Mark Koernke and Donald Betcher discussed NBC (nuclear, biological, chemical) defense preparedness, emphasizing that militia units nationwide are training with gas masks and protective equipment. They covered practical NBC defense tactics, including gas mask maintenance, repair techniques using duct tape, and the advantages of specific mask models for rifle marksmanship. The hosts addressed ammunition scarcity, advocating for .22 caliber practice rounds and bullet casting as alternatives to commercial ammunition. They discussed surveillance infrastructure (fiber optic trunk lines installed along highways since 1999-2000), night vision equipment limitations when used with gas masks, and deception tactics. A caller shared experiences awakening people at a racing event to government overreach. The show emphasized preparedness across medical training, weapons systems, and tactical operations in contaminated environments.
As a Live 365 VIP member, you get rock music, country music, classic, reggae, jazz, urban, polka, inspirational, ethnic, everything from mainstream to indie and obscure. Except commercials. For your free trial membership, go to live365.com slash VIP. Live 365. These words were true. We are not free, but we have ourselves to blame. For even now as friends trample each God given right we only watch in tremble too afraid to stand and fight If he stood by your bedside to dream while you were asleep and wondered what remains of the freedoms he fought to keep What would be your answer if he called out from the grave? This is still the land of the free and home Well, good afternoon ladies and gentlemen. This is the first hour of the afternoon intelligence report. I'm Mark Quirky. And I'm Donald Betcher. One day closer to victory for all of our brothers and sisters both on and behind the lines in occupied territories west, southwest, east and northeast. Well, ladies and gentlemen, you're listening to us on libertytreeradio.4mg.com. Also on pbn.4mg.com and we're on live 365 then go to Liberty Tree Radio. We're also on AM&FM microstations, CB Bay stations and UltraNet technologies both east and west of the Mississippi. You will also find us on other systems coming up and online even as we speak too numerous to mention. Kind of fun because I had a chance to talk to some of the guys yesterday and last night about that. We are advancing in many areas, but today is a special day. Oh yes, Mark. We could talk about 63 years and some odd hours ago now, but if you listen real close, a real silent wasn't a big bang, but one in the chamber. The slide is closed, the well is full, and the perimeter is secure. And many times I've asked you to compare an inch to a mile. And we opened up kind of like that this morning talking about, you know, the anniversary of Hiroshima. And even talking about even in this time of colossal weapons, we still have the need for the man with the rifle. You know, Kennedy, he was a guy that later spoke about, you know, how malicious, how people should be building militias in America. I'll have to find that quote, Mark. I have it here somewhere buried in, you know, paperwork. Boy, if I ever got with a computer, a lot of things had jumped my hand better. I'll find that for you, the talks about Kennedy and militia here in America. He encouraged it. We talked earlier in the day, Mark, about that battlefield that might not be exactly a level playing field if you look at it that way. Because a lot of people do, oh, we don't have a chance. Well, again, you know. It depends on situation, it depends on location, it depends on even the lay of the land and it depends on which way the wind blows. And then the next thing it depends on you guys is I don't really think there are enough people insane enough to really just nuke the whole place to where we can't live through it. Because you know what? If you pay attention, you know, much like watching, you know, gunslingers when you're a young kid watching, gunsmoke and riflemen and whatnot, If you pay attention, I think you've heard them talk that, that, oh, it was a despicable phrase when it first trickled down, Mark. You'll remember this, when this phrase, eology, first came to common knowledge. Remember before when they talked about nuclear weapons at the beginning? I don't remember that because I was just a little sprout. But for a little while there, Mark, America had stand-alone technology. And then, oh, a few years after this, to bomb in the air and then they rapidly rushed up the parity. This equals out with pikes that are to a museum. He fits right into a portion of it. But now that runs up and up and on. But they matched that to what we were told was the mad, remember that Mark? The mad, mutually assured destruction. This is the reason why no one would ever press the button because it would be a mad situation. Again, mutually assured destruction. You know, the Mexican standoff, well, you know, We're doing that in different parts of the country right now. I don't want to change the subject. But after telling us about mutually assured destruction for a good long time, we started to hear another phrase, you guys. You'll recognize it, and I know that it was done for a particular effect, so to speak, leaked down. There's a phrase that when you're talking in nuclear weapons and amount of them deployed, it breaks down to a limited nuke exchange. Now, you know, let's do it like this. Like military targets, a carry that would be nuclear-bearing responses if they can be caught on the ground. Those would probably be the major target, much like at the front of World War II. Mark, you remember in the history, it was kind of the doff of the hat in the gentlemen's agreement, nudge, nudge, wink, wink, we won't bomb civilian areas. the air forces of the future will maintain their targeting ability to military assets. That didn't do Hitler a whole lot of good, so he turned rather rapidly to the cities. And you know, you've all seen the films, you know, that communist Edward Armora, the display of the destruction of the cities. You can even see it in the archives if you know where to look. But take that up to times and run this over again