July 29, 2010
Evening Show
59m
Complete
Radio Episode
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Summary
Mark Koernke discussed investigations into Southern Perversion Law and the ADL involving alleged misconduct with minors in Montgomery and Nashville, as well as separate ADL document issues in California. He then shifted focus to extensive operational guidance for Arizona militia border deployments, covering vehicle maintenance and recovery procedures, mapping resources, camouflage techniques, noise discipline, equipment procurement from Maine Military, and personal gear recommendations including helmets, duct tape, and electrical tape. He emphasized thorough preparation, physical conditioning, and the importance of supporting deployed personnel through sponsorship and supply.
- arizona militia
- border deployment
- southern perversion law
- adl
- vehicle recovery
- topo maps
- camouflage
- noise discipline
- acu uniforms
- maine military
- preparedness
- field operations
- equipment maintenance
- citizens rule book
- militia operations
Transcript
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Live 365 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? Oh, 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 Iookeed 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 trampled, each God given right, we only watch him tremble, too afraid to stand and fight. If he stood by your bedside in a 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 land of the free? the drums. The drums. Yes, good afternoon ladies and gentlemen. This is the second hour of the afternoon intelligence report. I'm Mark Kornke. One day closer to victory for all of our brothers and sisters both on and behind the lines in occupied territories south, southwest, east, and north. Well ladies and gentlemen you are listening to us on Liberty3radio.4mg.com, pbn.4mg.com, and we are on a myriad of other reflectors. We would appreciate all of our friends for doing just that and making it possible for you to listen in in so many different ways. We're on AM and FM microstations, CB Bay stations, and alternate technologies, ultra net technologies, both east and west of the Mississippi, along with Central and Southern Alaska and the Aleutians over there in the corner on the lower side of the chalkboard there guys and little eggs Anyway, we're also on the Hallmark Network Starting out way up there in Maine and that district of the planet and then working away down across the border in a myriad of directions to the bottom of Florida across the bottom of Florida across the arc of the Gulf of Mexico Which either has a lot of oil or doesn't have a lot of oil either the microbes have eaten everything including the faces of all the victims on the on the coast Next part of the Sci-Fi adventure is what that's going to be. Across to Louisiana, doomed! Texas, partially doomed! And Oklahoma, where they're still pumping oil and don't care. All the way up to Nebraska, across and over to the third of Wyoming. Want to say hi to the third and all our troops there. Then back over to Iowa slash Iowa, where many of our new micro FM stations and AM stations are going up and online. Want to say hi to the guys in the cornfields and way out there working on a wheat. And then back over to the Golden Spike Project, east of the Mississippi, along all of the Blue Ridge, with all those mountains and valleys to cover. And thank you to the restaurant crew, the grandma teams, the OK teams, and the ST groups that are out there right now running cable, setting up fiber optic, and also using old earth technologies in so many ways to have a replacement, along with all these others, for the internet. It is a beautiful hot day out there and as you can imagine knowing it's almost, almost the end of the month. It is the 29th of July, second year of Fabian Socialist and Soviet Socialist occupation of America with a K. On the east coast, treason. On the west coast, treason. To the south and on the gulf coast, treason. on the border with America and Mexico. Treason! Wow! Hey, at least there's one good thing, guys. Our federal government is very consistent in betraying America across the board. Who'd have thunk it? At least they can be consistent in something. They certainly aren't consistent in anything else. But one thing, betraying the trust and the confidence of the American people, stealing from the American people, spitting on the American people... Wait a minute, that sounds like the Mexicans down there. Oh, wait a minute. No, no, no. It's the federal government and the swine yahooties that are there. Yeah, yep, just another group, you know, another parasite, different day. Well... On the east coast, as we know, it turns out there is a lawsuit with Southern Perversion Law. Apparently the ADL is part of this thing too. It is a molestation case that is going through the Justice Department. There are at least three different special investigations going on. What I do have so far is that one of them with Southern Perversion Law has to do with the intern case that you might recall got a little publicity last year about this time and then was made to disappear. It was like it just, what happened? Where'd it go? Well, it didn't go anyplace. That's one of the problems. So apparently, because of external investigations with one congressional office, and you know it's not Barney Frank's office, whoo-hoo, yeah, those rumpus squeezers there, they're not going to be looking into this. But anyway, apparently the investigation is now being pressed, and this is going to be another test of the injustice department i think we all know what's going to happen here but uh... apparently a sudden perversion law to include morris sleaze or if not more sleaze apparently the post that he held which probably includes potluck they're being investigated right now for a number of different uh... acts of chicanery of perversion with minors by the sound of it. So we'll see how this works out. The interns couldn't have been minors that I know of unless it was some kind of high school internship. Ooh, that wouldn't be good, would it? So apparently the ADL offices are tidied out of Montgomery and also, what was the other location here? Also actually out of I think Nashville, Tennessee is what they're saying. Maybe they're in the music industry. So Nashville, Tennessee, and also Montgomery, Alabama are the two offices that are being investigated with the ADL, and they're tied in with Southern Perversion Law in this. Apparently