Mark Koernke discussed historical and contemporary firearm design and manufacturing, focusing on how simple, cost-effective weapons like the Sten gun and German Volkssturm rifles (VG1/VG2) were produced during World War II using minimal resources and non-strategic materials. He explained how these designs could be replicated using modern tools and alternative materials, advocated for acquiring surplus firearms inventory (SKS, AK, FAL, G3 rifles), and promoted CNC machinery and small machine tools as essential for regional defense and self-sufficiency. The episode included announcements for upcoming patriot events including gatherings in Sturgis, South Dakota, Washington D.C., and Texas, and emphasized the importance of understanding historical weapons engineering to prepare for future conflict.
I had a dream the other night that, well, I didn't understand. A figure walked in through the mist with a flintlock in his hand. His clothes were torn and dirty as he stood there by my bed. He took off his three-cornered hat, and speaking low to me, he said, we've fought a revolution to secure our liberty. We wrote the Constitution as a shield from tyranny. For future generations, this legacy we gave, invists the land of the free. in home of the brave. The freedoms we secured for you we hoped you'd always keep. But tyrants labored endlessly while your parents were asleep. Your freedom's gone, your courage lost, you're no more than a slave. In this, the land of the free, in home of the brave. You buy permits to travel and permits to own a gun. Permits to start a business or to build a place for one. On land that you believe you own, you pay a yearly rent. Although you have no voice in saying how the money is spent, your children must attend a school that doesn't educate, and your Christian values can't be taught according to the state. You read about the current use in a regulated press, and you pay a tax you do not owe to please the IRS. Your money is no longer made of silver nor of gold. You trade your wealth for paper so your life can be controlled. You pay for crimes that make our nation turn from God and shame. You've taken Satan's number. You've traded in your name. You've given government control to those who do you harm so they could burn down churches and seize the family farm and keep our country deep in debt. Put men of God in jail. Harash your fellow countrymen while corrupted courts prevail. Your public servants don't uphold the solemn oaths they've sworn. and your daughters visit doctors so their children won't be moved. Your leaders send artillery and guns to foreign shores and send your sons to slaughter fighting other people's wars. Can you regain the freedoms for which we fought and died? Or don't you have the courage or the faith to stand with pride? And are there no more values for which you will fight to save? Or do you wish your children to live in fear and be a slave? Oh, sons of the Republic, arise, take a stand, defend the Constitution, the Supreme Law of the land, preserve our great Republic and each God given right, and pray to God to keep the torch of freedom burning bright. As Iowoki vanished in the midst for whence he came, his words were true, we are not free, but we have ourselves to blame. For even now his tyrants trampled each god given right. We only watched him tremble, too afraid to stand and fight. If he stood by your bedside, you dream while you were asleep and wondered what remains of the freedoms he'd fought to keep. What would be your answer if he called out from the grave? Dill the Land of the Free. There we go, we are. This is the second hour of the afternoon intelligence report. Mark Morky. One day closer to victory for all of our brothers and sisters both on and behind the lines in occupied territories. We the People Radio Network, WTPRN.com. I want to check, we might still be on dead air right now out there in Radio Land. I don't know, we just got to report just in case you are listening to us on WTPRN.com. That's We the People Radio Network, TPRN.com. We're also on theradio.4mg.com. on AM and FM major stations, AM and FM micro stations, CV base stations, and UltraNet knowledge east and west of the Mississippi and central Alaska. Our friends up there, it is Weapons Wednesday. Information that you can take advantage of to acquire better knowledge east to upgrade accordingly. You know, interesting, just a historical note here. And hopefully, I think we're up. Well, you never know, we may, but I think we're on a feed right now, so we're gonna assume the worst, we won't be disappointed. Actually, 100 and, well, way past this, guys. We're looking at 104. As you know, the three-man musket of whatever type, Harper's Ferry model 1856, 53-56, depending which conversion, was out there. We also had the three-man Springfield in service. There was a myriad of other firearms, first from overseas to include the Enfield, you know, the Zwab rifles, etc., progressively brought in under contract. Many pre-Civil War firearms were bought bargain basement We literally cleaned out the inventories of all of Europe arming both sides and then progressively upgrading through the Civil War but never throwing anything away. Nothing was ever just Disposed of people it may have been collected but it was turned around and other units were typically armed with whatever was on hand Routed for resupply purposes inventoryed and then elected and then as you know brass technology low-grade steel iron were the norm for the day. Imagine something that would really be bizarre. Now remember at the beginning of the war you had volcanic repeating rifles. They were already out there guys. There's whole units that were equipped with lever action repeating rifles at the beginning of the Civil War. Not at the end, traction rifles available. But interestingly enough these arms were all very very effective. in place, especially in the hands of cavalry units. Gave them a lot of firepower, meant that they didn't have to worry about trying to reload a muzzleloader