Published Sept. 17, 2025, 9:03 a.m.
9am Liberty Essentials - Bill Mohr, Karen the Riveter and Ralph the IT Guy will be teaching the perspective on religion in government. This is a continuance of study of the Constitution and lawful self governance. We will be learning together the relevance of current issues and apply the Constitution for guidance. 10am Greg Martini - Mr. Martini began studying and learning the IRS Tax Code and it’s Status and Standing for American(s), which led him during COVID in 2021 to studying the Law in America. By the end of 2023, he found a group led by David Jose and Mr. Martini began studying all of Dave’s law classes, along with other patriots that have published their works over the past decade. He has become an active Constitutional member of several groups that educate and assemble to learn and discuss our social/political structure in the United States. X/Twitter: https://x.com/i/broadcasts/1mrGmBOYzddJy Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/636616148890812/videos/1101998692086441 Rumble: https://rumble.com/v6z2mfa-bnn-brandenburg-news-network-9172025-celebration-of-constitution-day.html https://rumble.com/v6z2mhg-bnn-brandenburg-news-network-9172025-celebration-of-constitution-day.html Odysee: https://odysee.com/@BrandenburgNewsNetwork:d/bnn-2025-09-17-celebration-of-constitution-day:8 BNN Live: https://Live.BrandenburgNewsNetwork.com Guests: Donna Brandenburg, Bill Mohr, Karen the Riveter, Ralph the IT Guy, Greg Martini
Good morning and welcome to Brandenburg News Network. I am Donna Brandenburg and welcome to our show this morning. It is Constitution Day. We are celebrating the Constitution Day today and what it really means, why we enjoy the Constitution, and why we uphold the Constitution, why we believe in why it was written, and what the Founding Fathers had in mind for us. I'm going to welcome in Greg, Karen, and Ralph, and I think we'll have other people joining us today. Furthermore, if you guys want to join us, just give me a call, and guess what? We will bring you in, and you can talk about stories or why you treasure the Constitution. Share your knowledge with everyone. How are you guys doing today? Wonderful. Good morning. Happy Citizenship and Constitution Day. There you go. And what does that mean to everyone? That's the question. What does the Constitution mean to each and every one of us? I did my TikTok video this morning and I actually have my seven-year-old self memorized the Constitution, well, the preamble, right? Thanks to it. You know, we think about this as something that's real stuffy sometimes, you know, it's a stuffy kind of study, boring study, you know, that sort of thing. But it really isn't. It becomes very engaging. But more than that, I learned it from Schoolhouse Rock when I was a kid. And remember, they had the they had I'm just a bill. Yes, I'm only a bill. And that was part of the the series that taught civics in our, you know, elementary civics for little kids. Right. And actually, that is when when I think of the preamble, I can do the preamble by my memory. But the music is running in my head. And that's that's how I learned that. And quite honestly, I homeschooled my kids. That's how I taught my kids the books of the Bible so that we did it to music so that my kids can recite all the books of the Bible in order and Old Testament. What's that? I do that, too. I can't get through it without I have to sing it or I don't remember. I can do the capitals and their states to some degree because Looney Tunes did that. There is a whole series on memorizing the states. And it went through region, but it included all fifty states and went through regions. And I can still sing that one, too, but I use that with my kids also. So we, the people, in order to form a more perfect union, establish justice, ensure domestic tranquility, provide for the common defense, promote general welfare and ensure the blessings of liberty to ourselves and our posterity. do ordain and establish this Constitution of the United States of America. Yay, seven-year-old Donna! I can count to ten in Spanish from Sesame Street. Works pretty good for things that don't change. Doesn't work so good for when you learn all the countries of the world from Animaniacs, and that goes back in the nineties. Yeah, that's the same. This goes back to learning. You know, we talk about some very serious things and serious topics because as adults we're getting through this. But honestly, one of the greatest things if you want to learn the Bible is read a children's Bible because it's a timeline of the Bible. And then all of a sudden you can connect the events and the people and what led to what. And honestly, I like the Tree of Life Bible because it's in chronological order. So if you study things and don't try to jump into the details, but get a good grasp and history and everything else with the timeline. then it starts to make sense. If you don't make the connections, you'll never understand what you're reading. That's the big gripe I have with how the schools teach things. They'll give you a textbook with a thousand bits of sort of, kind of, sort of related information, but you can't really assimilate that into your mind. And unless you make connections to how this affects every day or how these people were relating to each other what they were doing you've got to make the connections or a thousand bits of information is just clutter in your mind yeah there's a lot of information available out there in fact I went to the library to return my neil gorsuch book the other day and on the way out you could see greg doing the cappy dance right there I saw it well and I and I um Put a hold on the second book that I well, it's his first book, I guess, but I I haven't read that one. But on the way out, there's a rack there books for sale. Well, through a donation and this glaring red seventeen seventy six jumped out at me. So I got for a donation a book just about that year from a variety of perspectives, and that's going to be really interesting to read. So I have a pile of books now. I have Behind the Bill of Rights, which I started reading but haven't finished, and it's really good. It's like the Five Thousand Year Leap, but it's about the Bill of Rights. I have the Federalist Papers, and I have the Five Thousand Year Leap, and I have... A whole bunch of pile books. And I have. Eighteen twenty eight dictionaries. Sitting there too. There's so much. There's so much. And I was looking for something. To talk about today. Besides I do have the history. Of this holiday written down. Maximus of laws. Another thing on my reading list. But there's so much to learn. And it can. That list can get overwhelming. And it's like well just you know. pick one and start chewing on it. And if you leave that because you get distracted by another one, that's okay. As long as you're working toward learning, it doesn't matter so much that you have, you stick to it on one particular topic or subject matter. I think I'm feeling like it's time that I go back and read the constitution again with a more educated view that I have now. because I'm gonna see it in a different way and it's kind of interesting how everything else that I'm seeing like charlie kirk there were there was a piece in the gorsuch book that went right along I quoted it on telegram the other day because he wrote uh from uh it was a study or a poll And it proved that students on campuses feel that violence is okay when you disagree with somebody. This is from last year, so it's not that long ago. But still, it's not like they didn't see this as a very real threat. And it's free speech. Free speech. The Bill of Rights, one of the most important topics nowadays... And, hey, that's related to the Constitution. Have we all read it? Yes, we have. So here we go. We're going to play this for everybody so you can hear the genius of Schoolhouse Rock as we celebrate this day and not take things too seriously. But it is seriously a serious subject. But this is where we start. Hey, do you know about the U.S.A. ? Can you hear it? Yep. It's low, but I can hear it. Okay. And they put those principles down on paper and called it the Constitution. And it's been helping us run our country ever since then. The first part of the Constitution is called the Preamble, and tells what those founding fathers set out to do. We the people, in order to form a more perfect union, establish justice, ensure domestic tranquility. Provide for the common defense. Promote the general welfare at hand. Secure the blessing of liberty to ourselves and our posterity. Do ordain and establish this constitution. the united states of america And I like the way that they repeated it, too. So as kids, you get it a couple of times. That was actually the strength of the one-room schoolhouse, is that when you were all in class together from kindergarten to eighth grade and sometimes past that, right? And when you were in third grade, you're getting the basics. But the older kids were taking a review of what they already learned. So they got it in their mind several different times so that as they grew and their perspectives grew, they could see it with older eyes. You know what I mean? And then the repetition really canonized it or got it into their minds. So they knew the subject matter. You don't get you don't learn by just one pass through things and all of a sudden have all the answers. You've got to go back and review it again. And each time you do, you're going to see something different. That's the Constitution. It's Bible or anything that's worthwhile to study. The second, third, tenth time you go through something, all of a sudden it'll click. And then a whole new understanding happens. That's why education needs to be a lifelong pursuit. Did you notice there was a jury in there? Oh, yeah. And now Karen does the happy dance. You know, regarding rereading stuff too, I always like to encourage people to reread the Declaration of Independence or read it if you've never read it, because it really kind of sets the stage for the Constitution. And how much of that has repeated and how much of the Declaration of Independence we have allowed Our own government. To do the exact same thing. As what they were complaining about. Yep. Yeah. This day. Was instilled. For that memorial. So that people would go back. And consider it. That's the intent and purpose. Initially it was. I am an American day. In nineteen forty. It was advocated. for U.S. citizenship celebration by William Randall Hearst the year before. But then Truman signed Citizenship Day into law February twenty ninth, nineteen fifty two. Then Congress required the week of September as Constitution Week, August second, nineteen fifty six. So we were supposed to be studying it for a week long there. And then in two thousand four, Senator Byrd introduced it as an amendment to the omnibus spending bill. And this is, as we know it now, it's called Citizenship Day and Constitution Day, which is kind of weird to have two days at once, but that's what it is. It's a September seventeenth thing, but it can change. This year, it's on a Wednesday, but if it falls on a Saturday or Sunday, they can celebrate it the like Friday before the Monday after because they want it in the school system. So the head of all the federal agencies is to provide employees with education. So they got no excuse, right? And then every educational institution that gets federal funds is supposed to hold programs on education regarding Constitution and citizenship for students on this particular day or week. So every year, everybody should be getting this. So all the federal agencies are supposed to be getting this, which, you know, they apparently never read it and decided that they shouldn't exist, but... Here we are. Well, you know, it's never too late to learn. I, you know, and I, I think, I think it's a, You have to have, honestly, I believe in continuing education no matter what you do because you can always learn more no matter what it is. No matter what subject you know, somebody always knows something you don't know and there's something we miss. So it's an important thing no matter what we are involved in. So any other comments, guys? Well, history repeats itself. If you don't learn history, you know, you're doomed to repeat it. So one of the things that I've been loving seeing the recent memes of people kind of discovering this, but I've actually got a couple of three D printed versions of the tablet of Ian Nassir. which is an old complaint letter about basically getting scammed out of a subgrade of copper less than what he ordered. And it reads like an Amazon review. And I love this thing because it... it's a reminder that thousands of years later, nothing has changed. It is actually the same as an Amazon review. Don't really change. And it's important to learn that history because, you know, people are, A lot of people look back at history and think, oh, you know, we're so much smarter, so much more advanced than people in the past. And I kind of tend to think the opposite, that we've all gotten a lot dumber in a lot of cases. And it's really important to