July 8, 2010
Evening Show
59m
Complete
Radio Episode
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Summary
Mark Koernke and co-host Michael Nasser discussed operational security (OPSEC), tactical deployment, and militia preparedness in response to drug cartel activity along the U.S.-Mexico border, particularly in Arizona. Callers from Texas and Arizona shared intelligence about cartel incursions and coordinated militia responses. The hosts provided detailed guidance on field operations including equipment sterilization, weapon selection, medical protocols, communications, quick reaction forces, and supply logistics for border patrol activities. They emphasized the importance of training, proper gear familiarization, and organizational discipline, and solicited donations of equipment and supplies to the Arizona Citizens Militia.
- border patrol
- drug cartels
- arizona militia
- operational security
- opsec
- tactical deployment
- quick reaction force
- weapon systems
- .308 rifles
- ar-15
- field operations
- medical protocols
- communications
- sinaloa cartel
- new mexico
- preparedness
Transcript
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Live 365. 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 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'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 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 eat God given right, and pray to God to keep the torch of freedom burning bright. As I awoke, he'd 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 and tremble too afraid to stand and fight If he stood by your bedside a 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 free? God bless you Well, good afternoon, ladies and gentlemen. This is the second hour of the afternoon intelligence report. I'm Mark Kornke. And I'm Michael Nasser. One day closer to victory for all of our brothers and sisters, both on and behind the lines in occupied territories, central, south, southeast, and west. Well, ladies and gentlemen, you are listening to us on libertytreeradio.4mg.com, pbn.4mg.com, and we are live 365, then go to Liberty Tree Radio. We are on AM and FM Microstations, CB Bay Stations, and Ultra Net Technologies both east and west of the Mississippi, along with southern and central Alaska. We are on the Hallmark Network and Eastern Seaboard, top of Maine, bottom of Florida, bottom of Florida, arc of Mexico, headed towards Louisiana, Texas, Oklahoma. are trying to rescue our friends in the third of wyoming and also iowa then across the gold spike project along the whole of the blue ridge and uh... that means a restaurant crew in the grammar teams okay teams are doing their part there is a party on the beach on saturday party in the beach on saturday party on the beach on Saturday also a meeting at the restaurant on Sunday meeting at the restaurant on Sunday a meeting at the restaurant on Sunday on the East Coast Bring bring transports you will be walking security of the parking lot everybody takes your turn even though there's many many people only a few minutes each and Let's not forget to call your food in to make sure that's ready to go. Well Mike. What is a day today, sir? 8 July 2010 Thursday And I know we have a number of people on the link up here right now. Let's see, we've got Mike Nasser down in the border of Arizona. We've got Mike from Texas. And I know we had Mark here with us. And we still had, let's see, Alaska hooked up, I think, too. Boy, that's four, well, that's four parts of the country. So Mike, first of all, what have you got for us? Mike Nasser. Go ahead. Well, I just kind of wanted to touch base. I've gotten some information, people calling from out of state and have some ideas on some of the things. I understand that there's people that have been responding, trying to come down here and things. Maybe some of this is pertinent to what's going on here now, but some of it also is back and let's take a broader look at the hall. You know the one thing that we've been doing is a lot is running training. A suggestion has been forwarded to each person. have one of these composition books, kind of like a spiral notebook type of deal. And that would be that person's training note and that in there, then they're going to be augmenting their training and then that would be signed off by the court. And that's going to be held by each person. And I asked that no names get put in that. Maybe you work up some code where people have a call sign or a number that can be added to that so they can be identified. So they can identify their own training book, but we need to do these. And then from each state, someone needs to be delegated to fill the file on each one of the members of the trainings that they've been through and also document other things. The person that worked for the Bevels or worked for the Internet, they should all be hand delivered only. And this way then if there's a state that wants to respond to Arizona, so to say, and then So this way we can build teams based on the capabilities and then we can craft that to the pertinent mission. And then the capability and the number that's been assigned to that person, then that can be sent over to the net to other states if they need help. Now then obviously if there's a file of this, if it's not handwritten and kept in a separate composition book, the file on each of the members should be kept on a non-net or a disk or a flash driver so that it be hacked into. And then some of the other information about people that are coming down here, there is do not take any identification into the field. There's nothing to buy out there. If you're going to lose your wallet, they will find it and then they're going to be able to find you and your family. There should be no identification uniforms need to be sanitized. There should be no name tapes or patches or anything like that. Other things, obviously if you know you're taking shots from what you've determined, there may be three different people. And