on a horse, which still was being done on the early stages of the war. Remember, muzzle loaders were the norm for the infantry. Well, the volcanic rifle was already out there in one form or another, and there were other repeater types that became innovations for their time, progressively both during and after the Civil War. Why do I bring this up? Well, you've seen the revolvers too. Look at the different technologies available. Imagine this. If somebody had looked at that cart and had thought about the idea of a floating, or like this, shall we say, a floating bolt with a big spring, if somebody had thought, man, maybe we can make this kind of a repeater, but we'll go in a different direction. Now, what am I talking about? Well, there's another weapon. We'll zoom forward to World War II. that was a weapon not so much really of desperation though to a degree you might say it was but it was the Sten gun. Now the Sten gun was an all homemade firearm. It could be made with parts being produced in every garage across England and it was. In fact grandma had a little hammer or she had a little drill or she had a little tool and they would bring in a bucket full of parts, sheet pieces of metal already cut And grandma would take her little hammer and she would round out with that little hammer and anvil, and a mandrel also in some cases, would hammer out a trigger guard, would go in another box, and she would do another one, and go in a box, and another one would go in a box, and eventually all the strips of metal around the left would be trigger guards on the right. Other people made trigger group shrouds, other people made barrel blanks, other, you know, with different tools that were at hand and nothing more than garage implements. or hand tooling an idea of how crude is the Bren gun, or I'm sorry, the Sten gun itself? Well, at its peak production, the Sten gun was being produced at $2.75 per submachine gun. You say that's awfully cheap. Yes, you're right, and very crude, but not a pretty firearm, but a firearm that worked quite effectively, semi or full auto. Now, how resilient was the design and how flexible? How about many of the parts being made out of brass? Huh? Yes, many of the parts being made out of brass. Also, in many cases, key components were not welded. They were actually brazed together. Yeah, that's right guys, we're talking crude here, but we're also talking effective and workable. Now, the original idea was that a Sten gun was only going to survive about two years in service. Well, lo and behold, they started using them and they found out that, yeah, that's true. uh... the theory work that way but in reality they lasted for a lot longer ten years later tears later forty years later countries that uh... needed a cheaper inexpensive firearm we're buying virtual bins of stengans and issuing them out as the submachine gun of choice for their army now why would bring this up and talk about civil war well here's a point the stengun so simple and so crude by, you know, the sophisticated standards of like the ZB-26, G34, or the MP-40, or even the Grease Gun, which of course was a clamshell design and much more sophisticated in many ways. The Sten Gun could have been made in 1860 technology. Can you imagine how lopsided it would be if all of a sudden, in worse, let's say, Nathan Bedford Forrest, how about, Stonewall Jackson. Imagine Stonewall Jackson with a battalion or you might say a squadron of cavalry armed with a 32 round magazine fed medium barreled sten gun carbine. Something that was full auto or semi-auto that went ba da ba da ba da ba da ba and continued to fire and again the cartridge was available and it could have been rimfire did not have to be center fire people. Rimfire cartridge brass construction for most of the parts. The barrel low grade, because it doesn't require much pressure, it doesn't take much pressure, and you would have completely changed the dynamics of cavalry operations. Not only would they have been effective as they were at a cavalry configuration for speed and for surprise, you would have had the volume fire necessary Kind of like that t-shirt. How many of you have seen that t-shirt out there? It shows Imagine for all you guys that are into compound bows. And it shows the Indian on horseback and over his head, he's got instead of his bow or his lance, a compound bow. The word Imagine is underneath in order to see how would this have changed the battlefield. Who would have changed the battlefield, guys? Just the idea of somebody understanding how to use pulleys and a few pieces of wood. would have changed the range, penetration, and effectiveness overall of yet another weapon in a timely fashion in a unique situation. The reason I bring this up is because the Sten gun, or the concept of the Volkssturm rifles of World War II, is something that they have tried to make disappear, or they don't want you to think about, or they control it to misinform your rifles. What are you talking about, Mark? Well, let's go in another direction. A whole family of assault rifles, real assault rifles, not the fake stuff that they're calling assault rifles today, which aren't, but a whole family of rifles were being introduced by the German military. STGs, also MPs, the MP designation, pure line that, but in reality I think somebody turned a blind eye intentionally. And again, the idea is to try and ridicule what in reality was an intelligent move, critical to the overall arms development, but at the end, middle end of the war, It was understood that the national defense of Germany would have to be deeper, would have to be locally supporting. While the MP family of rifles were being developed and they were more expensive, something else comes up on the horizon that the, well, how is it we don't want to talk about? Because, like the Sten gun, these rifles, or light rifle car beams, were a very successful design. We're going to cover that when we come back in just a few minutes here. It is... 616 here on We the People Radio Network, back in 3 with the Intel Report Weapons Wednesday. Enter Food is easy to prepare and cheaper than a cup of coffee to take every day. And speaking of coffee, EnterFood.com has the best all organic fresh coffee ever. It's fair trade coffee infused with rainforest polysaccharides. 