
[00:38:20] Unknown:
And they didn't say anything about it. It it's interesting to note about when they talk about code of fair federal regulations and all this, stuff is set up. Nothing it's all under Congress. It's plenary power of Congress. It's not it's never been voted on by the whole government. Of course not because it was in bankruptcy. Yeah. Pelosi or whoever's speaker of the house has total control. They can do anything they want under that program. That was a big one everybody was fighting, but it really did set up the ability for us to be able to get out there and argue against it.
[00:38:54] Unknown:
It's not part of it. It's, and I hear people say, what is it in the constitution that agencies and all this stuff? You know? I mean, there's just wholesale ignorance out there on on what we've been through and how we got here. Okay? And I'm honestly, I'm kinda shocked that more people aren't aware of doctor Schroeder's, work and and his opus there, the War and Emergency Powers Act. If you're new and listening, go to the matrix docs and go to the new student section there that Paul Scott set aside for you. And in there is the, War and Emergency Powers Act with the audio cleaned up. The audio of the one on Rumble was, well, just wasn't as good as it could be. And Paul being meticulous and this being a very important, piece of work, because it sets the table for everything we do. Okay?
But if you haven't seen that, you shame on you. Hey. Unless you're new, you just didn't know about it. But it very important for your foundational understandings here. Roger, I don't think I've ever seen that either. I need to go to John, you've never seen that? No. Oh my goodness. John, please go watch that.
[00:40:07] Unknown:
You know, they're talking a lot about these, seven special forces. That'd be a big deal about going into South America, you know, down there down there and working with and and Mexico. Well, I in Mexico, I hadn't heard that they're in South America yet. I did hear you agreed to do it with Mexico. Well, I wanna clue you in. Nineteen sixty eight, when I was in airborne training, I was at down at Fort Benning, Georgia where the school of America Yeah.
[00:40:32] Unknown:
K. Columbus. Columbus.
[00:40:35] Unknown:
Yeah. So what was interesting to me is is that I had foreign officers in my airborne class. That's when I found out that we were down there training them, and then, you know, we fought down there in Colombia against the, communist.
[00:40:51] Unknown:
Yeah. And Are there Shining Path or FARC? One of the two.
[00:40:56] Unknown:
We have been, see, when I applied for special forces, what I was told when we first started that we would always carry ID. We would never be without ID because if we were, we could be tried as a spy. So we would always have military ID on us, but our job was to go in and create insurgencies. We created most of this stuff that's going on, you guys, and this business about just this big deal about seven special forces going down into Mexico. We have been in South America and Mexico Decades. Since 1968. I know for sure. I mean, I I was their part a little bit. You know? So there's a lot of crap going on, but I'm really glad that the military guys that are going in there in our government under Trump are they know what's going on,
[00:41:46] Unknown:
and they know how to fight it. Did you did you see, the speech by Homan over the weekend of CPAC? Back?
[00:41:53] Unknown:
I heard part of it. I didn't get to see the whole thing. No. Man, that guy. Whoo. Oh, I'm happy about him. I am absolutely over the top. He's tyrannosaurus
[00:42:02] Unknown:
rex, but
[00:42:05] Unknown:
It's great.
[00:42:07] Unknown:
I mean, it is. I love to see these real hawkish people in there. Now it's at the pleasure of the president. Now promises made, promises kept. No. No. No. No. No. I Things don't really bother me about the about the whole thing with the with the community here in the country is they they think that having to apply for a permit is okay. You know, if and they say I'm pro second amendment. If you are okay with CCWs, you are not pro second amendment. Yeah. That's gotta go. Well,
[00:42:37] Unknown:
you know, again, I'll voice my what is it? I don't even know what it is. Astonishment. I'm just astonished that we don't have the whole gun community right on every one of those platforms Paul named out. Well, don't you remember? I think you got
[00:42:54] Unknown:
the guy from, gun owners of American Oh, yeah. That he's on a show. Oh, yeah. I remember. With Brent. I remember. And they're still pushing all this, you
[00:43:03] Unknown:
know Well, and and again, this these guys have made a business out of this. And this disrupts that business. See? And I don't know how much in that involved that is, but
[00:43:16] Unknown:
same with, with David Strait and Ann Von Wright. They've been Well, the cancer society. You know, cancer society. They were never gonna cure cancer because it's too big.
[00:43:25] Unknown:
That's the Rockefeller family business. That's how they got started.
[00:43:29] Unknown:
Yeah. But,
[00:43:31] Unknown:
go when you go watch, Gene Schroeder's now he has all the exhibits in there and everything, John. Eighty seven or eight 80 or 90 of them. And, on what happened. And there was nine people researching that. It wasn't just doctor Jean. He was just a spokesman. He's a researcher too, but there's other folks that did that. And if you're watching it, when you get around March, and the first thing after that was they were gonna require licenses in agriculture. And that's how you know the system changed right there.
[00:44:07] Unknown:
Mhmm.
[00:44:10] Unknown:
But I'm anxious to talk to doctor Jean. I told Joe if he speaks with him again to see because he told us we when we excuse me. When we spoke in December that, after the twentieth, we could possibly get together again, and it's been a month past that. And, I'd love to hear doctor Jean. So I'm sure he's ecstatic too, about what's going on and what's happening. Nice guy, though. Anyway, hopefully, but you that's something any of you, if you've not watched that yet, you it it almost should be mandatory viewing, really, for our Yeah. I'm gonna go do it right after the show. It's it's just now remember that was done thirty years ago. Thirty years ago back in about 1994.
Unbelievable. Now here, remember recently when the law fair was going on with Trump? And and one of the comments I heard he makes it, they're trying to charge me with some 1917 espionage legislation. That's what it is. The War Powers Act. So it's even come up lately with Trump. But all that'll be in there when you watch it. You'll see it all, and, it's just astonishing. And for the people maybe haven't seen this, just to give you a little a little tip the edge up just a little bit for you, but 1917 legislation, the trading with the enemies act, the Germans were named as the enemies.
And all they did when they bankrupted the country in '33, John, was they brought that legislation forward, and they took out Germans, and they put in citizens of The United States.
[00:45:56] Unknown:
Yeah. We are the enemy.
[00:45:58] Unknown:
Yep. So, but, highly recommended folks for your understanding for your understanding. And, of course, as I always tell you, your your freedom is directly correlated to how well you understand this information and how well you can implement it, such as teaching others, defending your position if challenged, the those types of things. That's why it's it's just so important. If you don't understand the information, there are no way in hell you're gonna defend your position if it's challenged. Just like John with this, traffic thing.
[00:46:36] Unknown:
K?
[00:46:38] Unknown:
And they can't say no. Well, they can. They're the we we've seen an example or two of some of these bimbos like the magistrate in Irondale, Alabama there with, Mike.
[00:46:49] Unknown:
But, well, you know,
[00:46:51] Unknown:
if if they go if they go against me, I I'm just gonna start if I'm gonna submit this part of that case somehow, the stuff that Wahlberger put over there in Fam Guardian Yeah. And why you are a, national and not a citizen in The United States. Okay. About 600 pages in full. Nothing but case law. Oh my god. Okay. And it's free. I used to pass that out to people, but nobody That's Josh. Josh did that? Yeah. Listen. I am so impressed with that. How did he even do that?
[00:47:22] Unknown:
I still don't know how he's done all this stuff. He's a driven man. He told me one time because we've got a personal relationship. We speak occasionally. And he had lost Los Angeles or California came after him to try and shut the those websites down. He defended himself in court and won. Well, he's quite the he's quite dedicated. He's got two sites. So one is FamGuardian, Fam Guard Guardian
[00:47:48] Unknown:
Org. Fam Guardian. Yeah. And then the other one is sesedm.org? S e d e d m. Yeah. And you gotta have you ever read his contract to join?
[00:47:57] Unknown:
No.
[00:48:01] Unknown:
Oh, man. It's little tiny print and all kinds of stuff.
[00:48:04] Unknown:
Yeah. Ma'am, yeah, he likes to write. I like to talk. You know? So, But it's a hell of a resource, Raj. I mean, he's got stuff on there. Well, I'm I'm not cutting him down or putting him down at all. No. I know that. For those people that like to read and go through all that stuff, it's a tremendous resource over there. Hopefully, we won't have to use too much of this stuff anymore with Trump in. I'm I'm pretty excited about when we get some new folks, going through the process and because now we could well, look. We could CC Bondi, a attorney general, Kash Patel, FBI director.