learn that history. Convenience makes people dumber because they don't have to think their way through things. Yes. So there you go. Any other comments? What's that, Karen? I know you prepared for this this morning. Well, I tried. It's interesting because my attention was going every which way because there's so many aspects that are important and interesting. Well, one of the highlights and one of the educational documents I got from America's Future, actually, General Flynn's organization, was that Federalist No. They were, it was, uh, I want to say it was Madison was writing about a Republican form of government versus democracy. What does it mean? And he was talking about writing about whether you have too much representation or not enough representation, like there should be a balance and how many people. her representative and such. And this comment really jumped out at me. He says, men of factious tempers of local prejudices or of sinister designs may, by intrigue, by corruption, or by other means, first obtain the suffrages and then betray the interests of the people. And that's exactly the problem that we have. And it really jumped out at me thinking about Byron Township because the when they get into the elections and they're able to corruptly do so, then they can have these sinister designs, as he says, um, by corrupt and betray the interest of the people. That's exactly what has happened. That is why we have to protect the election system because the government's failed to do that. Then we can take, um, And of course, with the notices, et cetera, hold them accountable to what they're supposed to be doing, which is to represent us and hold others accountable who fail to protect us, hold each other accountable when they fail to protect us. These are their jobs, whether they're on the federal system under that constitution or under the state constitution or both. And the, the, the impact is Flynn has been talking for a while about local being so important and it's, it's becoming amplified for me. The more I read about these things, the constitution is important in the federal sense, but the state constitution and our local government situations are so vital. And I felt terrible because I got distracted yesterday and I missed my township meeting. Well, and the Constitution really had a lot more protections against that. We've lost a lot of those in that they knew that people were corruptible. And they set that up brilliantly, really, to pit different competing factions against each other to guard against that corruption so that no one ideology could... could take power unchecked. And that was one of the reasons for a republic versus a democracy. And it kind of annoys me anymore when I hear people say that, well, the United States is a republic, it's not a democracy, because it's supposed to be a republic, but we have lost a lot of those republic protections in that, like, for example, we're not supposed to be directly protected electing the National Senate nor the president. Both of those are, there's processes for those, and they both include somewhat of a time delay so that you can't have the kind of partisan flipping chaos that we have when going from you know one party to another and just basically rewriting the government uh as different people get elected that that should never happen because there's a time delay there so any kind of a change is slow and we've stripped a lot of that out and gone far too close to being a direct democracy am I bill how you doing Oh, I'm doing good. Just driving across Michigan here on a lovely, beautiful blue sky day. Oh, glad you could join us today on Constitution Day. So we're celebrating the Constitution. What wisdom do you have that you want to share with us? Well, here's one key factor. And Karen kind of, I was listening in before as I was getting ready here, but Karen kind of put this in perspective. is that Constitution Day was originally set up as a reminder, almost a forcible event by the government to educate our youth and our constitution. Our preamble clearly declared it, Donna, you said it, and that is to secure the blessings of liberty to ourselves and our posterity, right? Not our neighbor, not the guy down the road necessarily, but our posterity, those who don't even exist yet. We continue this fight to make sure that they retain the same rights that we were handed down from our fathers. Now in this day and age, we have forfeited a lot of those through different bureaucracies and all the tyranny that's going on. But that was the original scope of Constitution Day or Constitution Week as it was first set up. I've got my wife next to me and it reminded me uh I mentioned it a couple shows ago donna that we need to quit studying about the constitution right same thing with our bibles quit studying about them and start studying them right pull them apart learn what they say don't learn what somebody says about them but learn what they say and my wife worked in a bank for years in the cash flow, right? So they were handling money. She would take all the money coming in from the security trucks and miscellaneous things and sort through those. One of the things that is clear, if you talk to anybody who works around money in a bank, they will tell you, if you were to ask them, how do you determine whether something's counterfeit or not, right? Well, The same goes with money, as with the scriptures, as with our government. There is an innumerable amount of different ways to create a counterfeit system. Look through history and see how many counterfeits have been set up, how many lies have been portrayed, how many deceptions, how many psyops have been put on the people. There are an innumerable amount of ways to counterfeit something. So you can't go around studying all the different counterfeits so that you'll notice them when they come up because a new one's just going to pop up and you're going to have to deal with that one. the way they deal with it with money is you study the real ones so that when something comes across your fingertips and it doesn't seem right, It's because you know what the real one feels like. And this one certainly doesn't feel like that one. So we're going to look into that and we're going to determine whether or not it's counterfeit. That's the same philosophy that should apply in everything that we do. Study the truth and you'll know when a lie comes up. Unlike what Orwell had spoken about, they developed this political language that make lies sound truthful. And if you don't know the truth, you're going to fall for the political language that's been set up. Well, look, I've been on a rampage against the political parties, even though I'm the chairman of the Constitution Party, just like you were, Bill, before me. And I just want to read something just so that everybody is very clear about this. The Constitution drafted in seventeen eighty seven lays out the structure of the federal government and the rights of citizens. But it makes no reference to political parties. In fact, many of the founding fathers are wary of the James Madison Federalist Tent. warned about the dangers of factions which he saw as groups driven by self-interest and that could determine the public good. George Washington in his farewell addressed caution against the baneful effects of the spirit of party Fearing it would divide the nation. Now, going back to the Constitution, we can look at all of the usurpations that are taking place and have taken place. Go back and read it. And they are not mentioned there and upheld by Norton versus Shelby County. They don't exist. They need to be struck from the record. And I'm going to say nullified is the proper term for it, is nullification, because they have no grounds to exist. And it's the three-letter, four-letter, whatever letter agencies that are out there that basically are asserting the rule of law in an unlawful manner. Yeah, and John Adams was one of the biggest speakers on that when he said that the two-party system is the greatest evil under the Constitution. Now, it's not allowed in the Constitution, as you just mentioned, but it's the greatest evil under the Constitution, by which he means that people are... are all the rights that was laid out in front of us. People are allowed to assemble. We are allowed to associate with whom we want to and disassociate with whom we don't want to, right? So that creates faction within itself. However, the Constitution was never designed to have a political faction trying to interpret it. That's the difference that we see today is these political parties or the factions that they talked about, both James Madison, Thomas Jefferson, John Adams, George Washington, all the early men in our country, They warned about it, but the people have become accustomed to it and have allowed it for so many generations that it's become this political lie that is now truth in most people's minds that, in fact, a two-party system is what we have, and that's just what we have to deal with. Well, and there's more to it than that, too, in that we do have the freedom of association, and what... What they have done with enshrining the two-party system into the statutes, because that is what they did, is made it so that you can't just say, well, my five friends and I want to form our own political party and put a candidate on the ballot. yeah they make it extremely difficult anybody that's been in any amount of so-called leadership in a party which remember leaders are just servants they should be but anybody that's had those positions it's been fought for decades keep going bill and those in other minor parties right we need to quit this language of third party again that falls It's not, they're not third parties. They are merely minor parties. They're smaller in number is what they are, right? So they're smaller factions that are designed. But even if you read, even in the Michigan constitution, right? They go as far as to state that we have a bipartisan legislature within the constitution. Now, where did that mindset come from? How did that ever get allowed into a state constitution? It's because the people became accustomed to it. Well, and those two parties should be the Federalists and the Anti-Federalists, right? Yeah. I mean, ideally, that's the way it started. But even immediately after the adoption of the Constitution, you can see numerous factions being promoted. Thomas Jefferson was one of those. I forget what they called it. It wasn't the Republican Party, right? They didn't exist until the I want to see the wigs and the bull moose party back on the ballot. At this point, you could have a Bullwinkle and Rocky party and it wouldn't faze me. Probably be better than what we have right now. Oh, that's funny. So it all boils down, you know, the, these things happen because we allow them to happen for the most part, but the constitution does not authorize them, nor does it delegate it. Yeah. in our systems. They may exist in the political mindset of the people, but they don't exist in our election system except by codified statute. Which, Karen, does the codified statutes apply to living individuals? No. There we go. It doesn't say what it doesn't say. Bill, you're breaking up pretty good right now, so I'm not sure we're getting the connectivity that we need. I think your cross-country trip is working against us here, Bill, because you're breaking up a lot. I'm in Mark Sosnowski's area of the world here, right, Mark? Welcome. Hey, Mark, how you doing? Hey, everybody. Just great. Good. Thank you for joining us this morning. We're celebrating the Constitution, and I guess I'd like to go around the room and ask everybody, what does the Constitution, why does it mean so much to you, and what really inspires you from it? Greg, why don't we start with you? You've been quiet. Well, I've been quiet. I am absolutely ecstatic that we celebrate Constitution Day, and I have Karen's commentary to start the podcast. In terms of the timing of the inauguration of the day and the goal of the party system and the class system that we've been put under, I really wish we convert Constitution Day to go back and study our state constitutions because that's where our Bill of Rights really are. That's where we Um, Michigan alone, you know, in their organic constitution had twenty one bill of rights. Um, the final one was important. Article one, section twenty one that said no law can ever be made to affect our constitutional rights. Um, and every state is very similar in Georgia. We have thirty one articles, um, that, uh, that pertain to my bill of rights. So. For Constitution Day, for me, we have to think about what God gave us. And God gave us a class system that is the only class system I will ever recognize. And it's not Republican and Democrats. It's not, you know, black and white. It's not any classification that our government creates on us is nothing but a sigh up for them for control and to create conflict among we the people. There's only two people, God made man and God made woman. And to me, those are the only two classes we should recognize. And I hope we can get to the point someday in a republic