Mark Koernke discussed alternative energy generation methods, including wind generators, water wheels, exercise bikes, and car alternators, emphasizing self-sufficiency during potential power outages. He explored the history and development of communication technologies from radio and television to the internet, highlighting how older industrial-grade equipment is more durable than modern consumer products. Koernke detailed plans for building independent, decentralized communication networks (UltraNet, Hallmark systems) using Wi-Fi, copper wire, and fiber optics to circumvent government control. He advocated for redundant backup systems and preventive maintenance, and made an appeal for support for Radio Randy (James Randy Perry) and his wife Tammy, who were dealing with health issues. Caller Dave provided commodity market updates at the end of the broadcast.
Wolverine Military Outfitters folks, this is wolverinemo.com. We specialize in ACUs, BDUs, and SDUs. MOLLEGEAR tactical vest, armored vest, and kevlar helmets. Custom camo fabrics and camo netting. All your flare gun and ammo needs. Parachute players, red rain players, 50 cal ammo cans, ghillie suits, snow camo, Russian gear, German gear, Swedish gear, American gear. If there's something we don't have, just ask and we'll find it for you. So check us out wolverinemo.com, wolverinemo.com. Check out our site, it's updating daily folks. Mention Liberty Tree Radio for your listeners discount or just call us at 734-340-7285-734-340-7285. 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 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. 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's 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'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 will be born. 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'll fight to save? Or do you wish your children to live in fear and be a slave? Both 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 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 trampled each God given right we only watching 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'd fought to keep What would be your answer if he called out from the grave? Is this still the plan? Ladies and gentlemen, this is the evening intelligence report. I'm Mark Kermke One day closer to victory for all of our brothers and sisters, both on and behind the lines in occupied territories, central, west, east, and southeast. Ladies and gentlemen, you are listening to us on libertytreeradio.4mg.com, pbn.4mg.com, and we are on live 365. Then go to libertytreeradio.com. 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 are also on the Hallmark network, eight colonial states strong and expanding into many other states across the nation. This will be part of our signal communications expansion. And at a given point, we're going to be part of the Golden Spike event in the southeastern part of Ohio. I understand that Phyllis and also Oscar, our two individuals, need to be congratulated. You are now the probably the host location for the Golden Spike event with regard to your site being the focal point for the big link when the time comes. We'll see what happens there. So, appreciate that. A couple of our older couples have been really, really active in the patron movement for a long time. They are hooking up some of the new equipment. They are working with some of our computer geeks, young kids who came in as a team and asked them how little space we need, a little corner, a little spot to set the rest of the equipment up. They go right along with all the other common equipment. The guys are used to equi- to operating and it will be tied into about three or four different tiers. So one system goes down, it backs up to the next, which then backs up to the next. One or another we are still plugged in across the country and many other locations. Backups to backups to backups. That's the other half of this battle, especially the signal communications guys. You know, think about it. When we first started radio years ago, people, not us, we weren't around. And by the way, this is the year 2009 slash year zero. It's the 19th of May. It is, of course, It's better than halfway through the month of May already, guys. But, you know, 100 years ago radio was already pretty well on its way. 100 years ago it was 1909. There are people that I know who lived through 1909. And this is one of the things I've talked about with regard to history. Technically, because they passed their living memory on to us and they talked about the experiences that they had of the day, for us it's not some written bit of history that somebody has to dig out of a book because they weren't paying attention to grandma and grandpa. Instead, we talked and worked with many of the people who were at the time young pioneers working in many, many different fields. It's funny how sometimes, and especially in the Patriot effort, this is true, a lot of the people that are in the Patriot effort are the innovators, the movers, the shakers, the people who actually did things and are continuing to do things. If you take a look at where alternate energy is right now or where unique and off-the-shelf technologies are being developed or have been developed, Well, look at the circles that these people operate in. They're not in the box, which of course the bad guys hate with a passion. Because for this reason, all of the crisis and all the terrible disasters aren't terrible disasters if they can be averted and that can easily be done by diversifying. Well, years ago, remember the ability to produce a projected voice. It was not the first system that was up and online. Dots and dashes made up the voice. It was a language unto itself. Something like I talked about earlier in the day here with regard to understanding the codex, so to speak, or the vocabulary of a particular trait. There was a whole unique language that we call it Morse code, but there were actually other codes. Morse code became the standard system for talking no matter what language you might be a part of. You understood the alphabet of the Morse code. There's an interesting thing. Some people think, well, I don't really get into another language. Well, if you actually, on the one hand, have a great time with English, a terrible time with any other of the verbal tongues, but you can handle Morse code, you know more than one language already. I just haven't thought about it that way necessarily. Morse