There you know, there's some some pretty good people you could copy this on now up there. Yeah. No kidding.
[00:48:52] Unknown:
Well, anyway, if they wanna challenge my status, I've got that whole tome that he wrote on status Okay. That you can put into the court case. Nobody's ever done that yet, but I will Okay. If I need to.
[00:49:05] Unknown:
Well, it's, I keep you out of court. It's what we try and do. What was that? Who's that again? From California.
[00:49:16] Unknown:
Hey, Chris. There's Chris, John. Hey. Chris right there. Yeah. Chris, where are you where are you?
[00:49:22] Unknown:
California. Northern northern, Los Angeles County.
[00:49:27] Unknown:
Oh, good. You know? Because I'm in Pasadena every Sunday. I'd like to meet you. Oh, really? I'm in Riverside.
[00:49:35] Unknown:
Yeah. I'm in Riverside a lot too.
[00:49:38] Unknown:
Great. Well, we need to get together.
[00:49:40] Unknown:
It's a little but, yeah. What was that what was that movie or documentary to watch? I didn't catch that.
[00:49:48] Unknown:
Oh, you haven't seen the war on emergency powers by doctor Gene Schroeder? Have you ever seen that, Chris?
[00:49:55] Unknown:
Hello. We're getting terrible up here. I'm gonna cut the phone and call back to you.
[00:50:01] Unknown:
Hold it. I'm not understanding you. Are you, understanding me?
[00:50:07] Unknown:
He was kinda garbled.
[00:50:09] Unknown:
Yeah. I I know. He always got a weak phone. Chris, what what
[00:50:14] Unknown:
I think he's calling back in. Okay. Probably so.
[00:50:18] Unknown:
Anyway, we'll wait for him to get back through. Yeah. He's always a little soft. Okay. Your back is better. Yeah. Over in the new student section on the web page, there is, is called the award emergency powers act. It's by doctor Gene Schroeder. Although there was about nine researchers on his team. Have you never seen that before?
[00:50:41] Unknown:
No. I saw that. I saw I saw I saw that. I got it. Okay. Yeah. I think
[00:50:46] Unknown:
Yeah. Yes. Well, it's a it's a masterpiece and, Doctor Schroeder is still with us.
[00:50:52] Unknown:
Oh, fantastic. Fantastic. And now who's the guy with the, I heard the Sam Guardian and Saddam and Status?
[00:51:00] Unknown:
His name is
[00:51:02] Unknown:
go ahead, John. Yeah. I'm John Kasarab. My number is let me give you my phone number. (951) 790-9866.
[00:51:14] Unknown:
Yeah. Call me. Let's let's get Yeah. It's up at the it's up at the top of the website there in the, EyeTerra box too, his phone number. For the wand. If you didn't get it. Yeah. For the wand.
[00:51:24] Unknown:
And And next week, we're gonna have to do some, wand stuff.
[00:51:30] Unknown:
Yeah. We hadn't done much of that here in a bit. And for the people, that are new, it's just a well, it's just a miracle little, frequency device that, Chinese guy came up with and isolated some frequencies from the terahertz band that is the healing band of the sun and, and has configured them in a little hairdryer type device that's very inexpensive and just really works. Okay? A lot of people have seen, I mean, miraculous things with this. We've been messing with it for about two and a half or three years, I guess. And, we'll give some testimonials and stuff in here one of these Mondays.
We used to devote all that. And then with Trump and everything, we just kinda with John, we've talked about political stuff and this, that, and the other. We'll come back in with some of these testimonials one day. But if you haven't if you're new and you haven't heard about that, it's something you might wanna look into.
[00:52:32] Unknown:
Yeah. And then I wanna tell you about, something called fix. You know, you combine the wand with fix, and, man, what you have got an incredible, incredible heat healing thing and What is fix? Wrecking your body. What is fix? Fix is a, called a bitter acid. It's a component of the hops plant, the flower, the big meal. Alright. And, anyway, what it does is is it actually activates through the vagus nerve system a thermogenesis of a visceral fat, but it doesn't affect your muscles or or other parts of the body. It's not. Some people talk about it like a weight loss thing, but it's not really a weight loss thing. It's getting rid of that brown fat that causes a lot of problems in your body. And you don't have to change your diet. You don't have to do anything. Now, you know, I'm, what, 76, and, unfortunately, you know, I in financial business, I I never met a donut I didn't like, you know, so I developed this little pouch down there. It didn't wanna go away, and, I've been doing exercises and things to try to get rid of that for a long time and never succeeded. But I'm using Fix, and now I've been on it since, I don't know, for three, four months now and or more than that probably.
But I'm not one of the guys that right out of the box when they started taking it had incredible results. I'm one of those guys that you I had to be on it for a while before it started working, but I'm noticing that that that fat area down there is slowly disappearing. Wow. And all you you just drop this stuff in your water. You put it in your booze if you want booze. Doesn't matter what you put it in. It's an incredible product.
[00:54:16] Unknown:
Did I tell you what this one sorry Ecuadorian did?
[00:54:21] Unknown:
No. You didn't.
[00:54:22] Unknown:
He bought the damn Krispy Kreme franchise and brought it down here.
[00:54:30] Unknown:
Oh my god.
[00:54:31] Unknown:
If I could get my hands on him, I'd beat him.
[00:54:37] Unknown:
I'm and now people are lined up outside. Right?
[00:54:41] Unknown:
Well, I am on some days. Yeah. Yeah. Right. Well, it's just such a delight to have a have that flavor come back after all these years because,
[00:54:53] Unknown:
oh, I hadn't been around a Krispy Kreme in a long time. So, anyway, that's, Well, they kinda disappeared here. They're not really around here much anymore. Is that right? Yeah. Oh, okay. They had a lot of financial problems and some internal stuff and
[00:55:06] Unknown:
I don't know where they went. Yeah. I don't need well, they might have come down here. You know what amazes me? And I anywhere on the continent I've been, it's the same thing. The success of Kentucky fried chicken Yeah. Stunning. Kentucky fried chicken. See one of their outlets without 10 or 15 people lined up at it.
[00:55:26] Unknown:
Well, they don't wanna pluck the I mean, the the the feathers, so they'd rather go buy it.
[00:55:32] Unknown:
I guess. You mean, do you remember that quote from the Supreme Court on taxation? My friend Ron Brown dug it up when he was fighting him, and it said, taxation the art of taxation is like plucking a goose. Have you heard that, John? No. What? The art of taxation is like plucking a goose. The object is to get the most amount of feathers with the least amount of hiss.
[00:56:02] Unknown:
Mhmm. Of course, you're usually dead when you're plucking them.
[00:56:07] Unknown:
Well, maybe,
[00:56:10] Unknown:
but let's, let's never let let facts stand in the way of a good anecdote.
[00:56:16] Unknown:
Oh, okay.
[00:56:17] Unknown:
Hey. He was a Supreme court judge that wrote that. Give him a little slack. Right.
[00:56:23] Unknown:
Okay. Well, he was challenged to begin with. Okay. Yeah. Alright. Yeah. Yeah. Yeah.
[00:56:30] Unknown:
Let's see what else. We got a couple of minutes. Yes. Hello. Hello there.
[00:56:35] Unknown:
Yeah. My son used to work for Kentucky fried chicken. Yeah. And I used to eat there occasionally until he told me what their secret ingredient was in the coleslaw. It's large.
[00:56:54] Unknown:
It is large in the coleslaw.
[00:56:56] Unknown:
Is that right? But lard is lard is good for you.
[00:57:00] Unknown:
Yeah. Large. Large, tallow?
[00:57:03] Unknown:
Yeah.
[00:57:04] Unknown:
No. I had Well, it depends on on what the animals fed. It depends on what they feed the animal, but lard and tallow, they're good for you. It bet better what I don't eat any I don't eat anything from pigs.
[00:57:17] Unknown:
Okay. Well, that's fair.