then you need to send three separate teams composed of one of these people. Low to estimate. I'd hate to send one or two people out here and find out that somebody's just been 22 at you just to get your attention. pull you into an ambush. So you need to have overwhelming firepower to do this. Another thing that we've always touched on is the medical, these need to be redone. I wouldn't throw away your own blood. They may be okay for training purposes or in your own area, but if you're going to deploy forward here in the should be no name, no point of contact on here, maybe these can be cultural location. So in case any mishap occurs, then this could be accessed, then this could be forwarded to the medical facilities or the next to other way. But as it is right now, I'm urging everyone to develop some new medical content. All you're going to have on there is just your alert. Any past, I mean, what's going on right now? I really don't know if you had your adenoids taken out when you were 13 years old. That really doesn't have a big, what we're talking about, that other thing is current. medications in your blood type. So that's allergies, history, your current medications in your blood type. No names, no point of contact, no telephone numbers, no next of kin, no numbers on there of what your Blue Cross Blue Shield Medical, you never know where these people have their eyes and ears at. Those obviously that are not capable of patrolling, they can obviously set up in a shaded area. We discussed last week about how to make a part indigenous to the area that you're operating in. They can set up their solar panels to charge their batteries for their radios. There's really no need to have them put in 100 windbags and fills or anything in a LPOP type of area, but these areas are definitely to fire. If you're not in the field, and there are other than maybe if you want to have group photos for your spray, if you will, there should otherwise be no photos permitted. If the media happens to show up, which they sometimes If things start heating up down here, somebody snooping around looking for a news item, make sure that you have your bandanas or balacoladas handy. The Mexican mafia monitors the webs and the newspapers, and they may not knock you down foolish enough to let you put into a newspaper on somebody's blog on the internet. There's good that you're going to be taking out at the grocery store or the mall. While you're down here patrolling on the border, somebody else may be to your house or to your family. If these people obviously are willing to shoot sheriff's deputies and things like that, you're only fooling yourself. Phoenix, Arizona is the kidnapped capital of the United States. Also, other things, make sure that you cover all of your skin, whether that's tattoos or scars, any identifying marks on you. that you may have a balacolamol, but if you have short sleeves on and some twos or a scar or something on your arm where you could be identified by that later, then you need to start wearing long sleeves. And then the last thing is that we have to get this into our mind and insurgency. And it's not too long. We've been letting the police handle this. And it needs to be identified and clearly closed with and identified as an insurgency. And I would maybe some of the archives of the intelligence report January and February where we discovered that that's an insurgency. Not only how to create one but how to take one down. So I would urge people to listen back to some of the archives back in January and February of 2000 and start getting in your mind some of the aspects. what it's required to create an insurgency and what are the proper ways, the tried and proven ways to dismantle an insurgency. And that's all I have to say. Very good. Now one of the things that we want to look at here is again, it's called OPSEC, Operational Security, guys. Sterilizing the rigs. One of the things that fire team leaders and squad leaders need to be doing when they get down the other end is a quick survey of the individuals as a last, like at the demarcation line, at the forward edge of the patrol deployment where everybody's set, you line them up. You do a physical survey of everybody's equipment to make sure the canteens are filled. Yes, you expect them to do it, but you know what? The sergeant typically will go through and tap them just to be safe. There's a reason for that. Somebody may have been distracted or somebody may think, well, I'm not going to carry that much water. You may have made it mandatory to carry the canteens, but I'm not going to carry the water. Well, that person will become a casualty and will become a hindrance if you are not careful. The other thing about sterilization, another cool thing you can do, muck with them. Guys, a lot of your uniforms already have somebody's name tape on them, but maybe not yours. Oh well, it's a bummer to be that guy. So, that's the other option is, you know, you may have uniforms, especially ripstop, that are already, you know, again, if they're standard for the unit you're with and there's something you inherited from a surplus shop somewhere, those could probably be left in place and you might even be creative. Mike can have somebody crank up a bunch if you're using Velcro. So, that's just another option. Typically sterile across the board, this bothers the other side, is part of psychologically it's a mess for the bad guys too because it obviously indicates you've thought ahead. And these are things that are covered typically on site when you get to the operational area during an exercise and operation of this type. In this case a deployment, a real deployment. As we said this is not a movie, this is a real scenario. The bad guys are now penetrating deeper into the US than ever before. The federal government is letting it happen. The bad guys know that it's a field day, not just on the border. Because Mike, when they get across the border, they just stop and stand out in the desert with their dope, don't