because, you know, Benjamin Franklin said it. It's a republic if we can keep it. It's been reinforced many times over the years. I keep reminding people of Judge Gorsuch's book that he wrote in two thousand nineteen, which really laid it out in terms of how far we've gone from we the people and our republic. And we are still a republic. Thank goodness we're still a republic. There's only one way to ever annihilate our republican constitution and the form of government that our founding fathers gave us, and that's through war. So if we end up going to World War III and they, you know, by treaty, take over America and create a democracy, then they will be successful in implementing their hundred and fifty year plan to to annihilate all of our rights. And they've done it slowly. They've done it methodically. They've created mere constitutions in every state. They created mere constitution in our federal government. So we have to go back, as Ralph said earlier, and look at what happened leading up to our constitutions in that was signed. That constitution came out of the states, the Thirteen Colonies. And they resurrected that Constitution and they gave the federal government limited rights, limited privileges from we the people. And those privileges came from the state constitutions. We have to keep focused on the state constitutions. On Constitution Day, and I like the way that they threw in Citizenship Day because they created in in eighteen sixty eight, you know, the Fourteenth Amendment that created the citizens of the United States. They wanted to celebrate that in the nineteen forties and they wanted to roll out their continuation of their plan to take total control of to go back to Bill, our fiat currency and and Um, and, and literally we, in, we fully went on fiat currency. And it's amazing how it started the in and then in they create this constitution day to promote the federal constitution. That's all they teach us in school is the federal constitution, because they want us focused on the limited bill of rights of that constitution and the superiority of the supremacy clause of the federal government over the states. We are locally managed. We're managed by God as our sovereign, then we the people are sovereign, and then we create our government and we start it locally. They have flipped that narrative and they have a top-down narrative because the EU controls the money and the education controls the Constitution. And we have to go back and study our text history and tradition and study. We've got to stop letting them create classes to divide us. Republicans and Democrats are not that far apart. Most of us are right dead smack in the middle. Let's get rid of these labels. Let's get rid of these classes that they've created and laid over us because that's what you do in psyops and war and military in order to defeat your enemy. And our government's goal is to feed us when literally our constitution says their only goal is is to protect my rights. Well, they've done nothing but defeated us and attempted to take all our rights away. So let's... think about the Constitution in a different way on Constitution Day, and let's begin to think about studying our Bill of Rights in our state first, and especially that final clause in each and every state's Bill of Rights that guarantees us a Republican form of government in perpetuity. So unless another country comes and takes America over, we are a perfect union, and I get to use all fifty states bill of rights in my life. And I can use Georgia's, I can use Michigan's, I can use Ohio's and California's and Massachusetts and Vermont. I can use every single state because if it's good for one state, it is relative to all of we the people. We are all a united people. And if we unite, that's the biggest fear for our government is that we the people unite And not become, you know, Charlie Kirk was at risk of exposing, and I don't agree a hundred percent with Charlie Kirk because I think he went, he created a class because that's what he knew. So he really aligned himself with the Republican Party when he should have aligned himself with man, man and woman. Those are the only two classes that I live by. I don't live by any other class. I don't care what color you are. I don't care what religion you are. I don't care what you follow. We are given our rights from God, and that is the class that we should be a part of, his class, starting with the Bible and starting with our state constitutional rights that God has given us. That's my thought. That's really well said. I think there's a whole lot of wisdom to unpack in that segment that you brought forward. Just the fact that, you know, even the parties, the parties were meant and have been to divide us. To divide us. Should be very sobering because not only that, I've got them all classified right now as terrorist organizations because they've taken foreign money and they're using money in order to subvert the process. And, you know, it's so easy for us. I will guide people to an interview that Brett Baer did with Amy Coney Barrett. Amy Comey Barrett, Supreme Court Justice. And she said in there, because all the justices are following this path and giving us our country back, but we the people have to wake up to it. She said the Constitution, the Bill of Rights is superior to every statute and code. statutes and codes do not apply to we the people but they want you to believe that they do and they put you under that thumb and they want you to buy a license for your car they want you to buy a license to do hair they want you to buy a license to study law they want you to buy a license to to do accounting those licenses are nothing but tyranny they are taxes and once we learn we the people and our constitutional rights which have never gone away. They've only been suppressed. They've been suppressed by these classes that they've created for all of us. They knew if they created classes. And by the way, I blame one thousand percent the American Bar Association in evil people because the American Bar Association is the one that created this tyranny. And they you know, it started in nineteen twelve when they started to take over all of our money um and woodrow wilson passed the federal reserve bank act which effectively we gave up total control so we gave up control to a democracy there is a democracy in america and every civil are indoctrinated into that democracy You're born into the republic. You're indoctrinated into democracy. Every single one of us is a dual citizen in America. We are a citizen. That's why they have Citizenship Day. That's why they named it Citizenship Day. The Thirteenth Amendment freed the slaves. The Fourteenth Amendment literally made every single one of us a slave of the United States of America Corporation. And the Supreme Court has adjudicated that and given us those facts in many cases over the last two years. And we're beginning to wake up to it. Why? Because we also have a constitutional right to assemble and we have a constitutional right to get together like this and educate each other. so the more we do this the more we communicate the more we can protect ourselves get rid of our class system vote for I only will vote for someone I won't vote at all for either party if they don't agree to uphold the laws of the land of the Constitution of the United States. And that is the individual state constitution, not the federal constitution. That's my state constitutions. So unless you agree to uphold the Republic, and you agree to protect my rights, which can never be abridged, all these laws that they have usurped, we've got to flip them. Really, they're not laws, because the final, you know, in Michigan, I'm going to read it, and I always go back to the original Constitution, so I go back to the Organic all acts of the legislature, contrary to this or any other article of the Constitution, shall be void. They're void on their face, but we haven't been taught that. I mean, literally, there are twenty-one bills of rights in Article I in the redoing the constitution and restating it and having constitutional conventions that were, you know, unconstitutional to begin with. They're all void on their face. We need to go back and learn our text history and tradition so that we can take this country back. The thirteen colonies all had states. They had Declaration of Rights before The federal government was created. The federal government, most people believe, as I did for fifty eight years of my life, that the federal constitution was created and then the states were created underneath of it. I never knew there was a fifty one constitution. And we were created by our local government, then our state, then our federal. And you can't give rights away. You can't give rights to somebody else that you haven't been granted to begin with. So therefore, every time you go up the chain, the rights became less and less important. You know, significant. Our federal government was created and given nineteen rights, nineteen rights to control. That's it. Shouldn't it like blow everybody's mind right there? It should blow everybody's mind. They took one of those rights. One, because in our Constitution, in our state, we were given the right to contract. and because we were given the right to contract they knew they could take that commerce clause and flipped that commerce clause into total control. And they did. Very, very smart people took that one clause and put us all in commerce, twenty four seven. I like what Mike said the other day. I disagree with him a little bit, and that's OK because I'm happy to debate it. He said something about operating in the private versus the public. And he's right with one small exception. I understand I can operate ninety nine point nine percent of my life in the private, but I do because they've created a tyranny that I can't get out of. I can't deal with money. in this mark in this country right now without being in the public because they have commercialized in commerce every single bank state bank charters federal bank charters so in order for me to participate in their fake money system which is not a money system it's not currency it's a note it's debt that they issue but that's a story for another day I have to go in the public for five seconds do my banking and then step myself back out so I live ninety eight percent ninety nine percent of my life in the private and all of us have the right to do it and literally all you have to do is learn educate yourself on your bill of rights and you have the ability to go back to the to the private and then You can give notice to your servants that are supposed to be protecting your rights that are not protecting your rights. I don't have to go into their fake courts. I can give them notice. And that is my evidence. And I do it in the love and peace of Jesus where I'm training them. I'm educating them on my rights that they're usurping. so that I can then flip that into a court of record in due process of law. And Amy Comey Barrett said it. She's like, we have all political power. We just don't know how to wield it. Well, we're learning, which is great. And this is really, it's really great wisdom. And it's going back to the beginning and starting to study all over again. Mark, what do you have to say about this? You've joined us. Would you like to give your opinion on it? Hi there. All right. I don't know what to say after what I just heard. I mean, he said it all, but I do have some ideas. Mark is part of the Constitution Party in Michigan here with us and a good friend. Much love to you, Mark. And thanks for joining today, too. Nice to meet you, Mark. Good to meet you, too. And I'm here in Detroit area and we run the Constitution Party Committee of Wayne County. and we meet regularly and we talk about these issues a little bit, can do about it. And we put candidates on the ballot. And so that's what we're doing here locally. And the conversation just a minute ago is a little bit about money. And I look at it a little bit in a more simple aspect. I know there's a big concern with, as you mentioned on how the system operates, but with the fiat currency. And when you look at the piece of paper that's called a dollar, it's based on a promise. It's okay, I've got a dollar here. It's promised that it's worth this much of whatever I want to use it for. So just like in old days, I think they said that tulip bulbs were Valuable commodity they were valued so much that they could be used in his currency And way back way back. I think The Roman soldiers get paid with bags of salt because it was such a valuable commodity So the value of this fiat currency is the promise that okay, it's all Based on borrowing right? So the borrowing is I promise that this is going to be worth something, and I promise that I have a debt to pay, but the value of it's diminished because of the diminishing values of our society. We don't hold the moralese as strongly to keeping our promises. Can I just say one thing about that? And that dollar is a note between the Federal Reserve Bank and the US Department of Treasury. It used to be backed by something real. Now it's a Federal