code is becoming less, shall we say, common because of course people having to learn things, it becomes really a heartburn for them to a degree. Now it was kind of also a passing system, so to speak, a screening system. You had to learn Morse code before you could get a license in the later stages. Initially though there wasn't any licensing and people just turned their equipment on and they were operating freely. For this reason, the bad guys didn't like that because, again, getting past all the mechanisms of control, people were communicating with each other freely. Eventually, voice came into play, and then from voice came, as we know, not just audio, but eventually the miracle of being able to send a television signal. Television was not something from the 50s or 60s, although it became very dominant in that period. It should be remembered that in the 20s, television was already in place. Germany had television before America did, in the way that you know it today. Television broadcasting was very limited in certain areas of the United States in its experimental form. Germany, especially under National Socialist Germany, guess what guys? They had it in every place they could put it where they had a central location where people could watch government television. So that's nothing new. Everybody else mimicked. In America, you saw much the same variation. Think about how many times. Now, this comes, it's an overlap. Let's put it this way. Let's go back a bit. In the old television series, about television activities or in movies even, if you saw television, where did you usually see television and where it was used as a communications tool to express part of the storyline? Think about it. In the bars, remember? You had to go to a pub or a sports bar or whatever kind of bar. Even in more recent times, though, still now 20 going on 30 years ago, how about Terminator? Sarah Connor is sitting there munching on a pizza. She of course is feeling a little antsy and while she is listening she hears something about her. Somebody says change the channel and she hears her name on the television, on the news, in the bar. This goes back through to spy novels, this goes back through to a number of different types of broadcasts. But nobody asked the basic question. What was the premise for this? Well, televisions were expensive, guys. Not everybody could afford a television originally, and so what they did is they went way out to the local bar, which was an enticement where you could watch the miracle of the Friday night or Saturday night fights, or something like even football. Not as we know it today with the Imperials, the way they're set up, but rather traditional ball type grass, real grass football. That was the enticement, but this actually was available in the 1920s. Color television was already available by then, too. However, one of the discussions that isn't made are some of the curious things that came out of the Depression real quick as we developed this technology known as television. Do you know there were whole processes that virtually vaporized in 1929? There are technologies in television. Now the claim is, and of course now that I'm older I would understand that on the one hand they claim that, well yeah a lot of people are alive that remember when these systems came into play, but they just disappeared along with a guy who invented them. Well, no they didn't. They just were grabbed by the JP Morgan types and a bunch of other parasites and they were made to disappear or put into very narrow and specific circles and they wanted control of what they were going to create in the way of a monopoly. Plus of course it was military application, don't forget that. And that actually can be demonstrated in something a little later. But anyway, just want to touch on the expansion there because let's reverse this. Everybody loves their DVDs. And by the way, DVDs and CDs are still right there. Now, they are the tool, they are the Praetorian, slash the Ensign of the Day. They're actually the Battlefleet ammunition of the day, guys. I know there's memory sticks, there's all kinds of other cool stuff, this little compressed digit sticks and stuff, but CDs right now are the Battlefield ammunition. Okay, and whatever Frisbee form, DVD or CD, Guys, you can't get any cheaper than the tool of the trade known as the DVD or CD. And the wonderful thing is, in both cases, they can offer video. Now CDs are more leaning towards audio or vast amounts of computer data that you want to compress into a very simple and nice throwable object. The DVD obviously is the dominant for, and all of the other DVD variants, is the dominant for video. Now we need to take advantage of. and use these to the best of our ability. Seriously, we must. We've got to take advantage of this. Why is that? Well, where else can you hand, literally, kind of like what he said in Back to the Future, remember when he was back in the 50s? Amazing. An entire television studio in a box the size of a shoe box. Ooh, you know, no wonder your president has to look, he has to be an actor, he has to look good on television. Well, one of the most important things is where else can you take an encyclopedia of information that will occupy the mind in so many ways and be able to hand it to a person for 50 cents or 10 cents and it can completely affect their lives and change the direction, the wrong direction they're headed in, say over the cliff with the lemmings, and put them on a path that will probably save their lives. all in a single plastic piece of material that has a little reflective surface on it and is being made by a bunch of minimal wage slaves overseas. And some here in the United States. Now, those tools need to be used to their max. But what do you do when everybody's worried about this? Everybody is terrified of the idea that they're going to shut the power off. They'll cut off communications at... Will we be alone? Really? Will we be any more alone than the moment before when I said that? Because, I mean, it is nice. I will say this. I have a really cool, by the way, hand-me-down flat screen. I don't know how old flat screen is really there when you think about it. But I got this at the property control U of M for $10. The keyboard's a throwaway. The mouse was a mouse that came with a computer that was the only new item, really, I think, of our two items in our computer inventory that we bought new. But almost everything else, including the cables, connectors, power