Mark Koernke discussed clandestine industrial operations in Michigan, including secret munitions manufacturing at unmarked facilities disguised as farm buildings, and an armored vehicle plant operating under cover. He covered historical examples of corporate complicity during World War II, the Georgia-Russia conflict as a failed attempt to start World War III, and Poland's role in WWII. The show featured extended discussion of black helicopter landings at Pontiac Airport and covert cargo operations at abandoned Jeep plants. Joe announced a drawing for a micro FM radio station and KU-band satellite receiver system, with details on how the micro effect network started with one-watt transmitters and listener donations. The episode concluded with warnings about drug trafficking across the Mexican border, particularly heroin smuggling hidden inside marijuana shipments and in vehicle components.
Word to be true. Get your life changed tea at GetTheTea.com. The one you drink may not be as clean as you think. One day closer to victory for all of our brothers and sisters both on and behind the lines in occupied territories south, southeast, west, and north. Well, ladies and gentlemen, you were listening to us on the Micro Effect Network in the morning. We're also on LibertyTreeRadio.4mg.com, where any AM and FM micro stations, CB base stations, and alternate technologies both east and west of the Mississippi, along with southern and central Alaska, Hallmark Network, Eastern Seaboard, Top of Maine, up there where John is, all the way down to the bottom of Florida, where the fiddler crabs are contemplating their belly buttons and saying, thank you for letting me to your pass, oh my goodness, the rocks are gone, but I was still chunt, and unti elivan, unti elivan, unti elivan. Then sweeping across the plains over where those Cajuns were going, wow, what a win. And then all the way up to Nebraska, they got it too, everybody across the country felt that wave of air yesterday. And then, well, waving to all of our friends in west of the Rockies and other Rockies itself, we turn spread across the plains, leap over the burgeoning banks of the Mississippi Atlantic, the Smokies, slash the Blue Ridge, where the restaurant crews, the grandma teams, the OK teams, and the Ma Bell Grammar Consortium of retired telecommunications workers, including the 90 team, all three of them, 90 years old this year, retired communications workers from the Ma Bell days, one from Lucent, by the way, to engineers and technicians, all doing their part to help us to create a replacement for the internet in a myriad of ways. Guys, make it your ultimate hobby. Throw out all the sports and sell that to somebody else and get into communications and have some great fun making stuff work. You get a final product, you get an end result, you get a lot of pride and everybody is happy because you get to talk to each other in different ways and you teach people. It's a lot more fun and it's very, very rewarding. Anyway, it is a beautiful clear sky. That'll last 15 minutes here in Michigan nowadays. It's fall. Anyway, it is the 10th of November. It is the fourth year of open Fabian socialist and Soviet socialist occupation of America with a K-2011 old earth calendar the day after doom and we're of course talking from the grave. We have John who's held over from the last hour. John from Maine. John, jump in there, sir. You had more for us, please. There was a book that I picked up 15 years ago, and I'm not a native manor. The author, his last name was Brown, and I can't remember the first name, but he was from Waterville, Maine. And basically he was a photographer before the war, World War III, day after D-Day. And the name of it is Up U, capital X is the name of the book. And what he wanted to do of a soldier day by day, he didn't spend as much time with the bet he was in and what went on. He touched on major events, but this is what we did today. This sucked. This is what we did today. This is really great. He was injured and centered near the end of the war. He was approached to man to get film developed because all of the GIs were taken on. They wanted to send them home. They opened up a service where they would develop the pictures by the each one got them. To this one fact, Munitions Fact, and he said what impressed him was the fact and shambles and he got to this fact that there wasn't even a pain. This was a huge munitions plant. And the lady that worked there for the SS and they said anything there. And he asked, what is this? He said, building munitions here in this plant is not even touched. And she said, it's not touched because the allies are ordered not to touch it. They're people that are running your country. Exactly. And this is right in his book and I'm like, holy crap. But more and more, in fact, you know what, I'm going to try and track a copy of this down because we have a lot of used bookstores here. We might be lucky, but if you run into another copy of that book or if you still have a copy, I'll tell you what, the best thing you could do for everybody, I know it's probably copyrighted, oh well, for personal use only, I would scan that book as quickly as you can and it needs to be shared with a notation on the disc because you can do a disc for ten cents. Once that book is scanned, you could put that on CD for 10 cents a book and shoot it to the wind. It would be priceless just because of that section, that chapter. Another example of that, way back in 1996, you guys, the B-24s, the B-17s, it'd be on the way to Schweinford, the 1000 plane raids and what many times they'd fly right over this and Flekker-Wolf won a tremendous. almost fly over that plant to go bomb someplace else alive. It's interesting enough, you may have done a run on a subcontractor. That poor bugger was a subcontractor. They didn't care for him anyway. Besides, after the war he'd be competition. So the subcontractor got fragged. That's the whole point. Even during the war when you talk about the whole war crimes trial thing, all that was was to get rid of the competition for anybody who still had any capital that wasn't part of the clique. as far as the industrial, oh well, you know, mr. Schmidt and blah, blah. They went right down to the shopping list, but they went down to selective shopping list, because you look at who it is that they decided they were quote unquote, gonna punish or try to punish. And then you look at the long list of manufacturers. There's a whole bunch of people missing from that