Mark Koernke and Spike Timmons discussed radio communications infrastructure, backpack-mounted CB radio systems, and field deployment strategies for militia and emergency preparedness. The show covered technical details on Alice Pack frames, Swedish backpacks, connector types, and military radio frequency grids, emphasizing modular design and captured equipment integration. They addressed energy alternatives including solar, crank, and wind power for field operations, criticized FEMA and Homeland Security's response to a local tornado, and discussed how Hollywood conditions viewers to failure through shows like The Walking Dead. The second hour featured Joe from the Carolinas discussing gardening and permaculture in the southeastern United States.
Live 365 Second hour of the afternoon, intelligence report. I'm Art Morky. And I'm Spike Timmons. And do we still have Henry with us? Uh, no, I think he had to get back to work. That's okay, we appreciate that. One day closer to victory for all of our brothers and sisters, both on and behind the lines in occupied territories, west, southwest, east, and northeast. Well, ladies and gentlemen, you were listening to us on... The... liberty to reread up for him g dot com got you there and we're on indiana freedom talk radio running with them micro stations good after by the way to our new little station on the far western side of jackson michigan with one of my f m one hundred uh... transmitters that i'd built back in what nineteen ninety seven still functioning and kick a butt taking names with the import circuit board guys. This is the powerful one. Really clean with the onboard synthesizer and a whole bunch more goodies that today are like second nature to a design like that. We're also of course on CB stations 27 to 29 and back up 31 up in Traverse City until I think this afternoon and then they're moving that again. So I believe at 9 o'clock they'll be offline with their test and then they'll be over in Mayo The Myo Michigan area, which is over on the east side of the upper part of the state for another transmitter test. This is the test range and potential for that type of transmitter, which will be stationed permanently in the Myo area along with the Traverse City area, etc. Each site will have a new radio in place once the test is done, but it won't be the primary unit that is the field unit. The follow-up installation crew comes in next, puts in the equipment, and we're ready to go to town. And we're also on the alternate technologies east and west of the Mississippi along with Alaska. We're on the homework network, top of Maine, bottom of Florida, bottom of Florida, across the arc of the Gulf of Mexico. Headed Louisiana, Texas, Oklahoma, big chunk of Nebraska. Whole bunch of Wyoming to include both Pitt, 3rd, 5th, and our friends in the Well, the state of Colorado only took a pull away from open warfare as needed because of the Satan worshippers in Denver waving to the left coast where the diaper stained brown and the Feinsteinism vomit their wretched communists built across the land. Ah yes, the California Soviet Socialist democracy laying the groundwork for communist Chinese occupation of the United States in a precursor activity to foreclosure. Paint that state. red and yellow. Turning back to the east, we sweep across the plains, leap over the burgeoning banks of the Mississippi, and land on the Smokies slash the Blue Ridge, where the restaurant crews grab a team's OK teams and the mob build, grab a consortium, bring us the Golden Spike. Many hands make for light work. A million Pettico junctions, the ability to continue to function when everything else is offline. It has been a beautiful gray, blah day. Kind of clear towards the middle of the day, but it's fall, so we'll probably get kind of a sochily rain somewhere around, I'd say about midnight or so. Just the way it feels. You can get used to blowing the weather cycle. Spike, what's it like in your neck of the woods, sir? What is the date today? Well, it's a beautiful day today, sunny. It says it's cloudy here, but it just got cloudy. It's been sunny all day. It's beautiful. is very usable right now guys to take advantage of the weather conditions we have get whatever you can get done and then get on down there like I said in the whiz get on down get on down the road and it is communications Tuesday by the way couple of projects I mentioned the spike on bring back up again here guys number one we haven't done in a while back in the nineties we did do a couple of variations on backpack mounted CB radios using Alice Pack or cargo frame kits. Now there's a couple of nice little units out there that are actually pretty affordable and because there's been a big surge in Alice gear and everybody's been buying it, the Alice Pack frame is out there but it's not as common as you might think because they're being scarfed up. You can get back pack Alice packs for $19 a piece if you look around still the ones that I found for remember we had three for ten those guys are all gone I looked Unfortunately you guys all listened before I got there Woodland camo Alice packs they weren't pretty as far as the buckles they had to be cleaned up or whatever it was blams They were the last of a pile of stuff the guy probably bought from the donor to the destruction But for three for ten dollars you can live with them because they were still serviceable. They just weren't as pretty The frames of course get bought up. The big thing that's going to be a shortage item, you'll still watch it. It is an issue now, are shoulder straps because the Alice Pack system had a separate patchable shoulder pad, you know, and shoulder strap and waist strap system. So you're going to have to catch a catch-kin on that and you're going to find pockets of those here, pockets of those there, etc. Well, I'm bringing it up because while the Alice frame is common, so we do want to figure out a way to put an add-on fixture on the Alice pack frame. The idea is that there's also other inexpensive packs out there that have frames. One of them is the Swedish backpack. Now it lends itself towards radio operations because of the very nature. It's a single big pocket pouch. The frame is actually very well made. In fact, it's superior to the American in terms of quality as far as how it's built. We made