they were swapping children? Well, I guess what? The underage people because it's an underage case. Also, they're using parties to be named or parties that, you know, again, they're not disclosing the names. So that tells me that it's a minor with the case with Southern Perversion law or minors because the way they're wording the paperwork that's already been generated. So we'll find out more about that as it goes. Got a bunch of emails on this already from our friends on the East Coast and our friends that are in the spike system there. Plus, and this is another separate situation going on in California right now, apparently with all of the other money problems that they have, Turns out that we may have another case where the ADL got caught with a whole bunch of files and documents they weren't supposed to have shades of their San Francisco fiasco. Oh baby, oh baby, you spin me right round, baby right round. So this is in, I guess the way this was found out is apparently because of investigations into some of these municipal money problems that were developing and it turns out there was some, well when everything else is scraped away I guess it became very apparent that there was some uh... illicit gains some money shifting hands and paperwork shifting hands during some of these audits that weren't supposed to so that's another case to watch in the middle central california around sacramento california and we'll find out more about that as it develops now uh... that case of course is probably going to link over with some other stuff that happened in San Diego last year too. All the stuff that happened during the transition period, they've tried to sweep it under the rug, mostly with the ADL and Southern Perversion Law. And that's another reason all this pickle, smoke, and mirrors, I think, with the whole border situation, which of course they've got to try and conceal that too. slip everybody over into the the gulf which is why BP had no problem you know let the good times roll and let the oil flow and don't do anything serious about it makes a great deal of sense when you think about that plus now they're trying to do the introvert extrovert introvert first it was Gulf of Mexico Gulf of Mexico stare at the Gulf of Mexico oil bubbling crude oil bubbling crude now it's walk over there in the Persian Gulf look over there in the Persian Gulf what about China what about China look at the Gulf of Mexico Look at the Gulf of Mexico. Over there in Gulf. Oh wait a minute, Gulf Land, Persian Gulf. Over there. You see how that works? Introvert, extrovert. But when you introvert, it's got to be absolute introvert with all your blinders on. When they go extrovert, you can't look at anything, oh ignore that, cases all gone, the super brain eating microbes are now back to destroy all the oil, blah, blah, blah, blah, blah, blah. And yeah, that is an old technology by the way. There's an overlap on this. It goes back 20, 30 years. Actually closer to, well this is year 2010. And if you look in popular science for 1960 to 63, in fact I got a reason I can say this because we got a pile of these we got remembered down the road, a whole collection. Gradually it's fun to go through the historical, see how they replay stuff. In the 1962-1963 window there was a whole bunch of discussion because of expansion in drilling in the Middle East and also in South America. The biggest concerns back during that period of time was the fact that most of the Venezuelan, Brazilian, and Argentine oil operations were kind of in the last of their usability or viability from the drilling of the 40s during the World War II era. And that the stuff was dying out, equipment was rotting, literally falling apart. So their concern was how do we fix this and keep the oil fields running in South America. Well, not only do they keep running, but obviously they've kept right at investing as we know. And there wasn't any surprise there. The point is that the microbe technology to preserve because it was overlapping with the ecology thing, remember we don't call it, you know, they don't use the term ecology anymore. You know, the green stuff, guys. But back in the day with the ecology, the concern was, you know, how can we come up with, you know, petrochemical solutions to deal with these problems? What about the chemical industry? What about biotech? What can they do to help? Everybody is pressing forward with solutions. Well, they did. And so as far as this whole thing happening, the idea is that remember, it's new to people if the public fool system is not educating anybody. So it's like brand new, or it's secret, or it's whatever. Well, if you don't tell anyone, might as well be secret the way things are working, because nobody's making a great effort to keep everybody up to speed or informed and multifaceted in their education. So that's another thing we got to watch and pay attention to there. But again, myopic in an introvert with blinders on. or extroverts. It's almost like, think about this, when they try to get you to look at Iran, look at Iran, look at Iran, look at the Persian Gulf, look at Iran. There's like, there's one blinder stuck on the side of the head, a little bit towards the nose, and then it's like, no, no, no, no, no, the oil spill in China, no, no, no, the oil spill, there's the other blinder coming up. So they've got you so that you can't see what's directly in front of you, and you're almost Google-eyed. See how this works? introvert, extrovert introvert, extrovert back and forth sucking and blowing it's got like an H&V unit guys remember it's either sucking or blowing when it comes to ventilation you know air systems same with regard to the control press sucking or blowing oh my goodness oh forgive me I did I say that yes I did Anyway, just a point there. The reason I bring this up is because advancement in personnel continues to take place. We get a lot of people that have heard the cry or heard the call for what's going on in Arizona and there's a whole bunch of people that are organizing to go down there. And again, we are making this our emphasis. Why? Well, if you're going to go down there, we don't want you to go down there thinking this is a two-hour movie. You know that. There are a lot of things that we need to be taking into consideration. One of the other is physical health and that just physical conditioning. Some of you aren't going to be traveling and trekking along the mountain ridges or the valleys or running the dusty lanes of the border roads