cords, everything else is throw away from a dozen different projects. Otherwise, I didn't go out and make an effort to spend a whole big chunk of money. And if I didn't have that flat screen right now in front of me, which is purely convenience, right next to me are two big screen monitors on standby ready to plug in and use. In fact, there are several others on standby and there are others we've handed out to make sure they're distributed and stored. The only good option, which is why again you might even want to put the flat screens in reserve for now, is to leave time off them because when the time comes you want to be able to run them on the 12 volt system as long as you can. Well, you've got to make sure also that they do run 12 volt. A lot of the new ones that they're releasing, I think they've figured that out because they've been putting the inverter inside the box so you have to go through a 110 outlet. Patch the cord unless you know what you're doing internally with the power supply where to actually tap in the 12 volt Right so that requires more work more effort now again the technology the big thing here though is let's say that we lost all this guys Let's say that you know what we're saying is we lose everything we even lose battery power somehow But I can't see that because just like Ed said here a moment ago We've got too many pieces of technology plugged in If I needed power tonight, let's say, and again, everything shut off and now Mark is on his own. I wish that I had more car alternators on hand, but that doesn't mean I wouldn't get hold of some really quick. But with a car alternator and one of about four or five, in fact, we just got two brand new motors given to us, one that was on a, one is on, it's a Briggs and Stratton engine, on a frame, on a fixture that's designed for a power washer. Now, do you want to know how long it would take for Mark to decide to turn that into a generator pack? This time around, if we go into crisis and everything's offline, there's a mushroom cloud way off on the horizon there, way, way over the horizon. Dead. I'm going to go one step farther if you've got a car alternator. You don't even need the motor. You can take some PVC pipes and I got a video saved on our YouTube favorites. It shows you how to do this. You can build a wind generator. Now the magnetic inside is not going to be terribly good with the original car internals. You can get others, but the original car internals will work until they burn out. So you can do that. It's just you're going to have a limited amount of time and it's not going to be as clean as the other stuff. I know the arguments, but it can still be done. And with that in place, no matter what, we're going to have power online to run some of our equipment. Now, some of our stuff is wired. And that's not bad because your local hubs right now with the UltraNet or with the Hallmark or with the ONets are working within their own sphere of control. And they even have freestanding and independent power in their area. Some areas have their own generators, have their generators as in water generation or the option is wind. But right now, there are many little hydrogens. They are So, between that, wind generation, or me going on just making this little power pack here, taking any engine we want, any lawnmower you want, or doing with the wind generator exactly what originally farms did to power themselves up 100 years ago, we can be completely, independently electrified within a very short period of time. And a lot of what we have as convenience lighting is not critical to our operation. But I'll add something else to this. Right now, let me ask you something. How many Christmas lights do you think were thrown out this last year? How many small light fixtures, light bulb fixtures, for instance, for standard small base Christmas lights? The traditional Christmas bulbs, the incandescent type. You know, I just picked up another mole probably close to, I would say, 1,000 bulbs. Now, I'm going to tell you that probably 2 out of 100 are dead. Let's figure that. 2 out of 100. Sometimes more, sometimes less. Because with age, sometimes bulbs will be compromised. They could already be cracked. Filaments could be damaged, whatever. I just got them all for free. Now, there's the light that I need. There's the actual illumination fixture that I need. For once generating power, I need to be able to convert it into something useful. Light allows me to operate beyond a limited 12 to 14 hour period. It means that we can have up to 24 hour activity in any given part of the day. We're not limited to sun up to sunset. This is critical. But tie this into communications as far as having some power. And you have to understand that with the equivalent, let's go back a little farther here. Before or while with the farmers were wiring themselves up, most of the industrial age of the United States We're talking the Great Age as everybody calls it, with all the innovations. It took place with less than half the power of one generator plant in the, one of the most remote or smallest generator plants in the United States. Take your pick of locations. With less than half of the output, literally the country was industrially electrified and came into the electronic slash the modern age as we call it. So, you don't need that much. In fact, you can operate quite efficiently with far less than we presently are. and still have the opportunity to run other pieces of equipment for entertainment purposes or whatever. Again, you want to get motivated, you want to play a game, you want to do something, you have to generate power. You know, if all else fails, the other option is, and Ed, you know we've got them, is exercise bikes guys. Exercise, biking and the alternator. Ooh. And then you want that TV to work, you got a pedal. You run that power into the battery, you charge the batteries up more, you get to play the game for however long. You crank the battery up, the meter shows when you get it up to spec, and you get to run it until it gets to a certain point, and then guess what? You're also going to have to recharge it so it's ready for whatever other needs are applying to that system. Well, there's another one, Dad, that we didn't even touch on. And for anybody who's got running water through their property, you can easily create a small water well, which will turn a little crank or a little belt, which will go over to your alternator. In fact, you can even make these things