lightweight. In going with lightweight, eventually the rivets fail, things like that. It just happens, guys. It's just the nature of when you pick a certain material and you go with certain equipment or certain technology, know the weaknesses or know the long-term use issues. We got our money's worth out of a lot of those Alice pack frames. They went miles and miles and miles. Just like the sets that I was talking about here where they get tired out. There's a spot that wears. On the Alice pack frames, the rivets were the weak point. Everybody knows this. If you've had hundreds of them, we've had thousands. Okay? It's just in the long run, be prepared with a solution. Now one of the little tricks with those Alice pack frames before it becomes a problem is break out the electrical tape. Now, Why break out just regular electrical tape in black? You can get camouflage electrical tape or duct tape. Now here's a little trick. Tape, wrap, and tape those hinge points, those connector points. Look at it like Gilligan's Island where you're going to try and make a bamboo hut. You're putting it together and wrapping it together with rope. Think the duct tape or the electrical tape the same way. And what you'll do is you'll alleviate, you'll actually reinforce those rivet points and they're less likely to fail on you right away. Now they're eventually going to wear out. It's entropy guys, everything's trying to go back to the soil, everything's eventually, there's a limit to how much stuff can flex. So that's what really is happening with the frames. They're good frames, I'm not complaining, I'm just telling you we know from now, since the Alice Pack is not a spring chicken. The Alice Pack and the Alice Pack frame system has been around for, and it doesn't seem like it, but, nigh on 40 years. The first Alice equipment showed up in the early 70s in Vietnam. So a lot of this stuff is a lot older than you think it is. You're all assuming, well, that's really, it's modern, and it's military, and it's, yeah, it is modern by comparison to, say, the World War II surplus, the Korean War surplus we were buying. But the Alice stuff has been around for a long time. Good equipment. I don't have any problem using it. I got most of my web gear, if you look on my videos. The web gear that I use is a combination of equipment. And the Alice stuff is just as quickly as incorporated as anything else. But today we're looking at molly stuff coming in. And it's inevitable that the molly is going to be, or the other type of equipment is going to replace what we've got because you're going to be pulling it off enemy corpses. There's a lot of this stuff in surplus. I'm going to bring it up in a minute. And the reason is because there's radio bags, there are surplus foreign military equipment that we can use. What we need to come up with is, and we need to think modular when we're putting stuff together. In other words, how many different ways could I adapt this equipment to something else and with regard to building a radio system, how many other subsystems can I, you know, if need be, integrate or adapt if something goes wrong with the gear I've put together? Now here's a little trick, and they seem bulky, but in reality the word is convenient and they are bulky so that they are actually quite easy to maintain. One of the neat things to use for connectors is the big bulky cigarette lighter type plugs. Now you've seen these and in fact there's male and female versions. There's umbilicus that have like three fingers. They have three look like big old, and all the sizes of C batteries, the connectors points the females are. But the neat thing about these is they're quick plug and play. In other words, it's easy to find even in the darkness. You can plug it in, unplug it, plug it into something else, etc. The other advantage is, well I've mentioned it, these are car fixtures. Every car on the planet, every place you go, you have the same kind of connector with a combination of motor and power source. Now this is especially critical when thinking towards the future because when you improvise, adapt, and overcome, consider this. How many automobiles are in your state right now where you live? So anywhere you walk outside, there's an available, oh, wait a minute, 12-volt power supply. fuel, maybe at the very least a 12 volt battery under the hood, and if you can hit a key or if you can turn a motor over, guess what? You've got an available power source. So you don't necessarily have to run off that backpack battery. Now here's another thing. If need be, I could use that car battery and drag it along somehow. But don't forget that there's 12 volt motorcycle batteries and there are 12 volt sealed emergency power cell batteries for lighting and things like that. That's what we're going to turn towards with a backpack radio or the lighter batteries. And it doesn't mean we can't use that motorcycle battery. It's fairly lightweight. It's actually also very durable, takes a lot of abuse. Motorcycles are choppy vehicles guys, they bounce things. For that reason, the equipment that goes on them has to take, and as I've been bringing up here, a lot of flexing. It's got to take a lot of bounce, it's got to take a lot of abuse. Now, you have to take that into consideration when you're looking at putting things together because you're not going to be just standing in one place. If you're infantry, or if you're in a combat or a disaster situation, guys, it's worst case scenario for the environment that your material is going to be working in. So we need to consider weatherization, and we need to look at wear and tear. and plugs and connectors that are convenient and easy, mean that the operator with minimal skill can work out a problem. In other words, our main radio is offline, okay, well here's what you do, okay hold on, operator, are you the RO? No, the RO's away, he told me to do this, I've been following his instructions, okay, well, that particular rig you've got a problem with there for the other grid, First of all, take a look at all the connectors. Make sure unplug and plug them. Now the cool thing about telling somebody to do this is tell them to grip the body of the plug, pull it apart, plug it in. They're so easy, it's plug and play, that they can go through and actually test. Now remember, one of