in whatever way on foot. In fact, you're probably planning on being part of the Beck and Toc, the command centers, whatever, and you'll be assisting in another way. Maybe you're a wrench turner. You're going down to help out with the Unimog's, going out there to help with the M113's or with the the five tunners or the deuce and halves, whatever. Guys, they need all of that and a lot more. So it really does make a big difference. If you can get down there just to do nothing but help to, you know, turn a wrench and put equipment back up on online because that's what you did as an MOS, you are serving the Patriot movement. You are serving the country and you are desperately needed because we need to get this work done and out of the way. Plus, remember this, once we get these vehicles up and online and they're running, Everybody out there who's ever been in a motor pool knows they're going to be doing cross-country work, they're going to be in the field, they're going to be running miles slash hours on the equipment. When that happens, a PM program is going to have to be in place along with preparation for field maintenance. One of the things that I recommend is a field recovery vehicle organized immediately because what's going to happen is you're going to have equipment broken down. Now there are two tricks to this. Number one, Vehicle to vehicle recovery. You might recall if you're a tread head that we had these big old steel cables that we carry along the side of the vehicle. And we say big old steel cables, guys. We're talking claws and cable. The cable's as big as your wrist. OK, a little smaller, but not much. A little smaller, but not much. May have the girth of my wrist. But for a lot of people, we're talking large, woven cable. They don't carry that for the fun of it. That's carried for recovering another tank or to help pull something out of an obstacle if it gets stuck in something. That's called tank recovery too. But one of the tricks to remember is guys, if it loses power, you stick it in neutral and the one power plant on the armored vehicle becomes the mutual power plant for both armored vehicles. and the vehicle can be recovered and pulled back if it was under fire, it'd be pulled back to a situation where it could be recovered by a dragon wagon and then taken back to the rear for maintenance and for repair or for scrapping either way. In this case, guys, we need to be able to A, recover the vehicles through mutual assistance. Now, I would go so far as to do two things in a subroutine yet again. A, cables or B, a tow bar that's mutual for all the vehicles. A lot of guys, if they have the Unimogs, have towed them to a site with another truck. Also for you guys who used to be in transport with the military, you guys know that we used to piggyback vehicles. And that way only one deuce and a half driver was there to move two deuce and a half. Why? Because the tow bar rig hooked up to the pannel hitch behind the deuce and a half, and the one deuce and a half would tow the other deuce and a half in idle, in neutral, slash, in many cases, would actually prep it by taking the drive shafts right off. And you would tow it like a trailer to the next location where it would go into the motor pool. The wrench geeks would be up there, clank, clank, clunk, clunk, a little bit more tender loving care, rrrroom when the other vehicle moves into the line. When it comes time at the end of two weeks or four weeks or a couple of months to return that vehicle to the other part of the state or to another location in the country, it would be piggyback to the other vehicle again. Everything would be prepped and it would be towed back the same way. Now towing is one option. This is back to the higher category. The other is if the vehicle can be kept in the field and be repaired or can be repaired enough to be recovered and escorted back to the motor pool. Now this isn't just for the military vehicles we have down there. The other consideration when we deploy equipment is that in many cases people are bringing their own CJ-3s, CJ-5s, Cherokees, Comanches, Jimmys, Dodge, Ram trucks, you name it. Well, here's a suggestion. Guys, if you can click junk rims, and you can, you know, if you're going down there and you can leave them behind extras, it would really be nice for the motor pool to have extra 16 inch Dodge Ram rims, a set or more, with some clunky tires that can be kept aired up. Why? Because that way if a vehicle goes down for a tire failure, you're able to grab a couple of rims. This is KWA 359, Ereko, Eko, Foxtrot, Sierra Tango Foxtrot Recovery. Do you copy over? This is Sierra Tango Foxtrot Recovery. We copy. Roger that, we need 16 inch rim, 2 for the M880 location, such and such, or if the M880 might be a 16.5 by the way, mostly they're 16.5s, they're older. But, it could have had a 16 inch rim switched over, that's fine. Could be a cuck-vee, could be a Cherokee. Well, you give them the shopping list, they come out with what they need. If they can't get it running or if there's something more damaged than expected, You either take it back, trailer mount it, or you tow it back if it's possible to tow it, but you have a system in place for recovery. Nothing will sit on the road, ever. Nothing will be abandoned, ever. To demonstrate your ability, your capability, your proficiency, your competence, we need to be thinking about this in advance. Nothing, no equipment, will be left behind. There's no excuse for that to take place. Why? Well here's another reason. Well we're just gonna have to leave it here abandoned. And do you want to be the person to mimic and gimmick over that to find out whether or not it's booby trapped the next day in a war zone? Because I'm gonna tell you something, progressively your bad guys are gonna be observing. At a given point, the threat about bringing pyrotechnics across the border and doing damage is going to take place. Since that is a consideration, leaving any piece of equipment abandoned in the war zone or occupation or patrol zone means that it is suspect as a weapon unto itself created by the aggressor when the time comes. You cannot abandon in place unless you're going to burn it and blow it right there. In other words, you're going to fry it and frag it so that it can't be used by anybody. Then you push it off into the ditch and you leave it there where it's a relic forever or until the metal boss come take it apart for scrap. Either way, guys, these are things that have to be taken into consideration