The host discussed practical self-sufficiency and resource conservation strategies, including food preservation techniques like making soup from turkey carcasses and potato peel soup for digestive health. The episode covered reusing household items, salvaging materials from construction sites, utilizing solar panels obtained from the Michigan Highway Department, and reducing dependence on utility companies. The host also emphasized traditional skills such as knitting socks and gloves, gardening techniques for maximizing tomato yields using Epsom salt, and the importance of learning practical crafts for long-term survival. A fundraising appeal was made for the Y365 internet broadcasting service, with a September 30 deadline for donations to cover annual costs.
I forgot to ask for it. Ah, that's a good opliter. Yes. Yeah, that, my power keeps going up. This is about, like, four times. Twice in the last ten minutes. So, yeah. And trying to put the energy. So. Hey! As long as the power's too bad. Oh my. It's the next kind of a day. But this is, you know, we're trying to do the intelligence report here. And you know every snack food that's possible, the old Murphy's Law has kicked in. Oh yes ma'am. You know, go with the flow, roll with the punches. That's what we do here. So, yeah, keep on doing. I've been waiting. I'm thankful that you're there and ready as a backup for us when stuff like this happens. And it's a clear, blue, beautiful, sunshiny day. It's probably upper 80s, lower 90s here. more like a summer day than a fall day. But the wind has been picking up from time to time. We've lost a few minor limbs out of the trees. But, so, not as bad as it was this morning. We had some really, really high winds this morning. They're saying tomorrow we're supposed to be 50 degrees down here. I don't want to hear that. I don't either. I'm like, hey, wait a minute. It was just 93 yesterday. Yeah, exactly. You see, what are you talking about? 50. So this blend came in blue where I warm water. That's what I understand. So far, temperature hasn't dropped yet. But a couple weeks ago, we went from an hour from 90 degrees down to 60. in a matter of two to three hours I came home and it was just awful it was you know just really really hot and went to take Bruce out at six o'clock and needed a jacket so it was weird Bruce is still illegal Bruce Doers oh he's here he keeps a me company you can keep it in a shape oh absolutely he's he's back down to 207 pounds so oh What is that? He lost 10 pounds, but he's doing a little good. He's a great dog. Can't stand up and go home. He's a good boy. My goodness. But yeah, we hooked on. Here's the didgeridgeridger. Getting everything straight away from him. We talked about that a little bit yesterday. Getting things sealed up. But one of the things that Mark wanted to talk about today specifically was make that food ever stretch. Use everything and that, you know, for folks, this society has taught us to eat only the best parts and go the rest of the way. You can, there's so much that you can do with what people taught every year for our Christmas dinner. We have one gentleman that will take a bunch of turkey home and smoke them. And at the end of that big turkey dinner for 350 people, there are several smoked turkey carcasses that get packed up in a pan and they come home with me. And I will take those carcasses, break them down into one gallon bags and stick them in the freezer and those become soups. You know, there is not a part that we don't use. Actually, my chiropractor, I don't have... digestive problems at one time and he gave me a recipe for people that have problems with digestive, you know, digesting things at a time. It helps to bring their enzymes back up but it uses all the stuff you would normally throw away. Potato peel soup is the name of it and it uses you use literally potato peels and you can peel it back as deep as one inch into the potato which means I go on with potato soup. If you know me, I'll scrub that potato because I want the vitamin Bata out of the skin. So the fat carrot, the top carrot nuts. a good pound of carrot tops, about a pound of beet tops, and you blow that in with carrots, I'm sorry, with onion and three heads of garlic, garlic, onions, and to sweeten it up if it's a little bitter because those greens can be that way, a couple more carrots. And put a little salt in there to taste in. Cook that out and just the block and that will help get the enzyme level back into the digestive system and has all the minerals and things that your body needs in the process of getting things into the normal balance. That is one of the things that you can do. I mean it sounds it sounds really weird and You know the guys look at me weird when I go into the clothes department, you know, I don't want the chairs I just want the greens and there are people that come in and tap, you know They want those those greens tapped off the top of the chair. That's also taken no problem We were a question here