the things about connectors, I don't care if they're big or small, is that oxidation is a problem, and always will be. Now let me give you a little hint. You ever had a problem with your car or battery? Oh yeah, that's right. You see, it doesn't take much in the car battery, little oxidation between the two lead contact points and no ticky no washy. Well, if nothing else, have them unplug, have them turn the little bit, the contact point, and plug that little fixture back in with regard to these connectors. Amazingly enough, that may be all that's necessary. A little bit of rust, a little bit of oxidation in some way is enough to completely disrupt a circuit. The other thing is convenience in terms of commonality of parts. We want to look at radios where we can get microphones. We can find headphones if possible. We also want to remember that we want to look for a system that is user friendly. So making the radio, you can use any kind of CB radio or marine radio want. But if you go with a more complicated radio, remember that requires more tutelage. People require more, they have to have more skill with regard to not only running it, just keeping it online. Because turning a dial once by accident, I got frustrated and it was dark and I turned the squelch, or I turned the, you know, take your pick. I turned the squelch up and didn't know about it. Somebody activated the radio and... Well, it's 12 o'clock at night, you're trying not really to draw attention, and all of a sudden, even over a headset, guys, you'd be amazed at how clear that sound is. Noise discipline and light discipline are especially critical in combat operations, or at least in operational security situations, where you don't want to draw attention if you're an LPOP and you're just monitoring. in a disaster environment where you don't want to draw attention you just want to watch the traffic to see who's piddling down the road that might lead to your retreat or might lead to your position that you've rallied people to. So prior to proper planning prevents piss poor performance in that respect and simple technology ensures again military has done this for years take a look at conventional military rigs now yeah they do have a little intricacy to them but they're built with certain safety features. And these are all things that you need to look at with regard to covering or locking controls, covering and securing control points for the radio harness itself, which is really very straightforward and simple. It's not as complicated as it sounds. I'm just pointing out that this is the science that goes into making things work, but also making them work in the long run. So while you can go with tinier fixtures and make things smaller, remember there's a couple of the problems with that too. If you make it too small and you're in the field and you've got to fix it, well, you know that things are going to break when things are critical. Things don't break when everything's going fine. Always when people get the high adrenaline, frustration, exhaustion, all those things are tied into what you do in the field, what you experience, and then add to that a mechanical problem. Oh yeah, it will break. You will fiddle fart with it and it will break. Which is that simple. So again before that happens, stupidize it. Make it so the unit is user friendly. Stupidize it. It's just that simple. Other things, this is also true with regard to your vehicle radios, all your other equipment. Remember, make it so that it can be repaired in the field or can be switched out. One of the nice things about these backpack radio ideas from the get-go is that if i capture a piece of equipment i don't have to try and make the enemy's radio equipment or something work for me all i have to do is switch over to uh... you know the again if it's something we've captured fighting power all i gotta do is take that existing backpack radio undue part of the coax and i've got for the magma on antenna that i'm using on the backpack and switch that over to a vehicle radio immediately instantly I have a radio rig that's already integrated into my signal grid. So if I've got a piece of equipment that I can use for an attack vehicle, then it's turned around and going against bad guys and coordinating with my infantry and with my other mech units real quick. This is also a big plus plus, and people don't take this. You want to talk about being a guerilla fighter, guys. You immediately have to look at integrating captured equipment. If you already know how it works and you've already got experience on it, you don't want to hesitate when it comes to putting it into the field and into service. Don't hesitate, don't wait, swing it around, start dumping rounds down range and move it with your troops. The faster you can do that, the more band damage you're going to do when it comes, okay? So that's another reason for signals. You don't use it like a cell phone, but when you use it and you need it, you use it efficiently. And you're already thinking ahead as to how it is you need to employ it to get the job done to, again, terminate the other side. It's part of a weapon system. So ideas, not just lamenting about the problems, oh, Spike, we're all going to die. No, no, we're going to make the other side die. That'll sell things real quick. You'll feel better about that. See how that works? Look, they're dying. Yes, then first. Yeah, then first. It's like, it's OK. Don't worry. See? Look, when you put holes in them, they die just like everybody else. So them first and all of them. Okay. Another thing real quick, I mentioned pouches. Now there's two things to take into consideration. One thing that's out there in force because there's not enough radios for all the junk laying around. There's a bunch of AMPRC 25 slash AMPRC 77 backpack carriers. Now these are actually pretty cool because they were designed to work with your old type 56 web gear and they work with the TA90 web gear. It's a soft pack that's armored that was designed to hook up in place of your you know regular suspenders on your web gear and for the RO it has a place for your butt pack to go on on this little soft frame below the where the where the radio mounts is mounted and the mount for the radio itself is hardened so that it created a firm support for the radio. Now guys if you look