now. And we need the manpower down there. We have a lot of good people listening. Some people are saying, I don't have a job, I don't have a family, I'm not really pinned down. Well, guess what? Here's a chance for you to shine. And here's a chance for you to do something where it really counts and your fellow patriots are going to remember this. If we do this right, going down there, this is going to be not only just going down there, but going down there and coming back. This situation is something that's going to be memorable just like the minute man one and minute man two deployments For each of the groups that went down there. This was a benchmark Because you aren't just yapping about it You're putting your money where your mouth is doesn't mean that everybody can make it and we don't have to you don't have to Apologize or you're gonna have to try and qualify don't think that marks ridiculing you for that. We understand the economy, too So what we need to do is if you can't get down there We need to have you help to sponsor the guys and gals that can get down there We need to make sure that they're genuinely are provided for and that there's nothing they have to I was hoping I'd have it No, that should not happen. There's no excuse for that to happen. Okay, so please you know, take the time organize motivate pump everybody up and Get the people that are going to have to sit at home to at least help to support the guy that's going to be sitting on that truck seat or on that jeep seat all the way down. Getting down there and hoofing it in the backcountry or driving his way around as a patrol officer with one of the mech units depending on what they do. Either way guys, they're going to need fuel, they're going to need food, they're going to need all the technical perishables. Everything you can think of, whatever it is you provide, it will be used. Now before we go any farther for those, again guys, if you know your area of operation, mapping, mapping, mapping, mapping, mapping. And I'm not talking GPS. I don't want to hear all of them in the GPS system. That's nice. That's your gravy on top of your meat. On top of your meat and potatoes. Mating titers, kids. Mm-hmm. It's like that mustard and crackers. Mm-hmm. Yeah, I like that mustard and crackers. Anyway, seamless.usgs.gov. Seamless.usgs.gov. Seamless.usgs.gov. topomaps.usgs.gov topomaps.usgs.gov topomaps.usgs.gov Those aren't the only locations but those are, again, for geological survey mapping, 150,000 scale and other scales that allow for more area to be covered on a single map. I recommend that you A, pick up maps for the area of operation that you intend to deploy in. right off the bat. And you need to be looking at them. By the way, if you're going to be at the kitchen table tonight and you've got those maps, you better be seriously sitting down and looking at them. You better be studying them. You better take a component of that grid one step at a time and walk your way across it. Orient your mind to where you don't hear the contour of that terrain. And you'll notice that, remember this when you're looking at maps, when the lines are closer together, as you all know, that means the hills are a lot steeper. Oh man, look at all, close all those little lines are. Yes, it's very hard to read the difference in altitude. No, it's not. That's steep. And it's tall. If there's a whole big block of lines and they're really, really, really, really close together and you can't count them, well, that's at least 100 feet, and probably more. But the point is that yeah, it's rough terrain in some areas, very rugged, very unique. Orient your mind to the battlefield that you're going to be working in, the area you're going to be operating in, the patrol area you're going to be a part of. You can do this now. The topomaps.usgs.gov, guys, I know you can pull them off the computer, that's fine. But if at all possible, try to get the physical GPO, Government Printing Office, maps. The quality is very high, the standards were set years ago, these are military spec because the military uses them. Okay? And if they've run out of a certain map that's newer, don't worry about it. Check to see if they have the next generation before that. Now that's a good thing anyway because there are some things that will not be on the newer maps that will be on the older maps but are still valuable. Example is that government has been kind of getting rid of marking some of the played out minds and spots that are on the map that are still physically there today. Now here's one of the reasons that'd be kind of valuable. Let's say that as we know the Arizona militia is deploying and utilizing one of the mine complexes for its own purposes. You may have other facilities nearby. Guess what? If they're abandoned and nobody has an interest in them, let's see. We have sheet steel, we have iron, we may have fixtures, we may have other equipment that'd be kind of nice to know about. And it doesn't have to be state of the art for some of the stuff that's being done. For instance, let's say I need some overhead cover material. I don't have to haul it in if somebody's already got sheet metal or tin roofing or whatever in the area of operation within reasonable proximity. That's enough to use for sandbag overhead cover. In fact, if you go to fortifications slash survivability, which is the present FM, survivability used to be called fortifications. You will note that Mr. Corrugated Steel is your friend, used for a majority of construction by the combat engineers no matter what it is from a overhead blast protection from mortar rounds to fortifications for radiological defense. Think about it for holding the sandbags up and for creating overhead cover for being able to handle weight between cross beams, I beams and corrugated steel. That's Cadillac living guys. That's high on the hog. So it'd be kind of nice to know where all those locations are where stuff might be findable, especially where it's remote where nobody's going to bother going out in the middle of BFE to try and find it. Mapping makes all the difference in the world if it's older mapping because it can give you ideas. So again, topomaps.usgs.gov, topomaps.usgs.gov, seamless.usgs.gov, that's S-E-A-M-L-E-S-S dot U-S-G-S dot gov, so we have to make sure we get that out. Mapping, mapping and mapping. In fact, every man needs it. Now here's another thing. I'll repeat again. Get the basic topo maps, one or two sets of everything you're going to need. Then, if you have