Reserve note that's backed by nothing except the promise of America. In our Constitution, it talks about weights and measures, which you're referring to as you speak of tulips and sugar, whatever is of commodity value. And weights and measures are supposed to be controlled by our government to protect our rights. And it was meant for gold and silver so that the weights and measures were equal and identifiable. Well, now we've since nineteen thirty three when we went off the gold standard and then in nineteen seventy one, They literally, we can issue notes because you can, the Federal Reserve can lend to the Treasury more notes by the flick of a pen by the transaction in the government, and they can issue trillions. And if you look at what's happened since nineteen seventy one, since we went off of the gold standard on the world basis, we went off the gold standard in nineteen thirty three in America. The weights and measures went away. I hope Trump says he's going to bring us back to that. But now he's talking about bringing us back to it by depositing these fake notes in banks and then issuing stablecoins against those fake notes. To me, that's not money. That's not currency. That's debt. That's debt. You can't back one debt with another debt and call it currency. The only currency, the only currency is commodities by weights and measures. I don't care whether you talk about land, but they took our right to own land away. None of us in America own a single piece of property, not one. And the key is going to be coming back to the Constitution because it's all there. And then we can get rid of their pretended laws. You want to finish up here, Mark, what you were saying? Yeah, I wanted to. my one thought about the constitution uh it brings me back to how I got involved with all of this way back in college days uh my colleagues and my fellow students were you know on the liberal side they were for mcgovern they were for jimmy carter and so I was like being a rebel a little bit okay I'm not just going to follow along I'm gerald ford and I'm richard nixon and uh so on and then ronald reagan Um, but the, the key of it all was, uh, the right to life issue. And I had no clue what was going on until I got into college. And I said, how can this be? All my liberal friends were like, I couldn't understand why they didn't see it the way I see it. So I've been involved with the life issues ever since. And, uh, is because of this first plank of our party. I know you don't talk about party divisions, but the US taxpayers party and the constitution party, the first plank is to be pro-life. And so I got attached to that and I stayed with it all these years because of And it's key to the Constitution. I guess the key part of the Constitution as I see it, because I've been involved in these issues, is that all these rights are ordained for us and for our posterity. And nobody ever considers the posterity part. I mean, I'm sure we do. But the people here on this show right now certainly do. But in society at large, they don't even consider that. And yet we can annihilate as many as we want before they're born. And next up down the pike is in Canada, down in the United States. I think we have to be ready to spread the word that this is more evil and unconstitutional. That's a great thing that all of us have to get in the fight. I'm going to bring Robert on for just a minute. Hey, Robert, how you doing? What's going on, Governor? Can you hear me? Everything good. We're here celebrating Constitution Day, and I reached out to you because, okay, so Robert is amazing. You want to give him a little bit of your background and military guy and a very, very good friend. What are your thoughts today on Constitution Day? Well, I like what that one gentleman was saying about the coming about the notes and all that. What's his name, Greg? Greg. Oh, okay. Sorry about that. Even if you go to the Meyers grocery stores and look at their machines, they tell you notes. They don't say cash. It says notes. And, you know, we have to start understanding, you know, that just like he was saying that about our Constitution. He talks just like, can you hear me? Yep. Okay. He talks about almost just like Red Beckman. You know, Red Beckman talks about common law, common sense, common grammar. You know, we all have God's law. There's a lot you can talk about because you talk about flags and you talk about you've got quite an education. Is there anything that you would want to teach people today or your thoughts on the Constitution, Robert? Well, the thing is, is that we just like he says, we were supposed to go back to the organic Constitution. Like when you ask a sheriff, if you stand for a Constitution, And you don't ask him which one you don't say. You just let him say what he has to say. Usually they say yes. Then you'll ask them which one. And they have no idea what you're talking about. You know what I'm saying? Yeah. Same thing with like like you just said, the flags, you know, if you watch if you watch Donald Trump. When he when he when he has all these people from different countries come in. There's no gold fringe around the flags, and there's spear tips on the tip of them. You know, the spear tip represents the military, which the military was created before our Constitution to watch over our Constitution. You know what I'm saying? Yep. We're listening. Keep going. Yeah, so, you know, I've been doing a lot of research on all this stuff, and I ran into a couple of soldiers when I was at an event, and I was asking them, since they are enlisted, I'm a veteran, but they were enlisted, so I asked them about the situation with the gold fringe represented, and they said, well, we're going back. to the real constitution. And I said, okay, you know, and these, these were enlisted soldiers, so it's common. They know that there's a big change on the horizon and that restore the Republic. Right. And like I told you before, Governor, you know, Space Force is in charge. When Milley became a traitor and said that he was going to give information to China, Space Force told the people, for now on, all military will answer to us. And I don't mean the Army, the Marines, the Navy, the Coast Guard, and, you know, That it means all military. And if you look up. About how Trump federalized DC and why he did it. Well, when we had the PR, when we had the parade for the two fifties parade, and when you saw that, that, um, that soldier from the golden Knights come up and give, uh, and give Trump that flag. That was the, that was the death of the corporation. And if you notice that Melania stepped in front of Trump, that's the queen covering up the king, the two flags that he, the two flags that he planted into the ground. Now, now they, they, they stand on the ground, not in the air. So they, they, they stand with us. And no longer is that flag represented up above the White House. I mean, it's still there. But those two flags now stand with us as people instead of looking over us upon, you know, where we're now together. You know what I'm saying? Yeah. It's a beautiful thing because as a nation, we stand together for each other. And just even on our election day, that's the day that every single one of us is equal, completely equal. We all have the ability to have a voice in our government, how our nation is run, who is running our government, the rule. Having them uphold the rule of law, which the Constitution lays out, which the structure of our government. And on that day, we are all equal. The beauty of America and the American experience can never be. told enough, understood enough, or overstated enough. It's beautiful. It is the picture of equality, peace, and protection where we stand as one people for each other. Together, not above. Cool. And when you've seen the flag, or when you've seen the parade in Washington, D.C., When we have a parade for the military, we're usually in colors. We're usually like a DNC and we're marching correctly and we're all in our uniforms. Most of those soldiers that you saw that were in that parade, they were all in BDUs, battle dress uniforms, and they were carrying them. You know what I'm saying? Everybody needs to start asking questions because if things don't add up, there's something different going on. It's a different day, a different time. And I think we're seeing us going back to what was intended and perhaps even the rebirth of this nation, just like the first revolution that fought against the tyranny. When we talk too about the representational system of the United States being a very well-designed system as it was originally intended and being superior to other ideas, again, as original intended, not as it's been kind of perverted necessarily to the point it is now, but Part of that is because of the historical knowledge that the founding fathers had of previous governmental systems and how they worked and how they failed. You look at the Roman Republic. and how that functioned and its downfall because it was a pure republic, reasonably so. And you look at the Greek democracies and how those failed because they didn't have the safeguards of a republic in them. It was partially based on the French system of government at the time, partially also based on the English system of government at the time. And there are When you start looking at the way that all those systems have previously failed in certain ways, there were safeguards drafted specifically to prevent those things from happening here. Like, for example, the titles of nobility stuff. That was, you look at the way that the House of Lords functioned and to this day still functions in the British government. And there are people that are still trying to fight against the House of Lords being in place in Parliament in England versus the House of Commons because of that whole thing. issue of titles and hereditary ruling. We pulled the guard against tyranny from the Swiss system in the Second Amendment. There are so many of these things that are based on It's a new concept based on all of the failings of all of the old concepts, many of which are still around. But we had all of these things that were guards against devolving into being the same as all of these things that have failed. And it really is impressive the amount of knowledge, historical knowledge and research that went into drafting all of those different things. Yeah, it's amazing to see the progression. Curtis has been texting. He said, is the Constitution for the legislators to nullify sections of our state Constitution? Because Article VII, Section VII is as if it didn't exist. The legislators... Let's see. Wow. Curtis tried to call in and he's being blocked. Let me call him. The legislators passed Act two sixty one of the nineteen sixty six because of a lawsuit in Grand Rapids based on an irrelevant, irrelevant case out of Alabama. I'm going to call Curtis and let him see because he literally is being blocked from calling in. This is kind of crazy. Yeah, this is crazy. This is so crazy that he can't get through. And Robert lost us, which is really crazy. And I'd also like to bring up on the subject of currency, too, that seventy one really just kind of codified what had been happening for decades, because even when the silver certificates were being issued, that was still a fiat currency. Ever since the federal government raided our stores of precious metals to pay foreign debts during World War One and then accelerated much so much more so. in the aftermath of World War II. But once the levels of precious metals required to actually cover the silver certificates that were issued, once those levels fell below the amount of silver certificates issued, it was a fiat currency even at that point. They knew they were going to become a fiat currency since the nineteen thirteen Federal Reserve They knew that's where they were headed. They knew once they controlled that currency, and we call it currency, it's not currency, it's debt. Every dollar that's created today is nothing but debt. And that's why they can keep growing it into affinity. And after World War I, when they created the largest bank in the world today, that literally controls most currencies all over the world and that bank is called bis bank of international settlements and it's a sovereign nation in and of itself they did the same thing that they did in america they did it with the world and they made that bank with the ten winning nations of world war one in order to and they gave them sovereignty from those nations The nations did not own and do not own today, but yet, BIS Bank created the money, funded Germany in order to create World War II. That was in the year, and then you can follow the progression from the year, why do you think we went off the gold standard? BIS took all of our gold from the year, If you start laying it out and we weren't, we didn't assemble back then. This knowledge is crazy to put in a spreadsheet and follow it through. They created the crash of nineteen twenty nine. Why? So they could create the Securities Act of nineteen thirty three and literally securitize all of us in the nineteen thirty five Social Security Act. It's