at that although that while years ago we wouldn't recommend it but there seem to be a lot of these laying around right now in surplus nobody wants them because they don't know what to do with them. They do make a great way to carry ammo cans or another option rather than just the regular frame or another way to carry an ammo can in the field most people don't think about that. But these carriers are OD green. They've got all the fixtures and attachments you need. They're already set up with suspenders and They're a good choice. That would be another option. So if you're looking for a creative solution start thinking that way I'm not going ahead. I just want to point out like when you're talking about radio and tactical calm personal experience that you know at one time I jumped off the chopper a lot of us we had for the you know the fans Military radios that, you know, and we had tested them prior, did all of our work prior. Now when we got on the helicopter, got bounced around, wrong buttons got clicked, we got off, landed in the LZ, and none of the radios were on the right frequency. They're all jumping around different frequencies. So I would really advise trying to keep stuff in. If you can, you know, simple system. handheld Motorola's or something that if something like that happens to your main unit, your main radio backup that you could switch to especially if you're under fire. Exactly. Again, that's where these handhelds come in. And again, people go, well, why would I need a backpack radio? Well, the backpack radios work for inter-unit command. Most people don't really understand how military frequencies work or how the military radio grid should work because, number one, for close, close work or for small, individual activity, we can use one grid We also then use for inter-support between different formations. We have another grid, and then that formation still needs to talk to command, which can be listening to what we're doing in the lower frequent, the lower part of the grid, but have a command frequency that's separate. So that when they're trying to coordinate moving larger formations, they're able to give a very specific order and start to move that force. in a particular direction. Now when that's happening I don't need to listen to the battle chatter of the platoons. What I'm doing if I'm say a company commander is I've been given an order that my company now has to move towards an objective. Well I need to give the platoon commanders their orders to move them separate from everything else that's happening above my formation and everything that's happening below. So again a good point there. Backups especially critical and uh... bouncer out this is what i what i was saying they it happens number one because lot of times with depending on what era they've taken the safety off of the radios see traditionally when you click dial in a frequency also had a thumbscrew you would lock down everything and a lot of times uh... because you know things get lost in the shuffle s o p for this or the specs for doing it and then they dated from the radio And there's a wide range. I mean, you got the next, the A and PRC 90, what is it, 90s and 91s, and all these new 100 and 1000 series radios. Most of them are nothing more than civilian radios pressed into military service. And they don't have the features that traditionally were in place, which everybody said, well, they're over-engineered. Oh, no, they're not. They're engineered based upon direct, beat the shit out of the equipment experience. That's one of the things that really gets me is like no the you do think that what let's let's do it this way Government doesn't care about us. Okay, so if government didn't have to spend it Government wouldn't spend it So, if somebody got the idea to put the tool or the item on a particular technical piece of machinery, it's from direct battlefield or direct experience where they realize, if we don't do this, we have this problem, this problem, this problem. And that's one of the reasons that the next family of radios during Vietnam had very narrow and specific features on them. The overlapping family of radios, the AM-PRC 8's, 9's and 10's, drew from the experience of the Korean War. Going into Korea, their frequency ranges were effective. I've got a bunch of 8's, 9's and 10's. In fact, I carry about... I got about 9 of the PRC 10's I got for almost nothing years ago, brand new in the crate. They work fine. We've used them for years in tactical operations. The 77, the 25 and 77 were the next generation and they drew on experience and requirements. So certain features were added, certain features were enhanced. Other things, parts of the radio were beefed up. Waters, you know, seal up, you know, the ability to seal the radio and protect it from moisture damage, which was a real issue and always has been with military radios. That was, you know, was dealt with, etc., etc. Now the PRC-8s, 9s, and 10s don't have a water problem. That was pretty well dealt with with the radio boxes and how they built the radio boxes. But I've looked at the newest equipment and there are problems that crop up. It's like, why should these exist? We already figured out how to do this. And it's, it's, uh oh, I hear it looks like we're going to break. I'll tell you what color, stay right where you are. We'll be back in just a minute here. Liberty Tree Radio and, uh, that's right, Indian Freedom Talk Radio is taking a break here. I'm back in about seven minutes. HempUSA.org urges everyone to plan ahead for possible food shortages in the future. We offer this dense nutrient-storeable food directly from the farm to your door. What the world needs is our energy-packed hemp food in a storeable, portable form that can easily and quickly be picked up for travel. This food contains readily available protein, amino acids, essential fatty acids, digestive enzymes, and major minerals. Visit HempUSA.org or call 908-691-2600 and with prices rising in every sector, the investment in your future is critical to have some storeable food available. It wasn't raining when Noah built the Ark, so be practical and be wise. Call 908-691-2608 and place your order today. If food shortages don't come, you can always rotate our hemp foods back into your daily food supply. To place your order, learn more, and see numerous other great products, visit hempusa.org or call 908-691-2080. Back to Basics, a clinical reference guide for nursing students by Daniel D. Dans, now available at amazon.com. The book includes laboratory tests with over 60 basic lab tests, which includes normal values, significance of the test, and what causes low and high values. A chapter on checkoffs includes 29 basic skills that a nursing student must become familiar with before starting their clinicals. A chapter on assessments will help the student to choose the right words and or phrases to improve their documenting skills. 