to because you're worried about cost, guess what? There's where the color photocopier comes in handy. Go into town, say hi to the person who's got the big machine or even if they just do 8.5 by 11, make copies of the maps and then laminate them. Wow, everybody could have a smaller 8.5 by 11 grid map of the area that they're going to be operational in, or they can have 2, 3, or 4. Between them, they'll have the same basic map covered that you purchased from the GPO. Oh, yeah, so you only need a couple of those. And then Mr. Photo Color Copier goes to work, but laminating is critical, because as we know, photocopies don't hold up well in inclement weather or with body oils or salts. OK? So, there's one solution. Another thing, again, remember, is signal communications. We have them on a hand card here, as you know. Well, do your Morse code with all the basic signal information, etc., and some of the other basic directorate-slash-orders on a single wallet-sized card and laminate them. Make sure that every team member has a copy of this, preferably three. One in the backpack, one in their personal ID system, whatever they're using, can be a hang wallet, could be just in the pocket, whatever they're doing. And if they do have a radio, it should be in the sleeve or in the body of the radio itself where it can be found easily. It has to be legible guys, it must be readable. If it's not readable, I mean a whole bunch of them, but they're not real clean copies. Well that's gonna kinda defeat the purpose if it takes longer for the guy to use it than, you know, you'd expect. And while he's busy gasping for breath and trying to get code through jamming or whatever, might be the last thing he does is he's not a D or a C. Is that a 1 or a 6? Is that a... Oh, he didn't make it. Oh well, I got brrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrr Well, with a keyboard you can do that. Always remember, it's the last thing you hear. Anyway, or with Morse code, it could just be KEEEEE because he died on the key. Oh, that's not good. Anyway, we're gonna make sure that doesn't happen. We're gonna respond efficiently. We're gonna make sure we have everybody squared away. I will remind everyone again, some people coming in late. Guys, ACU works exceptionally well down there by the looks of it. Again, each camouflage has its purpose. Let me point out a little history. Years ago, I had the chance, back when nobody wanted camouflage from the desert, nobody. No, no, no. Oh, it looks strange if it was built specific for a battlefield because it's built for those conditions. Years ago, the Brits worked in North Africa. Oh, they did. That's right. Yes, they were Kalunyos, don't you know, I say. Well, from one of my suppliers, the guys called me up, and this is years ago, when we reached to get the Czechoslovakian airborne camel. I said, hey, I got this camouflage here, but I don't know where it came from. I said, well, OK, you know as well as I do. What does the label say? Well, it looks like it's British markings, but it was some kind of colonial uniform or some kind. I said, really? He goes, yeah, but you know, in the office here, it looks weird. It almost looks pink. He looks salmon colored and pink and camouflage. It's like ranges of pink. Nobody's going to want to wear this. And I said, well, you would if you were in North Africa. And he said, what? I said, well, have you ever looked at the camouflage and the colors of the sand? And one of the reasons you get a pink shade is red granite, guys. When red granite granulates, what color do you get as it goes through the translucent stone, especially when it's in little chibbly, chunkly thingies? Oh, that's right. It also can be, of course, kind of, shall we say, filtered out or washed with white stone, gray stone, whatever. Well, what's interesting is you actually get kind of a red into pink shade quartz color from granite and other stone that is mixed in. So what they did is for North Africa, this camouflage worked exceptionally well in like Libya into the Egyptian desert. Why? Because of the shade range of the color base. Kind of like, think about rock from Georgia. You know what I mean? Think about Georgia clay. That's why the russet colors of the Swiss Alpine camouflage work oh so well down there. Well, on the other hand, it's like, man, that uniform shouldn't work. Yeah, but it does. Now, The ACU, I can show you picture after picture of the ACU in other environments, and it's like, why in the hell is he wearing that? Well, it's because it's the uniform he had when he was overseas and it works there, and it's what they got stuck with because the Army doesn't do a real good job of reissuring stuff the way they should anymore. They're run by Kmart, at least the Quartermaster. Well, might as well be. Anyway, for that reason, guys, ACU works down there on the border. mainmilitary.com, M-A-I-N-E, mainmilitary.com. You're looking for ACU to use down there? Guess what? They've got a complete Mali system, brand new. Includes the M16 mag pouches, grenade pouches, and a couple others. And it's a package deal with the vest. They're brand new. And the price is right. So here's the thing, if you're not going down and let's say maybe you've got about two or three or five or ten men or twenty men that your unit is going to sponsor Hey, start tracking down the ACU stuff, watch for the bony hats, everything that they need. Guess what? It's available. Main military has a whole bunch of that stuff on hand. But the MOLLEVES, especially if they're using the MINI-14, the AR-15, let's see, the other one is if they're losing the GALLEAL. Or they're using the, that's right, the 223 Sega, remember? With the new Sega adapters, or the GALLEAL adapters, standard AR-15 mags can be used in both of those rifles. Well with that being the case, that means that the ACU AR-15 mag pouch rig is going to work just fine for your rifle. There you go, or for the troops going down there. So here is a solution, not just lamenting about the problem. Take a look at the web page, mainmilitary.com. Mainmilitary.com, M-A-I-N-E, military.com, 877-608-0179. That's 877-608-0179. Talk to Frank, tell him about what it is you want, and plug it in. Again, if you're not going down there and you want to send as a gift something down to the units, a couple of other things they need or that they want are desert camo nets and sandbags. And again, there are solutions. Go to their web page. They'll give you all the answers there you need. For your own operational