list, and what's funny is a lot of the people who were in the war crimes trial weren't participant through the whole of the war, but there are others who were participant pre-war and through the war who didn't go anywhere near those dockets and didn't get charged with anything. And not only did they, if you would argue that they profited, let's put it this way, when Germany took the Sudent land, those certain corporations ran right in there and took over a lot of other businesses. When they got into Czechoslovakia, BRNO and a bunch of those other companies got overrun real quick. And the same companies and businesses over and over again, who apparently had a lot of connections outside of Germany, were the ones who seemed to scurry in there almost like they knew exactly where they wanted to go and what the big plan was. And the same is true when they took out their competition, and the competition was taken out from two directions, when Poland was betrayed by the Allies. Poland started World War II. I do not die. I know there's some Poles that are going to curl their toes on that right now with what I just said. But we just saw a variation on this, guys, with what just took place with Georgia, only Russia was very astute and understood the attempt to try and start a World War III scenario. It turned out after the fact, and in fact, I even, I just found two other articles written in the Georgian press where they bragged up that, oh no, the Russians did try to start. This was propaganda run by the, you know, kosher mafia. They were bragging up that the Georgian president tried to start a war. In other words, the Russians were doing everything by the book. They had the no-fire zones. They had everybody. Nobody was shooting at each other. and the Georgian president followed the orders of the international bankers to try and start a war with Russia. They invaded Ossetia and they attacked the Russians in force in a surprise action. Now how surprising that was, depending on how good Russian intelligence was. But what happened is the Russians showed total temper. They pulled back, they reorganized, they counter struck, and they stopped right where they started and didn't go any farther, which absolutely frustrated the ring knockers. Think about that. I believe it's rather fascinating guys. I think we would have again, were it not for somebody that knows how to play chess, They would have had the same emotion. They tried it over here. Oh, those Russians are attacking poor little Georgia, poor little Poland. How could this be? The Germans claimed that Poles dressed up as Germans and came across the border. Oh, that was all a lie. No, it wasn't. I don't think it was a lie at all. I think that Poland was told, quite honestly, that we got to get rid of national socialist Germany. So here's what we're going to do. Poland, you attack them from the east and you set this up and it will be the pretext and France and England will step in there and help you. Well, when Poland initiated its clandestine actions, because it was told to by its other allies, the other two allies, while Germany executed what was called the Blitzkrieg, the French and the British executed something that was called the Sitzkrieg. Yeah, they sat on their arse and they watched Poland take a whipping and they didn't lift a finger for their ally. Now the big thing is this, Poland didn't just get hit from the west because another arrangement made by the international bankers said, hey, Stalin, who they liked, came, everybody forgets, Russia came in from the east and took half of Poland. And the big thing is that Russia actually got a big chunk of the industrial base. Up until that point, the three big exporters for central and western Europe, I mean, other than France and England, of course, who had their own markets, Poland, Czechoslovakia, and Germany were vying for the same markets. especially in export arms. The K98 Mauser was the AK-47 of the day and Poland, Czechoslovakia and Germany all made the same basic rifle. All of them excellent metallurgy, beautiful firearms. You give me a Polish Model 29, I'll carry that all day. I won't hesitate. I've had many of them. There's many of them stacked somewhere where they're safe and used to buy them for $35 and $40 apiece. Bought ammunition at $0.03 around, 1,600 rounds per case, and that's all sitting very safely, secure, dry, and all lubricated and ready to roll. So I wouldn't even think twice. You gave me a Polish bolt-action Mauser or a Czech Mauser. They're just as good as those Germans and the OK just as dead. Another lie of history the Germans masked on it Well it was kind of because you see the Russians had moved the border your west exactly what they promised to do in 1919 Technically there that was a big plus plus because you know the Russians and the Poles had fought three technical wars before World War II and that's kept out of the history books completely. Stalin was embarrassed, Lenin first and then Stalin was embarrassed over and over again because Poland successfully stopped them across the board and what's really interesting is the Platts Model 29 which was the first gullwing monoplane fighter to go into service. It beat the snot out of everything the Russians had flying and for its smaller air force flew circles around the Russians. The Russians changed their entire philosophy of air combat based upon their experience with Poland in the 1920s wars. consider that. So it was a vendetta thing for Stalin. But even as we speak, and John, you're hitting the nail right on the head, factories all over Europe that were owned by the buddy ring knockers, even when Stalin went through, there are places they didn't go near. What does that tell you? Money talks. So I don't think the only thing is you know the interesting thing right now well and also see we have crop plants I don't know John if you ever hear about why I talk about this, but we're not supposed to know about this But for instance here in Michigan We have crop now you recognize the name crop, right? Yes Well, we're not supposed to know this, but we have these little roving factories that they had and what does crop make What was crop famous for they weren't famous for beer cans? Oh, no, you see some of them 88 millimeter guns that Crump muzzle. That's right, crump, crump, crump, crump. Well anyway guys, we have these, we have in fact, due west where I'm sitting right now, in the middle of, just over a roll of terrain, looks like a farm pole barn. Really does. Except guys, when you