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To get your Berkey system, please visit We The People Radio Network at wtprn.com and click the Berkey banner or call 512-646-6444. That's wtprn.com or call 512-646-6444. Collectors, outdoor enthusiasts. survivalists. The army navy store from your memory as a child is just that. A memory. But there is still one place to find everything from gas masks to ammo cans and find it cheap. MainMilitary.com. Get hard to find objects like real world blankets for under 20 bucks, canteens for just $2, or trioxane fuel for just a dollar a box. MAIMEMilitary.com. With free shipping on items over $150. Not including heavy items. Find surplus items for cheap now. Like 30 caliber cleaning kits for just $2.99 a piece, or a dozen for $30. Flare pistols are a the world. Great host, great topics, great speech at its best. This is We The People Radio Network. Now, in the dark days of the later part of World War II, Germany is creating what it calls fortress towns or fortress cities. Now, some joke that that was kind of like a doomsday epitaph. In other words, you're a fortress Schmitzberg. Oh, God, we're all going to die. But many cities, and all of them, took seriously the fact that they knew that from the west, the US coming along with the other allies, and from the east, the Russians and the Mongol hordes were going through and rape, kill, pillage, and burn. So with this in mind, many of the German industrial complex subcomponents had to come up with solutions for national defense to try and make things more efficiently. Well, long behold, instead of the full type assault family of rifles, one of the things that one company came up with, actually two different cities, were what we call the beer can guns. Now, the reason they call them the beer can guns is because they were produced in beer can plants. Very quickly the tooling was run around into other projects which they were already in on for military production So it wasn't like it was the only thing they did was beer cans But taking the basic premise of a semi-automatic light rifle using the MP4443 type magazine and chambering it in that caliber they came up with an all-stamped firearm that cost about three dollars per rifle to make This light rifle used a beaver board stock was a very simple design. There are two variants, Volt's Grenadier Rifle 1 and the VGS 2. The Volt's Grenadier Rifles that they developed experienced in a wide front, but rather were used for regional defense. Interestingly enough, at the end of the war, since we captured the production facilities, we took, like we did in so many other places, the whole factory, or the basic components of the factory, picked them up, took them back to Aberdeen Proving Ground. At Aberdeen Proving Ground, they produced a number of these VG1 and VG2 simple rifles. Any factory, anybody, any home plant could make them. They found out that they worked as well as any other conventional arm in the inventory. Tested them, they did the evaluation, and then they made them disappear for obvious reasons. All of a sudden you're looking at a rifle that instead of costing you $500, $400, $300, or $160 a piece, You're looking at $3 and $4, and remember that these VG rifles were never tested to destruction. Well, they were tested to destruction in the laboratory. In other words, in research at Aberdeen. Most important to remember is that on the battlefield or in perpetual use, like the Sten, they had a lifespan far in excess of what anybody wanted anyone to think about. because nobody would be making big gobs of money hand over fist on a weapon system if all of a sudden you could crank out a whole bunch of light rifles comparable to the AR-15, the AK-47 but build them for three and four apiece. Now most important with regard to the concept in design and the drop the seed here, think about this, they didn't reinvent the wheel. They took basic components, example, they stuck with eight millimeter. They went with the eight millimeter assault cartridge and they went with 8 millimeter assault rifle magazines. There's nothing to change. Already in production, already out there in force, they proved the cartridge was proven. What happens here is they have a plug-and-play rifle. It didn't even get... In fact, this thing was riveted together. They found that these things were very durable. They found that they were very resilient and they found that they worked and were very deadly. Think about the process. If you were to build a design, any light rifle, light carbine, slash semi-automatic is what you want to do, utilizing the same concept. Your variable in geometry would be the magazine well. The magazine well, the barrel, and the extractor, and of course bolt face, become the critical components for variation in commitment to caliber, whereas type of ammunition that you're using. So let's think about this. What are the calibers out there that are the most common that we can get? And what magazines? Well, the AR-15 is the most user-friendly for magazine well if you think about it because it's plug and play. In other words, all I gotta do, even pitch black, is make sure that little angle on the base of the mag is proper, find the magazine well, slap the magazine up, pop, pop, twice on the bottom of the mag, hit the forward assist, and my rifle's working. That is the big plus of the AR-15 rifle. That's one of the plus pluses on it is the speed with which we can reintroduce another magazine into a positive feed well with no major actions. In other words, I don't have to think one or two processes. With the AK and the M14 and the others, you do have to think more. A little bit. You got to make sure that magazine, you get really good at it. Trust me, repetition