units, remember camouflage knitting. On that note, Guys, if you look around you'll find Norwegian, you'll find Czech, you'll find Dutch, you'll find American. Either plastic or moss. The moss is actually a striated nylon, it's really interesting, it's puffed. Like cotton candy. Works exceptionally well. You'd be amazed. Now how long it's going to last? I haven't experimented with it. But camouflage netting for each of your vehicles is a critical issue. This is going to come up in the, as far as camouflage, covering concealment with your mechanized forces. Everybody needs to be ready to hull down, to disappear. To do that, you're going to have to practice. When you stop a vehicle, one of the first things that you're doing is the camouflage net, which is typically mounted over the cab and over the roof of the vehicle. is first pulled down, stretched out. You automatically, this becomes second nature. It should be so second nature that as soon as you're leaving the vehicle, even if it's not your vehicle, you're participating in camouflaging it immediately. Another thing, now our troops were so disciplined in this guys that in Desert Dust 1 they did both. A, they knew to stop the vehicle and camouflage it. That's not good because then you couldn't find it. Well at least the other guys couldn't but that's what they were supposed to do. The other thing is you're also trained to shut the vehicle off for noise discipline. Now in our situation we got to make sure all those vehicles including your personal vehicles as I said they start, they stop, and they run. Well, actually, they start, they run down the road, and they stop. You see how that works? But whenever you are stopping a vehicle, automatically you shut down. Now, this sounds strange, but if you're going to stop the column for any period of time, you shut down. Why? Because this prevents noise from allowing the aggressor to identify your position. All the guys that were in Desert Dust 1 were trained to this because they were perfecting their techniques for use in what they figured was going to be World War 3, the adventure continues. The Cold War comes to a hot war, okay? And all the guys that went to Iraq knew that when you stop your vehicle, as a convoy, you're supposed to shut it down. Well, there's a problem with that. We had the Humvees in service, which we had not been maintaining. During Desert Dust 1, which you don't hear very much about because they did the raw, raw, raw, let's go kill Iraqis, but in reality, 50% of the Humvees in the field, their electrical systems were not charging properly. As long as they were running, they would run. When they stopped them, they had to be jumped. So typically, Humvees were slaved, one vehicle to, one badly running vehicle to a functional Humvee. Oh, you didn't hear about that? Well, a lot of our guys will tell you about it that served during that period of time, including a lot of young men that I trained, some of them which were accidentally left behind because their conditioning kicked in. They stopped their vehicles, everybody shut off their motors, and then half of them realized, oh! I wasn't supposed to do that, but because they weren't supposed to break radio silence, they had to sit there and wait until the convoy figured out that it had left behind 15 or 20 or 30 vehicles, gone a few miles down the road, and then realized, hey, we're missing a few guys. Yeah. Your buddy vehicles stopped and they shut down the way they're supposed to and they couldn't start back up. So this is one of the things that we need to remember to again condition our troops too, but we have to be thinking constantly camouflage and noise discipline. Now on that note, here's something else you need for your backpack that everybody better have in their repair kit. Mr. Electrical Tape and Mr. Duck Tape are your friends. If you don't in your repair kit already have, and by the way you don't have to have silver anymore though if you're poor silver is fine, but even if you want to just get some kind of color, guys at Harbor Freight and all these places they offer duct tape in every shade and color you can imagine. At the very least without spending a whole lot of extra money 3M for the same price as their silver duct tape make brown or earth green or kelly green or od green or gray duct tape without spending any super money on it. Now in addition to that all those companies that make duct tape almost always make camouflage duct tape now either in the traditional multi color patterns that are just you know like woodland or whatever or tiger stripe or they actually make it in digital or real trees so you can pick the color you want. Now, Mr. Duck Tape helps to lock things down when everything else fails, provided the stuff is actually the original product. If it's a fake, sometimes it sticks, sometimes it doesn't, so be prepared for using more. Electrical tape is used for silencing a lot of your gear. Now, in the past, we had to use black, and black was a standard because that's the color electrical tape came in. But then 3M got the same idea with their electrical tape that they got with their duct tape. We can make any color you can imagine. And it's true. They do. There's now a palette of colors to choose from, including every solid color tactically you could want. Tan, brown, loam green, medium green, dark green, dusty black, charcoal gray, medium gray, light gray, you name it, the colors are all there. But on top of that, no, that wasn't enough. Now they also make camouflaged electrical tape. So there's no excuse for you not to have if you want to. You can spend a few more pennies, but you end up with being able to secure all of your extra strapping. Let me give an example. All your extra strapping should be, once you get everything where it's supposed to be lengthwise, should be rolled up and should be lightly secured. Now the way to do that, the reason you're doing that is so that you can prevent your strapping from buffing. because it's one thing if you just you know walk around here like say with lots of background noise and you're near a metropolitan area you don't really notice it that much but when you're out in the middle of nowhere where only there are scorpions and snakes or just Bambi and bears that it's amazing how that unnatural sound of flop flop flop flop flop flop wait a minute stop wait a minute flop flop flop flop It's coming closer to flop flop flop flop flop. I think I'm gonna shoot the flop flop boom. Oh, I got him Oh, oh boy Well you see now