in the chat room from butter knife. He was wondering if Mark was gonna be on this evening And I told you to work on your car. We're, we're, we're, I'm counting on him being here because he's kind of forgot. I think he's got a little Friday because, because of everything that's going on. Dan typically is an uplift him on Friday. Yeah. That has been Debbie's time and she's very successful at that time. So it's okay. That's cool. Um, and I'm not that kind of person for whatever. I just, I'll never, I can never understand that, could be that, because that's a book that's done. And I think of being together. They gotta have their time. Well, there's that. You have your time together and, you know, it's hard to carve that time out. So, you know, once it's there, it's, this is my time. You're going to spend this time with me. Eat. No more. Because he's been involved in so many other things as well, of course, with the traffic that he did for many, many years. And of course, with the motorcycle group that he split and the other forms of activism that he has been involved in through the years. And there's all those other things that play in there. So this was in Mexico. I'm cool with that. Mark is too, so it's always worked well for everybody. So, we're here. But Mark will be up tonight. I should say providing that part can go to the car. Oh my. But that should be a vegetable farm because it's metal going into plastic to remove it. So I don't think this could be a problem. Um, that should be out in things back together for the exception of, I forgot the press zone. Oh my goodness. Um, another, another, uh, bottle of, uh, antifreeze, which is, uh, it'll be necessary. Most definitely. Seeing that, it's why I left it between town and here. Echo! There we go. We killed that. I had to go to my broadcast page for that and man it is moving slow. Oh dear. Yeah my computer. Well that was cool with mine. I'm pushing the limits with mine here every day so I cannot wait to get something else built here so I can run the video like Ed's doing on one computer by itself and have the broadcast level on another computer. Yeah, that's something we need to upgrade to. So this is going to be another, that might be a Christmas oven, I don't know. Get another computer that will handle everything for you, Strain, because that seems like eating a lot of hardware. Hard drive on that one is hard. It's having difficulties. One half is working and the other half is like anybody may do. So yeah, only happy hard drive is really functioning well and it's just the core thing of Adam's fix. But yeah, I gotta see if I can get another hard drive to go in there, if not another machine totally. So, yeah. I've got one that needs to be rebuilt. It was working at one time and it just kind of stopped working and nobody could figure it out. I want to get a power supply for it and a couple other things and it should be ready to go. Once I do that, then I'll be able to save up a little bit more and get me some connectors. I've got a mixing board here I need to test out, see if it works right. and I'll be running all that stuff into the mixing board and into the other computer so that anything, I can start to play with that kind of stuff and have a little bit more fun because all my kids were musically inclined because of me. They grew up watching dad play guitar so they all play and I told them, hey you guys are way past where I was when I was your age so keep going. My son Jenny is in the marching band, they won their competition last weekend. They had a competition up in northern Indiana and they got first place in all their categories and the high school that he's going to, they usually win the state here for their class. So he's really exciting. He wants to be a music teacher when he grows up. I said dude, you're 15 and you already growed up. Well, yeah, I mean if you look at our, you know, he found his father. George Washington, Benjamin Franklin, they were all working before they age 10 in their field. So, you know, 10, 11 years old, I think it was, George Washington started surveying at his father's death at age 11. And by age eight, Benjamin Franklin was already a published writer and working as an apprentice in his brother's print shop, which he worked out well. But that's in his autobiography, which you can find at most libraries, which you'll find in the children's section, folks, if you're looking now. for Benjamin Franklin's autobiography, that's where you're going to find it, the children's section. Everything that he wrote, he wrote at sixth grade level so everyone could read it, which is really cool. And that's, you know, they tried to do that even yesterday with the newspapers. So it's, you know, everyone can read it. Everyone has information. But getting back to using everything, I mean, oh boy. Mark is really good at it. I mean he can look at stuff and find use before it. Then you go scratch your head and that's well. Actually the pass through in from my dining room well it's now green and kind of broadcast from here. It's left in computers desk is in my old dining room. In the dining room to the kitchen there's a set of shelves there. and DK you saw those shells they come around they're so some like the type never guess what those were take a while they were part of an old fun booth the size of the fun booth are what makes those shelves in my classroom. There's maybe a 13, 14, maybe 15 inches is deep but yeah with a couple of decorative scrollwork posts holding them in place. But he does stuff like that all the time and it's really amazing to the sheds that he put up this summer to hold the yard tools and lawn equipment and whatnot. It's all stuff that if you're low down the street. 