creates the experience. You have to bring the mag up. You have to make sure it's in the niche, push it back, pop up on the front of the mag. make sure she's locked in place charging handle and pop pop pop. Okay now option with regard to a volkskrenadier rifle is to do what they did with the BG-1s and BG-2 the form volkskrenadier rifles. Go with a positive magazine well like the AR-15 using an AR-15 type magazine and 223 ammunition. Since you may have a whole whole bunch of AKs that show Al Bet in 7.62x39 to be re-engineered to re-engineer the lower magazine well assembly so that it could be detached in the basic kit form and that you can replace it with a pivoting magazine well to adapt to the AK-47 or the AK-74 type design. This sounds, explaining it, more complicated than it actually is. And remember, think components. Do not, don't think, you're going to buy a whole new right? No, think components for field manufacturing or for adaptation of the design in a regional defense, what you have the most of is what you plan on using. Now let's take a sub note here talking about sub-caliber type weapons, is what ammunition do we have readily available in force out there that we're seeing either as loaded ammo, offended cases? Well there are two calibers. Number one, 7.62x25 Tokarev. No, it's not gonna be around forever. So the idea is to know that you'll be eventually drying up on the 7.62x25 and going to another caliber. Well, what other calibers are out there that are coming? Well, 9mm's in military circles, of course. 45 ACP is out there. But one thing all of you may have noticed that there's a gross preponderance of is 40 caliber Smith & Wesson police brass. Lots and lots and lots and lots and tons, and I mean measure it, not in pounds, tons. Expended reloadable boxer primed nickel or conventional brass This means 40 caliber Smith & Wesson should be looked at as another alternate light caliber option or a light rifle configured books grenadier type weapon Also for your personal use with regard to secondary pistols to have on the shelf now I'm going to mention a company I've mentioned many times High point is an excellent fire $150 High point in 9mm high point pistols they make a smaller frame they make a, I should say they are all medium frame basically pistols but they make a shorter crop undercover version 380 auto but they also make it 9, 40 and 45 I believe now too but they make a standard medium frame semi automatic pistol that works and it's really it's a screwdriver guys it's part of a toolbox it is not designed to be a pristine piece you lay on the shelf and stare at and go oooh It's a working tool. It's a useful working tool. It's built as a working tool. So the high point pistols in .40 caliber, for those who are looking for a way to save ammo and be able to continue to feed your weapons, you know, feed your troops when the time comes and they can continue to fight. .40 caliber is another caliber that should be considered because it's going to be readily available from the Stas Polizai, okay, and from other sources. It is not the only caliber. There's going to be a mish-mish of stuff out there. We can already see what's happening with the inventory. But this is one area where, for the price of the rifle, for instance, another little option is a high point carving in 40 caliber and a high point fist pistol in 40 caliber can be put on the shelf for a pretty inexpensive price and you have another option to continue to fight when other stuff is dried up. or as we have to shift through the process of supply and support, drifting from one caliber to the next and utilizing every round available that may be in the inventory. We're going to be back in about three minutes with the People Radio Network here with the Intel report. If you're familiar with F.N.F.A.L. then visit GunPartsGuy.com, an excellent source for parts, accessories, and technical support for all F.A.L. rifles. If you'd like to modify or upgrade your F.A.L. the Gun Parts Guy has a great selection of new, refinished, and refurbished parts. The Gun Parts Guy doesn't have a Federal Firearms License and he doesn't want one, but he is THE source for parts and the best F.A.L. kits today. Call James at 360-906-8369 or email Gun Parts Guy at hotmail.com. You'll be pleased with the personal care and technical support you get from the Gun Parts Guy. That number again, 360-906-8369. Whether you call or visit the website at GunPartsGuy.com, be sure to mention WTPRN to get an additional 10% discount off their already low, low prices. If your body isn't feeling too well these days, you're going to start taking this hemp by say, go to hempusa.org. You may not like what I'm about to say, but you know I'm gonna say it anyway. The government doesn't want the best for you. They keep you down, they keep you blue, they starve your body for all its nutrients. They won't let you grow industrial hemp. It really doesn't make any kind of sense when it's so healthy for the world and useful for you, my friends. Mr. Bush will hear this song for the heart of America wants this one. Go to Hemp USA. If you're a truth or an anarchist or renegade, you only want things that God has made, go to hempusa.org. You offer free shipping anywhere in the states, go to hempusa.org. Government is best which governs leads. Wake up and smell the fascism. Being in government means never having to say you're sorry. What part of unconstitutional do you not understand, George? In today's world full of tyranny and injustice, sometimes it seems the only thing we still have is our freedom of speech. Exercise your freedom of speech by purchasing your choice of hundreds of different Liberty Stickers from humorous to serious at libertystickers.com LibertyStickers.com can even customize your own bumper stickers. It's time to stand up for what you believe. Invest in your freedom. Get your stickers at LibertyStickers.com for your family, friends, and community. Go to LibertyStickers.com or call 877-873-9626. That's 877-873-9626 and express