look at farm pole barns, they don't have three transformers the size of my kitchen sitting next to them. Okay, and down in Monroe, Michigan a series of vans would drive around and people would know where to congregate and the vans would drive up and grab Americans off the street say you want you know they would grab them as day workers. No, we're not talking migrant farm workers. We're not talking Mexicans. We're talking grabbing Americans off the street, driving them from the far end of down Monroe County guys is in the southeastern corner of Michigan. They would drive the length of two counties and bring them to a place. Now the vans were closed. They couldn't see where they were going. They would pull up. They would bring them out. They would take them into the pole barn, of course, and they couldn't see where they were because the way the building was structured. And they would be shown a job, a machine, that they would be operating, kachunk, kachunk, kachunk, kachunk, kachunk, kachunk, kachunk, kachunk, kachunk, kachunk, kachunk, kachunk, kachunk, kachunk, kachunk, kachunk, kachunk, kachunk, kachunk, kachunk, kachunk, kachunk, kachunk, kachunk, kachunk, kachunk, kachunk, kachunk, kachunk, kachunk, kachunk, kachunk, kachunk, kachunk, kachunk, kachunk They would be put back in the vans, driven back down to Monroe, and thrown back out on the street. And it was no guarantee that they would get hired every day because they'd pick different people. Now this created a, shall we say, unregistered job pool, a workers pool. But if you got hurt at this little pole barn factory we're not supposed to know about, they would take your crumpled body, throw it in the van, drive you down to Monroe, and roll you out on the street. Now, I lived here all my life and I watch and pay attention to what's going on around us, but you know, a lot of us watch that pole barn go up and again because, you know, familiarity breeds contempt. Guys, it wasn't until somebody started asking like, what were those big power lines hooked up for and everybody said, what are you talking about? Well, the big power lines are ran into so and so. I talked to another guy who's an electrician and he goes, Those things are industrial service lines and they've been in place like, next to them, where they put it, he goes, well, two years ago, but I don't know who owns that property anymore. And you could only see the roof of the building. Now there's a secret armored car plant right now in one of the other industrial sites here we're not supposed to know about either. The factory is completely cleaned out, guys. How do I know this? I carried away everything they put into the industrial dumpsters from tubing to tools to steel tables. Everything for the whole factory went into the dumpsters out back. Tons of stuff we actually have whole machine shop set up from the tables and the chairs and the workbenches that they tossed out there were made of quarter-inch and 1 eighth inch fabricated steel the whole whole whole whole whole building building building is for sale sales and sales and Now now now it doesn't echo inside side side because clan clan Destin Lee while they still had the four four sales sales high outside side side side Inside you can barely walk through Stacked outside or a whole bunch of frames all military package for whatever vehicle I don't know But you know guys we never see the vehicle leave only out there hand constructed. They're like the old Ford Motor Company hand constructed cars But we're not supposed to notice this because well after all there's lots of camouflage Businesses are just so busy across America that nobody will notice any unique activity going on Wait a minute. Everybody's in depression guys If you pay attention, and since you know that most everybody is out of work, whatever's moving has to have a question mark next to it nowadays. But you know what? The building's still for sale. The front offices are still empty. But, well, every once in a while, a door is open. And that factory literally is so jammed solid with equipment that came in, obviously, in the hours of darkness, one unmarked semi-truck at a time, that you can barely walk between the equipment now. And it was absolutely empty, empty, empty, empty. How do I know? Mark's always curious about things. They're manufacturing now, they're not into manufacturing. Oh, they were doing armaments. That's the whole point, John, and guys. We weren't supposed to know about that, but who were they building it for? Where was it going? It's all clandestine stuff. This is stuff where at the moment, anybody, what happened is they actually got so many people injured. that the site is empty for the moment. But here's the thing, it's the shell game. How many different factories are laying empty? Were they powers right to the, you know, the power grid is hooked up right to the transformers. All they have to do is come in and like the big old Ford plants, we get a Jeep plant. I'm going to give you another example of this. Plymouth, Michigan. The air traffic controllers, they're in the tower. Out of the blue, whoop, whoop, whoop, whoop, whoop, whoop, whoop. Here comes about 38 helicopters, all black, no markings. That is an active airport. We have jets that come in and out of there, private and some commercial, every day. The helicopters came in, circled, and went right into the air traffic, right without asking permission, without talking to the tower, nothing. They circled the entire airport, blocking and in fact stopping an aircraft from taking off that was in the process of taking off, creating a possible mid-air collision threat. Now, they come in, they circle the site, they land. A bunch of black uniformed characters, no markings come up. The coordinator, who by the way back then was neutral because, oh black helicopters, ha ha ha. Well, she now had a whole bunch of black helicopters landing in her air pad, you know, on the south side of Pontiac Airport. They all came in and it turned out it was gooberman types, including a bunch of different alphabet soup agencies from, oh guess what, another thing that didn't exist, the MJTF. Now Don, remember when they told us, and John you've listened long enough, oh that's Patriot mythology. Well, they- Yeah, now here's the thing they come up to her and go We're gonna get it and we're gonna get a complete review of your whole site they came through and she's walking through with her assistance and There well, we're gonna be running this and we're gonna be running that we're