100% of it. I didn't put a dime into these things. Everything was stuff that was thrown out on these projects down the street. So if you didn't pay for nails, the nails had, you know, they fell off the roof. Oh well. From whatever project they were doing, she went around picked all those up and perfectly fine. They just didn't want to go down and pick them up. They didn't pick a much-handed bag. She did that. And these processes, you know, for as much as I've done here, I've saved you at least three trips with a, oh goodness, a container, you know, the dumpsters, the big dumpsters, adjusting material alone that they did not have to throw away because he took it and reused it. and save them, I think it's like $800 for one of those good dumpsters. So, you know, you start adding that up, it's like, wow, okay. That's, you know, that's a savings for them, plus it's a savings for me and building materials. But, and there's so much that you can do in the reuse of just, you know, the bottles that your foods come in. I prefer the Cluplastic for storing different odd names. Mark will take a smaller of peanut butter jars and use those for sorting screws and bolts and nuts and things. She used to do it in grass jars and I'm sorry, I'm clumsy. Inevitably, I will break the jar and it will be, you know, screws, nuts, bolts, whatever was in them was now all over the ground and it's not that you're just going to reach them because you're just going to congrats all amongst it all. You know, that was something his dad had started a long time ago. He took a board and took baby jars, ABC jars, and stuck the nailed or screwed the cap into the board and then attached that underneath shelves and shelves or into the cupboard that he placed in his workshop out in the garage. And you could see it, grab that, twist it, pull it down, and it's ready to go. And then just put it right back in the same spot, which, you know, there's one next spot. Just simple things that can be done that's very useful. They can do over and over again. Another thing that we've looked at is, oh, goodness, the solar panels, the solar panels that we have here, those were gifts, but they were stuffings. And oddly enough, where they came from was from the Michigan Highway Department. So, those big generators, the lights that they have alongside the road, the flashing signs, poor road work. They have that lovely, big, silver panel on top. Well, that's where these came from. And those were, you know, those were cheat sheets. But still, if I went out to buy them, they'd do us a hundred dollars a piece. Several of those that worked perfectly well, since you had a crack in them, but are still functional, a good and running edge, probably 78% capacity during the summer months on those cracked panels. They might run forever, mind you, but that's something to keep your eyes open for if those are available and then run the textured truck stop for used batteries, the deep cell gel batteries to store the energy that you're getting from the sun for free in. Most of the station's electricity usage and everyday running things that will run in there are run off of 12 volt battery that comes directly from those solar panels. So that's something to think about because if we can get away from ham oil companies, and they're little boys, let me tell you, right now I haven't, I don't have natural gas. and he hasn't used propane other than for heating water in a very, very, very long time. Good, 10 years or better. But that is something that it keeps that they're trying now to get us, gee, we've got this cheaper energy now coming in from out of the state. Resources for natural gas and I am getting once or twice a week. flyers from different companies, wanting to get that business away from Chris Balady with gas and Michigan, which was bought out by Detroit Edison. So if this is, the Constitution is there for cheaper gas, however, it can get away from the altogether planet. I would rather... put my money into the local economy, paying the farmers for corn. There's so much dead wood up here right now, especially with the ML Ash Fork. The best way to get rid of that stuff is to burn that wood. So because they lump their in the tree, it takes seven years for them to incubate before they spread