your freedom of speech today. Call 877-873-9626. That's 877-873-9626. Uh, get your pen and paper ready. By the way, it's raining here in Michigan. Don got it earlier with a whole state is being swept with a really typical summer storm that we see here. Lots of moisture coming off Lake Michigan. Uh, so again, everybody, I think there's some storm warnings out there for different parts of Michigan. Check the weather service real quick to see what the situation is in your area. Um, right now, even as we speak way out there on the planes, South Dakota in Sturgis, South Dakota, Kitty Carson and many others are out there speaking from the second through the sixth. This is the first day. It's been of course not just closed out yet. They still got stuff they're doing right now even as we speak. If you get a chance, go to revolutionforfreedom.com. Revolution for, that's the number four, freedom.com. Revolutionforfreedom.com. And you can call Kitty Carson at 03746-734-734. never know who might be out there over the next couple of days because this is going to be an ongoing event until pay attention and there'll be further announcements on that event. But again, revolutionforfreedom.com. Also, to find our activity, the training activities in Oklahoma and in Arizona, go to offthegridgirl.com. The Grid Girl, Washington, D.C., of course, on the one hand. We have a rally, Ron Paul should be there I believe, but there's of course Poker Face Playing, a band you keep hearing every time you listen to our program. And in addition to that, we also have the Friends Party coming up here on the 12th, right here in Michigan. For those of you who are interested and excited, we will make sure we give out the information on that again. No, it's coming up, we got a little time still. But also make plans for The Promise of America, Washington on the Brazos State Park, July 26, 2008. 9 a.m. to 6 p.m. Lunch will be available for purchase. Admission $20 per person, $30 per couple. Children under 18 free, eight per couple. Guys bring girls, girls bring guys. Christian Singer, Leefa Latrell will be there lunchtime entertainment. Vendor space available, first come, first serve, $20 per table. Your chance to hear Jack Blood from this next. Hank Gilbert with turf, that's www.texasturf.org.com. correction, spot mark in a face. org, there's no dot com. That's www.texasturf.com. LB Bork, author of the Red Amendment. Myself, Nancy Cornky, Don Vetcher, and also Steve Schenk, the eFoodsDirect.com. Check them out, guys. Find out what's available. Sheriff Mack and Daniel New. Again, the right tools mean everything. Get the tools to fulfill the promise. Now if you want to get hold of Sally to find out more, Sally Jernicke, give her a call at 830-997-1908. That is 830-997-1908. Also, the end of the month, actually we're looking at events up in the northwest. We will be giving announcements there for the August window, the beginning of August. Also, at that time, the Virginia militia will be holding their final set of organizational meetings. I will be there for that. That will be in the first weeks of August. We'll give you the date there for the guys and announce to everybody when that's taking place. They did a great job. They didn't need me there to be involved in politics that are supposed to be internal. Kill the politics, guys. We have not got enough time left to deal with that kind of nonsense. Focus on the problem. Agree. Deal with these minor issues as quickly as you can and get on with the rest. Supply and support, quartermaster, all of that was dealt with. Everybody realized we're running out. Congratulations. The Virginia-Misham militia did a fine job. They had representatives from every one of their counties there and from several of the major cities. Typical monitoring operations with the bad guys. And again, very good job, but it will be in August looking at that. Knob Creek, all the way out in October. Don't forget it. We plan on trying to get everybody there that we can. If you want to see how weapons work, this is a chance for you to actually look at some of the equipment, understand it's in a contained environment, and under perfect conditions. That's not how the world works, and that's not how weapon systems work. As you will find out very quickly with any weapon that you are carrying, proper maintenance is great. Okay, now. With regard to the whole idea of what was the reason I was bringing up this thing about the BG firearms, the vulse grenadier category or even the Sten gun, is that these weapons require minimal engineering time. Minimal production time. Completely built at the tactical level. Now there's another term that has to be incorporated into this and I'll give you an example guys. I had guys commenting, you know, the BMP we looked inside or no it was the BMP and the BTR 60. The BTR 60 had plywood seats. You know, oh, that's really backwards. No, it's not. It's called utilizing non-strategic material wherever possible. Now, think about it, people. Anywhere where you can cut corners and produce something, and if you aren't doing it already, most militaries, you don't realize this, because you haven't seen the kind of knockdown drag-out war that we saw in World War II, you know, since World War II. In World War II, there were tiers of production concept. And I want you to get out of the idea. It's got to be a certain way. Let me put it this way. How many of you out there work with wood? Let's say that you have an AR-15. Let's say that you're in a situation where you still have access to some tools. In fact, just some very rudimentary and crude tools. And somebody has a pistol grip brake on their AR-15. Would you, A, well I mean we would, initially what I would do is grab the duct tape and grab the electrical tape and even if the handle is broken on the base, I would tape it up to soften it so it wouldn't be stabbing you, it wouldn't cut you or whatever and I'd use it for however long I had to until I could replace it. But let's say that we're down the road and I'm