one after another. And you literally can follow history. And we have to learn text, history, and tradition and go back to our founding fathers in the Federalist Papers. Because it was a fight between the Federalists and the Anti-Federalists that created our Constitution. And they never wanted us and our posterity to live in tyranny again. So they gave us a republic. They made us the kings and queens. And you know what? The key issue in our Constitution is life, liberty, underscore liberty. Liberty is the key, but you can't have liberty If you're in a moral nation, you have to have morals because that's the perfect segue to this. You have we have to have morals and it's got to be a personal choice. You know, we can talk about money and that sort of thing. However, in laws or rules, but it's just like all of us know, a contract really is only as good as the people that stand behind it because of all of the all of the unlawful measures that people will do to get out of things. So that comes back to the next part of this whole contract with the Constitution. It comes down to the fact that do we have ethics? Are we willing to stand for the principles that God gave us to have? I mean, the Bible is his instruction book for life. So are we willing to stand on what God has instructed us to do, having morality, ethics and doing the right thing by him, having a heart of service, not for worshiping those gifts that he's given us? Because if we don't have that, nothing else matters. Bill, I see that you're there. Can you you want to chime in? Yeah, so Thomas Jefferson said that if people wish to remain ignorant and free, they wish for what never was nor never will be, right? That's the whole purpose of what we're doing here is to help people not be ignorant. Because if you're ignorant of where we came from, you will have no idea where we're going, right? It's a step-by-step process, as Greg has pointed out clearly. that I see in today's society is the education of the youth, right? That's a whole other constitutional issue that somehow people think to promote the general welfare of the people, the government has to be involved and regulate education. And that's a complete fallacy. It's a complete lie from the pit of hell to think that the government actually has children that they need to educate. it's very clear that that God gave the people the ability to educate their children. It's our duty to do so. And we can we can talk among circles, you know, our little our echo chambers, our adult groups. But honestly, if we're not going after the youth of the nation, then we're really doing a disservice to the Constitution and to the framers that put it in place. John Adams once said while he was in the White House, and forgive me, I'm going to botch this quote a little bit, but he prayed that none but the wisest men, and there's another verb adjective in there I can't think of right now, but ever inhabit this house. He was basically praying the heavens that the men that the people would put up to be their servants and to follow the laws put in place, only they would be the wisest men and be able to do what the duty required of them. And he ended that by saying, posterity, you will never know how much it costs this present generation, right? You have no idea what they went through. If you think it's hard today, you're mistaken. He says, you'll never know how much it costs this present generation to secure your liberties. And he said, I hope you make good use of it. He says, if you don't, I'll repent in heaven forever taking half the pains to secure it. Isn't that incredible? Our founding fathers had nothing on their mind but their posterity. It's as if we signed the Constitution ourself. It's so well said, Bill. We have to learn that because people will tell you the Constitution is a historical document. No, it's not a living document and they want to change the words in law and they adjudicate in the Supreme Court. The Supreme Court admits they got it wrong for decades. They got it wrong. They admit it now. because our constitutional rights can never be abridged. They can't take it away. And legislators are made to make laws for our servants, not us, in order to protect my rights. But if they convince one of us, they put us into the trust, the Constitution is nothing but a trust. And that's something we didn't start off with, but we probably should say it. Prostitution is a social compact. It's a trust. And it's a trust between three parties. The trustees are our servants inside the trust. We are the beneficiaries. But our founding fathers made us the trust protectors. And that's the three parties of a trust. And that's true today of any trust. Well, what they did was they took us from the beneficiary and they put us inside the trust. Because once they put you inside the trust, they could convert your rights to privileges. And then you didn't have free speech. You had civil speech. You had civil speech that they controlled and said, oh, you can't say this on that platform. And they could shut you down. That's a privilege. That's not a right. Constitution, every state constitution protects and guarantees a Republican form of government. And they have abridged that by contract. We contracted by the Fourteenth Amendment and then the Social Security Act. We contracted into the trust. We became trustees. Well, I don't want to be a trustee. I'm going to be a beneficiary of the trust and you protect my rights. And it's something we all have to learn and we have to go back and educate. Because in eighteen sixty eight, they ripped the rug from underneath of us and they took state constitutions out of the education process for the people that were going to practice the law of the land. They literally took it out of the schools in eighteen sixty eight. And they only taught universal code. They taught the law of the state. Okay, let's see. Bill, you want to add to that? Yeah, just one more thing, and I probably ought to go because I've got nightmares of traffic out here. You had mentioned something, Greg, a little while ago that most people don't understand, and some people were probably scratching their heads. When you talk about being beneficiaries or trustees, that's beyond most people, because most people haven't had to set up trust or deal in corporations, anything like that. But you had also mentioned that we are kings and queens, right? That is a huge concept that people miss. Being that we have no monarch, we have no oligarchy, we are not supposed to in this nation. We are the kings and queens. We put up servants to do certain tasks. We speak about this all the time. But we are the authority when it comes to that. I actually dissent from a lot of people regarding the Constitution now to say that, I would almost agree better with Thomas Jefferson when he said, what authority? Well, I'm going to botch this one too. Something along the lines of what authority does one generation have to bind the next? All right. He admits that they had no authority to put their posterity in any specific position because he understood they were free men. They were able to make their free choices when it comes to their own forms of government, as seen. Now... I like to go all the way back to some of the original pilgrims uh the signers I believe there are forty six of them correct me if I'm wrong but the signers of the uh mayflower compact right before the men ever stepped foot on the ground they understood the need to have some form of societal uh societal system in which they were able to hold each other accountable They didn't immediately go out and elect a king from among them, because mainly they were getting away from one at that point in time. But they didn't elect a king from among them to rule their new land, nor a prince. If they were going to follow the king's orders, they didn't even go for a prince to rule them. But rather, they bound themselves to each other to establish the same justice that they sought for. It was a mutual compact among, for lack of a better term, the people of God, right? This is what we should be seeking in the churches as well. It is a mutual compact among the people there to hold each other accountable to do such things. That is why the framers established the right of the people, namely the duty of the people to impeach our servants and to prosecute them for high crimes and misdemeanors. The simplest infractions of the law and their duty, they are to be held to account. And we have long, long time ago forgot our duties in doing that. What do you think, you know, by the law and by the Constitution, I guess I would like to, because I really like the whole topic of accountability and holding people accountable. I have a feeling that we're going to see some very high profile arrests and such for prosecution. But what are your thoughts? I know what Karen's going to be. I'll let you start it out, Karen. Actually, Bill, because you said you have to go here. What are your thoughts? We'll go from Bill to Karen next about how to hold them accountable. Well, first and foremost, uh we establish the fact that people are kings and queens right we are the authority ergo we are the government in this land uh it was said of old times that every country has the government that it deserves our founding fathers explicitly expressed that when they said that the representation namely congress or our legislatures and small is an exact miniature replication of the people at large Right? So whatever the people are willing to tolerate, that is what is going to happen in government. So first and foremost, before you can do anything, the people have to be willing to repent and turn back to their original roots in America to understand that they are the authority and they have a sovereign over them that requires them to, what does Micah six, eight say? Do justly to love mercy and walk humbly with thy God. Those are the first three prerequisites to American government. Now, as far as where we're at now, and we all understand these people have to be held accountable. A lot of them need to be prosecuted. Many of them need to be tried for treason. Can you hear me? We have a system now that makes it so difficult to do that because we've allowed the three branches to become so corrupt. That is why we need to start seeking justice at the local levels first. We need to be establishing our own peoples, for lack of a better word, compacts, right, among our communities, starting first in our families to hold our families true. Secondly, in our church communities, the churches should be the house of first judgment, right? And then thirdly, in our local government communities, because that is where the first protection of the people will happen. Those are the people who are your neighbors. The ones who protect you. So if we can get that started first, we can hold our local officials accountable. In our own people's court system, in our communities, hold them accountable. If you can't prosecute them, fine. Run them out of town like our fathers would do, right? If we can do that, we can move up the ranks. We can start going after counties. Once we get a few townships or municipalities going, then you can start going after counties. You get a couple of counties on board, guess what? You just rallied tens of thousands of people You can go after the state in the same manner. Once you get a couple of states on board, the federal government loses all control. They lose their narrative. They lose the power. The states go tell them to fly a kite, go pound sand, go kick rocks. If you come after us, we'll bury you in it. But it doesn't happen from the top down. It has to happen from the bottom up. May I? Yes, go ahead, Robert. You're exactly right. Because when I go to these commissioner boards, I got cut off last time. But when I go to these commissioner boards, I explain to these doctors and these nurses that stand up. Like I told you before, I took nuclear, biological, chemical warfare in the military. So all this pandemic, this fake pandemic was all fake. All these stupid masks that you wore were all stupid and they wouldn't protect you. Now I tell these nurses that want to keep trying to help make us with this healthcare crap. I tell them executive order one, three, eight, one, eight. I want you to read that it's three pages long and you better understand it because it's not going away. When Trump created these executive orders, Biden, the fake Biden endorsed them. So you know yourself when an executive order goes in place, it can either be taken away by the judge, by Congress, or by the new president. But Biden kept it going. So executive order one, three, eight, it's not going away. And that's crimes against humanity. And these people are going to be held for that, you know, because of what they've done. It isn't going away with that one or with the election. I want to add to that, too, Robert, to think about anyone who has taken a paycheck from our government has also, by virtue of taking a money payment, they've also agreed to the terms of the contract, which is the Constitution. They're also subject to it. When they take a payment, then they are, in effect... agreeing