Mark Koernke discussed preparedness training, equipment maintenance, and supply chain logistics for militia operations. He emphasized the importance of carrying proper gear including gas masks, night vision equipment with spare batteries, and maintaining combat readiness. Koernke analyzed lessons from Black Hawk Down, contrasting the book's realistic account with Hollywood's portrayal, and stressed the need for proper training methodology with equipment loads. He addressed supply and support infrastructure by referencing the Vietnamese and Iraqi insurgencies, explaining how distributed supply networks sustain fighting forces. The show included technical difficulties with the live stream and a caller contribution about mountain time coordination.
is this still the fan to the place and home. Ladies and gentlemen, you are listening to us on Liberty Tree Radio.4mg.com, pbn.4mg.com, and we are on live 365. Then go to Liberty Tree Radio. You will also find us on AM&FM Microstations, CB Bay Stations, and Ultra Net Technologies east and west of the Mississippi, along with Southern and Central Alaska. I want to say hi to our friends here in the Aleutians, and we're on the Hallmark Network, 8 Colonial States Plus. several other states too numerous to mention because we're spreading in all directions with the Hallmark Net. Golden Spike Project coming up, that will be discussed on Sunday. There is a meeting at the restaurant on Sunday on the east coast where all of our friends, you guys need to attend. You're going to have to, some of you are driving quite a ways I understand. But this is a critical meeting, yes, there will be special guests and there's going to be special technologies passed on. So you guys have some business contacts to make. Congratulations and good luck there. Also, party on the beach on Saturday. Alternate location 23. Party on the beach on Saturday. We are also going to be busy with a number of training exercises. Oh, it's raining outside, Dan! Yeah, well you don't melt, so congratulations. It's the ponchos for. Yeah, so the ponchos and what weather gear is for. It's what you bought it for. So congratulations. Use it. We have a lot of work to do and get it done. We are on a press schedule now. NBC instruction is going to be mandatory with all the training that we participate in. Everybody is going to be involved with so be prepared for that. You will carry your gas mask. You will carry your other equipment. It is designed for a very specific short mission of nothing else. Again, to get you out of an area. A lot of people are concerned about that. I know the argument about Well, I'll tell you what, most of what we see the enemy carry and use for quick deployment is low end, but if it's concentrated, the idea behind this is you're not going to be hindered. There won't be any variation in damage or depredation of performance. Have a gas mask. Carry one, carry one, carry one. It's that simple. Also, it mucks with the other guys on the other side because we're not supposed to be equipped or prepared like that. Well, yes, we can be. Congratulations, you can do it. Oh, and if they make any stupid comments like, what was that television series, the Net or whatever? Guys, you walk up after you plug their arse and if you think you want to upgrade, take their mask off their head or out of their bag or just unscrew their filter and put it in yours. Remember, the filter is the key. Filter, keyword, filter. So if you want to upgrade, there's a significant upgrade right there. Fallout fails. Okay. I'm sorry. Today's date is for the Soviet May festivities. The Communists here, of course, are doing everything to try and pass as much of the Soviet legislation that everybody warned everybody about. The quote unquote eight crimes bill passed. All that means just the Communists are showing their colors. It's just the kind of nonsense that they're involved in. So don't be surprised. If we have to go to war over freedom of speech, is that a problem? I don't have a problem with that. You know what, everybody better start talking that way too because congratulations, freedom of speech is worth fighting for. People would say, oh you're only fighting for your guns, you're only fighting for it. No, I'm fighting for freedom of speech. I'm fighting for freedom of religion. I am fighting for freedom of the press. I am fighting for my right to own, possess, and maintain my personal defense because that is a natural God given born with right. That's something somebody drops down on your lap from some approval rating by some booberman operation. They can stick that. Anybody wants to support their nonsense? Hey, go to war with that? We can. Not a problem. So we're all getting ready to prepare. Actually, we're preparing and getting ready for what's coming. And I want to stress again that we have a wide battery of tools. But one of the things, a lot of them take batteries and a lot of it takes other support that's perishable or has a time set to it and only good for so long. This is true even with night vision something that said Don need to remind everybody about if they're using their night vision equipment It's not going to last forever is it look around you guys you can find little solar little of a firefight so you know reminder for everybody When you're dealing with throws remember you've got to calculate what it is you can carry now We've talked about