Mark Koernke and co-host Don discussed night vision equipment procurement for border security operations, specifically first-generation double-tube systems available at favorable pricing for potential Minuteman-style deployments. The show covered tactical applications of night vision for establishing listening posts and observation posts (LPOPs) along the U.S.-Mexico border, operational procedures for night surveillance including systematic area scanning techniques, and shift rotation strategies to manage operator fatigue. The hosts also conducted an extended discussion on shotgun selection and training, covering 12-gauge and 20-gauge options, proper shooting technique, ergonomics for different shooters, and the advantages of tube-fed versus magazine-fed shotguns for combat applications. Additional segments included commentary on vintage vehicles and industrial equipment available for purchase, and comparisons of modern weapon designs to historical military innovations.
Then, we fought a revolution to secure our liberty. We wrote the Constitution as a shield from tyranny. For future generations, the slighty we gave. In this, the land of the free and 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. And this is the land of the free and 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 news 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 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 will be... 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? O 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 I awoke, he vanished in the mist for whence he came. His words were true, we are not free, but we have ourselves to blame. For even now as tyrants 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 is this still the land of the afternoon ladies and gentlemen? This is the afternoon intelligence report. I'm our clunky 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, left, central, west, and east. Ladies and gentlemen, you are listening to us on LibertyTreeRadio.4mg.com, pbn.4mg.com, and we are on live 365 and go to Liberty Tree Radio. You will also find us on... AM and FM microstations, CB base stations, and ultra-net technologies both east and west of the Mississippi along with southern and central Alaska. We're also on the Hallmark Network, 8 colonial states, and expanding, headed towards the final destination. The culmination of three different groups coming together across the nation, the Golden Spike event, where all three, to and heavier technologies as we go. So anyway, today's date is what? May, March, same thing. Well, close reviews tonight on him then. Again, the fifth key of let me see January, February, March, April. So for year zero, if you're a commie. Well, I'll tell you what, we want to touch on this again because we got you here and this is the top of the hour and a lot of friends we have are listening on Fridays that may not be able to listen during the week. Guys, Don and many other people around the country have been working on this project to try and pick up some special night vision technology that's at the right price right now. So Don, you explain the situation and just go right through it top to bottom and then how they can get hold of you. Well you guys, we have to buy a drum on this and it's going to be gone if we don't buy this earlier. It's no different than how do you hope more people, maybe many people will buy that and then they put it in the field. Well there's a years ago Mark I offered a, it was a single tube it brought. I think as long as in our generation I don't think or long range where they are and knock on the door anywhere on the count to counties and their mothers they might need to be cautious there and you need to check if you're a Canadian American border, make a year or what not. So you need to check you guys that's almost as big as 6, almost a 2000. Remember if you want to talk to me is 231. Again one of the reminders here guys is that we have an opportunity to upgrade a whole lot of units. Some of you that are listening are down in the San Diego area. or down on the border in Arizona or maybe west or central Texas. You're deploying on the border. You're looking for equipment to assist with the border closure. This is technology that would apply there completely, especially for establishing LPOPs, listening posts, observation posts, combined with aggressive patrolling. The LPOPs could be doing spot and don't have to move. They're in fixed location. Much like the last deployment that was done of the two major deployments that were presented by the Minutemen, in the second deployment a lot of people had night vision and were able to operate all through the evening. Now keep in mind this is first generation but with much larger collection lenses than you typically find. on a lot of the first generation equipment that has been purchased in the past. It's not the biggest, but it's again, a very nice system. And where this would be ideal is where you have a fixed position with radio command and control, perimeter security, fire team leaders who want to try and observe the area of operation and expand on the ability to make, shall we say, more competent decisions in darkness. You may want to survey or scan an area. It doesn't mean you don't have other equipment and it doesn't mean you won't be upgrading in the