to the contract that they put themselves under the contract. Just like swearing an oath. So they're subject to it also. And that's treason. There's nothing more about it, but it's treason. And you, Governor, you talked about it all the time when I was securing for you. And they didn't like it because they knew that it was coming. And now it's coming. And they have no idea. They have no idea. Like I tell these nurses, you got no idea what this is about. They have four or five military personnel that listen to what you got to say. They already know what you've done. So now it's all up to you. You're still going either to jail or if you were part of adrenochrome or any of that shit, you're going even worse. You know what I'm saying? Yeah, Robert did security for me when I was actively running for governor. And, you know, Robert and his lovely wife, Tara, I love your family. They're just some of the nicest people you'd ever want to meet and the bravest people you'll ever meet on the planet. So, yeah, they're going down. And we need to call it out for what it is. We've been for so long soft pawing all of these issues instead of getting in there and handling them. And that's a big problem. We have to have accountability. We'll be right with you. Yep. Go ahead, Karen. All right. So you asked me about the accountability. Well, I was headed in that direction, but a little different direction than Bill went. Bill is spot on, too. But... Going back to Constitution Day, one of the things that the founders found to be exceedingly important was that we had these different branches, which were to provide a checks and balances against each other. We call that a separations of powers concept. Well, and then everything I've read about what it was like for them when they were trying to draft this. Can you imagine? They drafted it from scratch. but they were studying other constitutions too. They were studying documents to prepare for this, but they wanted to create something. And because it didn't work in the other governments. So this checks and balances system is what is that about accountability? Well, they were fighting all the time. They had constantly, um, you know, this concept of unity, the people, we should all be united. And I, and I saw that before my previous experiences in assembly where people are like, well, we should just all get along. They didn't get along when they wrote the constitution. That's the way it's supposed to be. And it got a little too violent than maybe it should have. But when you, When you consider what they put into the first article of the Bill of Rights, why was it there? They knew those three concepts were vital. Assembling, religion, and free speech. Bill touched on all of that with his commentary just before Rob spoke. They understood that the foundation of the people needs to be godly. Robert talked about the executive order. I don't care about the executive order from the defective corporation, even though it comes from, you know, quote unquote Trump. And I say quote unquote Trump because I don't know if that was from Trump. Because that's a whole other subject. But I care about common law. Common law is biblical law. You can't trespass on the rights of other people. You can't harm them. The government harmed people. The doctors and nurses harmed people. That's a trespass of common law concepts. It's a godly concept. And we can hold them accountable through the grand juries for that. So even regardless of an executive order, which can be a tool to educate people if that's the system that they're familiar and comfortable with, But we need to be making them more comfortable and knowledgeable about Bible and biblical law, God's law. What is a common law? Where do our rights come from? What does it mean to be a sovereign prince or king or queen? We have the right to protect ourselves. And if we can't speak about it, and we can't meet and learn about our godly laws, and we can't freely speak to share it with a group of people, then we don't know what is in the Constitution or anywhere else. That separation of powers is an important concept, and it's about that accountability, Donna, that you were asking about. So what do we do? What did Bill say? Was it last week or the week before? He's teaching his children when they have a conflict, he pretends that they're having a little jury right there. He teaches them about how to solve resolutions or make resolutions and solve problems by lawful procedures so that as they grow, This becomes commonplace in their minds. So what he was talking about with regards to starting it in your own family, he's absolutely right. I don't have kids, so my influence starts in my community or the party or whatever organization I become a member of or I join into a conversation with other people or where I am on Telegram is my circle of influence. My role then becomes to educate them on the Bible and common law, where your rights are and why you have free speech, just like Charlie Kirk was trying to do. So that they understood how to do it, maybe a little more politely than the founders did. But they they became so passionate and perhaps violent at times because. They knew the value of what they were trying to accomplish. It was so, so important. And the other thing I wanted to say was, how did they do it? The states were already joining, as Greg was saying. They were already creating states when we had a constitution for the states. So they had to what? They had to send representatives. They couldn't all go to Philadelphia, right? They had to create a way to represent themselves with a smaller number. And then it went to the people. So we celebrate the signing of the representatives. We forget it wasn't until June of twenty one, June twenty one, seventeen eighty eight, that nine the required nine of the thirteen were able to approve of the Constitution. That's the date we should be celebrating. Because that's the date the people had it in their hands and said, yes, we agree. Even more so than just the representatives of them. This is what is important about the republic versus democracy concept that they created with our constitution. Was that we had representatives that we select in a particular manner. when it's done right anyway, and that they represent our interests and our desires and they protect us. So how do we hold them accountable? No, we don't wait until the next election. We take action right away to correct that. I'm going to interrupt you for just a second, Karen. I will. Ralph has to go. So you have any last words here, Ralph? Because I know you've got to get at it. Yeah, sorry. My phone's kind of been going nuts here the last few minutes, so I'm going to need to get going. Do you have anything else that you wanted to add to the discussion a minute? No, good discussion and a lot of good knowledge here. Just, you know, the whole thing about going back and learning history because there were a lot of smart people back in the day, and it's good to absorb that knowledge and not just disregard it or ignore it. Awesome. Thank you. Well, you have a great day and we're going to continue on. See you. Carry on, Karen. Well, as Greg pointed out in the chat, there's another concept that's absolutely vital that our founders found super important and that we should too. And we haven't seen it, so we don't really know what it looks like for the most part. Due process of law, that process which is due. And this is something that I'm constantly pointing out nowadays because so many people don't seem to understand. When we see something that goes wrong, let's say the shooter of Charlie Kirk. We don't really know who shot him. We're still in investigation. But what does the public do? What does even Trump do? I want the death penalty. Well, death penalty for who, Trump? He hasn't had due process yet. They've made an arrest, but they're still making an investigation. Maybe what they'll find with the investigation, he wasn't the one that shot him at all. Maybe he wasn't shot. Maybe we're all being fooled. But there's a due process for everybody. And it's really tricksy nowadays because you get somebody like him that's a really popular alleged criminal or someone who allegedly harms a child. And people want to kill that person right then and there. They want to drag him out in the street and beat him like he was in Mogadishu or something. No, we don't do that here. We're in America. And we have a lawful grand jury process when it's done right. We've never seen that. But there's a process for that. And what we've been shown in these sham courts doesn't exactly do what a due process of law is supposed to look like. But. Even before we get there, the public is crying out for something other than due process every single time. And then they say, well, this person should be punished by the others in the prison system. No, that's not due process either. That's called torture. It's not acceptable. It's not acceptable and it's not godly. So if you're saying, I want those people to be fired for their jobs because I'm angry and they're bad people because they have a different opinion than myself. Well, look at the fingers pointing right back at you. You know what, Karen, when I heard people say, just let them be beat up in prison, I was kind of brokenhearted to even hear that. That is so detestable to me. When you look at what happened in the Bolshevik Revolution and the amount of torture that went on, this is so... the opposite of God. If someone has to be removed for doing something wrong, no one, and I mean no one should be happy about this, nor celebrate it or inflict pain just because that comes from the darkness within a person's heart. We have to handle things as adults, but that doesn't mean you do things of torture or of or of hurting people just to hurt people. And honestly, it is repulsive. And it is so anti what God stands for. Look at the people that have been tortured over the years in any political scenario where people justify it. They deserve this because... on and on. We become the monster when we do that, right then and there. And that talk needs to end immediately. If someone has to be removed, if we go to capital punishment and such, and that's the option, so be it. But that doesn't mean you go in there and do horrible acts against people such as they did then, such as like poking eyes out, peeling people alive, setting them on fire. How many people have been burned at the stake? This is evil beyond all explanation. It is evil. And just because somebody does something wrong, we don't take it upon ourselves to do evil in return. It's repulsive. However, accountability has to happen. People have to be held accountable. And there's no walking away from this. Oh, I've got another friend here I'm going to bring in. Who's eating breakfast? Hey, David, how you doing? I just taking a breakfast break. So got to tune in. Thank you. I got to introduce David. And I got to tell you, David is one of my favorite people in the Constitution Party. You will never meet an individual who can quote more foundational law in the Constitution in your life by heart And I mean by heart than you will, David Gilley. And I'm just glad you're able to join us today and celebrate the Constitution. I'm just going to let you talk because when you listen to this guy talk, everybody, you're going to just be totally amazed. Well, gosh, God bless you for doing this. When I was teaching, I was an adjunct professor during my Navy career for a couple of universities, and the irony is Congress passed an act a number of years ago that any college that received funding from the federal government was required on every Constitution Day to do something meaningful in honor of the Constitution. Of course, the congressmen never caught the irony that the Constitution not allowing them to give money to colleges uh this was you know they never saw the irony but anyway um I would often ask my students uh you know why do we celebrate constitution day if we do uh and I got different answers I would often point out the kind of popular barb that our constitution poses no credible threat to our actual form of government meaning the rampant tyranny and misrule that is the actual reality I would suggest to them, well, look in history, can you find any instance, and you can't in written history, of a country whose constitution does not permit Nazis at our airport, does not permit social security, does not permit breaking into your house without a warrant, does not permit you to go on and on and on, recording everything you do on your phone, recording this conversation. horrible things that we live with. The blessed thing is that in our country, in our country alone, they are so explicitly unlawful. So I would suggest that the reason to celebrate Constitution Day is to have a time of reflection and repentance, to think, what am I as a citizen doing to encourage the rampant lawlessness in my state and in the general government? What am I doing to discourage it, if anything? and where can I do better as a citizen? So that's to me what Constitution Day means, an opportunity to think what I can do to repent and do my part to