[00:57:21] Unknown:
Jello is, I think, from beef, though. Right? Beef beef. Yeah. You know, I I've always said that Kentucky fried chicken had the best coleslaw otherwise around. Better than we made at home.
[00:57:34] Unknown:
I know you made it That's not too.
[00:57:36] Unknown:
Yeah.
[00:57:37] Unknown:
I don't eat it anymore. I
[00:57:40] Unknown:
make it work as I can get my hands on, man. Baby back ribs all the way.
[00:57:45] Unknown:
Oh. Oh
[00:57:47] Unknown:
god. Oh, make me hungry. One of my childhood friends one of my childhood friends had a, strange reaction to KFC coleslaw. It basically made him kinda stoned. Stoned? And we could never figure it out. We could never figure out why. There was something with his biology that reacted to the coleslaw, and the dude just he was higher than a frigging kite. Wow. His mom brought home KFC on a day that he was gonna go for a job interview. And so he ate the the chicken and the coleslaw, and then he went for the job interview, and obviously, he didn't get the job. Damn. What is their stoner doing showing up at my garage? Yeah. Wow. It was funny.
[00:58:34] Unknown:
Don't know too much about that. Hey. Attention?
[00:58:40] Unknown:
Attention. How about you? Banging the gavel there. Yeah. Front
[00:58:45] Unknown:
front. Hi. That is my gavel. Go on and Yes. Well, we are enjoying it. On the on the lard. On the lard. You know, Doc Wallach was at a conference one day, and, this lady said her dad was a hundred and 10 years old. And and he said, wow. That's awesome. What did he like to eat? Lard sandwiches.
[00:59:10] Unknown:
Oh my god.
[00:59:12] Unknown:
That's what he lived on. Lard sandwiches. 10 year old black guy.
[00:59:18] Unknown:
Nice.
[00:59:20] Unknown:
Okay. I hope you had some collard greens with those, Dave. I hear the whistler in the background. That means Paul front and center and bid our Chicago ice. I do, por favor.
[00:59:32] Unknown:
Yeah. If he did have collard greens, they were probably sauteed in lard. One zero six point nine WBOU FM Chicago. Thank you so much for joining us for the first hour. Please do follow us into the second hour by going to eurofolkradio.com, radio Global voice radio Net, or you just go to the matrixstocks.com. You'll find those links there as well as the free conference call link. You can join us live on the show. Thanks for joining us. One zero six point nine WBOU FM, the bolts of Chicago.
[01:00:05] Unknown:
Bye. Bye. You really got a terrible mayor and governor. We feel sorry for you. Well,
[01:00:14] Unknown:
the gruesome Newsom's gone. I don't think he's gonna survive anymore.
[01:00:18] Unknown:
Why? What are you saying that for?
[01:00:21] Unknown:
Well, everybody's turning against him. Good. The guy's a freaking idiot. You know? He's part of the Pelosi
[01:00:30] Unknown:
mania. Oh, he's her, yeah, he's her nephew. Yeah.
[01:00:33] Unknown:
I mean, he's so sickening to watch. It's just If he's seen his head that little lately, his head's bobbing around, bobbing and weaving like he's fighting Mike Tyson or something. I don't know if you noticed that. Next time he's just gonna interview you. Watching the way he uses his arms and his hands
[01:00:50] Unknown:
is there's something wrong there.
[01:00:52] Unknown:
Yeah. Yeah. Well, hopefully, y'all get rid of him.
[01:00:56] Unknown:
No. It's not like a Parkinson's thing. It's just that he tries to overemphasize using his arms and hands, and he's he's just blabbering. It's just just disgusting.
[01:01:05] Unknown:
Accentuating his lies.
[01:01:09] Unknown:
It's just horrible.
[01:01:12] Unknown:
Anyway,
[01:01:13] Unknown:
John, you gonna hang around? Work? No. No. No. I gotta I I gotta get busy. Okay. You don't need me all this time. You know, I I once a week is about all you can take of me. We enjoy
[01:01:25] Unknown:
having a little social intercourse here with you on the show. And Yeah. I like being an old time listener and all that. You always got something to add. So, like Paul, you're welcome anytime. I know you I'm still learning. I know you're lurking. Well, hell, we're all learning. Yeah. Still learning. I though. We want we want we wanna get this I wanna get this exposed to the Trump team somehow. Now I don't know that you know, we got a a listener, William, who's from Augusta, Disgusta, and, has a, private flight business. There he flies big wigs around.
And he told us that, he said, I I take people to Mar A Lago, and this is being talked about at Mar A Lago. Now I don't know how much further that goes. All I know is that's what he told me. K. That's fantastic. He's the one who was flying a magistrate judge around, and he started telling him all this stuff. And he starts using my questions on it. He said, do do you know the legal concept behind the word person? No. So, and an attorney friend of his, which I thought was funny. And the attorney said, have you done this? I'd be scared to death to do this. Well, these are the people that don't understand this is your choice. Yeah. They they've just been conditioned right into being a surf, and,
[01:02:51] Unknown:
well, they like it, probably. Like an elephant who's chained by a little chain. Take the chain. He still doesn't leave. That's exactly correct, John. Thank you for the analogy.
[01:03:01] Unknown:
Because he doesn't know he can.
[01:03:03] Unknown:
Yeah. That's right. Well, I freed a thousand slaves, and I could have freed thousands more if they only knew they were slaves.
[01:03:18] Unknown:
Yeah. That little document that you put together that that we collaborated
[01:03:22] Unknown:
on Yes. And stuff, that's still powerful. Still powerful. Yeah. And for those who don't know what we're talking about, how to escape the matrix, we thought when, Biden stole the election and everybody got their ox gored the same day that people would be more receptive. So we, took and wrote out two basic how to escape the matrix. I think there's two or one. And that's a very good handout too, by the way. And, I mean, a lot of people slaved over that for hours to get that that, verbiage correct and succinct where we could get it onto two pieces of paper. So there's another tool for you. Forget about that.
[01:04:03] Unknown:
But I was thinking about the other day, John, so I'm glad you brought it up and we got a chance to mention it. Well, you know, I haven't had a class because people can't get anybody to sit down anymore. They're not scared anymore. They they just think this is all gonna go away and they Well Yeah. You know? That's the danger when a conservative
[01:04:21] Unknown:
gets in. We've dealt with it before, and all of a sudden, the heat's off and you let your breath out and go back to doing what you were doing before, but we can't do that this time. And and and besides, we gotta keep pushing what we're doing because we can do more than Trump can do really on an individual basis. Right.
[01:04:40] Unknown:
It's called patriotic disarmament.
[01:04:43] Unknown:
Yep. There you go.
[01:04:44] Unknown:
So I haven't heard that term before. Oh, I don't have any either.
[01:04:49] Unknown:
But Oh, maybe I just got a new phrase. Hey, John. John, be sure and catch us next week because Roger's bringing Krispy Kreme donuts to the show.
[01:04:59] Unknown:
Hey.
[01:05:01] Unknown:
I don't think I can get him through the microphone. Larry, were you trying to say something?
[01:05:07] Unknown:
Yeah. Just one more quick question for John before he goes. When did this traffic citation when was it issued, and was this right before or after he put his local notices out?
[01:05:21] Unknown:
You know, see, that's something else that I've done. I've been doing this for a long time. The first paperwork I filed was in 2013, and then I we sent it to the Internal Revenue Service. We didn't actually send it to secretary of state and you know? So in the meantime, I had got busy and stuff. So it was in October, I think, when I got the ticket. And I always have all these things going on, and I don't ever get everything done in time. And, you know, so I I got it out kinda late here. So, anyway, it you know, one thing at a time. So that's about as close as I can tell you. I'd have to go find paperwork. Yeah. John's got some complications
[01:06:05] Unknown:
he's been dealing with for a few years. So
[01:06:09] Unknown:
Anyway
[01:06:09] Unknown:
Yep.
[01:06:11] Unknown:
Alright. I'll see you guys. John, always a pleasure, buddy. I'll be lurking. Alright. Well, have a good day and a good week.
[01:06:18] Unknown:
Yeah. You too. Thank you.
[01:06:21] Unknown:
Alright. So now now who wants to come forward with something and discuss? Nobody? We don't have any of our little engines out there with questions or comments. Okay. There's one. It's right there. Yes, sir. That's Samuel, I think.