this before you have limited combat weight, but Whatever you think you're going to be needing you better get used to carrying basic rule if you're carrying a piece of night vision into the for one night Or one night you better have a spare. In other words, they left everybody hanging out to dry to a degree. Part of it is because the Americans decided to go out and start grabbing the local politicians and kidnapping them, which is really what that whole mission was all about. Kidnapping. Keep that in mind. Anyway, at the very end of the book, you might recall the reference to the Delta Force team that was there with the survivors. In this case, they were because they had been chased right out of Mogadishu. No matter what they say, they were back to the soccer field. What's interesting about that is the comment that you know the guy had carried his night goggles which of course were very ultra lightweight state-of-the-art present issue and you know it was one of those things where you thought for the few pounds that he carried in support weight they would have been priceless in the situation that he was in. After dark. Because he ended up staying longer. It was like oh we're only going to be here for a little bit. Now I've had this argument for years but this was driven home in this particular book not in the movie. In the movie they did just reverse. It was just great these guys did it. everything perfectly. No, they didn't. There were muck ups left and right. That was one of the things that was pointed out by the troops, by the men who were in the action. The last comment made, and the thing that was done is, and this was, even though they had just left an action, one of the things that happened is the guy was immediately going over his gear. Not waiting until weeks later or after he'd rested, he was immediately going over his equipment because his assumption is he could be going right back into battle. And one of the first things that he did is he reached into his kit, pulled out his night vision equipment and stuffed it right into his combat load. First thing he did, that was one of the things that was described in there which is in line with our school, my school of thought, the way I was taught. You don't wait when you have a situation like that where as soon as you've stopped. You don't rest. The first thing you do is you evaluate everything you've got, you check all your mags, you top off everything, you check your weapon, you make sure you're scored away to fight first. You have weapon first, mag second, and then start loading and then start checking your gear to make sure everything's where it belongs. Everything can be re-situated to the best of your ability with what you've got. And this is true in taking stock of all of your combat equipment in preparation or in preparatory mode for deployment. But, let's say that you're in that same situation, you've come out of action, you realize, man, I should have had another set of batteries. Oh, I'll do that tomorrow. I've got other things to do right now. I'm really kind of tired. What's the first thing you do? Go find the equipment. Go pick it up. Go put it in place. If you're in a spot where, or a location where you can reacquire or scavenge. What it is that you need to have in your combat kit where it needs to be. You've got allies that will trade, if you've got a quartermaster that's friendly, or if you are near your base of supply. And you have the ability to put that into the kit now, you do it now. You rest after you've made sure that you put all the tools in place that will keep you in life if you are caught unawares. The other half of this, and I've had this over and over again, you know, guys, well, we're going to lighten this up for this exercise because we don't need this and we're not going to carry that and we're not going to do this and we're not going to, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no. That's not how it works. You train with the equipment you plan on carrying. Now, there are very, there are rare occasions, sometimes, for instance, when you're familiarizing people with weapons, you may lighten the combat load or you may negate the combat load in what we call phase one familiarization. But in Phase II familiarization, you add the combat load and you make sure that you then treat the student the same as if he were actually walking through the action for the first time. Why? Because you've added a new and unfamiliar element to the training course. And so you walk through, as the instructor, you walk through with the student, you watch the student perform, you identify if there's a mistake or an error that's made or if it looks like there's going to be a safety issue so that you can prevent the safety issue from developing. And then in the next phase, now that you've walked them through it, you may do it more than once. During what's called the instructor phase or the instructor control phase, you always, if need be, walk through the action two, three, or four times. You don't just, ah, go up there and show me you can do it. No, that's not how it works. You're not a teacher if you've done that. That's not how it works. You're there with the student. You're there with each of the students. All of you who are instructors have to maintain control over the training environment and then, kind of like kicking the bird out of the nest, then after you've