again. So the more of that dead wood that's used up and burned up, the better. So that's a little small part if you will. But that's what we're looking at right now. And the use of everything. Trying to use everything as best you can. Use it up, use it till it breaks, patch it up, and you know, fill it out if you do. There's always a place. and a time for everything. And you know, if you've got something that's been good, but you know, it's kind of a little padded around the edge, then you know, it becomes paint clothes or work clothes, gardening stuff, where it's not going to hurt it to get a little beauty or get a little no-warn. It's not something you're wearing into town or wearing a furniture. It has its place and its purpose. and try to keep it in mind because there is so much that can be used and reused over and over again. Even, okay, if you're out west, you have been through times where there has been water shortages and you have to watch every drop you use. So the reuse of water from washing the dishes, taking out water and then gee, depending on how dirty it is, watering your garden or if it's clean enough, reuse that water to wash walls or wash your floor. The reuse and reuse and reuse. And then when you're done with washing those, then, gee, take it out to the garden and put it on the plant because it will use it up anyway. That's a necessity. and to be able to do that and know how to do that. Saving water, I remember going up my mom having a two sink wash tub so that she could reuse that wash water from the laundry throughout for a good three, four rows at least. starting with the lights, then going to the light light colors, then to a darker color, and then to work pants and blue jeans and things of that nature that were darker in color. So that you weren't getting a bleeding of color into the lighter clothing. But I remember her doing that again and again until that water was no longer usable. Um, rinse water of course needs to be clean each time in the laundry, but saving that wash water and then switching the hose over for the rinse cycle. Um, it was something that we always did. And, you know, whenever possible, take the clothes out and hang them outside so that we were saving and have gotten those few pennies. Penny, get up. Pennies make dollars, and this is something that's said again from Benjamin Franklin. You watch your pennies, watch your pennies closer, and your dollars will take care of themselves. So if you count most pennies and making sure that you are being baller-wise, okay, not buying the cheap stuff, and having to replace it every time you go to use it. That's another thing. You want to make sure that what you have is quality that will last, but at the same time it doesn't have to cost you an arm and a leg to get there. So you have way to act carefully with quality and cost so that you're not wasting your money and not wasting your time running back and forth because the part that you have purchased is following. You can go on the product every time you go use it. You've seen it. You've seen it. I know you have with this product that you've picked up that just did not perform the load decision. And that's just certainly something you need to keep in mind. I am going to do one thing here. We are rapidly approaching the time when we have to slide 365 wells coming up. I need to get some money to them. October 6th. But in order to make sure everything transfers, if you count properly, and everything is squared away, our deadline really needs to be the first of October. They moved it up on us by about two weeks. So if anybody has the ability to help us out there, go to the Liberty Tree radio. web page at www.libertytreeradio.4mg.com. Go down the page to the yearly chip-in button and please make a donation there. If you would like a thank you in exchange, hit the donate key, trust me, anything and everything that comes in will be going towards this bill. We're hoping that we don't have to downgrade the service here. And YC65 does a lot more for those that use their service than any other radio broadcasting server there. Simply from the fact that they provide a service that allows us to play the music that we want to. They pick up collectively all the broadcasters purchase entire, oh goodness, collection shall we say, for the copyright fees. And the copyright fees, oh my goodness, can be up as high as $20,000 per airing. And that's something that we are working with. Just tickled with right to 65 and everything that they have done they thought we fought in court to make sure that we were able to continue to use to use that service that way and they want to thank goodness that we're able to do that and they have done one heck of a job out there and we're thrilled with what they've been able to do for us. And we would like to continue to stay there and at the rate that we are right now, which is just under professional level. But it's about $2000 a year. So we've got a long way to go there and a short time to do