[01:06:41] Unknown:
Yeah.
[01:06:42] Unknown:
I just wanted to reiterate that this bankruptcy business really starts with Lincoln in 1863 along with the first paper currency. He did, he had the first Treasury Comptroller, Samuel P. Chase came in and was the guy who suggested the greenback. They raised billions in today's currency in T bills and bonds. They did all kinds of things to put this country in debt and that debt wasn't paid off until some of it until the nineties.
[01:07:23] Unknown:
I thought that they turned down the Rothschilds offer on bonds.
[01:07:29] Unknown:
I think they created their own systems completely. There was no national banking system at the time, and they created a whole new they we went from a time of state banks almost completely to this new banking system that Chase brought in.
[01:07:46] Unknown:
Uh-huh. But I don't believe there were bonds involved in that. To mine, I read an article down years ago, long article, on the guy that exposed all the greenback theory to Lincoln. He was a guy from Illinois or something, and that that that was where he got it. Chase might have had it too. I don't know. But, in the greenback system, you don't have to have any backing like bonds because you spend it into circulation and tax out what you spend in, and there's no excess for speculation, and it just acts as a medium of exchange. Now, obviously, with the feds and the greenbacks, and probably the Confederates too, is they didn't tax out what they spent in the circulation, and there was, there there was an equilibrium
[01:08:36] Unknown:
there. My understanding, Sam. Something I never I never understood either is that Lincoln is such a pivotal person in all of this corruption. I mean, according to this article here, he worked with a guy by the name of Jay Cook and Company to successfully manage the sale of $500,000,000 or $11,900,000,000 today in government war bonds known as 5 twenties in 1862.
[01:09:05] Unknown:
Okay. Well, that may be true, and I've just never been exposed to that before, Samuel.
[01:09:10] Unknown:
Yeah. Well, I wasn't either until, you know, the there's a history in the book of the hundreds that that started my query into this. We didn't have a comp controller of the Treasury until Lincoln. We didn't have, I mean, he realized that within a year of starting the war that they weren't making enough money at the federal government in order to support that war and they had to start figuring out ways to raise the money from different people and, this is what they did. So it all goes back to this guy, Samuel Samuel Chase is Pete Chase is he was the ultimate politician. I mean, he served in all three branches of government.
There were new offices created for him by Lincoln. He was, appointed to be head of the, Supreme Court by Lincoln. This guy got around. Yeah. Senator and I think governor of, Ohio, etcetera.
[01:10:22] Unknown:
I think he started a bank called Chase Manhattan too.
[01:10:28] Unknown:
I don't know about that. Whether that's the same Chase family or not.
[01:10:32] Unknown:
I'm virtually certain it is, but I don't know for sure. Just speculation. Yeah. Well, there's a good book on Lincoln by, Tom. Oh, and I can't think of the guy's name. I just heard him so he mentioned the other day. The real Lincoln, I believe, is the name of the book. It's not very flattering to mister Lincoln, I don't believe. Tom DeLongeurio or something like that. Written a bunch of books. Very conservative guy. Very debatable figure in history, isn't he, Samuel?
[01:11:09] Unknown:
Well, yeah. In the book of the hundreds, they pretty much make him out to be a, an atheist, a denier of Jesus Christ to his friends. He had a little book that he wrote according to some of his closest associates that said, you need to burn that because if the public ever finds finds out about your stance on Christianity, you won't be elected dog catcher. So one of his friends actually burned the book.
[01:11:38] Unknown:
Really? That's the first I've ever heard that. Yeah. Well, I know his wife was kind of a, yeah, well, some people say that. I don't know about that particularly, Joan. A, his wife was a wacko.
[01:11:55] Unknown:
No. His real love was, I guess, Anne Rutledge, and he never really recovered from that whole scene according to some of the personal accounts of his life and then, the death of his son and stuff. Right. He was a troubled troubled man all the way around.
[01:12:14] Unknown:
Well, you know, there's still a statue of him over in Westminster, don't you?
[01:12:20] Unknown:
Yep.
[01:12:22] Unknown:
Sure is. I don't know, Joan, about all that. He's a Jew. She's a Jew. Trump's a Jew. All that. I think a lot of that is probably not what it is, but whatever.
[01:12:39] Unknown:
Lincoln's mother was a Jew.
[01:12:41] Unknown:
Lincoln's mother was a Jew. How where's your source on that, Joan?
[01:12:47] Unknown:
Well, I mean, I found out so long as I don't like I don't know. Two years ago, I don't, I don't remember sources. I just remember facts. Thank you. Yeah. Well, okay.
[01:13:00] Unknown:
I don't know if she was or not. I know his father died when he was very young, and I think his mother died too. Mother died first, and then his father took off and left him straight him and his sister or something in that cabin for a long time by themselves to fend for themselves and stuff. So he didn't have exactly an ordinary upbringing.
[01:13:24] Unknown:
Roger?
[01:13:25] Unknown:
Yes. Larry.
[01:13:28] Unknown:
Yeah. Samuel mentioned that the, under Lincoln, the, income tax went to fund the government. When does Samuel this is a question for Samuel. When does he think that the transition occurred when the funding went from the government to the bondholders. And then a question for you, Roger,
[01:13:51] Unknown:
is if, hypothetically,
[01:13:53] Unknown:
if the IRS is abolished like the rumors are out there with Trump, who will pay the bondholders? Like, what will happen to that whole He'll take well,
[01:14:04] Unknown:
well, I'll give you a okay. Well, I can answer your question while, they're noodling on that one, your other one. Samuel is. He's going to remember they said they're gonna take the savings from that they've gotten from Doge and potentially give, Americans back a rebate? $5,000 if you've been paying taxes, I believe. Well, that was they were gonna use 20% of everything they saved for that, and then they were gonna use part of that to pay down the debt. And from then on out, if they switch over from IRS to tariffs, other foreign countries will be paying the debt.
They'll pay it with their tariffs. You know, there was a and I from 1817 1870 to 1913, we totally survived on tariffs. Did you know that, Larry?
[01:15:11] Unknown:
I didn't know that.
[01:15:14] Unknown:
There was a cartoon. If you ever see there was a book years ago by a guy named Boston Tea Party, called Goodbye April 15. Have you ever seen that, Larry? The book on IRS or tax. Repeat
[01:15:28] Unknown:
those dates again that we survived
[01:15:30] Unknown:
I'm going I'm going to 1870 to 1913 when the Federal Reserve was voted in. And in that book by Boston Tea Party, there was a cartoon that was reproduced from about 1875 or something. And it showed the the senate and the well of the senate. And in the bottom, the the senate well was full of alligators. And the caption was that we're making so much money off tariffs, Larry, that they thought it was gonna corrupt the senate. Tariffs work. And what did you say?
[01:16:15] Unknown:
Excise taxes work to excise taxes.
[01:16:21] Unknown:
Well, excise taxes are internal, generally. The these are imposed in ex oh, excise. That's, Yeah. Well, I guess it's come going out. You know, one of them's coming in, the other's going out. Boris, what did you have?
[01:16:43] Unknown:
Yeah. Right. But if they put the tariffs, we're gonna end up paying more for the product. And Only only initially.
[01:16:51] Unknown:
Only initially. Because then the reaction is exactly what's going on with Apple. To avoid the tariffs, companies move their manufacturing back. That's what Trump's trying to accomplish. Okay? So, yeah. I'm a ask you, Trump, I heard his speech because tariffs are my favorite word. It's my favorite word in the whole lexicon. He was saying that to one of the hell, you can't turn the anything on without Trump Trump giving a press conference about something.
[01:17:29] Unknown:
So it's quite cheap. Thinks it's gonna get all those jobs when they bring all that manufacturing back the, HB Visa holders?
[01:17:38] Unknown:
I don't know. I don't know. I hope not. I hope that they got some precautions built into that ahead of time, you know. These guys are not dumb. So let's hope that doesn't happen. And the problem with the h one b thing is the Indians are so slick. They've got Indians that have been in corporate America, and they get out, and then they start going back and recruiting from India people to bring in and put them in corporations. But the problem is India is so slapshod that you don't know when they give you academic results or anything else if that school even exists.