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It is their right to get their duty to throw off such government and supervise new guards for their future security. Once again, the Republic is calling on its sons and daughters to unite. Join the revolution Friday at 7 o'clock p.m. Eastern time at the Melissa Town Hall meeting with Ed the AK-47 on libertytruedadio.org.com. www.4mg.com www.pdm. gomg.com, my 365 and Mahamarkt Network. For more information, go to www.libbietu.io. gomg.com. Like sleeping watchmen on the wall, we have failed to keep the signs of you surfing foreign powers within our land. Letting brought deceit and usury be the curse of these hard times. Now won't you heed this wake-up call and lend a hand? Be a part of solution and restore constitution. Lay your power In reclaiming our nation, join the Second American Revolution today. We are one of our ancestors who refused to live in chains. We now must cast our eyes on liberty's light, for the blood spilled by our forefather still flows within our veins, and we shall not live as slaves without a fight. Like soldiers we must stand and face this enemy within and do what we must do to seize the time. For in order to defend and exercise our liberties, we now must place our liberty on the last revolution, institution, in our nation today. Spike and myself here, Spike and Mark. It is a beautiful gray and looks like it might rain a little sooner but it's because coming in from the south you sending it to a spike I know this was happening you hit the button the weather button's been smacked anyway pay attention if you're out there at Hennen home probably even work this evening across southern Michigan we got rain squalls here and there that have been taking place close to Lake Erie and of course in the southern western part of the state too so I guess we got hit in a couple different directions Simultaneously and for everybody out there it is Communications Tuesday a reminder that yes, if you could please support Indiana Freedom Talk radio and Liberty Tree radio guys. We are listener supported so in order for us to continue to operate Although we'll trudge along with whatever we can but if you pitch in a little bit it goes a long way We don't waste the resources that are provided The big thing here again is a reminder that when the time comes you're going to have to be the solution with regard to signal communications be it local, civilian, or militia, military application communications. Guys, you're going to have to be the ones plugging it in. There's not going to be anything dropping in from above other than enemy ordnance. We know that. So when we do operate, minimize any activity to conserve energy and to reduce signature for targeting. The idea is that again a simple click and a tick are all that's needed, not necessarily even any conversation. Checking in at 0,900 hours can involve nothing more than a tap code. where everybody hears a certain sound and we know that that particular post is checking in. It does not have to be verbal communications. If you do, again, remember that there may be a verbal requirement that also is a way to confirm that a post is active with the people you sent there, not somebody else. So there are different reasons for performing in different ways. With regard to civil defense and disaster situations, minimizing energy consumption is obvious because the area of damage probably doesn't have a whole lot of spare anything to offer. So, minimizing and immediately deploying alternate energy sources is part of the priority that you need to have in place as a radio operator or as a militia or any kind of field support commander where you're going to be deploying. Let's assume that we do not want to put a burden on what will be an already strained environment. For that reason, crank power and solar power should be a priority. Little wind units can be made also, and again, if you're not thinking big, if you're just thinking getting energy guys, consider a small wind fan, a light belt drive, a very, very light belt drive system, and adapting one of these heavier crank type generators, the little handheld cranker, not the handle but they make little pack-only units now too. Adapting something like that for fan drive, if you've got any kind of wind, if you've got any kind of air motion at all, a little unit like that is going to continue to feed all through the night. Now remember during dusk and dawn you'll have during that shift as the as the radiation spectrum changes there is usually a settling of the environment, but when the once the Dawn or dusk period passes especially at night you're going to see wind activity. You'll see this during the day. Well remember that that wind activity can on a little generator unit, a small unit, we're not talking anything big. We're talking about just feeding a trickle charge just like with your solar panel during the day into the batteries to take, you know again recharge or to take up the slack if a lot of radioactivity is required. In emergency services operations, you're working 24-7. Now, I would go so far as to say that if you have a mobile pack, if you've made a camper back into a mobile radio rig, or like the unit that Captain Monahan just finished working on here for one of the guys, a trailer-mounted emergency signal communications rat rig. With everything on board, we can do shortwave CB. In fact, there's about six different rigs on board this trailer so that we can do a complete CP for any kind of situation that develops. It's not the only one, but it's one of many that we've built over the years. One of the things to take into consideration is building a little short mast and a drive system. And remember, think lightweight. Think