done so many walkthroughs, you've critiqued, and then you've even had them walk through yet again. And it can be even with live fire or without phase one. The sub-phase. in phase two with the combat lotus without live fire walking through it, and then in the next step, walking through it with limited live fire. And then after you've watched your student, then you let them go and you give them an opportunity to perform without any instruction at all, and then critique them. But always critique in a positive way. You did well, but there are these things that you need to correct. We're going to go through this again. Now we're going to step back and walk through everything. And I'm going to point out where you made your error. And then I want you to correct it. And I want you to reinforce that correction over and over again. Drill and drill and drill. And you know what, some people say, it's really boring. Yeah, you know what, it's not all flash and bang and all this excitement and you run, run, run, run, run. And all of a sudden they take a cut and the actors can stand around, smoke, drink for about 20 minutes. Then they all get back into their pose and they run, run, run, run, run. And what you say on the film is nonstop two hours worth of everybody with adrenaline rush. Yeah. OK. When in reality, it doesn't work like that at all. So, you have to calibrate and you have to teach and train your troops to understand and familiarize themselves with the true environment, not the BS they've seen in the movies. That's the other problem we have, is with a lot of what you see in the Hollywood, it was designed to misdirect or it's designed to make you think, man, I'm just not capable. These guys can do this for hours and hours and hours. Yeah, yeah, yeah. Well, no, they can't. As a matter of fact, they're human just like everybody else. It's the propaganda of the Superman that is something that needs to be thrown out the window too. They die just like everybody else. The bad guys in the other side go down. Someday they're going to be dirt puppets just like everybody else. That's how it works. Everybody listen and remember that you must control the situation. Also, you must be prepared for the situation. That includes having all the material and equipment on hand. Better to have a little too much, which there is no such thing, rather than not enough. That's something that's been experienced over and over again. The reason I bring a book up, because everybody is familiar with Black Hawk Down, read the book. I'll tell you what, it's a downer book, guys. It's not one of those, oh, oh, boy, oh, oh, oh, like they were doing in the movie. None of that. Throw that out the window. It's not like that at all. It's a very realistic accounting of this action step by step by step. Were they proud of the fact that they survived? Well, hell yeah, they made it. But they actually describe step by step what they went through and it's harder than hell to do this in a well it's not hard It's just in the time it takes for you to describe what you're describing in a book The action has already happened 10 or 12 times over but what you're doing is planting the Memory chip so to speak so that the person's mind can work in its imagination or in the process of imagination and paint the image A good author is able to use enough description that you can put the person in the boots of the character standing there That's the goal of anybody who's writing a book is to try and get you put you into you know walk a mile in the guys moccasins run a mile in the guys combat boots bleed for a little bit in his stretcher you know what I mean and That's what was done with the book as opposed to what you see with the movie two different worlds all together the raw raw raw stuff was it was that that was the reason the raw raw stuff was in that movie is Because the department you know the donut of destruction provided all the cool things that otherwise Hollywood couldn't get you see how that works Let me give you an example of a reversal on that. Although it got support anyway from another element. Heartbreak Ridge with Clint Eastwood, not as serious, super serious as say Black Hawk Down. Do you know why that was a marine unit that the main characters were all part of in that? Because the army wouldn't properly support the movie because they wouldn't script in certain ways. In other words, the co-producer of the movie, if they have been involved, couldn't have control of and tweaked certain things to make it a Ra-Ra movie in the direction they wanted. Now, they still got the other support from the other direction anyway, but it's interesting that that's just in the interagency rivalry issue. If you remember, even in the storyline, the main characters are originally with the Army. Remember when they described Heartbreak Ridge? What are all the guys part of? They were all in an Army unit. So, let's see, wait a minute, they went in the Army and then all of a sudden you say, I'll just ship over and be in the Marines. What do you think? Oh yeah, let's go join the Marines. Yeah, okay. Yeah, the Army almost killed us in Heartbreak Ridge and there's only three of us left. Let's go see what the Marines can do to us. Think about it. Man, if the Army can do this, what do you think the Marines are like? I don't know, they land on beaches. What's the survival rating there? Not really good, but a lot of