they? They just stop and they never go to the border. Yeah, they have a sign here. They stand at the side of the highway with a little cardboard sign that says Philadelphia. Yeah, right. This is already going through. We discussed that deal the other day. They arrested those guys from the Sinaloa cartel up in Oklahoma City. So yes, maybe I'm 80, 100 miles north of the border, but they ain't stopping even here. They're penetrating deep within the heartland. Can you stay right there for a moment? We have Mike from Texas with us too. I know he's been patient. Mike, you there? Yes, sir, Mark. I just wanted to call and tell you about a phone call I got last night. A militia friend of mine called me. He's not in Arizona, but he was contacted by some militia in Arizona. And he tells me that some of the drug cartels have invaded the United States and they've taken a fixed position on a high mountain pass or some high point in Arizona. And they were shooting at war patrolmen and the sheriff deputies. And the militia is going to go take Because the government won't do it. And I'm all for it, but I think we all need to go on alert. What happened in Kosovo and Yugoslavia? The ethnic Muslims, the ethnic Christians. And then the ethnic Christians fought back and killed the Muslims in Yugoslavia. And so the Muslims pulled the uniforms off the combatants that were killed. They were enclosed on them. and cried genocide to the United Nations and then the United Nations came in and bombed the ethnic Christians in Yugoslavia. And I'm sure the UN would like you to start hearing and claim that all the mushrooms that you pour are micro workers when they're really invading skin. Well, one of the things that we've talked about Again, camera technology is so cheap that it's ridiculous, that perhaps combat cam isn't a bad idea. If it's controlled from a team leader's perspective or with a media tech whose job it is to progressively monitor and to record any battle action that takes place. There's a couple ideas that we brought up before. One of them was the idea of actually mounting the camera fixture on one of the Picatinny rails right on the gun, right on the weapon system. There's going to be no doubt who's doing what where. And this would be a way to record progressively the action as it develops. Of course, it might be embarrassing for some people if the adrenaline rush is too high and we find that they're killing a lot of chickens and seagulls, okay, as in stuff far and behind the target and, you know, stuff in the air, you know, overshooting the area of operation, the designated target area. One of the other things here is And I have argued this, that this whole thing is going to be, they're doing to the United States what they did to Kosovo. Kosovo was, well more importantly, let's take Arizona, New Mexico, western Texas, and southern California as the target. Each state is a Kosovo unto itself. New Mexico, we don't hear anything about for this reason already guys, it's off this chart. You don't hear anything about New Mexico. Why? The dope Lord's already got it. Everybody down there is scared, everybody down there is hiding, everybody is hoping it will just go away, and it's not. The federal government won't do anything because they're the ones helping to make it happen. The DOPERS are in our government, the DOPED DEALERS are in our government. They're expediting and allowing this whole BS with Mexico to take place because they're in business with them. And they're DOPERS too. And SLAVERs. So that's just one thing we need to remember. Now, What they will do is progressively escalate this scenario one way or another. If we did nothing, this is going to continue and then they're going to still proceed with the same action because it'll allow for osmosis to take place. There will be sufficient force weight across the border that they can shift both from the south and here's something everybody's forgetting about. What about side shifting? So imagine if you will that which is already infiltrated in country actually taking a percentage of its mass and shifting it back into the southern states on the border. You're going to get pinched from two directions simultaneously. Now either we do something now and again this is going to have to be intelligent. We're not saying you know get you know smear Vaseline in your hair, light it, and again strip naked smear green jello all over you and start running down the street wild-eyed. That's not the case. We're talking about everybody pulling the resources they have and squaring their act away. We have the gray matter and we have the manpower. The most important thing is getting it properly organized. And a lot of the petty BS is going to have to die real quick because we better be focusing on the mission or we're going to start losing a lot of people we can't afford to replace. Now I might remind you of both the American Revolution and the war of 1861 to 1865 Casualties especially that was strange because we're still here. That's right. We're still yeah, we're all still attached just a second time That's happened by the way Anyway, I will remind everybody that the casualties lost, especially with the exceptional and inexperienced individuals at the beginning of both of those conflicts, cost us more troops in the long run. At this point in time, everybody better get their act together. We've got a lot of work to do. We're looking at eight years if this thing starts, guys. Realistically, I argued this years ago, a lot of people got disheartened. And I said, well, and I'll say it again. If we'd done this sooner, we'd only had five years. But you know what? It's going to take eight. It's going to take between seven and eight. The seventh year will be slowing down a little bit, and then it'll be mostly chasing and hunting them down. But in the initial phase here, you're going to see a whole hell of a lot of confusion. Our military people understand this too. They're fed up with what they see in Washington. A lot of other