sorry guys, the parts are all gone, there's no spares and until you see something that somebody's fragged or blown up or busted, you're not going to get another hand grip. Does that mean you have to suffer with that situation or do you turn to your non-strategic inventory? Mr. Pine board, a 2x4, a piece of walnut, a piece of ash, whatever you can get your hands on. And what you do is with a little bit of honing and a little bit of saw work and then some sanding and filing, wouldn't you make an exact reproduction of what was needed or at least close enough known to know the difference and you could either oil it or you paint it or whatever you do to seal it so it doesn't rot. And you have yourself a replacement pistol grip. Well, what you just did is alternate engineering utilizing non-strategic materials. Now, let's get into other areas. What do we have? What do we put? Non-strategic means it's junk. In other words, it's plentiful. You could try to cut it off, but it won't do you any good. Okay. The only thing you can try to do is cut off, for instance, tools, which will be the next thing that happens. That's why the tool industry was attacked so heavily by the globalists. If you do not have tools that are good or effective, you're going to have to make do, and of course, it makes more work. Making more work means it consumes more of your time. Consuming more of your time means that you make fewer of the things that are needed. Okay? Now, combine that time tool with the idea of non-strategic materials. What else do we have a whole pile of laying around? What about plastic bottles? Do we have a lot of plastic bottles laying around? Why, yes we do. Clear plastic. We've got the junk plastic of the world, the milk jug, milk gallon jug. Well, think about how many times you've taken to watch that stuff heat up and it kind of becomes malleable and you can actually kind of either pour it or you watch it sluice over to the side of a fire where it cools and creates a new unique design that's kind of neat when it cools. You bring it out of the ash and go, oh, look at this. How many of you have done that with pot metal or aluminum? Now, aluminum, as we know, is going for a premium right now. It's going up in price. It's becoming more pricey even as I speak. Aluminum, or pot metals are considered non-strategic in many ways as far as refuse goes. For this reason, you have to look at the idea that you can cast things or grind things from this non-strategic material to make components to save cost and expenditures, which allows you to spend more time in other areas that are more time consuming. Example, I mentioned the Bieber board stock on the Bolt Scredadier rifles. Well, all it was was a piece of pine board or a piece of wood, whatever wood they could find. cut to dimension, ground minimally, sanded and oiled, minimal steel plate sometimes and in many cases without for the buttstock. Work just fine, weapon had minimal recoil, accuracy was reasonable, everybody got away with it. Now does that mean we have to be that crude? Well think about it, with a little bit of plastic and a little bit of mold work, I can make a butt plate out of plastic that seals the end of the wood so it's less likely to chip or splinter or break. I could make it out of cast aluminum. I could make it out of... Well, just think about it. How many things could I make it out of? Strapped pieces of metal bent and then screwed into place with one screw on the top and one screw on the bottom. You see how we're thinking here? Improvise, adapt, and overcome. Even with regard to strategic production, this is possible. But you have to start looking historically at examples that have been made to disappear. because they're people friendly especially manufacturer friendly for simple or crude environments. Anyway, we're going to go to break again. We'll be back in about three minutes here on We the People Radio Network. Hi neighbor. We all know that knowledge is power. We've tried to give you knowledge to help you prepare for rough times. There's the worldwide famine and our country's dependence on often dangerous food imports. You know about genetically poisoned food. Two-thirds of the food is disappearing with the bees along with huge crop failures from all-time record water shortages. You know they're turning food into fuel with corn ethanol plants. If we do not control our food, food will be used to control us. Food control has been the plan historically in every enslaved population and is the plan for America. The only value of the knowledge you have to take control of your food is if you choose to get a supply while you still have the freedom to choose. Call 800-409-5633 on the web efoodsdirect.com. Call 800-409-5633. Collectors, outdoor enthusiasts. Servitalists, the army navy store from your memory as a child is just that, a memory. But there is still one place to find everything from gas masks to ammo cans and find it cheap. MainMilitary.com Get hard to find objects like wheel-wool blankets for under 20 bucks, canteens for just $2, or trioxane fuel for just $1 a box. MAIMEMilitary.com with free shipping on items over $150, not including heavy items. Find surplus items for cheap now, like 30 caliber cleaning kits for just $2.99 a piece or a dozen for $30. Flair pistols are a and the world. Deadline Live and Jack Blood are proud to announce our new bookstore. Okay, it's not really our online bookstore where you can get every title, book, and DVD you hear about on our live show. It's brought to you by the people at Brave New Books. BraveNewBookstore.com is the newest, bravest, and most complete bookstore online today. And their DVD selection has all the titles you need to decode the New World Order and fight the Information War. BraveNewBookstore.com has awesome t-shirts to proudly display your patriotism and liberty stickers to alert the public at large. Brave New Books is physically located at 1904 Guadalupe Street under the Chase Bank building next to UT in Austin, Texas. So stop on by and maybe