future, but this is an excellent system for the price. Fourth generation is out there in La La Land. Third generation is pricey and we know that. This is a solution using first generation equipment. It is a double tube system. and you're going to be pretty satisfied with what you get. Now again, Don, there was another thing here, the hull casing colors. There was a selection and you decided to go with the, obviously with the darker tactical tones, correct? Oh, again, this goes back body and put the same tube in it and it'll look like Shamu and everybody will want one. You know what I mean? They've also offered this in black. Well, we'll talk about that. Be the guy who is more in the tactic one more time, and again, to Pass the word on. It doesn't have to be anybody listening to the program. Anybody else who wants to coordinate on this, Don has explained the parameters for it. We're going to continue to mention it through the week. As soon as we come up with a completed solution on this, we'll let everybody know. Window of opportunity is not all that great because There aren't that many units available. Now these are not knocked up or busted up or broken rebuilds or anything like that. These are factory end runs. This is the last of these systems, right Dom? It's the last of this body style, so to speak. Then they'll be going to the 57 Chevy model. Yeah, with the same motor. is the 56 Chevy. that's off the equipment. If we get it, we eliminate that real quick. that's like nothing else out there. They haven't seen for a while. So if you want stuff that goes back to grandpa's period all the way up through the 40s, 50s, 60s and 70s or stuff there you haven't seen for several decades to a few decades. Boy, I'll tell you what. And also modern stuff. He was cleaning out a lot of factories and apparently businesses and warehouses and bought stuff out. I assume he was selling it, but there is enough to do an entire electrical company, industrial grade, over there right now. A whole bunch of other tools and technology, tractors, you name it. Older technology, all kinds of stuff. In fact, there is even a cauldron over there with a strainer. I mean, you get the cauldron, you've got the strainer, you put all the carrots and potatoes in. Let's say, when the camels are done boiling the victim. Wow, I mean, did I say that? When the big potatoes and onions are in their hole, well, you're all set, don't worry. Bubble, bubble, toil and trouble. But anyway, it's pretty cool. But the Mustang was most interesting there, too. That's a one year body. That's because they had the flat back. Now this is the IELTS. The 72, 73 of course is the last of the true big bodies. The 74 is the transition car. And what's really cool is this is a convertible and it's not in bad shape. It's got a little bit of rust around the bumper area in the back with a cap of all places where the top of the bumper There's a little sheet metal that wraps around there. That's where the rust is. There's no rust on the body. It's kind of interesting. It's highly repairable. Yeah, this thing is going to go. If somebody or anybody is watching and paying attention for this thing, this is going to go for a good penny. It is a beautiful car. Of course, we were just joking. We could do a little cheap version of Bullet. We've got a 72.5 charger. Let's see, we have a 73. Totally a skew. cars. We get a charger and a Mustang. We wouldn't burn either one of them nowadays. We had to fake it completely. It had to be cardboard boxes and junk wreckage from some of the newer cars. Computer-generated impact. Yeah, exactly. But we don't have the computer CG to do that, so we just had to fake it really bad. That expression of the bad guys in the car. If everybody doesn't remember Bullitt as one of those famous chases. It used to be one of the most considered to be one of the best chase scenes in the game. Because it was all real footage. When they did it, the sad part is when you see the bad guys take that muscle car into the gas station. Steve McQueen, remember, was the main character. Each year, the model change was different and was unique to in and of itself. Maybe more people will buy. This body is being just a fancy. It's a fancy. It's a place where it will hang up, which is critical streamlining or wherever you can reduce any surfaces. This is why we talk about all the other designs. Everybody has some really neat stuff. They are hanging on their M4's slash M4 knockoff, AR-15 carbines. It looks cool. If you are going to be in nothing but a city or if you are just going to be in a SWAT team and go into rape kill pillagers and burn somebody's house and ransacking it being the pillagers that they are, that would be one thing. Or if you are in a perfect environment where there is no foliage like the desert. That would be a variation, but anywhere else, everything that you have that has a groove, a niche, or anything that is able to hook something, it will. Yes. Not maybe, it's just as guaranteed, it will. Why do you think weapons have been built the way that they have and have been pretty much streamlined for many, many years? There is a reason. That way when the time comes for field weapons especially, the average arm, there's all kinds of intricate ideas they've come up with with most every combat arm over the years. It's only in recent years