to instead of mutually assured destruction, we're kind of pretty certain that should that happen it would limited nuclear exchange now let's go back to military targets a number of civilian targets in order that it this fit with portion of the letter again mentioned earlier not in whole but enough to beat humanity spirit into submission because all if they got if they did that city they'll do us next well how many how often have we told you we think to this hour when it comes to cities it's like three two one all the while in the background someone yelling like the intelligence report Here's another thing about cities and what one, the aforementioned phrase, limited nuclear exchanges, Mark, I'm certain you've heard this in inner circles. Many times, you guys, if you've watched a number of movies, particularly the recreations of how the bomb was initially set off, they weren't certain when they dropped on Japan, they would go off. To this day, they're not certain. Brand new highest technology is going to go off. If downtown Moscow is targeted with one warhead, Again, I repeat, they're not certain it's going to go off. So guess what? They send another one in just to back up the first one. And like I say, they're not certain that one is going to go off. So they're pretty certain though if they put three on the target, one of them is going to go bang really, really hard. And if it does, it'll probably catch the others up at any rate. Limited nuclear exchange. It's hoped. There's no reliability to this. There's a theory involved, but the problem is with cascading effect with specialized weapons, especially with these weapons, we know beyond a shadow of a doubt that they have specific side effects that can be quite detrimental. Not the least of which, remember, other things flying in are affected by the weapons that have gone off. Not just EMP, but remember if there are multiple targeting, but it's off schedule. Much of what is being used actually, well let me point this out, air defense missiles were nuclear tipped. Under the logic that a little nuke would do a fine job of knocking something out of the sky. This is why we've told you that you'll never see fleets of bombers both ours unless it's in field display. You'll never see fleets of bombers being deployed against an enemy again. They'll sneak in. I mentioned, talked about sneak earlier. They call it stealth when they talk about bombers. Be deployed in twos and threes and be spread across the map on the way to their target. That way they can't be destroyed with a single air burst, much like here comes the 82nd Air Force with 14 wings. Now you've got 117 B-17s in the air. Imagine had Hitler deployed air fuel bombs into that, Mark. Whole fleets of airplanes would have never come home that day. And again, specialized technologies. In this case, something everybody is worried about. Well, if you really are in the ground zero, as I've said, and as everybody knows, oh well, that's it. But you know what? That's true if it's a thousand pound conventional, guys. So our mission is to help to prepare you to be ready for when this happens at whatever level. And that's where NBC Defense comes in. And understanding how their weapons are limited or work. See, that's one of the other mistakes that's made. Everybody's going, oh my goodness, they're just so powerful. Okay, they're limited. All of the assets the enemy has are limited in very specific ways. That's one of the things we have to understand. Nuclear, biological, and chemical ordnance pretty much are in the defense category, are covered with a gas mask and chem suit. Now there is some other technology that is integrated into that you can access. Some people can afford it, some can't, but those two basic tools, the gas mask and the chem suit, are going to afford reasonable protection both with regard to cost and actual defense within time limits that are normal especially when we're looking at exposure levels. We are going to have to fight in these conditions. Remember, basic Russian policy is to fight through. In actuality, NBC, Nuclear, Biological, and Chemical Ordinance, is designed to be deployed just in the same way that you would a conventional artillery barrage. You walk with it, you move into the agent, through the agent, and neutralize and engage the target and then move on while follow-up formations neutralize what is left. The new World Order Click operations are going to be thinking the same way. So you have to be prepared. Of course, they're not in any better shape. I'm going to back up here for a second. Don't think for a minute that they're in any better shape under these conditions than you are. Just the reverse. In fact, as we saw with Desert Dust 1, look at just an example of this being the number of people of our troops killed with inoculations. Think about that. Wow, real super tech. They did this, they did that, they jabbed everybody up and they killed off a whole bunch of our warrior class from behind the scenes. So with that being the case, you don't know that a lot of their side even aren't getting the happy shot. You know what I mean? Don, kind of like in communist China? Oh yeah, we've described that. At the end of the war, and you know, You know communist China. I call it the forgive me the first bastard child of the United Nations because it's kind of true isn't it? Israel being the next let's go down the line here as if you weren't a party members a member of that person's family or someone who had distinguished themselves against in the war against the Japanese and then against you know the cum cumin tae you know chain kai checks people you know people who wanted to free China and If you were over 60 or 65 you went off to the happy farms. And there they gave you the healthy shots. Everybody that received the shots, they were dead within two weeks. Now you wonder, well gee they had a lot of people to bury. Well they didn't bury them, they put them in these big vats and let the flies get to them. And you know the flies, they propagate, it's in their nature and you know when flies propagate eventually you got maggots. And this is a rather, you know, It's a sad and