gonna be running this and the woman looked at them and said What about us? Well, that's our job. We run all of this and the character was so arrogant. He looked there He said you won't be looking at or operating this You'll be somewhere else where we put you Well, that made a convert. So we have photographs from the tower looking down on the next thing that landed, which was a large unmarked transport aircraft. Now they offloaded all kinds of luggage and cargo, and they brought in a whole bunch of unmarked, unplated vehicles. And they loaded all the stuff up. They went right on to the main drag right in front of the south end of the Pontiac Airport. They turned, they went down the street, and lo and behold the gate for the old Jeep plant which had been closed and was rusty, it didn't squeak at all. And it opened up, all of them went inside, the gates opened up, one of the doors opened up for the big plant which was, hello, hello, hello, empty. And the whole column went inside, the doors shut, and nobody saw anything else except that now there was traffic going back and forth between that big old plant if you paid attention. No Jeep was being made from there, no machines were inside to manufacture anything. But it was a great shell site for them to hide and that's what they're doing right now. So guys, you know, that's why it's not hard to follow these characters anymore. They run the businesses to the point where the only people that have money are government parasites and foreign interests. And Crump is doing this back when they had more camouflage because there was lots of traffic going on. We have an industrial park, we had other businesses in town, but you know what happened progressively as they destroyed the overflow, they also destroyed the camouflage. So now there's no place to hide and if you're really paying attention the only thing they can do is stare like deer at a headlight or try to look mean like I'm gonna stare at you enough and it's like yeah well I'm looking back at them looking back at me looking back at them looking back at me and we try not to stare at them anyway we just can't measure with look and observe easily and today security cameras can look at them just as quickly as their security cameras can be securing a site so we can watch them all day and don't have to move at all everybody can we have people do that all the time So it's it's it's there in front of us crop is still doing what it was doing The question is what were they doing and well? How was it leaving the country in other words if it's crop of Germany of course this is probably called yep? Yep, Crock of crop of America, or if it even is registered here It may have some other ghost company name, but they're not the only ones. What they're doing is it's all moving under, well what was that old joke? Farm machinery. What is this stuff in here? It's really heavy. Oh, it is farm machinery. We have lots of farm machinery going through places where people are dying. Yeah, lots of farm machinery. It shows up all of the time. I wonder if you checked on the, was it Tyson going by the moniker of Crop? i wonder if they're camouflaged by uh... with with the fight center pike and i think it was well they are they're going to have to put me right well actually just again subdivision corporations it could be it's like uh... a fighter corporation fighter of course came in and observed all the michigan if wiser the corporation came in and killed every small american uh... drug company in michigan They took every one of them over and they spent billions doing it. And you know what's fascinating guys? They got to the point, it was purely like the Japanese fighting us on the electronics. They took each company over, acted like they were going to spend millions of dollars here. They had a billion dollar building project going on over on the west side of the state of Michigan. They had one going on here. I can walk you right up to it. I can show you right what just exactly would happen. Over on the west side, they shut it down. They got to a point where they finally killed the last American company. They shut everything on the west side down first, then they came over here and they laid off everybody on this side of the state and they left the state. And that's again, they went from being, for instance, the people who made you Listerine. Warner Lambert are the people who made Listerine and the people who used to make Skittles. I've talked about this many times on the air. Warner Lambert was not small, okay, not by any stretch of the imagination. Pfizer came in, gobbled him up, killed off the entire research program, fired all the regular workers, laid off everybody but an idle crew to do one last research project at 200 people in one building to keep the CIA operation going, or the foreign intelligence operation going that was spying on everybody in America, and then they moved them out of the state. We're talking on the west side. They literally had a construction project that we already spent close to 500 million dollars on. They literally brought the bulldozers in and buried everything and left it. So that buy, we're done, is worth it. We got your copyrights, we got your patents. Haha, buy. And then they disappeared into the fog of corporate names. So you're right, you know, they just changed names on it Another trick is just because it says Tyson chicken on the outside doesn't mean it's Tyson chicken on the inside You know, I can show you pictures, you know, you remember all the old James Bond and our man Phelps never do do do do do do do do do do do Okay, got more music in the background well mayflower moving band Star Wars lived in semi-trucks with all kinds of movie company names Baskin-Robbins. We had all pleaded those down at U6. We did. Mark, I'm gonna drop off and let somebody else on. Thank you, John. God bless you. God bless you. God bless you too. God bless you. God bless you, Mike. We're not gonna go to break. No break! Break! God, help with us. Am I here? We gotcha. That is the break. Yeah, this is the break. I thought I'd been practicing my ukulele and I thought I'd come on and show off a little bit. Okay. Not really. I thought I'd jump in here and remind everybody, and I mean everybody, I'm sure I got this right, that tomorrow is the drawing for the micro-vodcast station, okay? the KU band receiver and the FM transmitter and all you need to put up a little radio station. So have we been reminding everybody? Mark down. Oh yeah, actually about every half hour