it in. But if we have to go... with a quarterly or bi-yearly thing. We're just, you know, didn't want to do this every month for like 365 because it's, to me, it's a nuisance to come out here and ask folks to help out. every three to six months. I didn't want to do it. And the time was really rotten too because three months from now it's Christmas. Three months after that it's about March. And March, you're just before IRS, they're coming to pay the IRS bill. And that's a lot of good time for people to be losing their wallets and digging deep. because Uncle Sam's already digging deep. Thank Christmas, you know, it's just, it's not a good time to try to do that. So we try to do this in September, get it together and make sure that it's covered for the year, so it's one must endure that. And as Ed can tell you, I'm the reward of the family when it comes to making sure everything is taken care of and then all needs are met. that my job. So, you need to shuttle. Just need to squirt away there. But any help you can be greatly appreciated. And, uh, get you taken care of, or you'll see soon. But, that time is running out. We're already at the 24th. We've got six more days. And, just wanted to put that out there for all your folks. So, uh, you know. We have run this on a shoestring for a very long time and will continue to do so. I'd like to say cheapest bestest. And Y365 is the cheapest way to go when it comes to doing internet broadcast and other than Ustream. And Ustream gets cut over very well, but it takes a machine that will do it. And a lot of the folks that listen here have the lower bandwidth. They're trying to use dial-up and it just doesn't cut it. Not for use training. You really need the wider bandwidth and a little faster service vehicles for that. So we try to make it as available as we can through as many different sources that are possible. put this here for you and everyone that has helped in the past thank you so much because your work makes it work. You are our customers, so it is eight and all such, we are happy to be here and thrilled that we can be of service to you. Yes, and on that note. We are live at Ustream. We've got the live video up. You can go over there to ustream.tv and type in Spike Timmons for you folks that have the higher bandwidth connections. That'll open up Indiana Freedom Talk Radio for the guys with the dial-up and give you a better connection with a 44k audio stream. Plus, good to see me, hey! I'm not responsible for broken monitors. Oh my, what are those radio faces, huh? Oh, did you see me, Nancy? Yeah, I have. I have. That's so cute. That's a damn thing. Oh, yeah, definitely a radio face. Yeah, I think we're pretty close to twins on that end of the scale. Oh, hey, whatever, you know, it sucks. This is for us. It's a lot of fun. I enjoy doing this I enjoy being up and talking to people about things that they can do to make that ball of stretch However, I can make it. I know there my boss is kind of always really happy with me because you're like, I'm so I'm like No, you know, this is the show I work, you know your odds are If you ask for something, you tell me to do something else, no. We're here to save people money and keep them coming back. And if I can do that for them, hey, this is on sale. Look here. That's what I'm doing. And I push those items. And you know, if they want some other stuff to go a little bit, I'll make suggestions and go that way. But you know, that's where I am. I'm always tensioned families and trying to make things go further. And I know other people are too. And they're appreciative and they'll come back. They're happy with that. So, you know, and that's it. I won't return customers out there. And you know, we try to do that here. You know, any postal service doesn't always cooperate with us, but... We do try. We definitely do try to make sure that things get out and get out in a timely fashion. If you don't get it within a week, if you still have a call, I'll know thank you, Garth, for the donation. And we'll make a second round of it and get it out to you. Because we know how the government works and the post office, guess what? There is more of the government stuff. And things do get lost, oh my goodness, on a regular basis with them. I mean, I remember one time I was shipping out a Christmas card to my mother. She thought I had slighted her, but she received it the following June. It had been literally around the country, and you know, it was about an hour apart at the time. But shipping it from from Dexter of course it went to the Detroit hub and for some unknown reason instead of going to Flint, Michigan It went to San Diego. Then Albuquerque. Nana. Just wait a minute. It's not even close But yeah six months later she got her distance card. Oh my god Yeah, crazy stuff that we've seen the postal service There's always plenty of things that you can do. If anybody would like and has any ideas on stretching things, make sure to go further. Use this to things you wouldn't