the Marines are pretty cool though. Yeah, let's go check them out. I mean think about it guys, you saw it right in the movie and nobody is thinking about it. This is kind of a weird twist. Now it doesn't mean it hasn't happened because I've got relatives that went from one service to the next during Vietnam because they just want to try out a different part of the war. That's how it worked. My one cousin was in Special Forces and after his first tour, Seals recruited him basically or he decided he wanted to play with them. So he went over and they jumped on him right away and signed him up for the Seals and he dropped right back in for another tour. After he did a couple of tours with them, then he went back over and worked with SF for a little bit. He decided again what he wanted to go into and they took him wherever he wanted to go. I've seen it personally, I've watched it. Of course, there was a lot of family members who were worried about everybody following him because after all he was a volunteer, he was not drafted. He had many sons. Everybody always asked him, why are you going over to the war? You've got a whole bunch of sons at the time. He had five, forgive me, not six yet. He had five and he goes, well, this is how it works. There are a whole bunch of 17 year old kids being sent over there at 18 year olds who if they are killed are the last young man to carry their family name. If they die, their family dies. If I die, I've got replacements. People didn't have an argument. They didn't know what to say. Back in the day, I remember that like it was yesterday. This is how it works. I'm taking the place of a kid who shouldn't be there. If he goes over there, chances are the whole family not only agrees, the family ceases to exist. The family name will be lost to our history. On the other hand, my cousin has seven sons and one daughter, and then they didn't stop. I think he had replacements. They basically gave us another infantry squad of fine young men who are out there right now even as we speak that are older than my sons. I think he did okay. Anyway, the point is, again about battery, this is why I brought it up and I wanted Don to stress this because But we have a supply issue that we're going to have to meet guys across the board. Now one cool thing, a lot of the night vision is using conventional batteries, correct? So a lot easier to find those, isn't it? A 3 volt battery is a common in night vision. You can find it. As long as there are cannons and icons that are driven electrically, you'll find that 3 volt battery. You might have to... pieces out there right... Maybe it would be to do exactly what you're saying, the slow, slow trickle charge with a solar cell. It actually makes for a quite forgiving formula with most batteries, even conventional batteries that you buy in the alkali. We do it all the time, as a matter of fact. With slow, trickle-like yard, light, solar panels, I mean look how small they are. They're designed to deal with a 1.5 volt battery. And the worst that's going to happen is you can experiment with adapting and if you do lose it, well chances are the battery is going to be lost anyway if it was already consumed. So you're not out anything. Whole herd of elephants running through the woods. Chances are, it's going to be, and it depends on the conditions, but cross country, yeah, you're going to leave marks. When I look at little carts and things like that, and most people are like, oh my goodness, I'd have to spend money. Guys, people are throwing stuff out left and right. Of course, the scrap yards are what got most of that stuff that was laying around, and that wasn't an accident the way they did. But there's scrapping prices gone down, gas has really not gone up, but there isn't as much out there to pick up and forging for what little is out there. It just isn't happening the way it was. So, if you pay attention and keep your eyes peeled, you'll have people throwing out golf bags or little pool carts, especially the Skeletize Basket frame type. Well, look at them as throwaways. Everybody's like, well, I could use that, but what happens when I have to leave it behind? How about leave it behind? The time that you use it, it is a useful, temporary tool. Now if you want to, you can cash it somewhere. You can use it to set up a place where if you move and you decide you want to leave something behind, establish it as a point just to remember. That way again, you recover it. If you don't pass that way again, it sits there until it rusts into the ground or oxidizes into a puddle of white dust aluminum. Who cares? It's paid for itself for the time that it's been used when it's free. When it's done and it's gone, it's done and it's gone. Why are you fretting? You didn't pay anything for it. Now, if you want to get a little fancier, like you said, one of the things I haven't done with the two or three of that variation in the cart, I spent the 99 cents and flattened everything out. Right now, they're still in the original alloy, aircraft metal, or aluminum, or steel, or whatever. But, if I were seriously looking at switching these over, or if I just take a little time in the next week or two here, I would lay those out. I would tactically camouflage them so that they've got a little less sheen or shine to them in any way, shape, or form. And, voila, I've got a tactical kirk. Wow, isn't that amazing? Only