portable with stakes. That way when you come up to a spot where there's a good water current, you can stake them into the river and you automatically have power. Ooh. And alternate power gives us a solution, guys, especially when it comes to communications. However, I'm going to back up here and also remind everybody, how did you live? A lot of you are old enough. Think about it. You lived without computer. Not only that, you lived without pretty much a lot of the other technologies other than special incidents or occasions. that you're used to just being able to switch on and switch off and have become, as Don would point out, not so much assistance as perhaps crutches if you are not careful. Now, the Internet is a wonderful thing, but radio communications guys is truly wireless. Okay, now we've gotten to the point where we're doing wireless slash, you know, Wi-Fi communications with computer, and that can be expanded upon. We now have the basis I'm giving you a little hint here as to how some things work. We now have the basis for freestanding independent technologies whereby we can establish whole hubs and nets of both wired and wireless internet that is free and independent from the internet that the system controls. We now have the technological base. We understand how they did it. We have demonstrated examples of what they did. We can show you how it's done. Why? Well, Hill people, you can go through the center of any town and demonstrate Wi-Fi and what it actually does. Do you honestly believe it is that complicated to perform? Purely, it was a matter of having the hardware worked out. The software issues are not a problem. Guys, we have it all in our hands. Now, the important thing is don't let it slip. And if it does, we only let it slip for a short period of time because in the past it was, you know, in theory we could. Now we can stand here and say, in fact, we can. So if we lose it for any short period of time, it's purely a matter of laziness and lack of motivation on our population to quickly replace it at our discretion. You see my point? Now, when people say how, well part of it, Mark can only do so much in the hours of the day that we actually are broadcasting. But let me point this out. Do the research. Get into the hardware and the mechanics of the processes. Then, cross-reference to older technology, which could have been used also, but was also, here's the thing, more expensive. Older typically is better quality. larger, solid state components are ruggedized, they're more durable, they can take more of a beating than microchips can in many ways. So, the only reason that we didn't go over to using the larger hardware in the past is because of its cost. As they brought throw away down, then microprocessors and microsystems became popular. But here's the kicker, guys. I can go out and pick up the older equipment which was cutting edge and cost millions and millions of dollars. Now for pennies, which means I can afford to run the better quality equipment and it is the cost of operation that is the pure and only bill that I'm going to receive. I bought the hardware for pennies on the dollar. You see how that works? I can now take what was an reality should be the cutting edge technology in place were it not for the fact we've gone to China sport junk. I can pick up all of the support hardware for so little that it doesn't make sense not to go to that that system. That's part of what we have been doing. You see how that works. You see the math here. Now at the time when this technology was developed and it was in its minority and its infant form. It was designed to be pretty much indestructible because of the cost and the process. Because it was a new process and they wanted to make sure that they could make it work and keep it working. Then, once the system is designed, have you noticed this with everything you use? That once the system is designed, then they find cheaper and cheaper ways to make a clunky, junky version? While it has the basic veneer outer image of the original system, the quality of the mechanical components degrade. Typically, this is also because the system comes from an industrial application where it was used by the communications industry for high quality broadcasting or high quality rebroadcasting or manufacturing in some way. What happens is the first generation that goes out into your hands is the stuff that really was used by CBS, NBC, Columbia Broadcasting, and say, Hollyweird, CNN, whatever. And so what they do then is they try to look for ways to cut corners but still charge you the same amount of money. Or even if they do bring the cost down, it's only for a time to entice you into getting rid of that old, lucky, big piece of equipment, which by the way worked flawlessly and had excellent color and excellent sound, superb stereo sound. Oh, but you bought into smaller and lighter. But smaller and lighter isn't durable and one clunk and it's gone. example of VHS machines. Now in the later stage VHS machines, in fact I got a brand new slash twenty, well no eighteen year old model right here I just brought it in just wiped it off just got a nice waxing. It's really looking beautiful looking like it's brand new like it literally just came out of the showroom. This machine has a lot of engineering features that simply don't exist with any of its later model counterparts. But most of the later model counterparts that you have, even the ones you can buy in the store, are nothing more than the leftover internals for the old VHS camera systems. Oh, that's how they made them smaller. That's right. That's how they made them smaller. Now the only cool thing is, Ed said earlier about 12 volt, is remember those were designed on porta camera type systems and they used a portable battery pack. For this reason they also were in the DC system. On board there is a converter that goes from AC to providing DC current to the subcomponents which were already engineered for the VHS camera. The same is also true with most of the other hardware you are using. Even the flat screen in front of us. Guys, and this is what gets me. All of this flat screen is in front of me real quick. I am trying to explain technology. The flat screen television or the flat screen, especially the video monitor I've got in front of me for the computer, is nothing more than a laptop. It's half a laptop. It's probably the more expensive component of a laptop for all practical purposes. Now, let me ask you something. I