you're not supposed to do that we we can't be sure we wouldn't be a friendly we're shooting So we're not just gonna go by sound but at the very least guys we can hear something coming if we don't use noise discipline So we're gonna make sure that our people are squared away That means that all your little points of contact are things that you suspect. Example, another thing, you might have web gear that uses a lockdown metal keeper. Guys, that lockdown keeper will work every day. and we'll stay right where it is until it becomes a critical moment or you're in the field and you've been walking for days and days on end and just when you thought everything was secure the keeper pops loose and all of a sudden you've got something maladjusted, it's fatiguing you, it's wearing you down. Well before that happens you take Mr. Electrical tape, you go over your gear and any of your thumb down ratchet type keepers get taped over with Mr. Camouflage duct tape or Mr. Camouflage electrical tape. Now I prefer electrical tape simply because it can be, it's easier to disconnect and clear everything off the gear and then reset it if you have to adjust for something. Example, you might add more stuff underneath the gear or you might take something away and you'll have to readjust the length of your keeper straps and your suspenders and all the other fun stuff. So you're going to want to be able to adjust it. Now you don't go super crazy with it. Again, use just enough to get the job done and make sure that you do a detailed job on it so that it's squared away, looks good, and blends in. That's why again, electrical tape in black, eh, kind of might stand out sometimes. Mostly it didn't. But if it can be camouflaged in earth brown or medium green or OD green or whatever, that's a plus. Just in black colors make a big difference. Then if you can spend a few more pennies, hey that's your choice. Anyway, ideas, not just lamenting about the problems, what do I do? Now another thing on that note, some people may or may not want to use helmets. I will point something out. A booney hat does not offer a whole lot of protection from anything but the sun, which is what it's for. And you're heading down to the desert, which is going to be hot. Really hot. Scorching, burn skinning hot. Ouch, ouch, ouch, ouch. Now, the other advantage is it also offers a certain amount of camouflage protection to use a booney hat. However, let's shift in directions here, you may not have to use a Kevlar helmet or a steel helmet and your unit as a whole can actually use something that works quite well, our bike helmets. Everybody's like, huh? Well, they're like climbers helmets, guys. Something that allows for your ears to be open so that you can hear, okay, but offer protection for the forehead, protection for the side of the head and the back of the head. There are a number of designs that are pretty decent. I watch all the yard sales. We have a whole squad that is outfitted with the same bike helmet because Mark has been patient. All I had to do was wait. You know what is really neat about this? The bike helmets were already tactically colored because that was in vogue over the 90s. And from the late 80's to early 90's camouflage was very much in vogue, dude. Woah! So, OD Green, Flat Black, and Earth Brown are the colors that we run into. But it gets better if you really pay attention, and this is really neat. I've got several Bell Helmet factory camouflaged helmets. They're bikers always. Now what's critical about this? Well, this is designed so that when a rock bounces off of, you know, from up above, it doesn't bounce off your skull and open up your scalp. But instead, shears and bounces off that plastic up above. That's a nice thing because the plastic, well, it's not as critical. Even if it cracked the helmet, that one time that the helmet might do its job, it paid for itself. The same thing that helmet does for you when you scut off that bike and your noggin hits the pavement at about 25 miles an hour. Well, the same thing happens when chunks of debris, slivered rock, pieces of wood come dropping from above when you're in an arroyo or if you're on the side of a ledge or if you're climbing up something. The other nice thing about bicycle helmets using them is that they're already set up to ventilate and cool. You're down in 114 degree weather plus or minus, typically minus on certain days. So where you're in a very hot environment, something that cools but still offers reasonable armored protection for safety purposes, is not a bad thing. Now if you want to go harder and heavier, that's your personal choice. There are Kevlar helmets out there. There are steel pots out there. Both will serve. I would try to recommend that for the sake of again Esprit de corps and uniformity, if at all possible try to provide the same model of helmet and gear to all your troops. There is a reason for this. Guys, we're going there with sending a message. We're not going to be, again, there's no reason not to be a hodgepodge on this. One of the considerations is guys that if you can, watch your Salvation Army's, watch your sails, round up a whole bunch of this stuff and ship it down there to the troops. Once it gets down where the guys are, if they want to camouflage it, you know what, like I said, Mr. House Paint, custom mix to the colors you need and you just lay a whole bunch of turtle shells on cardboard down there and you go to town with the paint and they'll all look the same when you're done. Wow! That's a cheap solution. By the way I paid about 10 cents a piece for the bicycle helmets because nobody wanted them. Ten cents? Yeah. Got a whole pile more in a duffel bag. All ready to go. all painted up, all finished. When I need them, I got them. When we need them, we'll issue them out. Why? Because that's better than your bean running into something at two or three in the morning if you run around in the dark and something you miss just happens to be at forehead height. Really does help a lot. But again, personal choice and it depends upon again techniques and technologies that you commit to. However, there's a solution for some people that are concerned, well what should I wear in the way of headgear? The helmets are an option. Oh, a lot of them, by the way, too, have snap facers for faceplates. Since you're down there in that extreme weather, you can buy snap-on visors that'll go right on those helmets. Oh, yeah. And so that eliminates a lot of the other problems you might have run into there