light duty with repair parts on board. Because we don't want any more resistance with an air system like this than is humanly possible. We want to minimize the resistance so that the system turns with minimal energy applied to that fan. Now in doing this, again, we're not expecting to power New York. We're just looking at recharging batteries that serve us in our daily operations. A simple trickle charge, you know, air fan system like that is a great plus for keeping your basic rigs up to snuff. In fact, you can run direct power off of those just as with your solar panel during the day. You can also do the old hand crank generator, the heavier, larger hand crank generators. You can make a bicycle system up. You've got extra bodies and everybody's, you know, long as they're not, you know, leaking body fluids or, you know, again, busted body parts as in bones, etc. If they're living, breathing, and still a rig of mortise hasn't set in, put them on that bike and have them pedal. Again, we'll provide food and water, but we need an energy source. We need additional energy sources until we can get more of the grid back up and online. So alternatives, especially for field deployment, need to be taken into consideration now. And it is a very, very important issue. We have to have the solutions. FEMA is not the solution. FEMA is a failure. Homeland Security is a failure. All you're going to get out of them is a gun and people trying to push you around denying resources coming into an area. You don't think so? Guys, we had this tornado here. The Stenican pigs and the state police were blocking anybody and everybody from coming in. Now we knew that. That was intentional. That was not accidental. That's why we don't have state pigs in this area and we've got county everywhere else but on the access points they were trying to block access so that we would be denied resources. Literally we found out later talking to the sheriff's deputies, oh yeah the sheriff was sucking the arson, the state police and so they cooperated on that. But it didn't make any difference. Number one, we had the tools in hand. Number two, our people already planned out in advance. We will infiltrate, exfiltrate out of the area and go completely around the state police squeakers that were trying to cause problems. Eventually that won't be possible and down the road you'll end up with some exchange and they're going to escalate something and everything starts. We know how that works. But in the meantime, again, Being prepared for the fact that the system itself is going to cut off and try to starve people so that they'll lick the boot of the oppressor of female Homeland Security and the rest of the pigs involved there. We can get completely around them, but you need to be planning in advance. And not just get around them, we can do better than they can. They'll try to claim or lay claim to it, but basically we can do better than they can. with everybody pitching in here, we actually were cutting our way out immediately. Well, actually we did it ourselves first. We cut ourselves out of the environment and got to the road. And it was the road and the failure to get up to snuff up to speed out on the road that caused problems. Our end of the business, we were in fact, we could have proceeded. We could actually cleared out, and I did, we cleared out part of the road here faster than anybody in the county did. Anybody with with Homeland Suck, Uridi and FEMA, they were worthless. They eventually got around to the business and even then it was the Hugo of Warsaw Lazy Man system and then they had to redo what they did because again they lack of proper coordination intentional failure which is what you can expect from failure in government with the socialist. Who gravitates to the socialist racket? Okay. So anyway, Prior Proper Planning prevents PISP or performance, the P-Principal, apply the proper tools, get the job done, and get on down the road. You know, get on down, get on down the road. Yeah, the whiz. That's just one of those things I've been thinking about. It's like, even that's an old movie now, guys. And by the way, yes, Michael Jackson's in that too. Oh man, no wonder they probably made that disappear and lost it. Anyway, uh... Spike, before we go any farther, I think we still have Spike there. Yes, sir. All right, then I know you're probably getting even busier. Anything else jumping off the wall there we need to cover from your end, please? Oh, really, I haven't been checking around. I've been getting ready for the next program coming up. Oh, yeah, you're going to have to keep you busy. Well, sorry about that, guys. Tell you what, go back to doing what you're doing. I've been listening and waiting for a chance to jump in there and say, hoorah. I agree with what you're talking about there because the radio thing, that's very important. Henry covered that. I failed my duties in my program. I don't cover that as much as I should. I do know some about it. I don't know as much as other people, but I grew up with CBs. I know how they function, how to set them up and make them work from way back when. All that stuff brings back memories when you start talking about it. I can remember helping my dad hook up the CB in the Buick Skylark, you know? So it does serve a purpose. We used to love those things back in the 70s, man. That was the rage. Everybody had a CB and everybody's brother had a CB and everybody had their nifty little CB handles, you know? I was a little Blue Jay and my grandpa was Whistler, my grandma was Hummer. and their friends were Tweety and Birdhead and he was a vet. He actually worked at the Veterans Hospital and was a Korean vet and a pretty good guy. We used to talk to them. We'd all get there in the evening time after supper and break a break of one nine. It was like the old party line. On the telephone you'd ring up and get in the party line. Who all was chatting today? Exactly. One of the things to remember, guys, is that, well, we've gone through a cycle there. Number one, the cell phone has kind of replaced the CBP. In fact, they do this in movies and in different programs. Let me give you an example. And again, Walking Dead. Okay. You watch that. They make stupid comments. Again, it's like, uh... what was the other one Jericho okay yes it all dropped at the clock or guys