want you to break out your golden oldie magazines, your broadcast magazines, if you saved any of your computer magazines. I want you to look at the price of a laptop by comparison to the price of one of your under the desk computers. Wasn't the price ratio about 3 to 1? It cost you 3 times as much or at least twice as much for the under the table machine as it did for your laptop. Now that price was pretty consistent until they wanted to start pushing flat screen monitors in our face. Literally guys, remember screen, face, monitor, ha, get it? Anyway, point is this, how is it that all of a sudden this became a $200 to $300 item? The whole blasted machine didn't cost $200 to $300 in many cases. Well, I'll take it back. $225 to $300 for a Dell with a flat screen, because oh by the way, that's all the laptops come with, and all of a sudden they took it out, put it in a really cool case that has a little swivel head on it, and told you this. is something special. Well, we had leaded gasoline and leaded gasoline must keep the engine running properly because the lead helped to lubricate the engine. But guys, lead does not naturally occur in gasoline. It isn't there. It's an additive. All gasoline is unleaded. All gasoline is unleaded. Period. No change in formula. It is the same fuel. Okay, the only thing they do is they take the unleaded gasoline and they put lead in it. Originally, the truck drivers used to do it with a little kit. We've described that before. Now, later on, they put it right into the factory. They put it right in the cracking plant. little blender, it'll have so much lead. There we go, it goes down range. But then they put on the signs, unletted gasoline, 10 cents more a gallon. You guys all remember that? The special process of making unletted gasoline. Unletted gasoline is much more complicated for the witch doctor to produce than the letted gasoline that's out there. Ooh, unka, unka, unka, ooh. With a bone in his nose and dancing up on top of the pyramid, he lied to everybody. Now, let's go forward. Do you see what I'm talking about with this flat screen in front of me? Why is it that four years ago, seven years ago, eight years ago, a laptop computer with just about comparable drive potential and a fairly good size hard drive, lots of RAM, was still costing a lot less than its under the desk counterpart? But once they take and separate that laptop and make it call it a flat screen monitor, all of a sudden they're charging you as much for the whole system as they were, I should say for the screen, as they were for the whole system when it was in production. I'm a little, oh wait a minute, no I'm not confused. This is a scam. Anyway, just like un-lited gasoline, our scientists are working so hard this new formula costs you so much. In reality, that floppy old laptop that was obviously within two years because they wanted to get another one, just like your computer into the desk. Anyway, I just want to bring it up. Very simple, but again, technology. It's cheaper, it isn't as well built perhaps as its counterparts even say four years ago. And so the older systems guys are what you want to watch out for, but especially in rebroadcasting and in hardware support for Ethernet and for a lot of other hub systems. This is another big hint with regard to the next steps that all of you will need to be taking towards getting away from the internet and building the rest of the UltraNet. We've already had the basis for the technology. Take the internet, combine it with Wi-Fi technology, only older and more durable plus more powerful. The stronger your transmitter, the farther your Wi-Fi system will broadcast. And if there is no Wi-Fi service in your outlying community that's fairly small, and you put a strong enough transmitter in place, You could set up an entire freestanding, independent internet hub in your area. A node that would not control but provide service to all of your community. And I wouldn't put one of them up. I would put two of them up or three of them up or four of them up and we'd all be friendly and we wouldn't be competitors. And guess what? If one goes down, you're never offline guys. You always have something available. Now, to get out of there, guess what? That's what your other systems and technology support provided by UltraNet or by any of the Hallmark systems or the O projects, that's where they come in. But you could just as easily be part of that. Start thinking beyond just your local area. Start looking for allies in outlying areas. And again, does not have to be state of the art. But I will say this, if you find a piece of equipment and you adapt it, Watch for every other system that's like it. Whenever somebody can run into another one, well, I already got one of those. Okay, you need two, three, four, and five. Why? Because you're going to be running 24 hours a day, seven days a week, 365 days a year. And it's not the razor, it's the blades that get you guys. You know how that works? We have the new Schick Mark 17 Razor. That's right. 40-47 blades. Not only will it cut the fuzz off your face, it'll take three layers of dermis and it will cauterize the wound that it creates as it turns your lower face into one big massive chunk of scar tissue, eradicating the need to ever shave again. Yeah, okay. That's scary. But the point is that, well, but wait a minute, you only get half of your face done with the razors provided with the free razor. We're going to give you a free one. Now, in order for you to consistently create scar tissue on the other side of the face, you have to buy another pack of razors. Oh, wait a minute, no, razor blades. And those razor blades will cost 20 times what your old razor cost. Oh my goodness. Well, that's because we may not sell any more after we turn your lower face into scar tissue anyway. Oops. Well, anyway, the point is this, guys. You're going to run 24 hours a week, 7 days a week, 365 days a year. Eventually, systems are going to get tired. That little hard drive and those little hard drives you have, if you have a server set up or whatever, are going to go, eventually they're going to go, and stop. Something's going to break, something's going to burn, something's going to get overheated. So instead of you going, oh my God, we're going to have to buy it, blank, blank, blank, blank, and you have this whole long list. How about if you go, oh my goodness, something's wrong. Wait a minute. You can even have everything already hooked up and hardwired. So