people know exactly what's going on with the NCO and Officer Purge guys that's being orchestrated right now. Semebem and Ding Dong is now going to get rid of as many Americans in the uniform as he can. As many Americans that are in the military right now will be booted out. They're not going to even allow them to re-enlist. This is already in motion. I challenge you to look at the Army Times and the latest Marine Weekly. The last couple of issues guys, it's right out there spelled out and everybody in the uniform is talking about it and the controlled media is not saying anything and by the way the Army Times is an official publication. So there's a lot more to this as far as where this is all headed and it's it's it comes down to Controlling the cap the base if we have an invading salient Which now is one salient is the New Mexico quarter. We can't really do much about that for the moment I'm sure there are people that are talking about it, but they're not acting okay, or they're not moving the way they should Arizona is still up for grabs My question though Mike and for all the guys in Texas is what about Texas proper? Yeah, we're gonna be ready for them and we're not gonna use anything less than .308. It looks like a moon season is gonna have a taco flavor to it. See, well at least in phase one senior. Of course you may also be finding Chinese in the process too, don't be surprised there. Mike on that note, the guys we've been recommending because there's been a lot of questions, going with the .308 to get the range out of the rifle. Main battle rifles such as the FN FAL, HK 91, sent me rifles, the G3s, M14s, M1As, pretty much that's where we're going to be pointing people. But I know again there are people using .223s, people using AKs, AK74s. What's the scenario basically in your neck of the woods as far as armament and coordination there? There are still quite a few people that have a heavy bond, bold action, really accurate 308s, but about two-thirds of the people have AR or some kind in 223s, and then the rest are mostly just AKs in 760 by 39. We haven't seen very many of the AK-74s in the 5.45 caliber. Okay, and then Mike down in your neck of the woods in Arizona, you guys are looking at some long shots there too. .308 does give a little bit of range. Yes, pretty much what Mike had said. It's a pretty good mixture of it. We're talking some serious distances out here. I'm kind of partial to the AR because that was I was trained in for 20 years, so I'm comfortable with that. I hear all the back and forth about, well, one works better in the dust and one works this and the AK is better. I fired them both and I prefer the AR. Now obviously that's not going to reach out and make a long distance call like your 308's will. Also, look at some of your boat actions like your moss and the dance and things like that. Obviously you might want to have some Maybe even 50 caliber support too. Bear in mind that this is kind of a come as you are thing. I would rather have somebody that was familiar and comfortable with a certain weapons system having them have to stop at midstream and have to go purchase something else. That's exactly what we were talking about on the ear here guys. There are a couple things I'm going to recommend right off the bat. We've seen this in several situations where the person was at risk and made a major error, which was switching technologies at the last minute because the latest widget or the latest piece of gear was available. The problem is you have no downtime to familiarize yourself. If you're using an existing weapon system, and we've said this several times, stick with it because you're comfortable with it. Same is true with gear. A lot of people are thinking, oh, if I'm going to go down the border, I'm going to go buy this now. Well, what have you been training with? Well, I've been training with this system. OK. Does it work? Yes. Is it pretty? Maybe not, it's no prettier or more special or less special than any other tactical gear. So the point is that if it works and you're already familiar with it, your muscle memory is already in place. Subconsciously, you're already inventorying everything automatically, you know where it all is. You'll know where to put the... I mean just in the dark, with your eyes closed. Okay, pitch black in a cave. You can literally reach from point to point to point and you already know where everything is located. You do not want to switch out where now your life is going to be counting upon every moment of action. The same is true with firearms and I understand this is something I do agree with. If you're already using, this is where we've had questions Mike, is some people have both the .308 and the .223. They are reasonably familiar with both of the weapons that they have. The debate is which would be the better choice going into the field if you're already committed to the two weapon systems. If we can, and again it's a matter of which do you feel more comfortable with or are more familiar with first, combined with the idea that increased range, like you said, we can see farther than we can shoot, it's kind of unnerving when you can actually see it that can mill around out beyond at a distance where you can't quite reach. with the 308 battle rifles that gives us at least a little bit of an edge and puts us a little farther out. But that doesn't mean we don't have a combined arms team. We've got SKS's, we've got AK-47's, AK-74's, AR-15's. Again, Mike, let me ask you, you're using a long barrel AR though, right? Yes, sir, a 20-inch military surplus, new in the wrapper, N16A1 stamped colt. Then about 20 years ago and put together myself. Still functioning, still works just fine, right? Yes, sir. Mike, down in Arizona, your choice? Short barreled AR. Car 15 or M4 type? Yep. Okay. So again, for everybody. Now, we had to re-qualify that too, though. Now, you worked as a medic, correct? Yes, sir. So that weapon was a little more out of the way for the type of mission you're