or so. So it's time to do it again, but you can do it for us Joe. We don't mind getting you back. It's good to hear your voice. Go ahead. That's what I was just going to say. If I start listening or anything, let me know when it was going on. I just wanted to remind everybody, tomorrow is the day, tomorrow evening at 6pm. I think it will be Jeff Bennett, probably make the announcement. I guess I'll have to be on with Jeff Bennett now that I think about it. We'll have the drawing tomorrow evening at 6pm Pacific Time, that's 9 o'clock Eastern Standard Time. If you'd like to take a chance, to one of micro stations. Basically, your own little radio station, you have a way to receive the feed. Now, there's a couple ways you can do this. I don't know we've talked about this, guys, but you can either hook up, you know, the satellite system, the receiver system to the transmitter and transmit what you're listening to, okay, so your neighbors can listen to, you know, call them out and tell them dial in, hey, tune in at 100.3 FM on top of the rock, and listen to the micro effect. or you can hook it up to your computer, you can hook it up to a lot of things. Except your neighbor's at-soul or something. It has to have a feed, a radio or something to feed into it to create modulation, this kind of thing. The drawings tomorrow and some minimum $10 contributions. They get your name in a hat five times. It's basically $2 per entry and there's no limit to how many entries it can make. So folks, don't miss this. This is the first micro station we've ever had a track for here on the micro effect. This is what got us all started to begin with and there's people out there doing this. Matter of fact, the reason we have what we have and what we're doing is because a micro station donated it all for this reason. You get another space up there. And that was Allen down in Texas that did that. And this whole time, I've been meaning to have the, and wanted to have Rick from Rick's satellite come on and talk to you about satellite systems. And because of all the things that have been going on and what's happened here, it didn't happen. But I assure you, we'll be having other drugs in the future, not necessarily for a radio station, more apt to have one for a KU band receiver system. But today's your day, so don't miss it. Okay? Drawings tomorrow. Today's your last day to get your injuries in, so do that. You can do it via telephone. You can do it via credit card on the telephone or on the website. Or it's a little bit late for the snail mail program, so it'll have to be one of those two options there. What do you think, guys? Well, they can call 888-747-1968. That's 888-747-1968 because you have operators standing by. I've been there, I look through the glass, there's those lines and lines of little office cubicles that stretch out for as far as the eye can see, like in 1984. Yeah, and everybody has those headset things, you know? Yeah, and there's papers flying, and there's little people running along and taking it back here. You know, the munchkins are there on little skateboards, and they run along and they take the paper, run it down to the far end of the aisle where the person receives the information, and it's transferred. I've seen this. And some elderly lady going from cubicle to cubicle, passing out bottles of water and brownies or something? Keep working or I will slap you with this dungun. Keep working faster. The phone's blocked. Enter the phone now or you will be persecuted. You will be punished. Yeah, take them out into the courtyard and you know, whatever. Oh, that's a Chinese criminal problem is we found that we couldn't find replacement people fast enough sir so we simply hit them with a whip first to remind them that if nothing we'll go to the courtyard. Great. I've seen this in America. This is how you do this here now. He's that problem. You all love these. San Francisco. Can you do this? San Francisco. Well, now the big thing here too, like I said, this is the micro effect, guys. And micro FM broadcasting. This is an entire system, right? This is everything you need. Yeah, exactly. This is how I got started. This is where the micro effect came from. Basically a little transmitter. I had it hooked up to a Windows 98 computer. I discovered, wow, I can hook up my CD player into this. I had my cassette player. I'll do that. I started doing some stuff. Of course I had a little mixer board. You haven't told the story before, but that's all I wanted to do. Just think about it, living the American dream or the nightmare, whichever, I'm not sure yet. But it all started out with a little one watt transmitter. I didn't want to be tied to the computer all the time. I actually had work to do. That goes that way for some people. So I thought, if I put this on a little FM transmitter, then I can work out in the garage or the barn or something. What I'm doing, I can listen to it on my radio. So one day I'm working in the garage and the computer kicked out. Windows 98 was famous for that. Just kick out the audio. And my phone rings in the garage and I knew there was nobody else around. So I picked it up and said hello. And somebody said, hey man, what happened to that broadcast man? I was listening to that. I said, what? And yeah, man, that guy was talking about vaccines or something. I said, OK. Yeah, I'll go turn it back on. And I hugged up the phone. I didn't even get to take my hand off of the phone and it was ringing again and I picked it up and I said hello and somebody said hey man what happened to that broadcast? Who is this? How does everybody know this is me? You know I said oh man we know. So okay so then it led to hey can you put a little more power on that because we're out here on the outskirts man can't quite hear it you know and so you know we went from this wattage to that wattage Now, at night, sitting here on top of the mountain, we glow in the dark. You know, all the power we put out here at the micro effect. But honestly folks, that's a true story. That's how my broadcasting thing got started. It's funny because... One watt transmitted. See what happens? What's neat about that too, as you pointed out, you didn't have to have that much power for people to hear, but that it titillated the taste buds and more wanted to. Yeah, that's the only, yeah, yeah that's farmers in the area here. Literally folks, I want to tell you, you won't believe, I can say this because it happened to me. One day on Saturday I was sitting on a, you know, I was wanting to put