took a few moments. So, even little buggy baskets, little grocery sack baskets. You know the ones that little grandmas carry to the store when they walk to the store and you see them slowly walking back? Hey guys, that's awful handy for throwing a couple ammo cans in. or extra gear that's perishable, you know a case of MREs, a couple extra ponchos that are throw away or extra gear and you can drag it wherever, throw it where you want to in the vehicle, pull it out of the vehicle. Everybody's talking about, here's the thing, everybody's talking about urban aren't they? Urban being urban warfare, okay, urban warfare is this, urban warfare is that, urban warfare. Okay, well urban warfare, congratulations, flat surfaces, lots of concrete, hey a little cart would be kind of handy wouldn't it? Once the time comes you have to dump it because the fighting gets a little intense. Big deal. Who cares? But for carrying your perishables and expendables inbound, look at it this way, it's an inbound throwaway, an inbound perishable, then something like this works perfectly for the type of mission we're talking about. So again, what are you out? Nothing. What did it do? It saved you some calories, allowed you to bring more junk in so that you last longer in the field and can deploy and fight more effectively. for all those urban, people are going to be fighting in the cities. Of course now, I think you better carry more, like we've argued about even going into the desert, like we're going out into the flats of Montana. Because if you ain't carrying more with you, I don't see any Meyers or Wally World delivery trucks showing up once they cut the city off. What do you think? You're right about that. Oh, wait a minute. You mean we're going to be stuck in the city here with millions of people? Yeah, yeah. Have you got a 55-gallon barbecue for people chops? We're going to have people ribs tonight? That's the problem with all being stuck in one piece concrete where there's only so much food and most of the people weren't listening and a bunch of them were crackheads and like they were spending their money on dope they weren't spending their money on food and everybody thought we need to go into the cities and fight there because of all well looks like the LTR feed just died off I'm gonna try to get it back Standby bye guys. I'm working on getting the live 365 Back in it says they're down. I'll keep you trying Once again guys, live 365 for Mark Kornke is down. I keep refreshing to see if it's back up, it's not up yet. Just stand by and enjoy the music for a little bit. We're going to try to get Mark on my Skype here so we can continue to broadcast, so stand by. Well, when the time comes to leave, you don't carry it back out. You leave it with them. You see how that works? That way you have food. First of all, the family benefits. It upgrades their ability to defend themselves. It also is a thank you in a way. There are a number of reasons for doing this. All of them plus positive for the Patriot Movement and all of them positive for the militia. Now, when you're done, you move on to your, you move on, you know, the siege, once it was closed and everybody, the Freeman decided to do what they did, that wasn't a choice. The militia had to, in fact, promise to follow the decision of the people who were under siege. It ended peaceably. So, the units, when they were done, they virtually cycled out of the area of operation. Well, most of the food, like the rolled oats, the one gallon cans of food, the cases of beans, the dried beans, the dried rice, it all stayed there with the hosts. So, in this way it demonstrated that not only were they supporting us, But we showed the best way that we could to support them in a way that would allow them to continue to operate. Hey, that kind of food stuff on the shelf means that that saves them resources for the future. They're more likely to keep their land because you've eased their burden, especially with regard to food production. And they can take that money they would have spent on the food and put it on property or covering the next year's crops or whatever. So this was a tit for tat, mutual support policy. It's something you need to look at. In a combat situation where it's to escalate or where you need to be deployed longer, a percentage of that food was consumed. Some units did not and in fact were all lamenting and whining that they had to go 60 miles for water every so many days. That they had to go 40 or 50 miles to go get food. That stuff wasn't right there like they expected. Well, they forget all of these states, and I'm going to point this out, even Michigan and all the others will be like this soon enough. So, Wyoming is a big state, guys. I'd say it's pretty large, isn't it, Don? Wide open spaces. Yeah, Monty's is the same way, guys. When you think state, if you're from the eastern states, remember, take a look at the map and compare the distances. And remember that the people are spread out a lot farther in the western states. So, the assumption that I could just run down the road and we'll get what we need because we don't have to listen to that. That Mark guy is crazy. Blah, blah, blah, blah, blah. Later on they kept looking at the ground when they came back and I heard the first thing they did was they did the whiner thing. Some of them did the piss and moan routine. Well, we had to do this, we had to