performing anyway. Well, you know, when it would depend, yes, sometimes we'd be issued a 45 and then I just, we also had our choice. If we wanted to have just a 45 and a lot of the medics like that because then they can wrap it up in a cloth and keep it in their duffel bag and then when they came out of the field then they didn't have to clean it. But I just you know it's one of those you know what we may be out here training but we're training to do a specific task and if that specific task be deploying to another country. I'm not going to be sitting here, hopefully. You know where I'm going with this one, but I ain't going to be sitting here waiting for them to do. I'm going to be trying to do my best to interdict them other than obviously taking care of patients. Hopefully most of the rounds will be going down range. The thing is, we're talking about the rush and everything down here. I should say only up to about the Palo Verde trees, the mesquite, ironwood trees, they grow up to, oh I'd say about. But there are definite places where you can get in some of these side canyons. You start getting up into the sides of some of these mountains. Boulder Strune and really choke and some of your longer rifles, things like that. You're humping up and down hill with a 50 cal that weighs 30 pounds and somebody you've got your ammo bearer and everything like that. I mean, again, I'm not trying to say that one's over the other one and obviously making a long distance. You need to rely on something so you're not going to be getting caught gnarled in the brush and everything out here bites up and on everything. You're going to be going through the brush and you're going to have to have long pants and long sleeves on and it's going to be every little after all these things. Whether it's a flashlight or a sight or a scope or everything and all these little for the batteries and the little touch pads and all that caught on every and imaginable and you're going to be tugging trying to get through some of these choke points in this brush. The cold automatic rifle in the shorty seems to work well out here. It's pretty handy. It's maneuverable. field gear that you've worn to many training exercises. That's why when you train exercises you need to get out of the field with the gear you're going to use and know what works for you and don't ever change anything up if you're going out to a battle. Don't go by a new rifle. Only take a rifle that you've had for several years at least and know real well. And don't take new boots to a battle. Don't change your socks. I made that mistake at a training exercise when I get by with thin socks and they blister my feet. You just take all the gear that you know that you trained with and you trusted and that's why we all need to get out to train exercises and get out all weekend long and train in the woods and you'll know what gear works for you and what gear will fail you. Exactly, and I think this is one of the things too where we're going to be seeing larger and larger forces on the ground and greater strength and deployment. A lot of the guys have seen combat or have seen actions in the past, not only in the Middle East, but also in Asia, or in even Europe at different times, guys. So we've got a wide range of experience that's going to be drawn from, and everybody's going to apply it accordingly. Most important is common sense. Keep your basic rig the way it is. You can do add-ons. That's why we have what we call bandoliers, guys. We've talked about making up water bandoliers. Rather than adding on or changing up a lot of your center of gravity by adding water where you may or may not be familiar with it, you can do tagalongs where you have somebody make up with cotton cloth in whatever camouflage seems to be handy. Get a couple of nylon straps, stitch it all together just like a cartridge bandolier. Grab some of these dollar store water containers, stitch cells out, you know in other words pockets for each and click, click, click, click. You got five or six water bottles that are tossers. You can keep them. I wouldn't throw them out right away but the idea is after you drink the water you can dismount the bandolier and store it, toss it somewhere. Leave it where it can be at a depot. Leave it where at a pickup point, whatever you want to do. If you have LPOPs drop it off the LPOP collect enough of them bring them back when they're out when there's empties Take them back to the site wash them out refill them congratulations more water in the field The idea is to be creative. Come up with solutions that allow you to continue to function and again with tag-alongs, add-ons. That's one of the solutions. It's the same with medical equipment. For the medics, to support them, one of the things that we've promoted for the longest time is having utility bags packed up with the basics so that other people can be carrying these bags in. The medic needs another blowout bag. He just throws another one. Somebody else throws another one to him and he's refilled. These are the kind of things we have to be thinking about now. Unit operations on the ground, supply and support, quartermaster guys, tomorrow's quartermaster Friday. How can we continue to build up support down in the area? Let me remind everyone. You don't have to have brand new gear, but you could take and make an entire rig up exactly like the one you're normally used to. Take that down to the deployment once you've got everything dressed up properly. And except for maybe your personal fighting knife and whatever else is personal, you know, is something that's yours, leave the whole pile of gear down there for the troops. Any spare food, leave it for the troops. Anything in the way of water containers, anything in the way of perishables like batteries, leave it for the troops. You may be leaving, but the fight's not going anywhere. It's gonna be right there. It's gonna be there every day. 24-7, you wake up, it's still there. So this isn't a two-hour movie. This is how you