up, I didn't have a satellite receiver at that time. And somebody donated one of them big Montana sunflowers, you know, the 10 foot dish and the satellite system, but I didn't have the, you know, like the four inch well casing to weld it all onto and stand it up. So I was commenting one Saturday morning on the air. I said, you know, folks, it's great. You know, people have donated and made a contribution to the station and stuff, but you know, sometimes one project creates another project. And that is, you know, I'm going to have to look around and find me like a 10 foot piece of well casing. And a farmer calls me from a little town called Cottonwood out here. Kelly answered the phone. I was still on the air. Farmer told Kelly, tell Joe don't worry about a thing man. I've got you know, foreign's world casing over here man. We'll get them all lined up. Bring them some concrete and throw in the ground. So you know it was really, you know you hear me say on the air, this is a listener supported broadcast network. That is no joke. That is real. Everything I've done here with this broadcast network It's because what you've done, not because what I've done, is that you know, I got the tools, the finances, you know, everything that helped keep us going. And that's pretty much why we're here today. And I've always said long, longest people participate and, you know, and get involved with us. I mean, you don't have to come stay at our house and, you know, eat at the table and sleep in our beds or anything, but, you know, hey, This is how it got started and this is how we keep going people making contributions. You know, this is our effort. This isn't some big conglomeration supported by you know Some soda company or beer, you know Budweiser beer or any other thing. This is the people's network Literally without question and that's how we got here and that's the real story Now, let's not forget, this is a $10 donation. It's a way for us to be able to cover the expenses, get bills taken care of. So it's a big chance for everybody to pitch in and in the process, like you said, if you're a farmer, a lot of farmers are doing this now. They're setting up micro FM stations like we're talking about, listening to micro FM stations. Yeah, sitting in the tractors, you know, where they're out in the field. That's no joke, yeah. And the neat part about it is that everybody can hear, including every operator. If you've got six, seven people working on the farm, they can be listening to what's going on from all the different broadcasters we have on the microeffect. But then guess what? How? How? You're supposed to be back here at the ranch at two. It's already 1.45. Get your arse in the truck and get over here. Thank you. That was local broadcasting. Back to the regular. You see? That's exactly how it could be done, guys. You could talk straight to and then go out right off the air. By the way, this is an announcement for number six. Get your Harry Heinden back to the shop. Get your Harry Heinden back to the shop. Now back to regular broadcasting. David Jr. Bit of Rattlesnake coming soon. It's going to be tasty tonight. We're having stew. Great. So, you know, I've been completely disconnected from the world here for the past couple of weeks for obvious reasons. Well, like, like, bump. Oh, thank you. You know, another thing real quick, did anybody call up and give you everything they owned yesterday? Everything they owned? Yeah! No, I don't think so. I put a challenge out of it because everybody is telling, I mean we've heard this, it's the end of the world, between the meteor and the whole world. Oh, is that going on again? Okay. Well, yeah, but that's only because again, and I know most people, it's like you said, put your money in your mouth, it's called Joe, 888-747-1968. Yes. Give everything you own. Give us the deed. Yeah, it's the last thing. I know people would use the argument, well, what good will that do? What will make you feel good before you go? Send us your negative bank accounts. put your money where your mouth is if you fear that again we're talking for the great now because yesterday was the end of the world well one of the many end of the world's but it was the end of the world as we know it and my point is that you know that's a problem everybody would hope for a light switch but it's just not going to work that way uh... and i've i guess the best way is the analogy like i said the alphabet impact system if you're in a car wreck or it was a and a bomb i doesn't mean ever said really doesn't guys if you're under a bomb you look at all all man You know, it's just like boom you're there. Okay. Well, that's the alpha impact area or the a impact here It's like a car accident, you know, no look a bumper. Ah, you're there now If you're the person watching it off on the sidewalk or if you're in another car you're in what's called the B category or if you're farther away from the epicenter of the blast you're in the B category casualty line okay but you may not be dead you may not be hurt but what because you just saw the bomb go off and everybody is like really looking nasty what did you reach your pocket pull out your pen knife and slit your own throat when you saw the car accident did you go oh my god it's so horrific I can't live with this and you know commit ritual super coup I can't count Didn't happen to me. I know but I did have I am getting off her right now Joe take my wife, please Well, actually we do have another chair. There's something that just... Wait a minute, there's a whole line of office cubicles we just told you about. There you go. Yeah, we have a position open. You'll eat lunch at the phone. You'll be sitting at the phone. You will answer the phone. And there's 25 other chairs there in that long line, so don't worry. Operator 15 is gone. You could be Operator 15 again. Whoever did that, there is a place. We're happy with Operator Number 1's shows. This is a low, great operation here man, we keep it down. Well, I just wanted to get on here this morning and remind everybody, you know, that tomorrow is the drawing for the Micro Station KU-VAN receiver. And if you haven't heard, you don't know whatever folks, the KU-VAN receiver system, you don't have to put the FM transmitter up, you don't have to hook up the satellite system, you don't have to do anything. But it's certainly worth having. I've told people in the past, you know, if you have the equipment, and you just want to stick it in a closet for a rainy day, if you pick up my