sickening and disgusting thing to recount, but this is what humanity and people do to their own people. This is what the Chinese did to those who simply raised arms against them or thought might raise arms against them in the future. The socialists did that to our American troops in Desert Dust 1 and probably to a degree Desert Dust 2. Remember the fight over these mandatory shots that they wanted everybody to take? Then, after they took them, even Stars and Stripes acknowledged that pilots had careers destroyed because they simply could not fly. That's what the medicals told them after. Think about that. Think about how many men's careers were destroyed in a situation where they also weren't combat worthy after they got the inoculations. And no, it didn't help the other troops because many of them, like in Desert Dust 1, who got the happy shot, ended up falling like flies later. That's why they discharged them early and separated them to the wind. So... The only difference is we didn't throw men and bats and skins and then eat the chicken. The chickens we had here were the parasites in the VA hospitals operating it, certain groups and cliques whose job they were told was to lie to the veterans about what their physical condition is. After all these years, after stamping them with psychosomatic illness and BS like that, this last year they acknowledged, oh gee, after how long? This is the year 2008. 17 years later, after the Gulf War I, they acknowledged that these guys, oh, after all, they did have something. So for 17 years, these men and women suffered because of intentional incompetence. Even farther back in the 1960s frame, you got, oh, you know, they elevated him to President Clinton, getting the firmets to attend Rhodes. Generally, you get a deferment. Doesn't that run through the length of your college attendance, Mark? Over in another area, we got Darth Cheney, who obtained throughout his college education. What that tells me is he got a deferment, went to college for a while, dropped out. He had to hide here accordingly. Yeah. I might get drafted. I think I'll go to college, and then went to college, got a deferment, and I can see how that works. Now, this leads up to the whole idea that when you look at these systems, okay, the bad guys aren't any better off, or other people aren't any better off, or all these people say, oh, they have everything. Really? Look what they did to their own forces, guys. Okay, look how they smacked their own people. Now, in this situation coming up, we must be ready and prepared to utilize all of the technologies available. And in the process, the defense systems especially, we need to know how to fight in them. As you have heard on this program, most of the militia units that are training, that are scheduled for the next couple of months here, are going into high gear with NBC equipment mounted, in other words, in place, ready to, you know, being used, and actually patrolling, operating more heavily than we even have in the past. And we have done this in the past, but this is the emphasis for this phase of advanced infantry training for militia units around the country. You need to be practicing and working with your chemical equipment on. Now, I find out this morning, because of the description given to me over the phone, that there definitely are two types of M15s. Now, the one model has the triangular elongated and widened triangular lenses, but there is another M15 on with round lenses. Now, the cool thing about the round lenses is it's very easy to replace. If one's cracked or damaged, you can actually cut out another piece of plastic if you have to improvise and replace it. Or, of course, you can probably have spare lenses on site, you know, like with your equipment, inside your gas mask bag where it's supposed to be, so that if you need to, you can pop the one out, replace it, bring the thing back up to, you know, the perfect serviceable level and the rest is history. But here's a little trick. Carry duct tape. Duct. D-U-C-O-N-C-T. Duct. tape. It is there for a reason. It was designed for, you remember originally, it was called 100 mile an hour tape in the military. But it was designed and it has been used for sealing ductwork. What does ductwork do? Move air. What are you trying to do? Prevent leakage. Do you get the hint here? Leakage of my gas mask. Good idea. So if you have a gack, a break or something, even if you have to cover an eye in a situation, you take Mr. Duct Tape and you seal it up that way. Now, another thing to remember about putting this duct tape in your repair kit on your web gear or in your gas mask bag in one of the pouches. Now what you can do is you can flatten the roll, get a small dollar store roll. Here is what is really cool, you can get black, you can get camouflage or you can get green. You can actually have a tactical color to fix your gas mask with. What do you do? You squash the roll flat, put it in a Ziploc bag, and then put it in a sandwich bag, and then put it in your gas mask bag in one of the slips inside where it is secure. What this does is provide you with an instant repair kit to keep you going. Phase one, if you realize you have damage, you want to be leaking, you want to seal the leak immediately, duct tape will do just that. Now this is quickie solutions in the field. Step two is to do either, you know, again, preventing, well, not preventing, but post maintenance, where you actually inspect this image, repair it if you can, replace it if you can. If not, you relegate the gas mask to spare parts and you replace the mask as quickly as you can, preferably off one of the corpses of the bad guys you just shot. Because everybody always tells me, oh, they're going to have all this stuff and it's going to be terrible and them has to work and ours won't. Well, our mask will work long and I'm so sure. There you go, go get that mask. Let's go get the second mask. There you go. So that works. You walk up and you take your guards right off them. Right? Well if you figure the only thing you have that's going to work perfectly is theirs, take it from them. Okay? There's the rule guys. Your equipment will