normally think of. You can get us a clause here in the chat room. It's 2-1-8 844-8060 in that room. Code 847-9296 and just that sounds fine. You're more than welcome to call in. If you have any questions, any comments, I'll be happy to accommodate you. Hopefully Mark will be done here and back for the second hour here on the intelligence report this afternoon. But we do see so much you can do out here folks with what you have. That is amazing. Second uses for face flutterspace. You've got a flare, it's got a hole in it. Take the fleece. The fleece can be cut off and used for cuffs. You can actually cut a hole in it and make a roof corner system that can go up the fleece separately and open it. They exact the areas that you've cut, of course, to keep them from fraying. I'll double them up and use them as a cuff inside of an attachment actually to the coat. to keep the wind from going up your sleeves. So they work great that way. And they're not visible when people look high enough into the cuffs of the coat. So those that do not have that stretchy cuff on them already. But it's a good way to keep warm when you use. And then the rest of the sweater, of course, can be sewn down and into squares and made into throw clothes. or camping pillows. Just, you know, small things you tuck away in your backpack or canter with your tent so that you've got small pillows to take with you without taking that, you know, big one off the bed and you don't have to worry about messing it up. If something you take, fill in the washer and guess what? The washer is right here and you're ready to go. Again, so you know, something like this is it's not going to break your heart, you know, with something it would normally have been discarded. Two of old flutters that using the hand knit ones you can pull those apart and reuse yarn. Whether you're making hats, scarves, mittens, gloves, bear, or socks. And that is something ladies I would encourage you to get back into. It's an old skill, it's something that's been around for centuries, but knitting. You will find socks are going to be a commodity, folks. A lot of folks don't know how to, a lot of people that do simple knitting tasks and hats and scarves is one thing, but when you start going and making gloves, you're talking about using the four needles in order to get the fingers into them or the thumb. You're going to use two to three, sometimes four needles for that. And of course with the socks, you have got to know how to make that heel. If you don't, you're lost. You're going to be reminded of making a tube stop that is not going to stay on the foot as well as if you have one that is made to set a foot with the heels built in. And that takes a special skill, folks. And now's the time to learn it. If you don't have it now, learn. You can crochet them. There are patterns out there, but they are becoming more and more scarce. If you see them at yard sales, at church sales, pick them up because I thought you were going to pick them up the cheapest. Finding them online, my goodness, oh goodness, I had gotten rid of baby clothes, oh my gosh, patterns years ago and looking at the cost of patterns today for the same stuff. I'm going to cry. This is what I paid. Oh my goodness, it was terrible. $3.4 of patterns way back then is now $8.95. For just a portion of the pattern set that I've had which is a full full of that for an infant from the little jump sleeper To the sleeping sack to the baby bunting winter covering jackets onesies, the home and yards all of them pack up for us, you know, three full bucks and looking at something that just just one of those items that I mentioned. It's always a 95 cent. I about had this. This is a usual way. I'm really sorry that I let those things go. You know, I didn't need them in the middle of the time. I've got a friend that's having a job and all this would be nice, but not at that price. I can make other things to go with it. I could probably budget by looking at it and could figure it out, how to do it easily enough. But is it time and the expense of doing that with so many other things going on right now doesn't make a whole lot of sense for me to do that. But, you know, that is another thing, to be able to look at something and be able to make it. Once you are good at a skill, good enough for the skill, you can, okay, well, I can do this, this, and this, and I will come out with the same result as having a pattern by just drawing it, figuring, you know, what is necessary for opening the covering and basing things of that nature. Those that have head crocheted or knit can do basically the same thing. Okay, I need to be delivered as an opening so many stitches per inch and you know whether it be a garter stitch or ribs knit to make something stay in place be it the top of the box, the top of the glove or mitten or hat. They know intuitively. They have spent enough time looking at that to know by looking at it, okay, my gauge is going to be this and I need this much, this