all you do is you hit a router switch and you go click and that whole backup system sitting there lights up, already has your software technology on board, and it goes beep, beep, beep, beep, and you're back on line. Wow. Didn't even have to run out to the store. Didn't have to go to Radio Shack for any connectors. Everything was sitting there on standby, ready to go. That's how you need to be thinking, guys, and that's how a lot of these people working these other grids already are. To a degree, as you're probably familiar with servers, they already work this way on the fly. There's a reason, because they have the same issue. They're running 24 hours a day, seven days a week, 365 days a year, nonstop. Because of that, systems get tired, parts burn out. This is where in the cable industry, with nothing more than what are actually online amplifiers. Most of the cable industry runs into extreme problems because they don't do physical maintenance. So again, it's not the razor, it's the blades that get you. The main core system can continue to function for a long period of time, but with calorie buildup. In other words, solid state components get warm. Parts have a tendency to get tired. transfer of electricity becomes a problem when you have cooked circuits here and there. So you have to replace things. Well remember, and this is something we already warned the guys with the alternate and with the Hallmark system, so they already understand this, if you bring everything up at once guys, all of your clocks are ticking simultaneously. If you turn all the equipment on, if you really did do what didn't happen before Y2K, see the one argument about Y2K is that in theory everybody started their machines up at the same time or everybody paid attention to doing all of the proper programming and date sequencing to make everything hit the exact same moment on the exact same day. That was not the case. In fact, in many cases, people didn't care about the date posturing at all. The plus or minus sign for, shall we say, knocking out a system would have been over a period of weeks or months had natural Y2K results developed. Well the same is true with regard to what's happening for instance with a cable system. Guy puts in a whole new brand new cable system in an apartment complex or a series of buildings. Everything gets wired in and then the happy day comes when they hit the switches and everything comes on and ooh I got 200 channels of nothing in my television ooh Look, an intramural backgammon. It's non-professional backgammon. No matter whether you're watching backgammon on C-SPAN, or on 14, the system is still heating up. The system is still getting warm. The system is still sending signals. And, if you're watching anything, you're helping to wear the system down. Now, when you turned it all on at once, that means all the clocks were ticking and all the subsystems at the same time. Which means, because there may be a consistent circuit flaw or issue that exists with that system, almost all of these units will start to fail within the same window of time. Oh, it was one thing to build the system. It's another thing to have to maintain and put the cost of maintenance into the formula. And typically, people who run stuff like this want maximum profit with minimal anything. They don't want to do anything to fix anything. They don't want to replace things. They don't understand PM, preventing maintenance. And because of this, they have major system failures which create customer dissatisfaction, which eventually leads to the guy selling it because he's in for a quick fix and he doesn't want to have to worry about follow-up. He sells it to somebody else who may not be familiar with the industry, the guy buys it, and lo and behold he ends up with a whole bunch of bills for a whole bunch of equipment that if he doesn't change it, he loses his investment completely. He loses everything. So, the guy in line who wasn't told about what's really going on ends up getting stuck with the ball. He will do the job, but he will fix to the best of his ability what he can. Chances are he's going to have to phase in his repairs over a period of time. Now, this is why if you're going to set up independent systems, guys, deep supply and maintenance. You have to start collecting stuff now and be ready to replace, as needed, subsystems and subassemblies. If you have amplifiers in line, a lot of people have built mini, in other words, okay, let's put it this way, smaller than the Internet, but bigger than an Internet system. Actually, an oversized, like an Internet system on steroids. Let's put it that way. Let me give you an idea of how big an Internet system can be. I want you to go get a map. In fact, nowadays this is second nature, but this has been in place since the late 80s across the whole of the U of M campus. How do I know this? Well, I worked with the U of M guys. In the late 80s, the Internet systems were already being tested on college campuses before you ever knew what Internet was. One was put in place a number of different types of boards and relays and amplifiers and hub technologies were experimented with. Now, whether or not they were having problems made no difference because they would plug in a system, experiment with it, and then give it away. Well, actually get rid of it. They would box it up, take all the cards out of all the computers, roll up all of the miles and miles of cable in many cases because they had a different system that they decided to go to or experiment with. And they would send everything over to property control where we would buy it for $1 an item or for $200 for so many pallets of stuff. This equipment would then go out and be given to allies who are able then to commit to that entire system to create a fully independent series of hubs and in fact an ethernet system that could connect whole houses and communities. This is like a sub-exchange with a telephone company. Everybody understand how that used to work? It works the same way when it comes to building up the UltraNet or the Hallmark systems. However, that was 20 years ago, guys. Plus, into the 90s, a whole new series of systems with more sophisticated technologies and very heavy hardware, very industrial, was put in place and literally created an internet system, an intercom system is what we used to call it, but an internet system that literally ran the entire length of the city, a sub-internet separate from the actual internet connections that are in