work long enough to strip off the other guy bare butt naked and to move forward and then you start killing them with their own gear. Okay? But the line is a bridge. All the equipment will work now. With regard to different masks, there is inside the Israeli kits. There are boxes, typically they will have a basket that holds the, what it's designed to do is hold the basic facial line of the gas mask. Inside that there's a circular hoop. That's usually where the gas mask is stored. Now, in the rest of the box, if it's either the defense mask or if it's the M15 Israeli mask, there is a little bit canister that has a screw thread on it and it's open on then and has a little hole in the other. What that is is a training implement. It's a training tool. Rather than own up your brand new filter that costs money, and of course, even the permits think this way, they created a training aid that for practice you can screw into the mask. And when you want to practice combat operations, the little plastic thing, that little hole in the middle of that plastic cup, which is screwed into your regular filter station, It performs the same resistance package, same resistance module activity as a regular filter. So it's a training module, a training mechanism. Now this is a good way to practice using your task without worrying about contaminating or deactivating special agency or more sophisticated filters. If you have them, don't throw them away and if you wonder what they were, know they're not a hose attachment or anything like that. However, if you had to, that is an option. If you had to improvise things, you cut the end open more, you could put a lasagna and plant it into place and look up to another filtering system. That's another idea to get it if you were looking at it. However, those little light things that look like about the size of a 35mm cup have the standard 40mm thread on them, those are designed so that you can practice with your mask. Now, Once we have masks on and we're training in the field, we want to perform as many procedures as we can so that we understand the limitations, restrictions, or abilities of the system we're using. This includes live fire with weapons. Some masks allow perfect cheek well. Example is the M-non gas mask or the M-non copies made by Finland. Filters on the left cheek is cheek service area is actually completely clear of obstructions. You will notice when you put your FNFL M1 rifle, M14, M1 carbine, HK91, Mini-14 up to that gas, that you can actually line the sights up perfectly. Which means that if you are able to stabilize your situation, and if you're willing to practice standard rifle marksmanship procedure, you can hit at a greater range than your counterpart on the battlefield who actually have deployed the gas. Oh, that really clusters their old weenie, doesn't it? Because when you perfect them and make them leak, if it's an irritant, guess what happens to the area that's leaking? Oh, there's a natural path right there. Oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, Range in all situations where you can aid your target sooner, faster and harder is best. You got to get them farther out, you coordinate your fire accordingly, you coordinate your mortar, rifle grenade, anti-tank, all of your batteries of weapons against them because they would have given you the greatest range you can ever possible so that that way they walk progressively into a cascading lane of fire. This is how they plan on using their weapons against you. Okay? So, again, once we get to that point, we may have to fight at night at the chemical attack. Don, we have special considerations there, don't we? Oh, yes. And again, when you talk about different ports, you know, each individual eye, the port that you look through, some mess, again, the Air Force and Navy mask is a full-face mask. That's really cool for, like, you know, looking around across the deck, you know, so you don't step in front of a jet or, again, working air-based ground defense. It's really good to have a full field of vision like that. But if you were to bring up a piece of night vision to view as example through one eye, even if you were to bring up a pair of night vision binoculars and hold it as far forward in your hands as you could so that you could use the back portions of your index finger and thumb to try to knock down some of the light, that whole of that interior of that mask is going to be filled with green light. And you will look like the moon when it is pulled. Exactly. That's certainly going to catch. someone's attention. And you know what, you're probably looking over there because you think someone might be there. Now it's kind of like, hey, here I am. And even before you might be able to, like three on a match, you turn a device on and you bring it up and you start to look over in that direction. And he's already bringing the gun to bear. And just about the time, you think, well, I thought I saw some motion there. He's sighting right down the tube of the piece of night vision right in front of your face. And just about at the time you think, man, I think that's a gun. That was a gun pointed at you. And that's a bad, bad scenario when I only bring it to you now so that you never make that mistake. Now, you might think, oh, I'll fix that. I'll get the mask with two ports, an individual eyepiece for each eye. But then when you bring up that piece of night vision, get your good cheek weld, well, guess what? That other eye is still glowing green there. Granted, it might be smaller and a little bit harder to see. But I'm told that When we started building stealth bombers, Mark, oh, invisible to radar, on the latest MiGs they installed look down thermal. So they fly above them and look for their exhaust. You know what I mean? If you know what you're looking for on the battlefield, sometimes it might be to your advantage not to show your opponent what he's looking for. So you don't want to light up that other arc. As you mentioned earlier, Mark, you can cover that port, that, you know, individual eyepiece with a flap of silver tape. But I'm going to advise you, if you do that, double it back