dress, then you have it. Okay? Or you can use the satellite system. It's free to air. You know, I always want to mention that. Free to air. There is no monthly fees. Nothing. The micro effect actually pays those fees. We have to pay for that. You get to listen to it for free. We pay for the audio streams on your computers. You get it for free. Okay? So... Again, there's no monthly fees. It's a plug and play. You hook it all up, point the dish up into the sky, and listen to the micro effect in stereo. It's an azimuth and elevation thing. And again, 888-747-1968, or you can go to themicroeffect.com. Themicroeffect.com, upper right hand corner. Scroll down a little bit when you get on the page. Right hand corner, there's a chip in right there. You can use PayPal. Can you use a credit card with that one or not? Yes, you can. Okay, so I forgot to mention that. So you can use credit card, you can use PayPal. There's a whole listing of what can be used there, guys, and you can make a $10 donation there. But there's also typically with that, there's a notation area. Make a notation for drawing. Yeah, for the radio drawing. By the way, you just made me think of something. Abby. Abby. Go on that phone, call the other phone so people can listen to the phone ringing in the background as if we're really busy here. Cool. Yeah, I never thought of that. Better than the telethon. Operators are standing by. We need to keep these phones ringing, folks. Do we have a teletype sound? We could use that too. And if we had a camera, we could show Abby's face like, you know, what? Well, a question pops to mind. How powerful is the transmitter? It's a 20 water. Oh my God. Yeah guys, that'll reach every corner of your ranch. You got a 6,000 acre ranch. That 20 water will reach everything you've got. You can glow in the dark like we do. Oh, yeah, in fact, that's a far more You know what? Edwards started here with a one watt Ramsey with a one-watt watt amplifier that I built we built from scratch and I started with that's exactly what I started with and What he was I he's taking my record in my tape collection and you know guys I've got records to go back forever and he was finding all of my radio series broadcast that I had here Well, he had the Superman that we picked up from another source and there was an episode missing. You couldn't help it because the episode apparently was lost in the archives of the destruction of things through history and it was from the 50s. He's playing episode after episode and what he was doing is he was being very unique. This is way back in the late 80s. What he was doing is he was using emails. People could send an email and do a request, you know, in the early 90s. That was unique. Well, he would get requests and people would, he would play music on the air with this little micro FM station. Well, you didn't know how many people were listening until the day he played the Superman series, one of the old Superman series, and the episode was missing. And here's this flurry of emails, hey, hey, did I miss a program? Where's episode six? Where's episode six? I'm hearing episode seven. I didn't hear episode six. And it was repeated. I mean, people from all over the place. contacted from the north, the southeast, and the west, and people from over towards Chelsea, which is quite a ways away from Dexter, a good distance, for this little micro FM with a completely improvised antenna. You would not believe the antenna if you looked at it. He was stringing wire everywhere. I mean, he actually did a very unique broadcast array here, the way he did it, and it was an experiment. But that show, just like you said, Don, how many people actually were listening, and this was to an ancient radio broadcast. people were following the episodes every day. I'm going to be there for that micro station at 3 in the afternoon because the Superman program is on. They've been listening and actually following the series just like when it was out on the air. Now think about that. The same is true when we're talking about stuff and people want to come back. You've got all kinds of broadcasters. Joe, how many live hours do you have right now? Live hours, 22 hours Monday through Friday. In other words, that's 22 hours. Somebody's got to keep track of the radio station, guys. We're in here 24 hours a day. Monday through Friday, we're here 24 hours a day, and we're in a few hours of Saturday. Obviously, we take the Sunday off. Not for any religious, it's just a day off. It'd be nice to have one, right? Yeah. It's nice to have a day off. a lot of work folks. Believe me, I assure you, you can ask my whole family here because we're the ones that run all this. We actually run six hour shifts, six on, six off. Abby is just finishing up her shift from two o'clock in the morning. I came in and told her, get out of my way. But at two o'clock in the morning, Tom Gamble comes on. He's got a three hour program preceding your program. And of course Dylan comes in here after Abby and we just keep rotating Monday through Friday, 22 hours. I'm trying to find it, you know, literally. We got a two hour window there from midnight till two in the morning Pacific time. We're actually trying to find a tacos for that slot and just go 24 seven Monday through Friday. Nobody else has that. Nobody. Nobody. Actually, if the truth be known, I walked in here, I don't know, at 5.25 yesterday morning and I could hear this. And I told her, I said, when you get tired, you know, if you feel like you're falling asleep, go outside and run around the building two or three times and then come back in. She did one part right, but not the other part. Oh, no I do the Chinese method you poke pins up through the handrest and you tell them to stay awake They have to keep their hands were just over the surface area right as they get tired the hand right and they're woke They're awake real quick. Trust me. Well back in the day I used to it was not unusual for me to wake up look at a mirror and have Peter Bell stamped on my forehead I'm serious. Yeah, right. So you're steering wheel there said Peter Bell, you know, you bet you head down there for a while you come back up you Now you're mr. Peter Bell. That's right stamp it stamp with approval. Yeah, there you go now another thing real quick here You know we thank you for bringing that we haven't touched on this in a little while But one of the reasons the TSA show up on the road you know as of two Fridays ago They opened the border to the Mexican drivers again Really? Yep, they