They're they're they're so scandalous. I heard Trump say
[01:18:23] Unknown:
I heard Trump say before the election, at least three times, he wants to bring a lot a lot a lot of people here to America.
[01:18:33] Unknown:
Highly skilled ones, Dave. Highly skilled. He's getting ready. He's kicking he's kicking people out of the country. He wants to bring in skilled people that we probably need because they've f ed up the school so bad over the couple of last decades? I mean, did you hear what we talked about the other day? 21% of the people this is in a survey, national survey, by some operation two weeks ago. 21% of the people in The United States are illiterate, can't read or write, and fifty three percent can't do it above a sixth grade level. Fifty three percent of the people in the country, Dave.
I mean, did that mean something? Who's saying something?
[01:19:29] Unknown:
It was Samuel. I I think what Lincoln did is he only really taxed the federal employees.
[01:19:35] Unknown:
That's the only ones you can tax.
[01:19:38] Unknown:
But he created this National Banking Act, and that's the thing that really changed everything. It you know, the article I have here is is trying to put the best lipstick on this ticket can, so take it with a little grain of salt, but it it was passed 02/25/1863 and all allowed for the creation of national banks that could issue national bank notes backed by US Treasury. These notes were printed by the government and their quantity was proportional to the bank's level of capital deposits with the comptroller of the currency of the Treasury.
So they would they and they were trying to create national banking charters for these treasuries, so they were taxing the local banks for being local banks so that they would force them into national charters. I I mean, the whole thing was from top down and trying to create this system of banking where they could float these treasuries and bonds and T bills and everything and make some money to kill people. So
[01:21:01] Unknown:
Well, it makes some money to support a war that shouldn't ever been fought and was instigated, I think, to bring in what we're dealing with today. And, yeah, it's an ugly part of the history, man, and still people don't understand it. I just by the grace of God that we know this and one too many years ago, all of a sudden, one day I went, holy smokes. This has to be the reason they fought the civil war to get this system in so they could control the world a hundred years later with it. It was exactly what they've been doing. These people are really bright, folks.
They're very bright. They're very cunning. They're very deceptive, and they had to have help to set this one up, my my opinion. I don't think mere mortal man could have come up with this, but regardless, they're very, very evil people, and they're very sharp. They're very slick. So, we beat them though, didn't we? I'm sure they never figured anybody's gonna get this. I don't believe what is evidenced by, colonel House's statement to Wilson there. It's on the website, He says, well, if one or two people figured out, we've got plausible deniability. No. Colonel House, long dead and gone.
No. You don't. There ain't no more plausible deniability. You're getting exposed on every corner at every vector and wait till this comes out because it will come out eventually. Yes. Is that you, Tom?
[01:22:42] Unknown:
No. George on Idaho.
[01:22:44] Unknown:
Hey, George.
[01:22:47] Unknown:
Hey, we're getting some nice weather up here, 50s and sunny.
[01:22:50] Unknown:
Nice. Congratulations.
[01:22:55] Unknown:
Golf courses will be green soon. But on the Lincoln thing, another perspective on this whole thing and I come out totally the same as just upturning the whole union. Is it something we can use? You look at the Declaration of Independence, which kind of set up the trust of our sacred honor as it ends. And then Lincoln comes in with his band and does the second trust or at least the second trust, which was the Gettysburg Address, consecrated blood. And, I guess, there was a fellow who died recently at a Spokane or I forget his name, Van Dyke.
He actually erased, either yeah. The Gettysburg address, I believe, he laid it out as, comparative to the lord's prayer and also Psalm 23, which I'd never heard about before. There's a document that, I saw on a that Boris Ericsson did that showed that, but I haven't seen that document. But, if Lincoln set up this thing with the whole cadre, and then we've been under military rule since then, and the fellow was talking about special forces before and then, you know, Pax Americana around the world, and the military is in charge of enforcing the trust. So if the trust is there, it's been set up and this fourteenth amendment thing where you can't question the debt and all that, how can we flip that? You know, they flipped it on us.
[01:24:35] Unknown:
Move filing filing an affidavit Common law question. Now well, you file an affidavit and flip it on them.
[01:24:42] Unknown:
Sure. Sure. But how can we retire this debt besides, you know, gold and all that jazz? I'm gonna yield here because I got I I if we
[01:24:51] Unknown:
if we can get enough exposure,
[01:24:53] Unknown:
the the debt is probably, for the most part, gone because it's all based on fraud. But you gotta get it to somebody's attention at a high level before that could be pursued. But none of it should be there. It's all fraud in the first place. They never told you you were going into servitude when you answered those questions. That's all fraud and, layers underneath it. But I don't like hearing I I I I just don't know where this trust thing is coming from. You know, how does it fit into the fourteenth amendment?
[01:25:30] Unknown:
Well, I would I would say that if we this is what has been these are court cases, so we're gonna get a get a little granular here. But the idea is that that the thing that we do is and Samuel mentioned the other day is we make sure the secretary of state knows who we are. Right? And knows about our status. But we have to. Actually you could actually send in your birth certificate and name the attorney general of your state, say, and your and the secretary of state. Let them deal with the trust. Say these court cases are all just banking cases. Right? And they're just they're not real true common law crimes.
And here we're trying to get, like, a common law jurisdiction in the court and all that. But what if we have this tool that we can send in and make the attorney general, make them, nave how do they when you add somebody to the to a case, I forget what that's called, you, you co join them or you join them joinder. Uh-huh. And, anyway, this is, I did that once when, I filed a counterclaim, I believe, in Massachusetts, and I named the Department of Revenue as a party to the marriage license, the party of my marriage, and I was on you know, I said I that was fraudulent. I wasn't aware of that, blah blah blah. But it was it was a private case. It wasn't like a a cops giving you a ticket or something like that.
But this is pretty powerful stuff, I think, as we defend ourselves as nationals. And I think we should we should spend time investigating whether it's not on the you know, not for newbies or whatever. That's fine. The other thing I was just learning about was we can actually ask a officer if we get stopped, and it kinda relates to what we're talking about. We can say, are you registered or do you have a certificate as a peace officer? And evidently, many of those don't, and they're just pirates then. And I never heard about this before. 62 years old. Right? Just learning this. And, I don't know if anybody has tried that or brought that into a case by not yield.
[01:27:28] Unknown:
No. Not to my knowledge. But I when I finally figured out what was going on here, I've never been one to try and go back and trace this k vest AQ and put my bills in it. I was so happy to be severed from the jurisdiction of these bastards that I let them keep that $5,000 they stole at my house closing, that they sent me a letter and said we took 5,000 extra for taxes we think you're gonna owe in the future. I could have gone to court and gotten that back, I'm sure. But I was so glad to be rid of the bastards. I just wanted to go on about my life. Now you make your own decisions on how you wanna deal with that, but that's my feelings on it.
So and you're not gonna get any lump sum back from Social Security and all this other Patriot stuff that's floated around for so many years that still floats around. K? Who else has got something to add today? Please? It's about thirty minutes left. Yeah. I hear you. Well, that sounds like Thomas. So glad I'm Tom glad you called Thomas because I wanna be able to go back. I meant to do it on Saturday and go over the situation that you presented us with last week where we may get some satisfaction out of that. What do you got on your mind today? I'll come back and revisit that when we're finished.
[01:29:13] Unknown:
Just the business of abolishing our income tax. They actually have already done it over in Europe because I was over there a number of years ago. We were actually living there for a while and in Portugal, I believe we were paying a 17% VAT tax on everything. And that's a bit high. And I think in Spain in some places some people complained of it being as high as 23%.
[01:29:43] Unknown:
But anyway
[01:29:44] Unknown:
it was just at the cash register, you know, they collect it from everybody.
[01:29:50] Unknown:
Yeah. And
[01:29:51] Unknown:
they don't have the problem in Europe of chasing people around for income tax. They just get it for anything you buy. That's right. You pay us certain amount. And in this country here if we did it right, if we could do it right and we got rid of the incredible the amount of money being spent federally, all the federal money being spent. I remember years ago a guy and I can't remember much about who he was, but he was some kind of a comptroller. He was like the equivalent of that Walter Burien fellow. And I think he was ex military. And he kind of calculated that if we could actually get rid of all the dead wood in the federal government spending, we probably could run this country on about a 3% VAT to take care of all federal expenses.