that this has changed temporarily because of the environments that we've been in. The moment we're back into a regular field environment and especially a high, fully eugenially intense field environment, Were there any kind of background, any kind of debris, any kind of stuff where you get a walk through things. You're going to find some of this stuff start to disappear real quick or you're going to see something that originally was proposed years ago but I knew would be the first thing they'd drop and that's to actually have an over shield that protects and that all these things were contoured into. Which does make sense. In other words, you actually, like you were saying Don, you mold a body that takes all these fixtures. and you plug them in. The only reason they didn't stick with that idea, guys, is that on weapon systems, things change. It's like the optics you're talking about right now. You go from a first to a second generation, second generation to third generation. There's a variance in the size of the piece of equipment. So if you have a molded or contoured overshield that goes on the whole weapon system, It can become outdated very quickly or requires modification. Now if they're thinking ahead, they can use add-on geometry blocks, in other words modules. So let's say you have add-on vision or optics, you could actually just change that particular fixture. But typically they don't want to think it out that far. You're looking at minimal bidders. There's all kinds of contract issues. Plus the bean counters have a brother-in-law they want to hire. You know how that is. Think about the M16, Mark. If you go back to the roots, we've seen one major change, the caliber. The three major changes, how many more major changes have been done? Almost exactly none. The only thing they've done is use variations and optics, and that's a minor feature issue. Example is the flat tops. And that's even there. There's no significant change to the internals on the firearm. All the parts on an M16A1 will fit on an A2 and vice versa with the exception of the internals. Now of course you're not supposed to be disassembling the lower trigger group anyway, but that's where the variation is with the military because of course in the M16A1 it had full auto select. In the M16A2 you have semi and three round burst. Of course they could never seem to get that kind of an idea right. You know what I mean? So it's either one extreme or the other. The Europeans on the other hand as we know HK and whatever, came up with a semi three round full auto option. So you could go one, two, or three. Option number one, option number two, or option number three. Oh, and don't forget, safe. That's number four. But anyway, that's why looking at these systems, the idea of how weapons are built. And I bring this up for another reason. I was looking at something else here just a few minutes ago, and just a video that one of the guys sent. And it's from YouTube. And it's showing you, it was a modern the Sorry about that. And most of the expertise comes from the private sector. Eh, just how it works. But anyway, something else I was looking at here years ago, Don, semi-automatic magazine-fed shotguns. Okay? Okay. 12 gauge. Now in this case they're showing a look at this design and of course they're showing a new penetrator shell. Fin stabilized and yada yada yada and it's a shape charge penetrates and explodes on the other side. Wow, like we haven't seen this before. By the way, that idea and basically the same concept only just a little larger was built for the flare guns the Germans made in World War II. The guy that built what he's building that you see on future weapons He literally stole it from a 1943 design that was set up to give the German flare pistols a little fire power so they could contribute to the battlefield. Duh! I wouldn't want to catch one. But it totally knew! No, it's not really. Same idea. Have you talked about that over the years Mark? Converting a, and I know, skip when an old, old flare came into my possession. Yeah. Well, the Germans did it in two ways. They did it with a spigot mounted, basically it would be like a Panzerfaust 1 charge or what most people would recognize as kind of looking like an RPG-2 warhead. Then the other model was basically the bore diameter of the flare tube and didn't have as great an energy but it was a way to send grenade rounds down range. Well, this new weapon, it looks to me, to be quite honest, it looks like the guy virtually took an Atchison. I didn't get a chance to listen to the audio. It was completely out of it yet. Maybe it is an Atchison, but it looks to be a stolen Atchison design. Atchison, 40 years ago, came up with the idea. There was all kinds of controversy. People lost money because the government kind of pushed them into not building it. They went down to the Caribbean. There's a whole epic story about that one. But the Acheson was the first that took the M16 type system and made a rifle based on the concept. They had the same basic design but magazine or drum fed. Then came the Spas 15. That was another variation on the theme. Everybody knows about this Spas, sort of shotgun, same alphabet. They can pump. But what they don't know is for the most part the next step was gas operated semi-automatic magazine fed and the SPAS-15 looks like a big, an