too. Isn't that cool? Yeah. See, what works for one in Endeavor in the show with the area of sports interest will work in another having to do with a very serious activity on the border. Solutions. Now. What else do we have left? Oh one more time and again, Sergeant Harris is not gonna be happy with this But Sergeant Harris needs to call the third RCT Sergeant Harris needs to call the third RCT This is with regard to Victor 2 slash m 114 maintenance Sergeant Harris and again, this is like about the third time we've been requested, but this is the easiest way I can send a general message out you'll get to him third RCT needs to needs to be in contact with Sergeant Harris as soon as possible Also, WA in Pensacola needs to contact Mr. Avery. That's WA. He needs to contact Mr. Avery in Pensacola ASAP. I don't know what's going on there, but I understand we got a spike on that. It came in while I was gone during the day here. We've got that covered. And last but not least, again, hopefully I've got it right here. I might have to slap myself. Nope, it's not here where I can do it immediately. We've had requests, where do we get Citizen's Rule Books? Well, WhittenPrinters. And guys in the chat room there, WhittenPrinters.com, I'm pretty sure. Whitten with a W-H, WhittenPrinters.com. Witten printers. They have the Citizens Rule Books that everybody's familiar with. It's got the three musicians, two with drum, one with fife, the spirit of 76, on the front, Bill O'Riats' jury handbook, the fireworks are in the document itself, read the Constitution. This is a nice little handout or a nice little promotional. I would also ask because there's another more than one reason for doing this. Guys, in all the units you should be carrying a pocket Bible and you should be carrying a citizen's rule book. I would go so far and this is an idea again guys I know we've piled enough on the units down there to Arizona militia but Whitten printers is down there on the border they're down actually down there in the Phoenix area I believe. If we can guys give them a ring see if they would donate a box of these to the Arizona militia border units. I know that they're not they're burdened like everybody else but One of the things that I would do is to actually mark, address, and number each of the citizen rule books that's given to every man that deploys down there with the Arizona militia. And it is a personal gift slash memento that goes back with the men from Arizona to wherever they're going to be departing back home. Some people will be staying down there and they still should receive this. Any person who participates in this deployment should receive a citizen's rule book and they should personally carry a pocket Bible. There are military copies that can be made. There are advantages to using these people. We won't talk about it on the air, but consider what you can do with these useful tools when it comes to talking to each other. So there are reasons for carrying them. And of course, not only, at least to which is why we fight and what we're fighting for. But Witten Printers is located in Arizona proper and they're readily available. We're headed towards the top. I know we don't have long here and I've been focusing on that area of the country for a reason because I know I want this to go perfectly. I think all of you do too. If we're going to send men down there and we're going to be going down there at different times ourselves, wink, hint hint, nod nod. then we have to make sure that we are squared away for this mission. We are prepared to deal with the problems and we're going to demonstrate that not only are we going to shine, we're going to shine bright and we are going to excel. We should expect that kind of standard from all of you. Seriously, I'm tired of this halfway. I'm tired of this part of. There's no excuse for this not happening in this deployment. We are not going to have to do much in terms of actual preparation. Down on site, it can all be squared away here, but there's a lot that can be accomplished in a short period of time. But when you're down there, it's not a game, it's a job. When you're down there, it's a mission. When you're down there, it's a task. When you're down there, it's work. We're going to be on rest for eight hours, and we're going to be working our hind ends off for 16. When we're in the field, we're going to take seriously the trade that we have embraced. When we come back off the field, the very first thing you do is take care of your personal equipment, arm yourself up again, replace all the perishables so that in a moment's notice, you could be grabbing your gear and back in the field. Now, as a little case in point, don't watch the B.S. movie about the Somali campaign with the Rangers, okay? Black Hawk Down. Don't watch it. Go to a used bookstore and get a copy of Black Hawk Down and read it. The real story is much better than the B.S. Hollywood movie and there's a reason guys because what they did there is what Rangers usually do. They get into something and then they learn from their mistakes immediately. They corrected things. The seals did the same thing. Everybody involved there, including the Delta troops, did the same thing. They realized they'd made mistakes and they talk about that in the book. They did nothing about that in the movie. We aren't going to let the mistakes kick in. We're going to learn from the mistakes of others so that we'll live longer ourselves. God bless the Republic. Death of the New World Order. We shall prevail, ladies and gentlemen. The Empire is on their honor. We're on the march. Spike Timmons coming up next to put on a nail right now ahead of the New World Order, right where it belongs. We'll be back at 8 o'clock with Donna Mark here until report evening. Bye-bye. That's M-A-I-N-E military dot com, one of the last surviving true military surplus stores in the country. Go online now to maine military dot 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. See our huge selection of gas masks, filters, and accessories. Finish at M-10 gas masks are three for $30. And Swiss filters are three for $12. Searching for strike anywhere matches, maine military dot com has them. Plus a whole new product line of survival in first aid kits and lots more. Get free shipping on orders over $50 only at mainmilitary.com. That's M-A-I-N-E military dot com. Or call 877-608-0179, 877-608-0179, mainmilitary.com, the main name in military supply. 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