walk away or you can't go back to the car. It doesn't work that way. Okay, just that simple. Anyway, I'll tell you what, Mike in Arizona, go ahead. I know you got a little bit more for us, please. Yes, I'd like to, you know, we were talking about distances and obviously binoculars are going to come into play and, you know, sometimes people start thinking about big distances, neat, big magnification. And out here in the summer when we have the Mirage, When you have a lot of magnification, all that does is magnify the mirage itself. We really don't need anything that's going to be a whole lot. We don't need something that's 40 power or 50 power. Something just along the lines of an 8x35 or some type of binocular will work just It's going to give you some magnification so you can see a lot closer. But when we start crossing over into these great multiplying factors of your magnification, it has a tendency to work in an opposite direction because it just magnifies the mirage itself and really doesn't aid you in distance. Very good. And again, that's the thing about optics. At the very least, we've had people that have been proposing donating gear and equipment. The Ace, Arizona Citizens Militia ACM is taking donations. People have already been sending equipment and material down there. This is the address, ACM-LLC 3141 North First Avenue. Tucson, that's Tuxon, T-U-C-S-O-N, Tucson, Arizona, 85719. Again, that's ACM-LLC 3141 North First Avenue, Tucson, Arizona, 85719. and if you want to send donations of clothes, perishables such as batteries, whatever you can think of. Maybe you got a bunch of office supplies sitting around the shelf because you have a little business and you got some stuff that's been around for, you bought 50 million or something and 10 years after you bought it, you still haven't gone through but 5%. Hey, maybe you can box some of that up. It can be Post-its, Notepads, Pencils, Sharpeners, anything you can think of. Stuff that is obsolete by your standards but you just got it sitting on the shelf. box it up, send it to that address. Box it up, send it to that address. That's the best way to do it. Extra boots, extra gear. We're sending boots down there. I know we've still got to get back with our trucker friends that are shipping stuff down to Arizona. We'll try to do that tonight still, maybe after the 9 o'clock program, or 8 to 9. We'll see what happens. ACM-LLC 3141 North First Avenue. Tucson, Arizona 85719. Again, that's acm-llc3141, North First Avenue, Tucson, Arizona 85719. And ArizonaMilitiaAtHushMail.com. That's ArizonaMilitiaAtHushMail.com for the email. And ArizonaMilitia.com for the website. That's ArizonaMilitia.com for the website. Let's see, we still have Mike here, we got both mics here, right? Yes. One other thing too is that before we move too far away from optics and things, something that we've covered on the intelligence report before, I know they've got all these little snap-on attachments that cost a lot of money to put on the front of your site or your scope or your binoculars to keep the dust off. A very cost-effective method to keep the dust and the glint out of the for the objective lens. of your stope or your binoculars is some pantyhose. Just cut a 2 inch square and then get some either tape, which I, you know, tape only attracts dirt and stuff so I kind of shy away from that but if that's all you got that'll work. Get some inner tubes and cut it up into 1 half of an inch sections and then use that to affix the pantyhose on the front of your binoculars and the front front of your scope it will do two things. It will keep the dirt and the dust off of the objective lens and it will also keep the glint if you are looking out towards the sun or the half of the thing. So you are not going to be given away your position with the glare and the glint of your optics. That is just another thing that you might want to think of. Obviously if you don't have females in your family, you can go down to the dollar store and if you still are embarrassed about the one buying pantyhose you can say something about, hey my wife sent me down here to buy some pantyhose, where would that be? And then you can go ahead and buy them so you can buy a whole pair of them for a pair. And you can make a whole lot of two inch squares out of one dollar so it can save your other ninety eight dollars for your little gee whiz snap on cool widget that somebody else is trying to make a bazillion dollars off of. And then you can buy $98 worth of ammo or $50 of gas and $45 worth of ammo and things like that to get on down here. We definitely can need your help. Things are really starting to pop. Just as a quick weather deal, a lot of cumulonimbus, half of where I'm at, over towards the Tucson area. It's been the rain down here. Humidity is starting to go up right now. Temperature is about 110 degrees. We're definitely heading in towards the monsoon type of the year, so it's not going to just be a gajillion degrees down here and hot and dry as it usually is. It's going to be hot and rainy, but then again, though a lot of times the grain cooled off and then all the bushes and all the waterholes are going to see another big party pre-deployed by nature out here in the natural washes and everything like that. So just as a heads up, it's building up out in the east in the mornings. building up in the afternoons and stuff, but right now, and this is one of the odd things, it's a pretty good indicator when it's really hot and dry. Some of the clouds come up in the mornings or in the afternoons, but they'll stay well to the east of it. But it's a pretty good indication that now it's, what, 3.30 in the afternoon, and we've got a massive, a manual of an endless cloud. Again, because of that rain cover of whatever kind is a good idea. policy is to carry at least two ponchos. Some of them may have rain suits, there's gore tags, there's a number of different types. If you do carry them, remember to secure them properly. You're going to want to