M16 that's been, you know, shall we say made real gooey and then stretched thin in all directions like it's, you know, like taffy. The SPAS-15 about 500 came in the U.S. and then they cut those off. Now the next one that came in was the Daewoo 12 gauge semi-auto shotgun in the military full auto. They started to sell those here and they stopped them as quick as they could. This whole idea of the fact that, oh look what the military is going to get, it's like, you know what, I don't think so. They might, but if they do, they might not even bother with an American design. They could pick up any one of four other countries and not have to do anything unique. Plus, they would be oiling the machine of the enemy, which is what they prefer to do 99.9% of the time. Whatever our guy is designed or come up with, They'll take note of it and then they'll basically try to rub them out. They'll push them out of the business. They'll tax them. They'll abuse them, whatever. But one way or another, they won't be able to get out what they want anyway. You've named some military guns, but you guys that are paying attention, that doesn't mean that you have to hunt for them if you come across one of those brown and semi-auto 12. Fine guns. Fine guns. Oh, now I'll be right back. Take over, folks. Okay. This would be something that your sweet 16 or your browning semi-auto 12 gauge. you can change the furniture around on it, you're probably going to have to look for John Moses. He was, you know, he liked, you're not going to have some, you know, all with lead and then Don would shoot his, you know what, when I go in any direction and you know, one shot it, but we could just go until we don't have any more ammunition and really got better as I know I haven't shot for time. They never really got better at bringing the gun to bear. And then sometimes that bird away from you and actually moving down time. You see a bunny in the, you know, what we have in kind of different ways, but you know, told you about with your combat rifle and magazines. multiply it by a thousand. You are looking at a slide, you know. One cool thing about a pump gun can almost be, you know, because you have that ejection point. As you move through an area, believe me, and you can see demonstrations of this. Let me think of our Bach does a real nice dimension of this on only hits count. A video, I think we have it in our collection, so we might offer it. He would shuffle if you look at the short round. Why do you think they called that one shotgun? Well, but why do you think they called that one game? And if you start to get up and going to rule your world right then again I go right back to a magazine fed shotgun and they're out there you better have magazine shooting a pump that you can feed that port bottom can't you and you know what if you're shooting a semi-auto you can do it one of the things to remember about tube fed guns is that you can constantly be topping the gun off yes when you're not uh what that is one of the nice things about a tube fed shotgun especially as a fighting shotgun Whenever you use up a few rounds and you'll be paying attention to what you've expended, you will count. What you do is the moment you stop and there's any kind of hesitation at all, you automatically throw another round into the tube below. Tapping it off. You keep topping it off. In that way it's the forever feed because they're logic is they see you that you're not going to be thinking about reloading, you're thinking about dumping rounds down range. And you should be thinking just the reverse. The idea behind this is to constantly top off to keep them guessing. Their accounting isn't going to do them any good. Also, this gives you a tremendous amount of firepower at your disposal when you need it. That's another thing that that's a constant issue for troops when they're operating in a battlefield situation like this is you run dry at the wrong time, but one nice thing about the shotgun is again once when you engage the target you're looking at 9, 11, 12, 14 or 20 some pellets going downrange and still with basically the same energy at intermediate and close range that you would have with any of the light rifles you'd probably be carrying. every time you pull the trigger you're saturating your area, beating the bush to a degree. But if you're aiming and again you know how to become a master with that shotgun, you will put the target into the middle of that saturation field and you will engage and neutralize the target first time every time. something that can shoot and that might sound. But you know, I've seen John Wayne fire his 12 gauge one handed in the movies, but you get that 12 gauge control in an instant in an airman you can't bring to the teachers to your 12 gauge control. I can verify that work. Now here again, we're looking at, you know, a number of different techniques and weapon systems are available. The other part about this is ergonomics. You know, something we've been discussing here is size of the person. Now each, any person can pretty well handle a 12 gauge. The most common error made is where we take and abuse somebody. You know, to try and supposedly teach them a lesson, which it doesn't, although the fact that it hurts, it may drive a person away from firearms. It's just something we don't want to see happen. We