And that combined with like your state, we pay a county state, but we have the county tax here, of like 7%. So we'd be paying where I live about say 10%, maybe as high as 15% of everything you spend would be taken care of. And it seems to me that that would be the most logical simple solution to it all. And it's already exists. It's not like it's something we'd like to do. They were already doing it in, in Europe.
[01:31:10] Unknown:
Yes. They're doing it down here too. And I was in Germany A Number Of Years ago, seven years ago, I think, and bought some things when I was there and had to pay the VAT tax. But then when I went to leave at the airport, you can go show your receipts, and they have some other paperwork you get from the store. And you get that refunded on the way out the door if you're not a in the EU. The other problem with the VAT tax, Thomas?
[01:31:38] Unknown:
Well, they've probably jacked it up to 25 or 30%.
[01:31:42] Unknown:
Well, no. The fact that you don't know where it's coming from because it's added at each stage of the process, and you never can transparently go back and identify how much and what stage. So you just kinda gotta accept. We're 12 here. And, they have an income tax on top of it, but I guess it's just for high earners. Yes. Their their their taxing division is called SRI. It's exactly the opposite of IRS.
[01:32:13] Unknown:
Right. Well, my my experience is my experience is that in places where they try to impose income tax like Italy and Spain and you name it, They have a hard time. The people are so resistant to it. It's like trying to catch all the rats and they don't. They just can't do it. Americans are probably more well trained probably because we're, you know, whatever we're Europeans and we somehow we worship organization. But places where my experience is you're not going to catch an Italian to pay any income tax. You're not going to catch a Frenchman. You know, you catch them at certain pinch points. But basically, they're like they're like, natural born evaders. They're just not going to do it. So you catch them you catch them with the VAT.
[01:33:05] Unknown:
It seems to work, sorta. Well, it it does work, and it is on top of other taxation. I know Trump with his, tariffs. He was bitching about the car situation where they were charging a flat rate, $25,000 per car, I believe, and then putting a 19 or something percent VAT tax on top of that. So Trump's deal is, okay. Whatever you're charging us, we're gonna equally charge you back. So it totally defeats the World Trade Organization. And what these guys have basically done is they exported all of our most of our manufacturing over there to China, and then they let them bring stuff in free, free trade, all that crap, but yet it's the Jew middlemen that are making all the money.
Okay? So that's the way and that's what he's kind of stopping with these approaches that he's doing. That's the way that I understand it, Thomas.
[01:34:11] Unknown:
Well, on the face of it, allowing somebody to take manufacturing out of your country and then bring it back in tax free, isn't that until recent times that's utterly absurd. I remember reading about factoring those. Yeah, we always had it. We always had a high tax in this country. If you want to bring in razor blades made in Europe in 1900, you're going to get taxed to bring them in because we made razor blades here.
[01:34:39] Unknown:
Yep. Well, you won't yeah. You get a tariff, which is a form of a tax, and it makes foreign goods a little bit higher. And the theory is that that makes people wanna build manufacturing and manufacture it inside the country, and then they don't have that barrier, and then you've improved your country because you've got manufacturing and jobs, etcetera, etcetera. And that's what he's trying to achieve with this.
[01:35:06] Unknown:
Yeah. Well, America America back, you know, prior to more recently, like, say, in the fifties and the but any before that, I remember you go to a small town, and I'm thinking the one that I lived in, we had a well, actually it was a little unusual there because we had a big division of General Motors in town. But we had steel mills. We had companies that manufactured nuts and bolts. We had a company in town that made wallboard. We had another company in town that was a chemical company. And then I lived in another town in Ohio for a while. We're talking small towns. They had a big a big place called National Machinery that employed like 300, four hundred people. We had a potato chip manufacturing, company in town.
We had, Timken roller bearings, had a had a plant in town or out you know what I mean? And not too far away, I remember people were working for a big whirlpool plant. I mean, this country was nothing but a beehive of manufacturing Yep. From coast to coast.
[01:36:13] Unknown:
That's as they were setting the hook. You know, when the Israelites, when Noah came down from Mount Sinai with the 10 commandments, what did he find, Thomas? He found the Israelites worshiping the golden calf. Right? Well, that's what you're talking about. We were worshiping the golden calf of materialism, and it was all the manufacturing and stuff after World War two when they were fattening everybody up for the slaughter. And, as you went into the fifties and mom could stay at home and she started getting new appliances, and you had the ranch house and the two children and the father working could provide for all of it. That was the oh, man. Isn't this the wonderful life we got? That's to sit back and take a deep breath before they did Brown versus Board of Education and slap the $19.54 internal revenue code in place.
And then they started turning the screws. I heard a story the other day with a guy that used to work for the IRS up until that time, I guess, in the fifties for a few years out in San Francisco, and he was retiring. And, somebody told him, he said, boy, the guys they're bringing in from back east are not nice people. So that was the whole transition. They brought the vultures in. They got everything in place, and they started turning on that 54 revenue code. And we still got it today, my friend.
[01:37:46] Unknown:
Yes. I heard, I think I saw something once where, like, the average person back say in 1955 or previous to that maybe was paying maybe a grand total of 12% or 15% of their income.
[01:38:02] Unknown:
Yeah. Well, a lot of people I don't know if everybody pay you know where they started that was in the victory tax. And during World War II, they started sending 10 forties out. Pay your victory tax. And then after World War II is over, they just never stopped it, and people were conditioned right into it.
[01:38:20] Unknown:
Yeah. No. I'm I'm sure a lot of people didn't even didn't even pay income tax. And then they they didn't even it wasn't even part of our culture. To pay any of the tax in the 1951. Have you ever heard the name?
[01:38:34] Unknown:
Yeah. It, they changed the IRS was created in 1951, I believe, with a Treasury order, t o, they call them. I believe it was in 1951, and that's where they formed the IRS. K? So
[01:38:56] Unknown:
Well, I was gonna say too, if if if if they actually did, start stopping or they create a tariff against any manufactured products coming into the country, if they did it slowly enough and did it by sector with plenty of heads up and it'd be graduated on whatever type of products. I think they would create another class of millionaire in this country because just going back to the way we were, I mean, some of these factories, I mean, I knew people that I had a friend, his brother-in-law actually had a small battery manufacturing company.
[01:39:34] Unknown:
Yes.
[01:39:35] Unknown:
He actually made we were talking about batteries for cars on trucks. There would be a class of people in this country that would be starting up like mom and pop factories with employees. Yes, entrepreneurs. They'd be very well off, and then everything would be made in America and it would be, we'd be more self sufficient.
[01:39:57] Unknown:
I don't think Trump has got the ability to do it slowly. He's got to do things fast because from the comments I've heard them make like JD Vance and others, Elon, we could go we could be bankrupt in two years and not even have them the ability to do what they're doing. So he is breakneck speed to try and get these things in place and to try and get these, overages straightened out and found out and cut off sending billions of dollars out to people so that they can possibly avoid another bankruptcy. And, of course, that's probably what the bankers are gonna try and do is put him in one. Yeah. So he's in a very precarious situation right now. What, Thomas?
[01:40:45] Unknown:
I was gonna say it takes time to set up a factory. I mean, if you were to bring back, let's say, the scale of, let's say, Whirlpool, why to set up again, they were in Northern Ohio. I mean, as a kid, I remember a lot of my friends' parents worked for Whirlpool and their dads did. That was a big plan and employed thousands or hundreds and hundreds of people. It would take a while to reset that plan up. It's not going to take
[01:41:08] Unknown:
twelve months. It's gonna take Not gonna do it overnight.
[01:41:11] Unknown:
No. Not at all. But then we'd be making our own washing machines and dryers here in America like we used to do.
[01:41:18] Unknown:
And Well, I think that's his guy. I think that's his aim, and his goal, Thomas. Now what I was gonna say a minute ago, and I want to thank you again for this last week. Thomas was listening to Rents last week. For those of you who didn't hear, Rents was take I guess you got through. He was taking calls or something. You asked the board screener where to write him as a email, and they gave you an email that I did not have. I've got one for him, but it's not that one. And so, at least a couple of you did do that because you copied me on what you sent.