into sixty seven Chevy one of the most hard and civil defense vehicles ever made in the U.S. puts to shame everything you have in your garage right now. And you'll notice it was the one that, oh it's got electrical problems and don't do this and don't do it, oh BS. You know, again, that's the truck you would prioritize maintaining. It's the one that'll run after a nuclear attack when everything else fails, guys. So what they do is they condition everybody through this imagery. So you're thinking, if I don't have the latest, wait a minute, well all those other vehicles aren't hardened for EMP. In fact, they're highly susceptible to EMP. The same is true with regard to communications. They were, you know, kind of, you know, they're in Walking Dead. It's like, you know, well, I don't know why the radio doesn't work. Well, how about you should have the radio up on the roof of the camper where it's got more height rather than down on the ground? I don't know why this isn't getting any reception. Well, how about you put it in a hole? But they don't do, again, that's not accidental. It's like, well, no correction or fixing the problem. And no information to really get you past what are obviously the obstacles of the characters because, well, intentional plot complication and plan to failure by example. We don't want people to actually do things right. In fact, just the reverse. Hollywood's primary mission is to literally condition you to failure, guys. So we need to override that. Yeah, it's entertaining, it's cool, and if it was done right, which is where, again, Patriot Wood really comes in, the process... Oh my goodness. Well, anyway... Interestingly enough, with the process the way it is, it's not that difficult to get it done right. It's just, remember, you draw on the knowledge of the people you have out there. And the reason I bring this up is because you said, Spike, there's a lot of guys that were using CB back in the day. We still have linear monsters out here, linear amplifiers, which everybody had to have a linear amplifier, man. You gotta have an amp, man. We gotta have an amplifier. We gotta blow the guys radio next to me. I wanna see the car next to me. I wanna see smoke coming out of the dash. I think we have a caller trying to get in there. Uh oh, do we have a caller? Jump in there. Who do we have? Their meter's moving, but they're not saying anything. Would you like another cup of tea, dear? Oh no, no, no. Wait for the office as is. Hello. A call from Mrs. Floyd from Mr. Floyd. Brr brr brr. It might be Ed. It says Liberty Tree Radio. Uh oh. Well, do we have a caller? He's hung. Is there anybody out there? His meter's moving. He's trying to talk to us, but we can't hear you, Ed. There's some strange stuff happening with our Skype and other activity too. Hey, by the way, real quick, and I caught this, and I don't, again, I haven't read the article all the way through, but I was laughing only because it's like panning for gold. Cleaners discover 280 ingots worth $1.17 million inside plane's toilet. Oh, what? International Airport. Yeah, you can say that three times fast. Yeah, I was just like, Jamal. This is a family network. Yeah, I know. You do it, you clean it up. You will have to wash it up if you do that again. Do not say it. International Airport in Daja, where they just recovered the gold weighing about 32 kilograms. Now, let's see. Cleaners stumbled across the bullion when they were cleaning the plane's bathroom. Okay. What was it? In the toilet? Apparently, it was. Somebody was figuring out a way to, after all, nobody's going to reach in there and scoop around. Well, actually, now, from this point forward, guys, don't be surprised if you're on a plane and people come back out of the toilet with their arm blue all the way up to their armpit. Yeah, you think about it. I mean, I can see this, guys. Having flown for miles, it's like if you see the pictures, they're showing all this gold. If you just had one handful, it's worth having a blue arm, you know what I mean? What do you got there? Oh, nothing. I'm fine. I'm fine as you take that, you know, the blue dye is on your hand and you rub it across your nose and now you got a blue mustache and you're like, oh man, this stuff doesn't come off. And you don't smell very good either, dude. yet i hope they don't hide it like they do in prison either yeah exactly all yeah i think we all boy how did it get in the toilet well they had to create in first and everybody and there was this long parade of guys all having wearing the same suit and they just getting up and using the toilet and that could be put you got that one right by well it's funny too yeah how did it get there And the trick is everyone would be eating beans. We do not want you to be banged up there. We want to make sure that everything runs through just fine. I bet you the guy that was supposed to dig him out on the other end, I bet you he wasn't going to get any of that gold either. Yeah, I guarantee that he'd have been executed on the spot if they didn't count out and find every single ingot that they had planted there. Somebody made some bucks. Well, somebody stole some. The problem is, again, Penny for okay cleaners discover to an idiot ingots, but here's the thing who is going to get the gold Do the cleaners get to keep the gold? We want to bet the government jumped in on that one real quick. Don't we know what I mean? So we lost that thank you last month He took one million dollars worth of gold bars from an Air France plane The solid gold ingots were part of a multi-million pound cargo of nine cases containing 300 Kilograms of gold now when they say not a multi-million pound guys. We're not talking weight. We're talking English pound sterling blah blah blah Detectives said that 44 kilos of gold ingots were taken from a plane traveling from the French capital to Zurich Just two weeks before 170 million worth of pure cocaine was found being shipped from South America to Paris on board another Air France aircraft in the toilet again Man, you would I guess some people I guarantee you're gonna have people with blue arms in fact two blue arms Because remember when you try to fish around in one direction those toilets are pretty small You're probably gonna have to use the other arm to get the other corner just in case Not gonna be