don't want to create the flinch factor. If a person is properly trained in condition and if you correct the individual, which is what the student teacher discipline is all about, the teacher's job is to correct the student if something is not being done right, the shooter will not be either afraid of nor wins at the possibility of pain because there will be a ghost memory. flinching issue that comes in. Also, it's just the fact that people think they need to pull a trigger real hard rather than squeeze the trigger. We don't worry about pulling the trigger. We want to squeeze that trigger. Now, it still means you can accelerate it, so it seems like it's a pull almost, but in reality you're squeezing so that there's minimal interaction with the firearm. And this allows for you to focus and keep the thing on target. With a shotgun, as has been said there, a little more forgiving. And at close range, well, not quite as much of an issue as we know, but that's a little different story. Otherwise, if you're carrying the 12 gauge as a primary weapon, you want the individual to be completely confident with it and comfortable with the arm. However, if for some reason they're having difficulty because of recoil, et cetera, you can drop down to a 20 gauge. There's a lot of 20 gauge ammo around. It is a comfortable firearm to shoot. Many times, Remington of course, Winchester, everybody has made a youth shotgun in 20 gauge as a counterpart to its standard 12. And the 20s are still out there in force. You're going to find them pretty much everywhere. And you'll run into these every once in a while too on the market in 20, like an 870 and 20 gauge. Nothing wrong with it at all. And again, you throw it to me, I'd carry it without even blinking. I wouldn't even ask questions. But you might need to engineer your weapon by gauge to meet the needs of the shooter, be of the person older, perhaps the person is injured, or the person is younger and may not be able to handle the recoil. 4-10s are out there, but you know what? 4-10 is as expensive as any other shotgun to use and it's, you know, as far as performance goes and cost. Again, less charge and all-spelt recoil. still a way to go if you're trying to train people. In the past it used to be cheap to train with, kind of like 22 versus a full caliber. But at this point in time, 410 Don is costing just about as much as 20 gauge in 12. So for the price, move up into the 12. If you've got a 410, hang on to it. Mark didn't say get rid of it. Mark just said if you're looking at any other arms, consider the fact that you've got more pellets going down range with a bigger bore. That's not a bad idea. A bigger barrel or a little more pellet for your first case. Horse power. There we go. Horse power too. It's something that has to be taken into consideration. It's just like when we were dealing with tailoring your handgun or the individual rifles to the shooters. In each case you may want to adjust accordingly. the big thing is that uh... it twelve pages you're gonna i think we're gonna probably see about twenty percent of the population carrying one form of shotgun or another It's just the nature of the beast and the fact that 12 gauges can be made, any shotgun can be made to be so convenient in its size and package. A lot of people have bought pistol grips, their logic is they're going to carry a backup firearm, that they might look at the 12 gauge as a solution. Expect to see that. I would say this, don't cut down a barrel if your weapon is able to interchange barrels. Guys, if you're just patient, you'll find clunker barrels out there in the 20 inch or the 18 inch. Personally, I stick with about a 20 to be quite honest, only because, again, no complications right now. And it's going to keep the group a hair tighter later on, which is what you want. And again, still, it's a matter of shooter preference. There are different missions where maybe you have a certain barrel length that will apply. I wouldn't cut it too short because you're knocking off your range and you're going to have some real problems if you have to use it for something to perform a transition mission because your primary weapon has failed. The shorter the barrel, the less effective range you're going to have overall. That's not going to make you very happy. If it's close quarters defense, The extra little barrel length you're going to get is also going to leave on, is going to actually give you a little more energy off the muscle when the time comes too. That means putting the round into the target with that much more fist when the time comes, which is really what we want. That's what 12 gauge is all about and 20 gauge. Anyway, I'll tell you what, now Don, we're almost to the top of the hour, so why don't you do this again. Go through everything. We've got enough time to do it. Explain to everybody what our night vision project is all about. I want to do this a couple times this week and we've still got enough time so jump in there please. Thank you Mark. You guys, there's some companies at night vision I talk to. I don't talk to the sales people. I talk to the vice president. I was talking to a president of sales here the other day and talking about a particular piece. He pointed out that we only have 70 of those left and 20 of them are going to Cabela's and we're keeping about 20 