But, if you would I never asked you to do too much around here. I would appreciate it if you would send mister Rentz an email and just in your own words on how on on what you think, maybe what this information has done for you. Mention my name, because he's been hit with my name quite a bit over the last couple of years, and he's always fending it off with I'm so busy. But maybe with this, unique website, I think it's one he probably checks more often because it's in his wheelhouse. And so if you wouldn't mind doing that for me, any of you do that, I I would really appreciate it. Maybe we can get on rinse. Maybe that's the next big step we're looking for. He's got a very intelligent audience, and I think this would resonate with his audience quite a bit.
So the email address to write him an email to, request him to get me on his program is sightings sightings, just like it spells s I g h t I n g s, like sightings of UFO stuff. That's why I know he likes that stuff. That's why I think this is an important email for him. [email protected]. Sightings at mind spring dot com. Hey, Jeff. You need to get this guy on. His information changes lives, as it has mine, whatever you wanna write him. Do it in your own words. But if you wouldn't mind doing that, taking a minute and doing that, maybe we can take the next step because get unwrinsed would be a big step. You've got a very large audience, quite intelligent people. So we'll see. If you do that, I'd appreciate it.
Capisce. Capisce. So, Thomas, did we get you taken care of?
[01:43:51] Unknown:
Yeah. Yeah. Well, just one more comment. I keep it's funny how things keep changing. I've always known for years that the United States government supposedly has I think it's 8,100 and something tons of gold is our gold hoard whatever. And I'm not sure if it's all in Fort Knox, but that's supposed to be what we're supposed to have. All of a sudden, they're saying it's only supposed to be $4,000
[01:44:21] Unknown:
I don't know about that, but it's not exclusively in Fort Knox. There's a depository in New York, and there's also one at West Point along with a mint. There's a mint at West Point too.
[01:44:33] Unknown:
Right. Yeah. Yeah. But I somehow, the now the mainstream news is saying we have 4,000. We don't we don't we've got more than that. We're supposed to have most of anyone in the world. And the other thing was they say it was audited in 'seventy four. That's not what I remember from going back over the years. It was something like 1957 during the Eisenhower administration is when the last time they went in and looked at it and seriously countered it. So it's been a long time since it was audited. Well, well, as I supposed to have twice as much as they say. As,
[01:45:09] Unknown:
as I've said, it it it may not be there, but it may be there. And the question is not is it there or isn't it there? The question is if it's there, who's got ownership of it?
[01:45:21] Unknown:
That's the question. And then then they have to x-ray each bar to make sure that it actually hasn't been turned into a tungsten.
[01:45:29] Unknown:
I can they x-ray gold?
[01:45:33] Unknown:
I don't know. But, well, I know they can drill in because that's how the Chinese supposedly found those bars not that many years ago. And they found they had an eighth of an inch of gold over a tungsten bar.
[01:45:46] Unknown:
Yes. So when they drill instead of on the corners, they used to do it in the four corners, and then they drilled in the middle and found tungsten. And there have been tungsten bars found on eBay too, by the way. I mean, not 100 ounce bars, but smaller 10 ounce and whatnot. Some of those have been found to be tungsten too. So if you're gonna purchase any of that, be very careful who you purchase it from.
[01:46:10] Unknown:
And you're better just to buy a buy a a a minted coin like a Canadian or a US or a Cougar and or Yeah.
[01:46:20] Unknown:
Yep. And, we've got a a situation down here. They've got a mint called the Aztec Mint, I think, up down in Cuenca. And, my friend Walt bought some tenth ounce gold eagles in The man, the premium was only, like, $6 or something. It was dirt cheap. They do silver too, actually. So they actually mint it for you when you place the order so you can get some of those tenth ounce coins. I doubt if you can find any tenth ounces through most of the gold dealers in The States. People want the small sizes first, and they'll they'll sell the big sizes they've got first and keep the smaller sizes. Thomas, do you know what Gresham's law is?
[01:47:10] Unknown:
Isn't that where good money drives or bad money drives out good money?
[01:47:18] Unknown:
Yeah. Bad money drives good money out of circulation. Yeah. Yeah. As people hoard, they'll hoard their good money and they'll go out with the bad money and do commerce.
[01:47:31] Unknown:
Yeah. Well, that whole problem could be solved from that this new concept and because of the new technology where you would actually have a a state. I would it would be have to be a state run bullion depository. You take one of your Krugerrands or whatever you got, even your silver, you give it to them to hold. You don't have to give it all to them. You give them one and then they issue you a card which will, you'll be able to then go out and spend a portion of what you have on your let's say it's Florida or it's North Carolina or New York. The state would control it and it would you'd want it to be anonymous, but you'd have a card a debit card and like that fellow, who I heard it from, what was Doctor.
I can't think of his name. It's because of technology, it's absolutely infinitely divisible. So you say, well, we have 7,000 grains in an ounce and if gold became so valuable, you'd say, yeah, I'm going to spend one thousandth of a grain and it's going to get me a gallon of gasoline. You know? Right.
[01:48:40] Unknown:
I think the one state that does have a depository is Texas. I don't know about those other ones you named off. And, of course, that was set up to the Bass family. It's a pretty well known wealthy family, I guess, in Dallas. And the patriarch of that family now sits on the University of Texas, board of directors, and they took $500,000,000 out of their fund, their we got a huge alumni fund, whatever it's called, and bought $500,000,000 worth of gold that Bass is insistence. And that metals depository, one of the reasons it was built was to hold that Texas gold. And then they've opened it up because, oh, what's the guy that worked with, Alex?
Kirk Kirk Elliott. That's where he suggests all of his customers put there, and they do issue a debit card exactly like Thomas was saying. And I gotta configure that the state of Texas metals depository is probably pretty safe.
[01:49:52] Unknown:
Yes. Well, I think the beauty of it is, is you would keep most of your gold and silver at home. Every once in a while, you'd go and drop on off at the depository and see, okay, now it's on deposit. Yeah. I've reloaded my card is what it amount to. And no matter what the price of the metals got to because people say, well, there's not enough to go around. Yeah. There is. If you spend one grain of gold to buy something, your your ounce of gold is gonna go a lot. You'd have a bank account that grew. You can say, gee, the darn thing grew. I've stuck it in, and my purchasing power, like, doubled and tripled because the price of gold kept going up. Yep. My card is divided can divide it. Pardon? What? I was just gonna say it looks like Trump's gonna revalue it to me. Go ahead. Yeah. Well, like you you said and like you said, you know, Jim Sinclair, he came out and he's well, let's just figure out all the economic, everything that's backed by Fiat.
Let's turn it into if if gold was to back it, what would an ounce of gold be? And he came up with what did you say 165,000 an ounce.
[01:50:57] Unknown:
Well, don't forget it's not fiat. It's backed by something, you and your labor, not us, of course. Yes. Oh, yeah. But there is backing for it. I mean, you you know any bankers that loan out $37,000,000,000,000 without collateral and compound interest attached? I don't.
[01:51:16] Unknown:
Everything is collateralized. Yeah. The other thing too is people say, oh, how could gold be $165,000 for one little ounce? And I always say, look at Bitcoin. It's not anything. You've got an imaginary wallet. You've got an imaginary coin. You can't weigh it. You can't smell it. It's pure fantasy and it was I think it got up to $107,000 for one Bitcoin. Yes. I said, well, if a Bitcoin doesn't exist and it lives in the ether in your imaginary wallet, why couldn't a real one ounce of gold be worth $100,000 or $150,000 It could be worth every bit as much as a Bitcoin.
[01:52:02] Unknown:
Well, see, it's not in their attention. Your attention is on the wrong side. It's not gold going up in price. It's the paper going down.
[01:52:11] Unknown:
Oh, yeah.
[01:52:14] Unknown:
It's always the opposite. So you you know with gold, you got purchasing power. The example, of course, is Rome Two Thousand Years ago. You could take an ounce of gold, go buy a nice toga, a nice belt, some nice sandals, and go out and have a nice dinner. And you can take an ounce of gold up to New York City today for $3,000. Buy a nice suit, nice belt, nice shoes, go out and have a nice dinner. Purchasing power has remained the same. As startling as that may seem. Got a couple of minutes left. Thanks, Thomas, for all your help and contribution. Thank you. And, if any of you would if you haven't dropped Jeff a, email on [email protected], please do.