had offa down there standing going we're gonna stop now mind you there's a line of 2,000 trucks at the border guys and Hoffa and two other characters are down there and of course the union that did so much to stop oh no they didn't they weren't out there in force they didn't have all their drivers out there blocking the road they just kind of stood there for a minute and the trucks went ahhhh yeehaw and came right across so of course all I can say is everybody needs to put uh row cages and crash bars on their pickup trucks and cars you know Yeah, well the Peter built that was driven 25 and 30 years ago up here Was taken south of the border because all the nuts and bolts are falling. You know I mentioned that one time. You know hey great We'll get all over equipment back That's that's no joke I went into what is it calamax or something I think is the name of it They wanted me to send my brand new trailer. They got a 3m plant just south of that They wanted me to send my trailer across the border and let them unload it and bring it back I told him, no that's not going to happen. And while I was waiting, we were having this little conversation, there was a gentleman that had been standing here for three days waiting for his trailer to come back. And it came back while I was there. Now this is a 48-102 with a super thermal king on the front and all this other stuff. Well, I was there when it came back. It came back with an assortment of tires on it. I don't even know somehow how they even got them on there. He had two stainless steel doors on the back which, you know, for a 13 foot, 13.6, 102 trailer. But the doors that were hanging on the trailer when he got it back were like for a 12.6 or a 12 foot something, 96 inch trailer. They were tied together with a bungee cord. And somebody had taken the reaver unit off the front and, you know, a new one, big, big one, and stuck some little SNWD 30 on there or something. And I, you know, I said, man that's your trailer? Man, you had to know how mad he was. And he ended up running, having to take that trailer all the way back to LA to get his trailer rebuilt. And then they were still trying to convince me to send my trailer down to Mexico. That's okay. I've got all the spare parts I need on my truck. I don't need them on somebody else's. So we want to thank everybody who was involved for opening the gates there to Mexico. and now we can go down and retrieve our equipment. Yeah, we'll get all of our parts back. Yeah, there you go. Well, it's coming over the border, that's the other thing. So the thing is that, again, the heroin is flowing big time. Another thing that I would point out, we've had several guests or callers that have come in, and one of the words that I've repeated long ago, I've been trying to explain to everybody, the border is heroin and opium. It is not marijuana. The marijuana cases are the only ones they're letting anybody hear about because that sounds warm and fuzzy like, oh, it's just Cheech and Chong, man. Where in reality, the actual conduit is running hardcore heroin. Math is locally produced, like down there, they just do it across the border. But heroin, which is processed opium, and black tar opium are the priority. What I said before, I'll remind everybody again, what they're doing, and the Dopers are doing this in a very intelligent way, even on the trucks, because they've had several trucks that now, you know, well, the ones that weren't running the regular corporate CIA, or you know, shall we say Israeli dope peddler runs. They've been popping a few of those. Well, what they don't do, they're saying it's Pales of marijuana. What they're doing is they're coring out the marijuana and putting the opium inside it and then jamming the thing to plug shut again. And they get busted for the marijuana, but nobody thinks that, well, maybe there's better stuff inside. It's kind of like a Tootsie Roll or no-law Tootsie Pop. Well, the other thing is when they order cars or truck, they don't bother. They're beyond that. in. You know, I'll give you an example. There was a guy up here, uh, Indianapolis bought a government car. I mentioned this, what, last year, uh, about this time. And the guy drove the car for a whole year, Joe, uh, Don, and he had a collision. When he had the collision, somebody hit him, they bumped the front bumper, right? And poof! Well, yeah! He was like, hey, there's stuff leaking out of his bumper! And guess what? It was a car that had been grabbed by the Fed, they stole it to make profit, right? The government did. And lo and behold, from a drug bust, and here this guy had something like however many pounds of cocaine he'd been driving for a year with in the bumper and had no clue they were there. He was there at all. So he hit cars worth more than he thought. Oh hell yeah, of course too late then. Well it's time to go gentlemen. One more time for that again we can call in 888-747 1968 for the draw right? Right and folks a minimum $10 contribution get your name in the hat five times $2 per entry and no limit on the entries tomorrow is the drawing for the radio station satellite receiver system. Don't miss on it. Please, by all means, give a subscription to the archives here. $20 a month. And again guys, 88-747-1968, 888-747-1968, please do the donation thing. We're past the end of the world for yesterday. There'll be another end of the world next month. 9-11's coming up again. Let's all be prepped for it before it hits, because the bad guys, well let's make it our training exercise today. You know what I mean? God bless the Republic. Death to the new world order. We shall prevail, ladies and gentlemen. The Empire is on the run. But we are on the march both day and night. The Rock! Kick him in the slats and run him down the road. Meanwhile, 888-747-1968, Joe's up on the rock. We want to keep everybody there functioning. Donate for the micro effect ASAP. We got to do it today. And again, tomorrow will be the drawing so everybody will know who's going to have a micro FM station and a KU-VAN satellite for their ranch, their homes, their retreat, wherever you want to put it. Thank you, Don. Thank you, Mark. God bless you. God bless America. Survival is your number one. It requires being tough and thinking smart. Sit Freeze Dry Guy are going to help you do just that. They have a long range patrol ration on trays. When you're in survival mode, it is absolutely the best item for your survival pack or bug out bag. 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