stay for one of their film showings. Go to bravenewbookstore.com now to peruse the virtual bookstore and look for the Jack Blood recommended section. Or call them at 866-516-6623, 866-516-6623 to order the books and videos you hear about on Deadline Live. Be the resistance. Tell your friends about bravenewbookstore.com. News politics cover-ups government corruption you're listening to we the people radio network WTPR ad this is the last 15 well 30 minute block before the end of the program here in weapons Wednesday with we the people I'm going up to this for a reason because you see the idea is to look at the problem differently not thinking you have to buy a box although you could buy components out of the Think about the idea that if you look at a system how much can be replaced with other you know through other manufacturing process to develop the same concept What about an AR-15 lower receiver? Why does it have to be milled out of one piece of aluminum? Why can't it be fabricated in blocks utilizing sheet steel? Remember that all of the internal dimensions are the key component the key surface areas the finished the magazine well and it's adjusted position to the upper receiver where the two pins are that the receivers pin to feel side plates with spacers made out of whatever material compensate for the thickness of the receiver and all the conventional air fifteen components with the proper drills and drill holes in place and the proper pins where they belong allows you to integrate all of the existing smaller tedious parts that otherwise would nickel and dime you to death, time-wise. And you can still even improvise in many categories there. Why am I bringing this up? Because we don't have to rely upon the system to get the job done. What we need is all of your creative juices flowing. We need all of you people with the old brain gears and high gear looking at the problems and coming up with solutions that will fit our needs. Let me give you another little hint here. The Russian philosophy on 30 caliber, why is it everything in Russia is 30 caliber? It's because of wartime production. You had 7.62x54, you had 7.62x25. Okay, now in between, we have the 30 caliber Russian cartridge. You know, what did this mean? Why did they do this? Well, here's how it works. Let's say that you make a Moisin Nagat M91 barrel and it has a flaw externally. Something happened with the failure of the flaw in the metal, a chip, a blem. Well, the idea is that you could take that one barrel, mill it down to three, cut it down and mill it down, mill them down to three, peppy-ish, 30 caliber submachine gun barrels. If there was a blim in an SMG barrel, you could take the stock and the stock material available and cut it down into a room handle mouser, a 5, into a toker barrel because there was more than sufficient material available once the stock, you know, piece of material was identified to be flawed. You see how that works? No waste, but that's why all of the chambering, all of the barrel twists were the same. This is a solution and an expensive one to get the job done. Another way to save on production steps slash save on production time with key, skilled, and we have another advantage here that's a plus plus plus for everybody which we don't nobody wants to talk about CNC technology allows free to program something and for it to go beep beep beep beep beep beep beep beep beep beep beep beep beep beep beep beep beep beep beep beep beep beep beep beep beep beep beep beep beep beep beep beep beep beep beep beep beep beep beep beep beep beep beep beep beep beep beep beep beep beep beep beep beep beep beep beep beep beep beep beep beep beep beep beep beep beep beep beep beep beep beep beep beep beep beep beep beep beep beep beep beep beep beep beep beep be The widget that you want is inside the magic box with all the magic tools often away to the side again pristine piece of metal trimmed and cut to yourself. If you don't think so go to Orange County Chopper and watch them when they have them go do custom wheel rims. Why are you wasting time on custom wheel rims when you could make any part you want with that? Oh yeah, wait a minute. Now just imagine what you can do with special. Here's an idea. Grab your pen and paper one more time today before we go. 1-800-476-4849. 1-800-476-4849. Do me a favor and call that number tomorrow sometime and get hold of Smithy. They're a combination of three and one tools. They have the Midas 1220 LTD, the King Midas, easy to use and packed with features. all the way up to and including what they call the Granite 1324. Right now, if you had to put them on time, and I'd rather do that than a nonsense with a new car, $8.77 per month will put you, without any money down, into this machine. And there's, you know, if you can spend a little more, you can spend a little less. But call Smithy tomorrow and look to see what they have. Ask for their brochures to come, you know, send them to you. and see what they have available. They've got all kinds of free tool packages that come with the machines right now. Yes, they want to sell product because the market is soft. We need to see this tooling and machinery out in as many places as possible where Americans will have the tools necessary to help to defend and build the nation. We don't have to go back to the Stone Age to get that done. What we need is to pick up the tools now that will give us a jump and move us ahead to where we need to be people when the time comes. The cool thing about these three in one tools, these are both lathes, drill presses and planers guys, mills actually, mill heads. What you can do with these is pretty much anything your little heart desires if you're a tool and die man or a machinist, you'll know what the value of this equipment is. For those of you who are learning, Well, just use your creative imagination to figure out what you might be able to do with machinery like this. Most important, runs off 110 people. You can get it three-phase in the larger machines or