place. You could jump out of the internet grid and connect to the internet as you chose. However, you could work free and independently, and still can by the way, inside the U of M system as a micro or as an internet type internet connective communication system. So, there are many, many different options with this. Well, you take the same concept people and now all of a sudden you have a shadow. This is what the system doesn't like. You can create an entire shadow mechanism running on your own hard line, your own copper wire, your own fiber optics. Now here's the kicker. We're now into the odds. With your own Wi-Fi rebroadcasting on your own chosen frequencies. You could be interconnected in three different ways with three different systems. And guess what? They can all integrate and talk to each other. The hardware is already in place. The software has existed for almost as long as the computer has been in place. So guys, it's purely a matter of how creative all of you choose to be. But you've got to put a fire under people's hind ends. Let me ask you something. We brought up this whole thing starting way back when with old radio. Old telephone. How many places had telephone? How many houses? How long it took to put the telephone grid in place that everybody just took for granted? And then we kind of went into cell phones. Big mistake. Although again, isn't that the same as the very thing we're talking about with the Wi-Fi type options? We took and traveled away from the copper wire system and the fiber optic system, although they're integrated. You can take that cell phone and call any person on a copper line any moment. Any moment. In fact, many times you do it and you don't even know. You don't know how many different systems your cell phone is traveling through right now. So your little Star Trek communicator looks really cool, but it's using everything from dinosaur technology to the Middle Ages and everything in between that and Star Trek. There's the best way to describe it. Stone Age, Copper Wire, Middle Ages, Fiber Optics, Present Day, Wireless. But they all talk to each other. Do you get the drift of where I'm coming from as far as solutions go? Now what if you can also piggyback off all of these? Well here's the part the bad guys don't want you to know about. Guess what? You can and everybody is. So, not only can we set up our own and free and independent systems, but guys, we can travel as ghosts in the wire across the whole of the system without anybody possibly detecting it. And that's being done even as I'm speaking. There's nothing the bad guys can do because here's the kicker. We can also pick the route of travel. Because of the integrated systems and the way all of them are readable, you can literally circumvent any security or any, shall we say, spy pods that are out there and completely go around them. The spider web and the lettuce that is in place now to include wireless, copper wire, fiber optic, and the cable networks are such that the space available is virtually unlimited. Think about it. Oh, and by the way, as far as frequencies go, garage door openers work as well as anything else. Whoops, did I say that? You mean I could turn it on and all the garage doors and all the neighborhoods kept going up and down and up and down depending on what I say on the air? Well, that would be kind of scary, wouldn't it? You know, we could be anywhere and we are. There's where you got to be thinking, guys, we can completely circumvent the aggressor. and you all have to be part of that to make it happen. Start to do the research. Get into studying some of what I'm talking about here and then refute or go, hey, wow, I see what Mark said. Now, we can't get into super details on certain things for obvious reasons. Operational security. Our mission has been to get the alternate, the hallmark systems and all the rest of this equipment plugged in so that it's rock solid and in place. And people have been coached in the technology so that we have the ability to do what I'm talking about when it comes to maintenance. We can't get caught flat footed on that. Hooking it up and then wondering, it went off. I do not understand why it went off. Bo-on-k-schmunk not understand. Must make out stone hammer. Beat on keyboard four more times. Maybe work now. Instead, we actually have some camp to have some competent individuals and then they need to be trainers just like all the other components we've been offering on the Intel Report. The idea is to build up the cadres. When we offer medical information, why do you think we're doing that? Because the number one battlefield computer needs to be maintained. Our soldiers, our people, the very reason we're fighting needs to be maintained. When we talk about weapons, it's because that's our sword arm, both our shield and our sword. and offense, the ability to neutralize a threat once it appears. First to protect ourselves, then to hunt it down and get rid of it. And that's everything from small arms up to artillery, armor, aircraft of all types, helicopter, etc. We have the ability to manage and utilize all of that. Well, communications works the same way, guys, but all of you are going to have to be generalists again so everybody can catch on to part of this. Be creative. Come up with solutions. Don't just lament about the problems. Next time the power goes off, you take a look at the blank screen and the lights that aren't working and ask yourself, how the hell am I going to get out of the Stone Age? See how that works? Anybody who visits here, this is a clutter. I've got some, right now I'm in clutter mode because I am collecting everything that all these other people are crazy enough to get rid of. And because of that, I have duplicates of all the things that I wanted because I was just patient and just kept an eye out. We can go from the oil age and the gasoline age and the kerosene, the whale oil age, all the way up through to the space age with LED lighting and everything in between. And then we have it at our fingertips. All of you should be just as well prepared. Right next to my electric lamp is an LED crank up. In fact, hold on here. Let me do this for you. Listen here. Here's an example. Hear that? Everybody knows what that is. That's a crank up LED spotlight. And by the way, one of our friends discovered these and they're fantastic. But right next to it, sitting right here, is what? Oh, that's right, a candle. And right next to that, as you can all know, is a