Randy and Deborah discuss points to consider for writing a good legal document. Hosts take your calls.
- Category Archives Rule Of Law
-
-
02-05-16 Rule of Law
Friday Night Info Marathon with Randy Kelton.
-
02-04-16 Rule of Law
Replay of 01-07-16.
Special Guest Michael Cargill, owner of Central Texas Gunworks. Michael talks about the two firearms he is donating to the 2016 Logos Radio Network Fundraiser, and also discusses recent firearms legislation in Texas. Michael, Randy, and Deborah take your calls.
-
01-29-16 Rule of Law
Friday Night Info Marathon with Randy Kelton.
-
01-25-16 Rule of Law
Eddie’s Night. Due to a power outage during the last segment of the show, there were approximately 4 minutes of silence. This has been edited out of the archive. Please donate to our fundraiser and help us get battery backup equipment so that in the future our shows can continue during local power outages.
-
01-22-16 Rule of Law
Randy continues on “The Rubber Ball” Theory.
-
01-15-16 Rule of Law
16k files:
Randy continues on “The Rubber Ball” Theory.
-
01-14-16 Rule of Law
Replay of 01-07-16.
Special Guest Michael Cargill, owner of Central Texas Gunworks. Michael talks about the two firearms he is donating to the 2016 Logos Radio Network Fundraiser, and also discusses recent firearms legislation in Texas. Michael, Randy, and Deborah take your calls.
-
01-08-16 Rule of Law
Randy presents “The Rubber Ball Theory” and takes your calls.
-
01-07-16 Rule of Law
Special Guest Michael Cargill, owner of Central Texas Gunworks. Michael talks about the two firearms he is donating to the 2016 Logos Radio Network Fundraiser, and also discusses recent firearms legislation in Texas. Michael, Randy, and Deborah take your calls.
-
01-01-16 Rule of Law
Replay of 12-11-15.
Friday Night Info Marathon with special guest Michael Mirras and hosts Randy Kelton and Deborah Stevens. Michael and the hosts discuss how to deal with debt collectors, creditors, and the credit bureaus, and take your calls.
Later in the show Deborah discusses “the funny money system” and the inherent “commercial agreement” nature of the entire legal system, how there is no such thing as an “unconstitutional law,” and how there is no such thing as “unconstitutional funny money.” Deborah discusses the agorist approach of individuals empowering themselves by learning the law, taking control of their own situation, the power of engaging the courts as pro-se litigants, and opting out of “the funny money system” as well as opting out of nuisance regulatory statutes, as a way to deal with “the funny money system” and “big government” by making them obsolete.