other machines that are more complicated that the same company offers, but they offer a whole family of machines that run off 110. All kinds of small work, right? So, the other thing I want you to do is when you call, tell them you heard about it on the Intel, heard about them on the Intel report. Tell them, yeah, I was listening to the intel report on Weapons Wednesday and they mentioned you and I need to find out more about what you have. 1-800-476-4849. That's 1-800-476-4849. Do this little part for me. Help me out in this way and it would be greatly appreciated. I want to see, you know, again, we're going to change the dimension of the battlefield once more. That's why, again, look at the historical text, what's available out there. Take a look at what it is that's been done in the past. We do not have to reinvent the wheel. By the way, there are basically, there are the seven black books of engineering on firearms. Most people don't know this, but the engineers do. There's a handful of black books, barely thick, almost like Bibles. Actually, they are Bibles. These are the Bibles for weapons engineers. And there's nothing new under the sun with firearms design. The only thing that they're doing now is they come up with whatever goofy combinations for the sake of just changing things up. And the fact of the matter is that they knew already beforehand what problems they would have by adopting the AR-15 family of rifle back in the 60s. Why did they already know? Because this series of books and all the engineering specs and the issues that would arise were already known 20 years earlier. A little hint here, by the way, before we go. If you get a chance, find a Smith Small Arms of the World for the 60s, you know, any number of years. They're, Smith Small Arms comes out every year. I don't know if they're putting them right now. They have been for decades. Smith Small Arms or Jane's Small Arms of the World. If you go back historically and take a look at the weapons that were available and have been available, you'll notice that, especially with the 1950s weapons trials for the M14 and the FN-FAL where they all came into play, and by the way, The AR-10, in its parent form, was there also in the competition and it was designed to fail. It was there and it could have been made so that it would not fail, but they intentionally wanted to stumble the firearm up. So this is an example, again, where, you know, again, fair examples of how things are engineered. The M14 won out over the FN FAL, but only barely, by the way. And the FAL was actually thought to be a shoe-in to become the standard arm for the United States military. So much so that in 1957, 56 and, I'm sorry, 55, 56, many FMs and manuals were printed with US troops carrying the FN FAL. It was actually thought that the rifle was going to be adopted as a NATO standard arm for the US. As we know, the M14 was the choice, and the M14 went out, and accordingly the tooling and all the technology supporting it continued in production from the M1 plants into the M14s, TRW making some of the best M14s ever on the planet. Very few of those surviving because of the nutcases like Clinton that had many of them destroyed during the first Clintonista regime and part of their administration. Anyway, point is, all of those weapons that you see in the trials in 1955 or that were available are the basis for all of Stoner's 223 designs that he produces and that are actually adopted or built through the 60s and into the early 70s. If you doubt me, do a little historical digging and you'll be amazed. you'll find that there are even some weapons you can't understand why they weren't made because they actually turned out to be more reliable than all the other weapons tested. They also were cheaper to produce, which meant there would have been more of them in inventory for yet less USTAC.TAC dollars spent with the same reliability and with the same accuracy as the other weapons that were in service. Oh well, that's history. We gotta live with what we got on the shelf, which is why I say the weapons we have there, guys, they do work, they are serviceable, and we want to take advantage of the vast inventory of surplus and direct the inventory so that it's routed to our troops where it's needed. Collecting the SKS technology in one area, the AKs in another, FALs, G3s, you name it, round it all up, get it out of the surplus stores, get it into our hands, Spread it back out accordingly so that it's safe and secure in preparation for the war that's coming. As always, God bless the Republic. Death to the New World Order. We shall prevail, ladies and gentlemen. The Empire is on the run. We're on the march with the both screener to your arms and a whole lot of other fun stuff in the process advancing forward. Kick him in the butt all the way to the shore. Give him a backpack full of rocks. Send him halfway back to the spider. Thank you, ladies and gentlemen. We'll see you tomorrow. God bless and good night. The Bill of Rights protects every American's God-given right to keep and bear arms. Now that right is being seriously undermined as legally registered rifles are being confiscated in some parts of our country. If we're not careful, we may find ourselves with no right to own guns. And that's where Gun Owners of America comes in. Gun Owners of America is in Washington every day fighting for you to keep that right. Congressman Ron Paul has called GOA the only no-compromise gun lobby in Washington. You need to be part of this great grassroots group of activists who are keeping the heat on their members of Congress. Find out right now how you can join. Call 888-886-GUNS and get started receiving their fact-filled newsletters and action alerts. Call 888-886-GUNS or go to their webpage at gunowners.org and help make your voice heard in Washington. Make that call right now and call Gun Owners of America at 888-886-GUNS. Remember, it's not just about gun control, it's about control.
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