over. So you don't put adhesive on the lens. You know what I mean? Take about an inch of adhesive at the top, take as much as you need to cover the port, double it back on itself. So now when you lay it on the glass, it's not sticking to the glass. You take and you fasten it to the top, or ever so slightly, however it's going to work for you. And you take another piece that reaches across it and adheres to the bottom. Now you can take that and actually curl it up open. If you don't want to use your night vision, but it's going to, you know, that little piece of exposed, it's going to pick up dirt and whatnot. Another quick way to do it would be like a cap, like a, you know, a watch cap or something. Pull it down a little bit. If there's a number of different ways to get behind this. And I can't tell you how many poles, yeah, that's the head laying around. Don't have a good wind. We're going to go to break. We'll be right back. A fighter has a warning heart and some midnight weather and blood to keep this and your own song. Check your mute. Yeah, I got a gift for Christmas with two tickets to the Brickyard 400. Had excellent seats, we're about 20 yards from the start-finish line, about 20 rows up underneath the awning there at the Indianapolis Motor Speedway. Too bad it was a terrible race. They stopped every kid and lapsed for tire because of Get Your Brother on Tires. But that's not why I call it. On the way down to 69 as we're starting to come to Indianapolis right on the outskirts of Indy, I saw what you were talking about over on 75, a pole with a solar panel on top of it. On either of that you tell it was a little bitty camera and then it looked like what might be an RFU reader and then down below that next to the pole was a box about 45 feet tall and about 2.5 feet wide. And they were on the north and southbound lane right as you got to Indianapolis. As a matter of fact, yes, we saw those coming back up. I didn't see them. I started to rest right away as soon as we could within a reasonable time. We were awake, kind of, at different points where we were scoping things out. But the systems like that are showing up all over the country by the reports that we're getting. We did see them on and off once we got down the Arkansas way and Texas way. Not as much in Arkansas, but they are there, mostly again around like Little Rock. We are going up the secondary roads and primaries on the northwestern part of Arkansas. Not as often, although there were some of the new construction. Any place where there is new construction, you are seeing them put them in right away. As soon as they can get them into the ground and on the poles. That is part of and I will remind everybody, we covered this years goal. When Y2K was coming up, 1999, when the Y2K date was coming up, a federal order. This is how they conceal things. What they did is they had a federal order before January 1, 2000, to run these blue and orange trunk fiber optic ones across every United States interstate highway and every state highway in every state. Now, our people walked up and actually talked to the guys installing them and they were bragging because they just thought they had a contract. They said they had carte blanche to go through any park, any national monument, any cemetery, any private piece of property, whatever it took to get these lines in. Period. Not to be slowed down, not to be retarded in any way. They were move, move, move, move and they had a deadline. These trunk lines are still going in, but this is the foundation. These things were already laid in 1999 to the year 2000, opening month. We're supplemented, as we know, for instance, on the east coast. There are pictures that we have. We need to post those on our site. Pictures were these same rolls of blue and orange trunk line, which are fiber optic spy line. for any number of projects were in place and they are still being put in place. Now the most important thing is when you think about it, the trunk lines, no matter where you went, didn't make any difference with what town, didn't make any difference with how big, didn't make any difference with how small, the highway lines themselves were always the same two trunk lines. I don't care if it was a highway that was out in the middle of BFE, like in other words it was a two lane road in Michigan, if it was on the designated state highway network, Those two same large trunk lines were laid at the same time. We know I-94, 96, 69, all of the interstates for sure. I mean we've got to shut it out. And then also every state highway that we could ID and monitor at the time, same thing. So, the system is there. They're just trying to figure out, like the old Wicked Witch of the West, how to plug the rest of it in. And one of the first things that we need to look at once we liberate this country is, A, I say we have the bad guys start digging all those trunk lines of fiber optic up, and that we take and put a camera over top of each one of their beds when they're in the detention camps that they built, and each one of those little orbs will watch them do everything, and we'll put it on national satellite where everybody can watch them. In the showers, over watching the showers. Yeah, if you choose to. It would be pretty disgusting. I was thinking we could chip the elite people like they want to do us. That way we can keep an eye on them. Oh yes, but they won't have to watch them very far. They'll be walking around in their little cells, in their little chambers, in the very places they built or had built. That's what we're going to keep them for a while because each one of them is going to get a chisel and a hammer. Each one of them is going to, for as long as, man, I think it will be for life, we are going to have them out there as workforces disassembling all this BS that they put together, including even the prisons. Our population has grown dramatically. For years, for 200 years, our prison population in the United States never exceeded a million. until these nutcases really started plugging in their global program. Then all of a sudden we went to 2 million, 3 million, 4 million, and I don't know what the