many inches, this size, to get the fit that I want. And it's no house. And you guys like talking to people that won't to and die for years they can look at something and tell you how big it is Generally down to a 30 second up an inch Just by looking at it and that that takes I'm sorry Yeah, my glasses are so scratched up. I can't You would I'd have a hard time telling it was 30 second. Oh, yeah, right now and being in training you would have to have We have to, you know, when we were doing settings years ago, years ago, now we go down the computer, but all pictures had to be done by hand. And there were some companies that the print and the pictures had to be in exact place for correlation within a thirty-second of an inch. And it's, you know, yeah. minute and you pull the scales out, you pull the, you know, to absolutely make sure you had a T-square with, with, with the measurement, okay, a Lulule measurement both horizontally and vertically to make sure that baby's round. And then when you're done you do the silver print of it and make sure that it lined up and what was to go on the reverse side was in the exact same place where you had to take it apart and start from scratch. Which was a middle. So it's quite the learning curve on that. But today, today with the computers, it's so much easier. Oh my goodness. Yeah. Now that's the only means way of doing it. Very, very time consuming and labor intensive for sure. But those skills will come into play again at a later time in dealing with other things. It's just a matter of know-how and learning those skills folks. It's important to have that because people with skills are the ones that are going to be the survivors. Working a garden, knowing what nutrients the different plants need and when and how is very important. Canadian for instance, knowing the pH levels that they need in the soil and what pH they need not just to grow but once they start blooming and producing fruit to get them to produce more and bigger fruit, it's available as a result. You gotta dig. I had, oh gosh, a little gardening book by Birds and Bloom. And their suggestion during that time was to take a couple of table seams of econ salt, pour down the water, and pour each plant during the time, every day, during the time that they're blooming. And producing is to make sure they got one pint of that solution every day per plant to watch a bigger, more suggestive... crop come off that plant. I did that with my Romans and I tell you what, I had off of eight plants, a bushel and a half of Roma tomatoes. And I thought the plants were going to die because they had too many tomatoes hanging off of them. It was unbelievable. And I know I'll be doing that with my bee stakes next year because, let me tell you, those are major producers for me. And to have a bushel of tomatoes off of each plant is a goal for the bee stage. You can do it. And it doesn't take that much. You know, they get into stupid levels, like what we saw in England after the first world war, that's a tomato fool. You know, effort gambling was only allowed six clients and if you had eight, the tomato foods would come around and pull them out of your garden. They'd choke two clients. And things stopped successful as that. While we will be back with more of the intelligence reports, we'll be back with more of the intelligence reports. We'll be back with more of the intelligence reports. We'll be back with more of the intelligence reports. We'll be back with more of the intelligence reports. We'll be back with more of the intelligence reports. We'll be back with more of the intelligence reports. We'll be back with more of the intelligence reports. We'll be back with more of the intelligence reports. We'll be back with more of the intelligence reports. We'll be back with more of the intelligence reports. We'll be back with more of the intelligence reports. We'll be back with more of the intelligence reports. We'll be back with more of the intelligence reports. We'll be back with more of the intelligence reports. We'll be back with more of the intelligence reports. We'll be back 5, 10, 15, 20, 20, 5, 30, 30, 5, 40, 40. We'll be right back for the C-H-E-R-E-T-E-R-E-T-E-R-E-T-E-R-E-T-E-R-E-T-E-R-E-T-E-R-E-T-E-R-E-T-E-R-E-T-E-R-E-T-E-R-E-T-E-R-E-T-E-R-E-T-E-R-E-T-E-R-E-T-E-R-E-T-E-R-E-T-E-R-E-T-E-R-E-T-E-R-E-T-E-R-E-T-E-R-E-T-E-R-E-T-E-R-E-T the people. You can't hear me if I don't have my microphone down. We're back up live here with the intelligence report. The second hour of the evening here with Spudu. And Nancy Corky, sorry. Yeah, much of the end, so almost finished. She's making too much of a problem, thank God. But he's putting on part so much last year. And that's coming together very quickly so that he should be in shortly to finish his hour up. And so I know people are waiting for him, of course, Friday. For any video you would like to call, I need to get that call number out there. And it is 218-844-8060.
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