maybe even carry it because of the snag-o-matic conditions we're talking about. You may want to be able to put everything into a separate little utility ditty bag. If you don't have something you can buy off the shelf from the surplus store, try to find yourself a camper store, a camping and biker store, bicycle biking. They make a lot of pouches that are just slip over pouches that are designed to be cinched down. It's purely to seal stuff up, keep the moisture off it, and also to keep it from snagging on the bikes or hooking on things when you're camping. So the cool thing is they'll serve for tactical purposes too. You got ponchos, try to match up a tight, tight, tight blossom bag. Like that, in tactical color it can be brown, earth brown, whatever shade of green. Black is not your first choice and black collects heat guys, so black is not necessarily the direction you want to go. If you can get anything else first you should. One of the other things here real quick, we were talking about OpSec. I don't know if you guys can still get it down that way, but most of the bow shops at least still have it in some form. It's called spandoflage. We've brought this up many times on the air. It's an equipping one and equipping two. But spandoflage was designed, all it is is a wrap around elasticized go that's been colored, been painted. It's a brush pattern paint. They do urban, there's desert, there's woodland, there's any form of green, there's gray, there's black. So you can pick the color that best suits the environment or shade for the environment you're in. And spandaflage allows you to be able to keep stuff on your face non-stop. So for what we're talking about down there with OBSEC, you can cut out the eye areas so that like a buck lava, the eye area isn't obstructed, personally. If I'm wearing glasses, I wear it right over the glasses because you can open up the gauze so that in the area where the covers are, where your eyes are, you can still see through fairly effectively, but all of the face is covered and matted, which is really the critical point here. So it's a personal choice thing, but spandaflage, or variations on spandaflage, they make both a head net or a headset. Now this is not a net, this doesn't hang. This comes down, kind of like those pantyhose you were talking about, Mike, and when you bring it down, it's going to cover down to the neck, They also made arm covers of the same pattern material so you could actually leave the sleeves rolled up or if you do roll them up it would be like part of a long sleeve t-shirt only in a satin type material. It does not reflect light, very dull and of course in camouflage patterns that you choose. So you might want to shop around and see if you can find those. The neat thing is if you do want to cut them out you just kind of pull out, cut, pull out and cut like over the shroud, when you pull it away you cut behind, you would just be on your fingers about an inch, maybe two and when it settles back on the face the eye areas will be exposed but the rest of the face will be covered. Then you can of course cam up a little bit if you want to with a little color just to break up the lines to supplement whatever is you don't have covered yet. Or everything else you do have covered but you haven't used a camo face paint on. Other solutions, a number of things here especially with regard to patrolling guys. If you can pre-position or pre-deploy LPOPs separate from the patrolling groups, you want to make sure that they can be properly reinforced and they are properly covered by other forces on the ground. This means you have to have what's called a reaction stick or in other words a response team. already designated on standby, typically made up of your personnel that are resting from any activity. Your clock is going to be 24 hours. Every eight hours a new team is going to be in place in operation, is going to be functioning. The biggest and most difficult thing to deal with is people don't want to go to bed. In a situation where you're in a fighting environment, guys you can go from that 8 hour schedule to all of a sudden the old adrenaline rushes up and your height is so tight you couldn't drive a needle up your arse with a sledgehammer if your life depended upon it. The tension level is going to increase dramatically as it has been said many many times. When you're resting, you rest, but the rest of the stable crew, the group that's not necessarily in the field, but is on standby, is also designated out of the LPOP, or for support of the LPOPs, out of the base camp as a response unit in the event there is trouble. They should be better equipped, they should be, in fact, heavy on ordnance, and if possible, mechanized so they can move faster. That doesn't mean you can't do it on foot, but remember, mechanize if at all possible. You might prioritize four-wheelers, jeeps, or any other types of fast-attack vehicles that are available to get the troops to where they're needed. Again, don't rush to the ambush, you know what I mean. It could be something set up, but common sense, if you have some mobility, you can always lose the vehicles and continue on foot. But every minute counts, and every moment is going to be a moment that is excruciating for the people who are being threatened. A minute seems like a day. These are things that need to be taken into consideration in advance. But out of the groups that have already been in the rear for a day or so, then out of each team, you're going to designate two or three of those people to be a quick reaction force. And I would not have those with the rest of their people, so to say, if you're camping in a certain group of blocks for states or counties or things like that, that you're going to draw two or three people from each one of those rested groups. They'll be the QRF. and they'll be encamped in a separate area. So you can go to one place, raise the alarm, and then everybody can respond from there. And for the 24 hours, the QRS stay in uniform with