count is right now. And that's the problem. So you know what? All these extra prisons, we don't need. All of the older ones, maybe, will be fine. We'll get rid of the old ones. We'll keep some of the newer ones, because there is a need for limited incarceration under very unique circumstances. But beyond that, the only ones that are going to be staying in those things until they're disassembled are them. We do not want to embrace the enemy's BS. We are not going to participate in their garbage. You get rid of the majority of all the stacked upon stacked upon stacked laws. Guess what? You can't find a reason for those prisoners to be there. That's the whole thing. Just think this process through. That's why we've got to be really well armed first. We've got to make sure that everybody has something. In fact, I want to address something that was in a letter from somebody that is right here in front of me. I mentioned doing the 22 ammunition every day. It's symbolism. Also, I will remind you that anything going down range, especially in a cluttered battlefield, you stand up and go, hey, I wonder if he's shooting at me with a 22. Oh, man, that hurts. You know what I mean? It doesn't work that way. You hear crack crack crack crack, you're not going to jump up and go, hey I wonder what that, that sounds like a .22, that ain't so bad. You know somebody on the other end might be smart as Mr. Saxon said years ago. You know you have two or three men fire .22s to make them feel real comfortable. And as soon as they start to get bold, that's when you plug your hind end with the .06. He helped. Oh, he only got 22. That's an old bait and switch, isn't it? Yeah. And it's so cheap it's ridiculous, guys. Come on, for what it costs you. A dollar worth of ammo. Dump 50 rounds down range. Make them feel, man, it's what I got. Now, I'll tell you what, I don't have a problem with 22 anyway because you got to remember in the battlefield we're looking at any injury is bad. The bad guys are going to be in the same boat that we saw with World War II or any other war. You get wounded, and you get wounded multiply. If you don't have the infrastructure in place tactically, and the bad guys are not going to have a lot of what they think they want because they're going to expand, and they're going to find out real quick that it's going to fail them. Both sides are going to have to be ready for this. We've been emphasizing this with our medical programs by trying to get more people trained up. Now, the good thing is this, we're on our own piece of real estate. We don't have to ship our casualties anywhere. The other side is going to want to try and evac the DD to the AO and move them out of the area of operation. And that's a massive logistic problem that typically they're not going to be able to do or in many cases they simply won't want to do. Remember, they want 80% of the population dead. And they don't care if it's their own minions that are dying in the process. We will make sure that is accomplished and we will find the ones that sent them and we will deal with the problem in general. We just have to be ready across the board. The 22 caliber ammunition, when I am asking everybody to do that, it sends a message with your wallet. It does create a massive, tactically dispersed supply system. You know how many times I have been to places where people have walked up and said, I don't have much but I can give you this to help with the fight. Now imagine how that is when a person walks out with a box ammo. Especially when you know that it is heartfelt because you know I don't have much but what you said here, this will keep the troops here. This is to go to the troops right now. Take this. You better be ready to accept it and you better have the weapons to do it because you're going to have people stepping forward in many ways. That's one of the areas where I know people are listening. Several of our friends listening in the chat room know right now that some of the companies are exhausted with regard even to bullets. They can't replace what they sold. think about that. Not the ammunition. We're talking the bullets, the little bullet things that they're running out of whole categories, obviously in 30 caliber because everybody's picking up 30 caliber. We've got M, like I said, we've got 3.06, 3.08, 300 wamag, 300 weatherby mag. There's a lot of 30 calibers out there. And all of them are getting loaded up. 300 Savage, not a bad cartridge. If anybody's got a 100 Savage or a 300 Savage, don't even worry about getting to them. Buy more ammo. Before you commit to a whole bunch, if you've never shot that gun before, go out and buy like a 10 box or 10, if you can find it, and you know, or have a Winchester and made another like, a Drell brand, and try to get it all in the same little confines of weather, and see which one shoots the smallest group for you. You know, see which one you're going to eat the most. Right, find the flavor it likes. Exactly, and then feed it all at once. So rather than make a commitment to a big group, try to make that commitment to a small group. Go ahead, Kay. All right. And I'm just going to tell you that all the people that I sat around were, oh, they were older than we are by probably about 10 years, 20 years for me, 10 years for you, because you're about 10 years older than me. I woke a lot of them up. They were sitting there, and when the police came out, you know, they had like probably 12 state cops or maybe county cops on the other side of the track on the infield, and they all came walking out and had their chests all puffed up. looked at the guy next to me, the older gentleman, and I said, wow, look at that, look like Nazi Gestapo, don't they? And he's like, yeah, they kind of do, don't they? And I started saying a few more things, and other people started making comments, and I referred at least five people behind me, in front of me, and beside me on both sides. I was talking to them. and telling them everything, you know, hey, look, if you haven't heard about it yet, you know, these people were from Wisconsin and Cincinnati and parts of Ohio. And I said, they're sending, you know, the