a pretty sight especially the little dripping blue trails going from you know the toilet back out to the seats That'll be pretty disgusting. Don't have so anyway on the door not stick your arm in the toilet Well, if you got even two or three or four of these, that would make the flight worthwhile. That'd more than pay for the flight, guys. Come on, think about it. And you're talking about poor places, okay? This is overseas where people like, it's like, now this will be an epic myth because everybody will hear about it and now you will see people digging in toilets. There will be all kinds of people, tell everybody, man. And then there will be the story about, yeah man, I got in there first and I got a handful of them. And it's like, look. And there will be of course images and guys telling the tale of how they walked away with a hundred thousand dollars in little gold bars and got it across the planet from whoever stashed it there. It will be the new children's fable. Alibaba and the Purple Arm. I found the gold! I found the gold! Shh! No you didn't, I found the gold. And you know the cleaners, what it probably comes down to is somebody had to probably do a fish tank, so to speak, had to clean it out. Had to open it up and do an evacuation where they do an inspection and they also hose it. And it's like, hey, there's nothing normal colored that I see there. And gold doesn't, nothing attaches to gold, guys. So it's like, well, that doesn't look normal. Look at all the pretty stuff in the toilet bowl. Oh my goodness. We're actually down in the reservoir So that's interesting to say the least but yes They do have a pretty picture here showing all of them laid out and everybody going that could have been mine, man That could have been mine Yeah, so anyway, they're just gold up there and then then they're them their Hills It's also in the Air France aircraft it turns out to in other places So, I wouldn't go fishing in the toilet anytime soon, guys. But I will remind you that painting for gold is not a bad idea. So, uh oh. And again, with regard to anything you were to recover like that, I don't think I'd really offer it up on the market or send it anywhere. I think I'd be just hanging on to it in this day and age. Because, yeah, there ain't no place you could trade it in or turn it in or put it into any kind of banking system you could trust. We're at the top already. I tell you what, we have got the next hour coming up here. Spike taking over. God bless the republic. We shall prevail, ladies and gentlemen. The Empire is on the run. We're on the march, both day and night, all the way to the Octopus's Garden. Well, I'll tell you what, we are going to take off for now. Spike taking over for everybody out there. I want to say thank you to Indiana Free of Talk Radio for carrying the ball. And let's see radio right there with you. So, sir, you're in command. We'll see you in about an hour. Alrighty, and we got Joe and the... Throw your own... The new Buddy Revolution coming up right next after this. In the shade This next announcement is serious news, and you won't hear it in the mainstream media. We are living in an age full of catastrophic events, and it's getting worse. But before we go on, remember this website. Highgrounds.us. In the past two decades, natural disasters have increased by 800% within the US alone. Cataclysms like Hurricane Katrina killed and displaced thousands because they were not prepared. And the 2008 economic collapse could happen again, but be much, much worse. So type this into your web browser. Highgrounds.us. Highgrounds.us is your complete source for family survival necessities. You'll find food and water with a shelf life of 25 to 30 years, plus tents, portable containers, light, heat, first aid, and much more. Go to our website, highgrounds.us, or call 1-888-202-9094. Place your order now and be prepared. That's H-8-8-H-H. Highgrounds.us. Hope for the best. but prepare for the worst. If you happen to have gardening questions or comments, please give me a call this evening at 712-4320900. Once you get there, why don't you type in our room number? It's 957-464 and then the pound sign. Hit star 6 to unmute yourself. This is a listener call-in program. We are live once again. It's October 22, 2013, 7 p.m. Eastern Time, 4 p.m. Pacific. So please feel free at any point this evening to call in and interrupt what I'm talking about if you have questions, comments, or anything else. If you just want to interact or get a message out. At this point, we're sitting here in Greenville, North Carolina. It is 61 degrees. The sun has gone below the horizon and it is fully cloudy, so we anticipate some cooler weather this weekend. So we're going to be getting our garden ready for that. If you need to contact me off-air, you can contact me at joefromthecarolinaasatgmail.com. Once more, that's joefromthecarolinaasatgmail.com. If you'd like to look at some of the videos I put up for your perusal Take a look at the Joe from the Carolinas channel on YouTube once more you go down over to youtube.com and hit Joe from the Carolinas I've actually got about four videos up for you guys just taking you on a tour of a backyard permaculture system here in the southeastern United States coastal plains of the North Carolina state and Let's start out tonight this evening with a little bit of a show format update. We just want to extend hello to all the Victory Buds out there who listened to my previous show. I appreciate all of your feedback over the past week. We've gotten some emails. We've gotten some other sorts of communications. Basically positive and I want to respond to all of you at the same time. So here's what we're going to do. I think what we're going to do is we're going to try to have a listener feedback segment for each show. You guys are definitely responding positively with me being on air and I appreciate that and I want you to be a part of it. So, you know, we'll have a listener feedback segment. And right now, this is our listener feedback segment. I think what we'll also do is we're going to have a gardening tip of the week since this is a weekly broadcast. I want to put something out there that might be timely. and give you guys an idea of what should be happening in your area of operation.
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