restore lawful government in the most glorious experiment in self-government that written history tells us about. David, I think we need to get you on here so we can talk. I mean, we've talked about doing something on the militia, which I have been actively studying all of this, but it's been... God bless you. What's that? God bless you for doing that. We need to educate people as far as their militia duty under our constitutions of our states and of the federal government. Yeah. And you know what? The thing of it is, is that it's not just the militia. Like recently, we haven't talked a lot lately, but I've been actively suing people in order to hold them accountable as well as showing up and giving them their rights and what they really are supposed to do. This whole education process is so amazing because it's like a, I don't know, a squid with tentacles in so many different directions. So many areas in which we're falling down because we're a hundred years past civic literacy, you know? Yeah. And so the great thing is, is as long as we move the bar every single day, and I don't mean the Bar Association, that's completely off the rails and should be abolished. The Bar Association should be absolutely abolished. It should be designated as a terrorist organization and completely struck from the record. Probably some prosecutions involved in that also. But that's not what I mean. But I mean, we need to be moving ourselves forward and becoming educated and also making it a goal to educate the people around us. Yes. Oh, and I bless you for what you're doing. Thank you. So I'd love for you to do something like quote something that will blow everybody's mind because David will go into this and he'll start quoting stuff. And it's amazing how much the human mind, which is brilliant, can actually quote. So you speak lots of languages and you've got an incredible history. So can you launch into something to blow everybody's mind? Well, I don't know. I tell you what, in our grandparents' day, it was quite common for children in eighth grade to memorize, say, Evangeline by Longfellow. That's what, eight thousand lines? So our minds are capable. It's just that we have a hundred years of kind of inculcated Civic idiocy and you know idiocy illiteracy and everything. I am the only person I've met, but I hope there are more who has committed the entire Constitution and all its amendments to memory. But I encourage people to do that and the reason why is if you're thinking. um you're watching tv say you're reading an article say and everything you read is almost unmitigated but you don't appreciate the level uh of the intellectual depravity until you have in your own mind a text against which you can compare what the talking head on TV is saying utter nonsense about what is our fundamental law. So once you have that in your mind as a text in the back pocket of your mind, so to say, that you can take out of your mind and look at and read every time you read something or hear some talking heads and compare and see how utterly nonsensical it is. You don't have the learning experience that you could have, so that's my plug for learning. I always tell people learn and memorize the declaration first. It's much easier and then memorize the Constitution and then learn all the amendments. What was the process that you used to memorize that amount of stuff that you've memorized? Because it's just shocking. Well, I guess I got it from my parents. I've always been good at, you know, from the time I was a boy, I would memorize verses in the scriptures and things. But anything that I, this is what I've discovered, anything that is written very well, that has a very deliberate rhetorical architecture is actually quite easy to memorize. You can't memorize the phone book, except there is an order in the alphabetization. You can't memorize a jumble of garbage with nearly the facility that you can memorize something that is Designed with such care and I can speak from experience that in the case of the Declaration and of our Constitution, there is not so much as a preposition anywhere chosen carelessly, and so you'll discover an internal order and architecture that is masterful that actually aids you in the memorization. So you'll you'll you'll say you'll take a paragraph. You know, we take the first paragraph, we, the people of the United States, in order to form a more perfect unique set, it said, okay, you go down that and you see it wrong the first time. Then you check yourself on the text and you say, hmm. Why did I get that wrong? Why does it say of in this. But here it says from what's the difference between a representative and a senator? And you know, all these things become clear to you as you try to memorize it and get it wrong and then correct yourself and scratch your head and say, well, why? You know, why does it say for when you're speaking of a senator? of a state when you're speaking of a representative. Oh, that's in the design. Oh, I get it. So the act of memorization teaches you such a deeper understanding. But the other thing is for the rest of your life, you have an education whenever you hear anything or read anything, because it's almost always garbage. And you can compare that garbage to the actual text in your mind and appreciate how garbagey it is. I just invented an adjective, but you know what I'm saying? Love it. Well, I'm looking forward to seeing you here in a couple of weeks and tell your lovely, wonderful wife that I send my love and I'm looking forward to seeing you guys out in Reno. Out in California. Yeah. Yeah. Well, I look forward to seeing you and God bless you for what you're doing. I hope you keep this, you know, people coming in, calling in all day. That's awesome. I really do like this new format where I've been bringing extra people in because I like it. I like doing it both ways. It's a little more for me to manage. So but but I very much like hearing what other people say. Yes. That's really how we learn. I wish I had your skills. I hope you can teach me some of these technical skills because I've been thinking for some time, probably over ten years. My son's been telling me, Dad, you got to do a podcast and talk about consequential things. But I'm such a technical dummy, but I need to learn from people like you so I can do something like that. Well, you know what you need to do is just come on BNN and we'll set up a show for you and just have you talk. Because literally, guys, David will blow your mind. Well, you're very kind. Yeah, I'm pretty accurate too, so... I am passionate. I am the first American in my family and I've always counted that as a blessing and that's the reason for my passion. You know my wife Lillian is the first in hers. I sponsored her and she became the first citizen in her family. So we're both very grateful for that. Oh, and I just love her so much. You guys are just a wonderful, wonderful couple. She's such an angel. I just, I pinch myself every day. Why did God, why was God so good to me? I can't figure it out. Anyway, happy Constitution Day to you all. Thank you so much, David. And we'll be talking to you soon. Isn't he wonderful? In the Constitution Party, one thing you will find is you will find people that are so educated. It's not the same as the other political parties. You have statesmen who are truly educated. They know the information. And I can tell you right now, I have sat there and listened to so many different people, That can quote, and I'm telling you quote, not just like say a verse in the Bible or an entire poem or an entire document. I've never seen it anywhere in my life to this degree ever have I seen that before. ability. And our last national chairman, Jim, he sat there one night, we were sitting in the hallway at one of our conventions. And it's not just talking about who do you like, who do you support? And that is never, ever discussed. No one really runs for office. They kind of do, but it's only because people kind of Nominate them. You don't just you don't just get up and run for something because you want it. It's literally people literally have to nominate kind of nominate you and and sponsor you. So you have to have you have to be found worthy to have an office. OK, it's different process than the Republican and the Democrat parties. The people that make it into office don't ever want the job, but they're willing to do it, okay? Because there's no payoff. It's a truly civic duty. The ability to quote though is just shocking. So Jim Clymer one night sat there and he was quoting a poem. And we all just sat there and it's very thoughtful. We sat there and listened to this poem that he had memorized. And it took him... probably twenty five minutes or more to recite this poem in the hallway with all of us listening. It was in the mastery. It's not just being able to quote it. It's the mastery of the subject matter. So I got to tell you, I have never been more proud to stand with a group of people in my life than the Constitution Party. And that's absolutely hands down without without a close second. So anyhow, I'd like to go around the room and give everybody a chance to speak. Let's start. Let's do this. Let's go with Mark. Mark, are you out there? Mark Ciesnowski? We'll go Mark, Robert, Karen, and Greg. So, oh, everybody's getting a snack now, so that's good. So, Mark, I'd like to hear your comments because we're in the Michigan Constitution Party together. The U.S. Taxpayers Party is a Constitution Party here. And I got to tell you, when I was running, Mark was the most faithful person in the party to show up at events. I mean, this is real, real support. And I just so much respect for everyone and their ability to stand for the issues that matter and not turn it into a popularity contest, not turn it into a money grab, but to do it just because of honor. I mean, that's what this is all about, is honor and upholding the rights of the people in the United States as one people under God, not factions. Go ahead, Mark. Well, thank you, Donna. Thank you for all that you, all your leadership and it's filled a vacuum that, uh, um, is moving things forward. And I appreciate that. And, um, there's been so much, it's not to say that anything in the past before your time here was not getting done, but there's new things that are around the corner here. So that's great. And like you said, about the character of the people in our group is like, I've been, I tried to run for a state representative in, in the, My friends from the Republican Party from college, they were no help. And somehow I was directed to the U.S. taxpayers, and they just pulled me in. It's like, these are people you want to be with. And so they keep pulling me in. You're pulling me in. The people before you, they pull me in. And so I'm just glad to be here and continue the work. Thanks for putting me out here today. That's beautiful. And Mark, every year brings up that we need to do something to celebrate Constitution Day. And fortunately or unfortunately, you know, we're all so busy that that it's incredible how much work gets done by a very few amount of people who truly like each other. We I don't think I've ever seen a disagreement. I mean, this is like, it's like, because we go back to those fundamentals, I don't think I've ever seen a disagreement with the people that are in the party right now. And it's a beautiful thing. So it's, it's like, it's like coming home. Okay. Robert, you want to talk, you want to give us some last words here? Well, governor, um, you and I always talk and, uh, I just wish a lot of people would start understanding that, um, the more you see things that are going on, it's always that they have a problem, they wait for your reaction, and then they already have the solution. And as far as like a militia getting started, I think first, this is my opinion, the first thing is what we have to do is have people start understanding the Second Amendment. Because every time the first thing that happens is they go for our guns. So the people have to understand that our weapons are part of our Constitution and our God-given rights. And they can't take it away. The Constitution is for the stupid Congress and all them to follow, not for us. So people have to start understanding about the militia is that our founding fathers, when they went to churches, they would go to church, listen to the preacher and everything. Then that preacher would take them outside, have lunch and stuff like that. Then after that, they would start shooting. So there's some people that don't even really know how to fire a pistol or a rifle. And they have to start understanding that that's part of our rights. You know what I'm saying? Yeah. It's our duty. Exactly. Exactly. I kind of like the, David Gilley has a huge, he's taught the, he's taught about the militia and what the rightful, the second amendment is. I mean, the guy's just brilliant. And the militia, you know, we've been brought up to think it's a bunch of, you know, crazy people with, you know, they're shooting guns all the time, but that's not what it is. It was not just about this. It was not just about the firearms. It was about serving