conventional incandescent light. all in the reach of each other. Stone Age, Middle Ages, Space Age. Each one serves its purpose and each one can back up the other. In fact, I can actually afford to spread the technology out for that reason. I can utilize my discretion, that which I feel I need for particular missions, and then apply my technologies accordingly. Look at the same way with your computer and radio technology and support, guys. That's how we need to do it. Anyway, we are getting close to the top of the hour. We've probably got about what, five, six more minutes? I will remind everybody again, but it's getting late in the day, so remember it is almost 9 o'clock Eastern time, but I'm going to ask you to do me a favor. We have one of our friends who's been a rebroadcaster. The exact same way we've talked about computer guys we've been doing with radio for years. We have micro-AM and micro-FM radio stations. They are not pirate stations, they are radio stations. They are being done by people who are free-minded and free-will, who are liberty oriented and do not believe in all this control freak nonsense and the BS that we've seen done by these globalists and the parasites that are trying to ruin our lives. Well, a lot of these people have towed the boat all on their own guys. They've pulled their weight and then many times more. One of our friends needs just a hello right now. So if you can, send him a card and send his wife a card too, please. Send them both a high because they've been rebroadcasting for many years. They're hard chargers. They have gone through all the highs and lows of the Patriot effort in the last 15 to 20 years and then some actually quite a bit more. So here you go. Get that pen and paper. I give you enough time to get your pen and paper now. See, Mark, give you a lead in. Anyway, James Randy Perry is how he's known, although most of you know him as Radio Randy. from down in Georgia. It's James Randy Perry. His wife's name is Tammy. Their address is 622 Henderson Road, Macon. That's M-A-C-O-N, Georgia. Postal Zone is 31217. Again, that's, let's see, James Randy Perry. and his wife's name is Tammy. So you can figure out how you want to configure it. You can say James and Tammy Perry. There we go. 622 Henderson Road, Macon, Georgia, 31217. Okay? And that's Macon, Georgia, 31217. If you want to call tomorrow, he's still in the hospital. We had him up on the air in the earlier hours. He is able to speak. Just remember he is probably going to get tired. He has just been through an ordeal. His phone number is 478-633-3660. 478-633-3666. If you are in the Georgia area, reasonable driving distance, how about you see if you can help out with anything that might need to be taken care of? Tammy just came out of an illness. She's been back home. She's been back moving around, but she's not 100% either. Marcus has brought this information to our attention. I know he's done a great job there. For all of you guys, if everybody pitched in a little bit, many hands make for light work. You don't all have to tow the rope the way he did. Instead, you can all pitch in by just reaching out and everybody with one hand pulling the boat along all together. We need your help there. Again, tomorrow give him a ring at the hospital, wait until reasonable hours. I think it's probably about as late as you want to call now. We'll wait until tomorrow. 855, somebody might just want to be getting some rest. But 478-633-3660 in the hospital. He's known as James Randy Perry. That way they'll know who to look for if you're asking about him. Anyway, I think I heard a pit. Before we lose the program here, who do we have? Good evening, Mark. Uh oh, Dave, you're at the top of the arc. Yeah, I know it. I just thought I would quickly give you the statistics. Yesterday they pumped the stock market up. Really big and pumped all up again. They went up about 3%, 200 and some odd points. And today at 3 o'clock it was still 29 points up, but at the closing ballot 4 it was 29 points down. Interesting, gold went up, though the market went down. Crude oil went up $60.22 a barrel on the closing today. Silver went up to $14.17. The stock market closed at $84.74. Yesterday it was interesting. Aluminum, zinc, and lead all closed out at $67 each per pound. copper went up 3 cents yesterday, went up a penny again today, closing at $2.04. Nickel is up a penny yesterday, 8 cents today, closing at $5.73. Not much happening except it's a bear market. Go invest. Spend your money. Suckers. Come on down. Young, you're right about the There is an oil lamp on the wall behind me and to the left of me there is a candle mounted on the wall. There is an LED light hanging over here on the post at the door entrance. There are two regular battery powered lanterns hanging out here in the hallway. Plus plenty of flashlights and lots of candles and there are lots of oil lamps mounted on the wall downstairs. Yep, go ahead and pull the plug big boys. I can survive a while. and that's how everybody has to be prepared. It's a ton of a deal because it's all be camouflaged, guys. You can make the look provincial, you can make the look colonial, you can make the look modern, you can make the look even deco if you want, but you can still perform at your discretion. That's how we need to set our systems off. Say what, Dave? Close with me. God bless the Republic. Death to the New World Order. We shall prevail, ladies and gentlemen. The Indian Empire is on the run. And we're on the march. So stay hand-knifed. Collectors, outdoor enthusiasts, survivalists. The Army Navy Store from your memory as a child is just that, a memory. But there is still one place to find everything from gas masks to ammo cans and find it cheap. MainMilitary.com. Get hard to find objects like real wool blankets for under 20 bucks. Canteen for just $2 or trioxane fuel for just a dollar a box. MAINE Military.com with free shipping on items over $150, not including heavy items. Find surplus items for cheap now. like 30 caliber cleaning kit for just $2.99 a piece or a dozen for $30. Flair pistols are only $25. Want to add a brand new Israeli gas mask to your collection? Kids in adult sizes are just $20. Get G3 Max for just $2 or a military fuel can for only $16. Add this hyphen hose for another $7.99. Find it all online at mainmilitary.com. With shipping throughout the world, check out mainmilitary.com or call 877-608-0179. That's 877-608-0179. Call today.
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