their boots on, with their rifle next to them, with their LBE and whatever gear they happen to be taking. It's none of this, oh hey, you guys, we got a call over here in Sector 4. Well, I've got to go over here and fill my campaign. I've got to go over here and get my LBE. It's like there's not time for that. These people need to be when they move forward and they've been designated as the QRF, then they will be in uniform for 24 hours. That's a booby thing. Now they can bring the sleeping bag. They can climb inside. There's none of this, you know, around in the night with the flashlight, when the call gets you will, you know, when that call comes in, you're going to be on that vehicle within two minutes. We're going to be DTR and there is no two ways about that. We're not waiting for no. Exactly. In fact, this is something that one of the things we can do if you're looking to establish that is to identify and isolate specific tenage. If you have a GP medium tent, that's fantastic and keep everything in one place. By the way, some equipment will be rotated or passed on from one group to the other in a reaction unit like this, a response team. Typically you'll want to have this on a clipboard so it's signed off from one person to the next. There's a checklist, everything is checked. When the rotation takes place, everybody looks at the equipment, you will physically touch. You will not say, yeah, this is here, yeah, I think that's there, yeah, no. When you are the individual who is the team leader, be it a fire team leader, a squad leader, a platoon leader, if you are being given designated equipment and it is on site and it is part of the table of authorized equipment or table of mandatory equipment, then what you are going to do is go through the list and physically touch whatever it is that's on the list. That way when the time comes you can't say well, I thought it was here. I don't know what happened It's not how it works. Another thing is even that critical equipment should be in a designated area in the hole in a holding area near the immediate action exit now, you know, the words wherever they're going to the the egress to the mounted vehicles, whatever it is that you have. In fact, those are going to be within such close distances. They should be out of whatever tenage you've got right into the vehicle. And again, isolation to keep them in one place where there's no habit around the chickens up. Oh, they're kind of around here somewhere. I don't know. Everybody was scratching their hind end. And Ralph went into town because he just wanted to go see the sights. See, this is not going to be a two-hour movie. This is not going to be any kind of game. This is going to be a very serious operation. And everybody has a task. It doesn't mean you won't be rotated out. We've talked about this, Mike, for the last couple of days. It doesn't mean you won't be rotated out of a particular mission or assignment. But while you're part of that, you aren't doing anything else. In fact, all the other vacationing, so to speak, is finished. Or any other fighting or other thought processes are shut down because you have to stay focused. Another thing that we should consider there is the fact that as we've said, proper communications. If you guys have any kind of radios that you're integrating in the system, make sure that you have batteries. Forgive me, I don't have that card. I will have it at 8 o'clock again. Slap me in the head. I knew that was what I wanted to bring to the studio here. We have a couple of companies, and BK might be there listening in the chat room. uh... why is that they're brain lock on this but the company uh... the prevent as uh... batteries rechargeable batteries available along with electrical components a lot of other cool stuff look at their super specials they've got double a batteries by that time that are rechargeables that are cheap cheap cheap cheap in this deployment you're going to need allot of batteries Seriously, everybody's got all these cool widgets, both mics. You've got lasers, you've got night vision technology, you've got light amplification, you've got star bright dazzling in the eyeball flashlights and also everything else that you can imagine that can be electrical. Hell, even razors and shavers, if you're going to go speed, in other words, electronic, a lot of people have. You know, you're done. Well, some of those require batteries. If they're the cheaper ones and you're going to take something that's kind of semi-throwaway, then you're going to need more batteries for that. Another cool thing, solar chargers. Try to round up all the solar chargers. Doesn't mean that you're going to have a bright, sunny day every day, but the sun's still going to be there. So there's a number of different options for charging on the battery packs, but try to pick up what you can. I heard another noise. I know we got Mike with us. We still have Mike from Texas. Nope, do we have another caller? No, I guess well, we're clear there. Okay, Mike. What else we got? We still got a little bit of time. Oh No, we're at the right. Well, you know what go ahead. We got a close. We're right at the top. Can you come back? You want to come back at eight? Sure can do that We'll have down here with us too, but we want to keep going with this. Okay? Okay, God bless the Republic Death to the New World Order. We shall prevail ladies and gentlemen the Empire is on the run And we'll be here on the March both day and night. Good night, Admiral. Where have all the military surplus stores gone? Don't worry, you don't need one! Because everything you need at Military Surplus is at mainmilitary.com! That's M-A-I-N-E, Military.com, one of the last surviving true military surplus stores in the country. Go online now to MainMilitary.com and discover a source for hard to find surplus items at true surplus prices. Surplus gun cleaning kits as low as $2.99. Complete chemical suits as low as $11.99. 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