do that. I said, well, we told you not to do that in the first place, didn't we? We told you what to do. Well, well, we didn't think we'd be there that long. What do you mean you didn't think you'd be there that long? You committed to the siege and everybody agreed to that. Everybody cycled out and everybody had gone out at different times. So there wasn't anything that could come up in the way of an excuse. The idea is to take this seriously right from the beginning. I don't know. I really don't know. It was in some people's minds. I understand. It was just for the sake of arguing because, oh, you don't know what you're talking about. Oh, okay. Cool. No problem. The units that did listen were able to pretty well stay in place. They didn't have the heartburn or hardship. Yes, they still had to watch their water supply because again, even for all the water they're carrying, you've got to do the math. You put 100 people in one place, how much water do they use in a day? Yeah. So 50 gallon water barrels, plastic blue water barrels. were used and that's what was sent out. When I said 50 gallons per person, that's what they did. Still, they needed water for food maintenance, obviously for food production, for cleanliness and maintenance with regard to the food production items. Plus, they still had to worry about maintenance on maintenance on the individuals. Basic personal hygiene. Now, all of that adds up real quick, guys. Needles to say, you don't have to tell me, the first thing that's going to disappear is personal hygiene to a degree. If there's a water shortage, we're not worried about bathing, if it's choice from them and keeping the person hydrated. I understand. You don't have to tell me that. The point is that where you can maintain standards for as long as you can means that your unit will maintain a higher overall proficiency and ability as long as you keep the supply train running. See how that works? So that's what we're trying to make people think about. We're going into this understanding the full depth of the battlefield. Even if you're unconventional or if you're going to be secret squirrel or I'm going to be a gorilla, whatever it still comes down to, guys, you better be reading a lot more on supply and support and the supply train, contrary to what you think. One of the things that the Vietnamese friends, everybody goes, oh, like the Vietnamese. And now, of course, it's the latest kids in the blocker. Oh, like the Iraqis. The Iraqis are starving. They are in worse shape than the Vietnamese were in many cases. They don't have any triple canopy to hide under. It's cool that they are doing what they are doing. When you look at them as an aggressor, they are doing pretty darn well with what they have got and they are continuing to fight. One of the things that the Vietnamese learned because they had already been in a war like that, like they were with us against the French, is they had a deep supply and support infrastructure. It did not mean that they had necessarily mountains and mountains and mountains of stuff in one place. What they did is they had the stuff deployed in many locations, but they had a variety of supply and support items based upon experience. Even medical support, which I've harped on. You know we do. We harp on this constantly. We have our friends up and online for that reason, like Mike Neser and Alfie Omega, because of that. Well, guys, they didn't leave a guy dead on the battlefield. I'm looking at some of these quotes by some of these people who are talking about the medical support in some of these videos. They are like, you just shoot the person and leave him. Really? Well, I hate to tell you that that is not what the Vietnamese did. While they had ample opportunity, they understood that the greatest strength and the core of any fighting force of that type is the manpower, especially reliable manpower. A person who is willing to go out there and risk their arse every day is priceless. Especially when he is not drafted, he is an absolute volunteer and his heart and his spirit is involved in the conflict completely. Your mission is to keep that person alive. In fact, that is the sole purpose for the whole of this thing to begin with, is to defend our lives and our liberty. Granted, we have to risk our lives, but it is because we understand the God-given gift of liberty. So, we will provide all the support that we can to keep every one of us alive through to the end of this campaign and on to the win, on to victory. But you've got to have the deep supply system in place. A lot of people are using shallow mines. Okay? There's a lot of people going, well, you probably need 50 rounds because I'm going to take from the neighbor and stuff and this and that. Really? Well, you better hope I'm not your neighbor. I'm gonna have 48 rounds or 49 rounds. You may pull the trigger once. Once you confirm you're intent, you aren't gonna be around very long. All guns brought to bear. That's right. Mark. Oh, who do we have there? This is, this is Bob Miner. Hey, go ahead, please. See what Carol got a phone call approximately, uh, about mountain time? Again, we have the daytime in place on that. I'll tell you what, if you want to, for the next hour, can you bring that back up and just play it flat out, it saves us having you repeat it? I will send you the link to it, to LTR in the chat. Ed will be able to do that. Ed