We'll see if we could get out. But first of all, I'd love to talk with him, and, I'll bet with my music background, he and his interest in those areas and background, he'd be fascinated by that, my radio background, all the things that, have happened to me over the years, people I've met, and this, that, and the other. For instance, I've got a guy that, I was pretty good friends with, who was a really huge guy in the radio business named Bill Drake. Have you ever heard of him, Paul? Bill Drake? No. Really? Well, he's touched everybody's life in the whole world because he's the wild guy that Yeah.
Well, he yes. He has. He's fixing He he invented the ten four the top 40, radio format. Oh, okay. He was a a guy, six foot eight. He was a big guy. His name real name was Philip Yarborough. He's from a little town outside Albany, Georgia and used to have a, you know, one of those spindle record players where you could stack the record 40 fives on there and then cycle them cycle through them. Well, when he was a little kid, he had one of those, and he'd he'd practice DJing and introducing the records and stuff. And he got in, got into a radio jig down there, ended up in Atlanta.
Atlanta is a terrible Atlanta is probably the worst AM market in the country. And the reason for that is because out to the East of Atlanta, you've got the largest outcrop of granite in the world called Stone Mountain. Oh. And so you got a lot of granite under that area, and you can't get a ground wave kicked out very well. So it's a traditionally terrible AM market. Anyway, Philip got up there for a while, and he ended up as the chain program director for WRKO in Boston, their radio chain. RKO, WHB, m or c in Memphis, Cliff in Dallas, whatever the cliff out in, or whoever the big LA station is. They had seven complements, big big stations, and that was when he came up with this, top 40 system.
And, he he then in the sixties, the FCC passed a regulation called the fifty fifty split programming rule. Have you ever heard of that, Paul?
[01:55:42] Unknown:
Yes.
[01:55:44] Unknown:
You know about that? Okay. Well, what happened was FM was still relatively new. Wasn't a lot of programming on it, although it was vastly superior to AM. And so what all the radio station owners would do, we have an a an AM here. Well, we'll just yes. And FM and attach it to it, and we'll take the a m signal and simulcast it out over the FM. Well, they let them do that for a while, but then to try and force the industry to recognize FM and broaden it a bit, they pass this regulation that if you were in a town, I believe, of over a hundred thousand, and you had one of these AM FM combos in town, that the FM had to play original music twelve hours a day.
And so he saw the opportunity in that, and he was the one that did a lot of the automated FM stuff early on, where they would take and just load tape recorders in there, play tapes 12 a day. And he founded a company called Drake Chenault that did that, and it was one of the first ones even before Muzak, became penetrated all over the country and world with this thing. And, then when he sold that company, he retired to Panama City. And, because he's from South Georgia. He's familiar with Panhandle there. And, he got a penthouse out on one of the condos on the beach, and he's so big, six foot eight. They had to redo the whole condo for him, and he had a a chauffeur and a limousine, all kinds of stuff. Well, I had my, old friend of mine was the man general manager of the t one of the TV stations down there. And, so Rob calls me one day. He goes, Roger, you never believed who I met who I met last night. I said, well, Rob, who'd you meet? I'm I met Bill Drake. I said, not the Bill Drake. Yeah. Roger, the the Bill Drake. He's retired down here. So I came home and that weekend and, got with him, and and he's a recluse, was.
And here I was active in the music industry in Atlanta where he'd been in radio and knew a whole bunch of those people were still in the area. And this guy couldn't get enough of me. I spent a lot of many nights out there at his condo watching the sun come up over the gulf in the morning. But just one of the weird I mean, very influential guy. I would have never met him in all the years I was in the music business, and I meet him on the side and become befriended by him. You know? So, nice guy though, Bill Drake, and, was very instrumental in the record and the music industry.
He would, he was real good friends with Elvis. And Elvis, whenever he was in Vegas, he'd he'd set up a a room next to his, and, and they'd party all night long. So record company presidents would bow at his feet because here's one guy could get their record on all of those stations, all those FM stations and stuff. So quite a guy. I would have never met him otherwise. It's, quite an honor, I consider that I was able to meet him and know him. And, just a few people like that along the way, you know. So we're about at the end of the show here on Monday for today. Hope you got something out of it. Anybody got anything to say here before we hear the whistler?
[01:59:15] Unknown:
Roger?
[01:59:16] Unknown:
In about Yes, sir. Five seconds.
[01:59:19] Unknown:
I wanted to ask you what is the shortest statement claiming your national status in the affidavit form that we're doing currently?
[01:59:29] Unknown:
Well, the shortest one is I, Samuel, from California, do solemnly swear my intent to be a national and not a citizen of The United States. That's the one that's on the state department website. I'm assuming it works.
[01:59:44] Unknown:
K.
[01:59:45] Unknown:
Is that what you're looking for?
[01:59:47] Unknown:
Yes, sir. Okay. Where do I find it? Yeah. And again,
[01:59:51] Unknown:
we can find it at the very bottom of the page on that certificate of noncitizen nationality. And again, it's not necessarily I've come to understand what you say, although that's very short and succinct. What matters is whatever you do say overcomes the presumption that you've agreed with your whole life that you serve. K? So that'll that'll work. Thank you. Anybody else? Yeah. You're welcome, Samuel. Of course.
[02:00:29] Unknown:
Roger?
[02:00:30] Unknown:
Yes,
[02:00:33] Unknown:
Larry. Yes, real quick. I think it's going to be a challenge to abolish the IRS because during the fiscal year 2023, the IRS collected $4,700,000,000,000 in tax revenue and refunded only $659,000,000,000 according to the Office of Management and Budget.
[02:00:51] Unknown:
Yeah. Well, I'm sure it's gonna be difficult. I I I don't have any doubt about that. They're gonna have to face the bankruptcy and how to cover that and everything else, and that's part of what he's doing with all this doge stuff. Now was there somebody else that said something when, Larry was gonna give the IRS comment?
[02:01:11] Unknown:
Yeah. A sketch. And I would just mention that they they sonogram gold bars
[02:01:17] Unknown:
these days that Oh, do they? Anguish their salt. Yes. Okay. I didn't know sonogram would go through gold. So there you go. Learn something. Well, I'm sure that Elon and, mister Trump are aware of all their little tricks and that they will do the right thing to get the right answer out of this. So we'll see as we go forward. Anybody else? Okay. I am gonna take off, and the first stop is El Banjo. So, I'll see y'all tomorrow. Have a great day. Okay?
[02:01:53] Unknown:
Thank you. Ciao. Thank you, Ryan. Thank you. Have a good one. Corey.
[02:01:57] Unknown:
Thank you. Thank you, Paul. Ciao.
[02:02:02] Unknown:
Thank you, Roger. Alright. That's it for the Radio Ranch with Roger Sales on eurofolkradio.com and Global Voice Radio Network. First hour of the program is on one zero six point nine WBOU FM in Chicago, and both hours of the program were on the net family of broadcast services, homenetwork.tv, freedom nation Tv, go live tv, and stream life Tube. For more information on the topics discussed, please go to the matrixdocs.com. That is the matrix,d0cs,.com, where you can find downloadables. You can find exhibits. You can find interviews. You can also find links to listen to the show either on Eurofoker Global Voice or join us live using free conference call and, the many links there. Thank you so much for joining us today. I'm Paul. I'm out of here. I have much to do this afternoon, but the conference will remain open. So come on down.
Dial up, set a spell, pack a lunch, stay the day.
[02:03:11] Unknown:
Bye. Blasting the voice of freedom worldwide, you're listening to the Global Voice Radio Network.
[02:03:17] Unknown:
Bye bye, boys. Have fun storming the
[02:03:23] Unknown:
castle.
Introduction and Program Overview
Broadcast Platforms and Technical Updates
Political Updates: Trump, Ecuador, and the FBI
Elections and Political Dynamics in South America
Trump's Administration and Policy Changes
Legal Discussions: Traffic Stops and Demurrers
Historical Context: The 13th and 14th Amendments
War and Emergency Powers Act Discussion
Economic Policies: Tariffs and Manufacturing
IRS and Taxation Debates
Gold, Currency, and Economic Stability
Closing Remarks and Listener Engagement