National Guard and the state police to Chicago to do door-to-door gun confiscation. And the guy goes, what? And I go, yeah, do you hear about it? No, I said, well, there's a reason why, because they don't want you to know about it. Exactly. And we kept talking. Well, that's the other thing too, real quick. Remember, for everybody listening, don't hesitate anymore. If you're hesitating, you're making a big mistake because everybody feels it and senses it. People right there were the same way, weren't they? I have people coming up to me at work now going, hey man, all that stuff you were saying, I thought you was crazy, but it's starting to come true now. I told you you'd be there telling me that, didn't I? And they go, damn, you did. Because I tell them when they laugh at me, you can laugh now. But when you start to see it, You'll be coming to me going, man, you were right. I'm sorry I laughed at you. And there's a few of them that are now. And I'm glad you guys had a good trip. I will let you all go. And God bless the Republic. And God bless you guys, too. You, too. Thank you. Hey, no problem. Have a great day. And again, for all of you guys listening out there, again, to remember, there are too many people that are hungry. There are people who are now going, oh, yeah. We hear it every day. I hear it constantly. We just had it happen at Meyers again the other day. Hope, forgive me, I made some noise on the radio here. The thing is that people are going like, yeah, remember what they were saying? Remember what they were talking about? We are seeing that now. The other thing we really care about is the ammunition issue. This is Weapons Wednesday. And one thing is, well, there are people that were telling a couple of our friends, oh, I can just go to the gun show and I can get a whole case for blah, blah, blah. Oh, yeah? And we said, really? And they went, well, yeah, yeah, I can. And so the gun show went by and they came back and they were going, oh, my goodness, the persons are in the engine quadruple. I couldn't get the ammo I wanted. I need a bigger boat full of money. That's right. Did you bring a wheelbarrow full of money in? And that didn't do you good if you, here's the problem. Even if you wanted to buy it, there are certain things you can't now. Think about it. And not because there is a ban, but you don't know about it. What they've done is they've limited or restricted whole categories and inside the country they've eaten up the inventory in one form or another, not accidentally. And so what's happening is you're going to have to scrabble. Now, this touches on another subject. And we've got to finish up this thought with the night vision. You've got to hear this. But real quick. Bullet production is critical. Now I'm now going to offer the next card, many cards I have faced before and brought up to you, but now I'm going to emphasize this. The next thing that you need to be looking at if you haven't already done it is bullet molds. Bullet molds. We need cast bullet molds. All of you who have 30 caliber get something. If you have an M1 carbine, I'm going to give you a little hint. You can do cast bullets for M1 carbines. Yes, I know it's a gas system, but there are little tricks. Let me give you a point. If you're going to use cast bullets, they are what are called gas checks. There are ways to make whole metal jacket bullets also. This is something we're going to have to offer out there across the board. The third is what's called copper plating. You can copper plate lead bullets. Think about that. What does that do? It creates an outer, limited, harder surface that will not abrase your barrel, will conform more readily to the rifling, But will not leave a substantial amount of leading behind. It was designed so that it actually reduces wear, increases performance, etc. on the overall regard to the bullet itself. It is a cheap way to come up with restricting the amount of lead you leave in the barrel. This is critical. It is the most important aspect of loading that everybody has to look at. Now, Don, please take a brief left off with the gas mask issue and night vision. Well again, you guys, talking about A lot of people don't realize that that rubber boot on the end of the most pieces of night vision is meant to be drawn right up to kind of fit up to your skull, you know, just to keep that leakage of light the wash off of your face or to expose it minimally. And if you don't have a piece much like, you know, tankers were taught in World War II to hold the glasses forward in their hand and in order to get, you know, they weren't exactly German submarine glasses. So they would bring the upper portion of their index fingers to their eyebrow and try to get that cheek weld only to the face weld with their binoculars. When you do that, you can shade the sides of your eyes with your thumbs. You can do that with a piece of night vision that doesn't have a lot of civilian pieces like ITP right now will have a single eye, a binocular, or even their binoculars don't have any on the back. So you're going to have to create that if you don't have it. But again, if you bring that up to a gas mask, if it's a single tube, an example being a gun sight, you're lighting up the hole of the interior of the mask. And this is something you need to stay away from. You need to figure out solutions as offered up. Even a bandana or the flap kind of ski earmuffs that you find in grocery stores and dime stores, they can be pulled down much like a pirate covering one IR. Because that's what the other guy will be saying, I think I see a target over there. And we've talked about that three on a match and you don't want to be that third one. But if you pay attention, and this comes from trying to get better at what you do all the time. And if you pay attention to what you're doing and try to get better at it, you'll get little peaks and you'll get great. You'll come to plateaus and then you'll run up. You'll get better and better at it sometimes all at once to a great extent. But trying to get better at everything you do, and this is what we're doing, we're trying to get better at being prepared, we're