the community. The militia was the one. Protect them too. What's that? To protect also. Protect and defend. But it was also they also did things like, you know, if someone was sick or the community needed help, that militia would show up to be there to serve them. And it wasn't an NGO. It was the people of the community who knew the people in the community and would show up when there was a tragedy. Cool. You know, that, that's something that, that, uh, it's unfortunate because so many people have demonized it, that they don't even know what it is. So Greg, in any words, Greg, and then we'll go to Karen. Greg, you got to unmute yourself. Greg, where's Greg? Oh, there we go. Okay. My bad. Sorry, my mind is racing and I want to continue on Robert's theme, but I also want to go back to Bill because he was talking about the Mayflower Compact and how our founding people of this land, before they ever touched land, they created a social compact. They knew it and God was the key. That happened in All going all the way back to twelve fifteen to the Magna Carta. We have to learn our history so we can follow the right that we have to liberty and the morals that we have as a nation and our founding fathers built off of those morals. And when we talk about the Second Amendment and the militia, our founding fathers wanted it to be very difficult. They knew the world wanted to do business with America. So they created a Navy. But they did not create a militia for the national government. They did not create an army for the national government. Those are what we call non-positive laws. Those were supposed to be from the states. And it was supposed to be very difficult for this country to go to war with other nations. We were here to protect ourselves and protect this nation. But we weren't going to impose our beliefs and thought processes except by example, except by example from how we lived under God as sovereigns. And it really is a matter of learning our constitutions and our Bill of Rights and how our founding fathers through our posterity gave us all of those rights through God. So it's a wonderful day. I'm glad we celebrate it, but let's celebrate it not going back to when they originated the Constitution Day. Let's go back and celebrate it from the very beginning of our founding fathers in the Mayflower Compact and the Magna Carta and the things that really gave us our rights. And that is from the gospel. of King James, which was adopted by this country in the Mayflower Compact because it was only written in sixteen eleven shortly before that compact was signed in sixteen twenty. You've got to go back and study history to learn the text, history and tradition of our founding fathers. They were brilliant, brilliant men. So wonderful. That's good wisdom. Karen. Well, I'm going to reflect back to your former guest who was memorizing things. He said something that I thought was really great idea that when we celebrate the Constitution or any other kind of Americana, when we feel patriotic, what do we do? We go in the street and we wave our flags around and we dress in red, white, and blue and hooray, hooray, I am an American and you're an American and isn't this all wonderful? But what we don't do is say, Hey, we have some problems though. We should be, when we're studying the constitution, it's like Greg and I have talked, when you read your Bible and you notice that there's something going on in your church, it doesn't match up with what the Bible says. What do you got to do about it? You have to say something. That's why we have the free speech element alongside the assembly and the religion. Again, you have to speak out and say something when you read it and you notice it's wrong. Like, Hey, we're not supposed to be electing senators and presidents directly. Did you guys read that in the Constitution? Why are we doing that now? This doesn't make any sense. It's not what the founders wanted for us. Look at the trouble we're in now as a result of that. So if you want to celebrate that you are an American, that you are an American citizen, meaning you are a citizen of the state of the land of Michigan as a woman living on the land, however you want to phrase it, If you want to say I am an American and I can wave my peace flag out on the front lawn. Cause that's what I do. I use my civil peace flag. I don't like the wartime flag on my property. I want peace for everybody. So I'll do that. But in celebrating the constitution, we should also be examining how far we've come from that and deciding to take action on which solves the problems that we're in. Instead of just pretending like everything is wonderful because we live in the best country in the world. No, we live in a country that's got a lot of problems right now. Let's take a moment and say, yeah, while we have a great country, we need to step up and fix it because that's what the founders expected of us too. If you can keep it, he didn't say, if just a few of you who are elected people We'll fix the problems for the rest of the people. Know that you, in Jefferson's comment about if you can keep it, is the rest of us. That's who that you is. That's you and I trying to do something to solve the problems of the land. There you go. Well, let's do this. Let's say a prayer. And then we're going to go about our day, doing what we need to do to uphold the constitution and be inspiring. Good civic minded Americans serving God in his land. Dear heavenly father. Thank you so much for Greg, Ralph, Karen, Mark, Robert, um, who am I missing guys? Um, Bill and every one of the, our wonderful friends who have given our their time. to step forward and see and David and step forward to speak about the things that make us great. You know, it's amazing how many people want to talk about all the things that are wrong and what the United States has done over the years, blah, blah, blah. Well, guess what? You know, we acknowledge that we are flawed. We are sinners. This is a fallen world we live in. And we can obsess about that all day long. But what's really amazing is when you work through one of your children or your children and bring out your character the good things that come from you in us. It's not us. It's you, you, you are the only reason why we ever do anything right. And we are grateful for that. We're grateful that you made a way for us to have relationship with you that you come and live within us and that we can actually walk with you living this life as we walk with you and turn to you and focus on you every single day. Thank you so much for the Founding Fathers and those people that thought it was important to lay down a government based on what you set forth in King and Judges. Everything that we do If we go back to what you have laid out for us, it just seems to work. And we thank you for your instruction manual for this life, the Bible. We thank you for that so much. And we're going to commit ourselves to immersing ourselves into your word, into praying, to seeking your will for us, and to following you all the days of our lives. Not only ourselves, but our homes, our families, and our friends that we would commit to teaching, to upholding, to encouraging others, to fighting for unity and for holding people accountable under the rules that you have given us. Thank you so very much. We love you so much. It's going to be another great day to serve and to look at your wonderful creation, celebrate all the wonderful things that you have done for us. Thank you so very, very much. We love you in the name of Jesus Christ, we pray. Amen. All right, boys and girls, here we go. I just came up with another task. Okay, Robert's face is back again. Hey, Robert. What's up, Governor? You're so funny. Do you want to say any last words? And then I'm going to go to my ding, ding, ding, ding. No, I just I appreciate everything these people are saying. I mean, we just got to get more and more people on board to understand what's going on, because you get before you before you react to anything. You got to sit back and ask yourself why it happened and where's the money going and what's going on with it. On anything. This is not a mob rule. It's about taking the time to process and not let your emotions drive you into craziness. We're seeing it all over the place. Step back. It's like we get into an ambush. In the military, when we get into an ambush, the first thing we do is we drop to the ground and we have to figure out where the shots are coming from. And then, then we get up, you know, we throw our grenades and we get up and we attack the situation. We don't just automatically run toward it. You know what I'm saying? Yeah. So there we go. So let's do, let's go to that point in the show, everybody, where we go to ding, ding, ding, ding, my twenty twenty two protests. And and I just I thank everybody. So go to Brandon.com because I'm the best non-conceiver is ever not conceived in history of the United States of America. And I'd like to have a discussion with the rightful president, United States President Donald Trump. Cowboy boots that weren't better. You're the only one. And then we what's that? What was that? You're the only one. I said you are the only one. Full stop. We've got to right this nation, and we have got to hold the line. This is a problem that I have, and I've said it many times. Our nation has gone to, and I'm going to say it again, eating brownies with dog crap in it. And we think that we're going to do, and we're going to get along with terrorists. We're going to negotiate with people. You don't negotiate with terrorists. You've got to hold to the law. And you have to go for the purest form of anything. And when I look at the other political parties, they're not just brownies made with dog crap. They are dog crap, okay? It's like, I mean, that is exactly what it is. It's not the lesser of the two evil. Dudes, you guys are eating dog crap out there, and there ain't no brownie involved in this, okay? Metaphor just gets worse and worse. What's that? Yeah. This metaphor just gets worse and worse. Give me a chance. I'll make it even worse. Let me say one thing. Can I say one more thing real quick? Yeah, say whatever you want. When I was a Republican and I was a precinct delegate, I would have John James and all these high people give me a call and say, hey, we're going to need your vote. I said, that's not Oh, you cut out there a minute, Robert. Hang on. He'll come back. I bet he got a call. He quit. Hey, Robert, right? When John James quit. Can you hear me? Stop a second, Robert, you went away for a minute. Start over and go through this again. Oh, I said when I was a precinct delegate, I would have like John James and all these people calling me and asking me, hey, we need your vote. I said, that's not the way it works. I have to go out to my precinct and ask people about you. And when he quit, and you got to understand, he was a ranger. So the rangers I know, they don't quit for nothing. You know what I'm saying? So now he wants to run again. And I'm thinking, you quit on the people once, you're going to do it again. I yield. Yeah, I can honestly say that if people make it into office through these political parties, it's because they've been put up for it and they've proven that they'll compromise and serve the beast system rather than serving the American population of we the people, unwavering, unapologetically, and serving in this world for God Almighty. not for the typical money almighty, which I know discuss every one of us here on this broadcast, and we're not those people. Cool. So there we go. All right, guys. Well, you know what? I just thank everybody so much for being here today. And let's see tomorrow, tomorrow, tomorrow. What's going to happen tomorrow? Tomorrow, I don't I don't know if I'm going to be on tomorrow or not. I've got a little bit of traveling to do for the next few days, but I might I will I will be in on location this weekend. And I expect that I will be doing some broadcast from that location, interviewing people and, and you know what, holding them accountable. They may or may not like me to be where I'm going to be, but we're going to see because the hard questions have to be asked on whether or not people we agree with or disagree with, whether they're gonna stand for us or if they're gonna just stand for the go along to get along, dog crap in the brownies or just pure dog crap, okay? And that's what's on deck here, guys. So if you see me talking to people, don't go crazy and go, oh, look, Brandenburg's falling in with the enemies. Okay, that's stupidville right there. It's like, if I'm there, it's going to be to get some answers out of people. and find out what's really going on and holding them accountable and making them face their choices. So there you go. So anyhow, God bless you all. God bless all those whom you love. God bless America. Make it a great day. If I'm on tomorrow, check my Telegram channel or X account, and then you'll know whether I was able to get away for a little bit to be on in the morning. But anyhow, you guys have a great day today, and I'm honored to know you all. Hang on the line. I'm going to end the broadcast.