for warranty. I have reserves so to spy, 20 in mass I can bring them to give that number a couple more times. Everybody writing it down, you don't go too fast. Okay, you guys, I also, and if you have a big enough pilot. And again, we're looking at trying to come up with solutions, especially the night vision now. Now here's the other thing. Granted, there's been a lot of debate barriers. There are people looking at another Minuteman type deployment on the border. Of course, it would be coordinated in time between a number of different organizations. And if that happened, one of the things that we're going to try and set as a goal, and I would recommend being set as a goal for everybody, is 100% night vision deployment on the border. There's no reason for you not to have that ability. There are a number of different systems that are out there. This is one of the solutions for that type of border mission. Where you're going to set up an LPOP, you're going to be observing a fixed area. You're going to want to be able to scan and observe. You will be transferring the weapon from one operator. Forgive me. If it was night vision and it's modern on a weapon, that will happen too. But what you do is you transfer the equipment from person to person as there is a shift change. Now with night operations, in many cases it's actually a better idea to change the sentries of the post more often. For obvious reasons. Of course it's also nice if you have people who are used to working say second and third shift that may be volunteering. Then we've got the guys who are used to staying awake all night. That makes a difference. That's one of the things where you have material and human management there to take care of the problem. In other words you have to have a ground coordinator. That's one of the many things you ask when you have manpower in hand as far as doing a survey of who can we use for what jobs. In many cases you have people who are already on the second and third shift, they can rotate in, they're not going to have the fatigue issues. But when operating equipment like this, because of the I-strain and there's also a mental strain, you're actually working with this stuff. It would be a good idea to shift your people out every so often, or what you do is you shut the equipment down, they take a specific periodic break. Now, the break and the duration is determined and is part of the log. So in other words, you're going to do something at a certain time, you're going to do another thing at a certain time, you're going to then break, then you're going back to your series of written actions as far as your surveys. I will survey the eastern quadrant of my area of control. from left to right, then the central area of control, the central quadrant from left to right, and then from front to back, so to speak, and the nearest to farthest point away. There are techniques for surveying so that you do a systematic check of your area of control in all directions. That's part of this whole process with using the night vision and then being able to survey with the night vision at your discretion and then switching over to say even better technology if you decide that you wish to deploy it. You may have it on hand but you don't want to eat the batteries up right away. Let's say you suspect activity, you can then do a scan with better technology and pinpoint the threat or pinpoint the individual or the individuals that were the interested. There are some interested parties. There we go. Things you need to check on. Just a quick overview. When you look through even a pair of fields, you bring up a thick as example. Now what you want to do is look at the tree, the rock, the building across until that is on the other side of the viewing area. And then even if you want to do sometimes. I know we're getting really close to that. In fact, I was expecting to hear the music here in a minute and chances are we will. We'll get right to the top. We shall prevail ladies and gentlemen, the Empire is on the run. We are on a march both day and night. Who lost? He threw the flat, sent him over to the border, throw him over to the fence to the rabbit, drug dealer, and chihuahua. 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 fought a revolution to secure our liberty. We wrote the Constitution as a shield from tyranny. For future generations, this legacy we gave. In this, the land of the free and home of the brave. The freedoms we secured for you, we hoped you'd always keep. The 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. and 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 news 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 paid for crimes that make our nation turn from God and shame You've taken Satan's number and 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 may be... Your leaders send artillery and guns to foreign shores and send your sons to slaughter fighting other people's wars. Can you regain the freedom 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? O 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 I awoke, he vanished in the mist for once he came. His words were true, we are not free, but we have ourselves to blame. For even now as tyrants trample each god given right we only watch in tremble to a friend
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