trying to get better at doing with what we have. And these are the kind of mistakes you don't want to see it happen to the guy next to you. You would much rather see the guy across the field make that mistake, you know what I mean, the opposing force. They train at it. They train at it too. I've offered it up like this, Mark. anywhere child you know you're out there digging a hole in the backyard and your father says well you keep digging a big a hole to China you know basically it's almost the kind of sort on the other side of the world so if they rush a whole bunch of Chinaman over here one day they'll be stay awake all night think about it you know think about it they'll be a belt be just like their whole cicadio clock will be just to work here at night and that goes over even to mouth say dungs in the little red book do your major operations at night under color of darkness I told you a while back that the night vision plant for the Chinese army. So the Chinese army now is building its own night vision granted its first generation. But if you put even a first generation piece in every foot soldier's pocket so that he can just take it out when he needs it and even use its limited ability to the best of his ability, oh you're going to have to want to be a grade up on that aren't you? You know like at least second generation. But you know I've also told you that recently well recently before oh over the past eight or nine years that frame of goal, Russian special forces were training in the field when they trained at night. Mark, they were using third generation American pieces, the Russian special forces. That's what Nelson and Perish Troika get you. And they don't have to build it themselves. Somebody would say, well, why would they do that? Well, because they don't have to build it themselves. The Russians are pragmatic with regard to military operations. In fact, most of the rest of the world is. And they've actually been feeding off R&D for a long time. It's like the difference between the American supply system for night vision, okay, we build exotic batteries that are so inanely obscure and cantankerous that they are sometimes even dangerous to the operator. Okay, now that's not with all of our present equipment because most of the stuff is now running off conventional batteries. A lesson from who? The Russians. Why? Because most of the Russian equipment, even in its earlier phases, was running off standard power sources that were made to the period. In other words, D cell batteries, C cell batteries, now AAAs and AAAAs. You have a few specialized batteries that they allowed, but even those were camera batteries that were fairly common during the window when they were built. So they were off the shelf and ready to run. What's the advantage here? Well, when we build a specialized battery and it costs $37 a piece, they're busy buying a whole bucket of batteries for $37. Uh oh. See the problem there? And their equipment still is running. And remember, they're able to throw more into the field for less money. In fact, virtually everybody with a weapon or without a weapon technically would be more likely in service with a night vision device as opposed to a limited number of specialized troops or a percentage of the troops with better equipment and others progressively degraded. That's the difference between the two. Actually, we can use, provided we understand limitations and advantages, we could use virtually any piece of night vision equipment that is out there with our weapons systems to include even IR. The Russians used what was called IR passive. All that that meant is that what they did is they didn't have any illuminators on their scopes. They simply ran the scope neutral and panned the battlefield for when you turn your equipment on. Oh, yes, see because you know that when you see something that goes meow and it's big and bright, chances are it's a target. Now the same, it's also true with regard to any of the other weapon systems applications. Again, when you do create for instance traps or when you create deceptions, you can't have them too obvious. In other words, for instance, let's say you want things to be dirty, but you don't want them to be so dirty. It's like, there's no way you could make that mistake. So you want to conceal to a degree. You want to make it look as if there's leakage or slippage or mistakes made. Even the idea of using an older piece of night vision, or how about this? How about a square box with a chopped up lens off an old 35mm camera glued to the front of it? with a dummy hand coming up to a gas mask, which of course is exposed, but a green LED light with a switch hooked up to it with a variable activator so that you get a green glow on a dummy face inside the mask. Hey, wait a minute. That looks almost like it could be viable. And it would be. And somebody would waste time on it. Now think, these are the little perfect, these are things that can be perfected so easily and green LEDs are all over the place guys. You know where you get them? You watch for the debris that's being tossed out. People throw out camcorders, recorders, tape recorders, equipment that gets smashed. Look on the gear. You'll find green LEDs, red LEDs, even yellow LEDs. Those get taken off very carefully and then get used for special projects down the road. Now with a combination of only a few little components, you create high confidence target opportunity. Now that forces them to waste artillery or waste a mortar round or call in a jet or whatever they think they want to do. We want them to do that. Between thermal targets and all the other fun stuff we can create, you want them busy losing life's time. Because remember, if they're busy bombing that dummy over there, they're not busy with you somewhere else. There you go. Now, they can never recover that time, nor that ordinance, nor that resource. And we're the top of the earth, so the one resource we've got to remember is time has passed, by the way. Right at the top. To get that mic signal off that guy's phone at the time. We'll use this one then. Thank you.
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