is listening right now. I'm not in there, but we are back online. You should be able to get there, Mark. Okay, hold on here a second. Let's see what we can do here, because I have not. Actually, we've been having a problem. There we go. We may be in luck. Okay. I'll hang up and I'll get that link sent over to Ed. Very good. Appreciate that. Thank you. It's already sent over. You should already have it. Alright. Very good. We'll see what we can do again in the next hour. We need to make sure we bring it up again. First of all, are you going to sign off? Yeah, I'll let you go. Okay. Very good. Not a problem. Thank you. One of the things that I would say especially about this is what I've argued right from the beginning when Osama bin ding dong went down to Mexico The Chinese were there to pull the message. Yes. There we go One of the things that the Chinese were down there while they were in Mexico They basically the ring knockers saw often spit down there were deciding how they're going to plug this nonsense in So it would not surprise me if they're actually looking at More of an open discussion with regard to the military who all think that we're just not up to speed on what's going on That's the sad part about this. Guys, for all you people listening in the military, we understand the manipulation by the globalists with the Chinese in conjunction with whoever we have that's involved in treason in Washington. Everybody else better be paying attention to it this way because there's no way that this thing could be dropped out of the sky and nobody was catching on. This is the age of computers. This is the age of Internet. There's no little burrow with a little kid on it being pulled by another little kid with a little message that came by carrier pigeon to their outpost. And they have to walk with a little burrow on 40 miles to get to the nearest telegraph where the old operator with the old vest and the white shirt, he's got the gambler's visor on and he's waiting and he's sleeping against the wall and the little kid comes up and pulls his shirt by the arm and goes, Señor, Señor, por favor, yer. and gives him the message and he looks at it blurly and he starts tapping it out and the telegraph runs up to Cheyenne and then it goes by telegraph across over to Missouri and then from there over to Atlanta to the CDC where another guy that they keep around only because Mexico only has telegraph systems down and there's an old guy sitting in the basement over there at the CDC and he hears, and he kind of wakes up from his sleep because he's about 80 some years old and he looks and goes, Well, maybe I'll get the message when I feel a little better, but I'll do it on the auto tape and I'll read it a couple days from now. Yeah, okay, sure. And I'm a Chinese jet pilot. Excuse me, they all have keyboards, they all have computers, they're all tied in, and they all know how to get hold of each other. Especially in a situation where they've already been flagged and up and online, worrying about this, or at least, let's put it this way, they don't sell Starbucks coffee part-time off to the side. This is my favorite example of how all these people who are nutcases that follow these control freaks, on the one hand they'll tell you all about, they get a gleam in their eye and they go, they're gonna kill you because they see you, I'll do all. Then when something like this happens, like 911 or something like this with this flu BS, then all of a sudden they go, well, they didn't know. Well, they got caught off guard. Well, they missed it. How could they miss it? What are they doing? Selling Starbucks, coffee, part time off to the side, and every couple of hours coming back and kind of doing their job? Yeah. Do you see the problem with this? See, people will relate this to somehow, I think, the way they maybe do their job. or the way that they think it's like, well, you know, I've got a lot of things I'm doing at work. People, the spooks and cookes and the spies and this whole police state rat nonsense has been put in place, that's all they do. All these rodents you hired, all these cockroaches that are in place, all these spies and snitches and rats. who perceive the American people to be more of an enemy than the actual enemy that we're supposed to be facing from outside. In fact, they almost all feel more comfortable working with foreign forces and foreign troops because of the way the little pea brains have been conditioned. Secret squirrel is happier with other secret squirrels from outside the United States than they are with Americans, especially patriotic and freedom-loving Americans. Most of the characters in these spook and kook operations are absolutely nutcase in that respect. They've been so twisted around the corner. They have been so twisted upside down. There's a whole bunch of them that hate anybody who believes in liberty and freedom in the United States. We ain't talking liberals because they don't believe that. That's not their agenda at all. They're just the other half of the power freak set. We're in an interesting situation here that's going to do nothing but get progressively more interesting as we go. Before we go any farther, I'm going to reinforce this again. Gas masks, gas masks, gas masks. Because if this, look at the flu or any of the bios like this that are vector transport.
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