October 24, 2013
Evening Show
1h 0m
Complete
Radio Episode
2013
▶ Audio Player
Summary
Mark Koernke discussed a case involving two foreign military personnel stationed at Fort Leonard Wood arrested for attempting to solicit a 12-year-old girl, expressing concerns about their country of origin being withheld and connecting the incident to broader security issues. The show featured extensive discussion of close-quarters combat tools including tomahawks, drywall hammers, machetes, and various knives (Bowie, kukri, cleaving blades), with callers sharing experiences and recommendations for weapons maintenance and selection. Koernke also reminisced about his father's musical career and family musical traditions, and promoted preparedness and survival equipment through various commercial segments.
- fort leonard wood
- foreign military personnel
- child safety
- close quarters combat
- tomahawk
- kukri
- machete
- bowie knife
- cold steel
- bud k
- preparedness
- militia coordination
- ohio militia
- signal communications
- microwave transmission
Transcript
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Live 365. What would be your answer if he called out from the grave, is this still the land of the free and home of the brave? And remember rule number one, you see a commissar pointing and you know, commanding from the rear. All fire on that fool, make sure that it's gut shot and groin shot to make sure that they're down hard and die horribly. Always remember that good afternoon ladies and gentlemen. This is the second hour of the afternoon intelligence report. I'm our kirky. I'm Spike Timmons. One day closer to victory for all of our brothers and sisters both on and behind the lines in occupied territories west, southwest, central, and east. Well ladies and gentlemen you were listening to us on Indiana Freedom Talk Radio and Liberty Tree Radio dot 4 mg dot com. We're on AM and FM micro stations, CB base stations, and ultra net technologies east and west of the Mississippi along with Alaska. We're in the homework network on the eastern seaboard from the top of Maine to the bottom of Florida. From the bottom of Florida across the arc of the Gulf of Mexico. Headed to Louisiana, Texas, Oklahoma, big chunk of Nebraska, a whole bunch of Wyoming to include both 5th through 5th and Our friends in the Civil War state of Colorado. Waving to the left coast, we turn back to the east, sweep across the plains, leap over the burgeoning banks of the Mississippi and land in the Smokies slash the Blue Ridge. Where the restaurant crews, grandma teams, okay teams, and the Ma Bell Grammar Consortium of retired telecommunications workers bring us the Golden Spike. Many hands make for light work, a million petticoat junctions, the ability to continue to function when everything else is offline. It's been a pretty day, but it's a cool day. However, I want to say good afternoon real quick to our friends in the Adrian, Michigan area and all the way down to Toledo. There's a couple of militia meetings this evening going on that are talking about coordination with Ohio militia units that's going to be happening this weekend. We also have a signal and transportation exercise going on that's going to be running across the northern end of Ohio. and that'll be taking place all through the weekend. So that should be a lot of fun. Setting up emergency or LPOP signal communications points and doing passive monitoring and communications transfer. We're going to be using both laser and microwave, mini microwave. In fact, I'm holding one of the units in my hand. As a matter of fact, let me give you an idea. This particular unit actually is mast mounted and it's a DICAM type system. It's about Well, actually, let me give you a hold on here. My finger, I can give you an exact. OK, let's see. It is about 6 and 1 by 2 inches tall. about six inches wide, really cool. And this particular unit is pin-mounted, actually with a couple of thumb screws. We'll lock it onto the mast. It goes up, and there's a handle on the mast below. I don't have that right here with me. That's actually in the other room. But the way we do this is you set it up, and we'll use a compass to shoot an azimuth to get the basic signal. Now, once you get it on target, you use a meter. and we can zero to a hundred percent with a microwave sending unit like this. These things are all over the place by the way. In fact this unit, this particular unit Could be had if you buy enough of them for about it well as little the basic sending in it as little as five dollars and ninety-five cents a unit from some of the Science supplies what's really cool is you have range the more height you have the greater the range you have guys over the horizon broadcast Capability is there so we're going to be doing a series of legs one after another and it's going to be with a little mobile micro CPs the way we're set up everything is case briefcase and suitcase mounted so that it's up and Everything is opened up, hooked up, you extend the mast. The base plate for the mast is actually a piece of steel. Couple of handles on either end that are welded in place. What you do is drive the front tire of the car or the rear tire over the plate and that stabilizes the mast. Then, obviously, run your unit up, shoot the asthma to get the basic direction. You've actually got on the upper part of the mast where it pivots or turns, you have a simple piece of bar stock that comes out. You can put a bicycle handle on it, whatever you want. But the idea is that you can turn it and then you lock it in place with a thumb screw with the primary post that everything pivots on. So what's really cool is it's all mobile, it all breaks down and it gives you the ability with the micro units. In fact we have one, two, three, four, five of them stacked up here right now. They're going to go tonight. Actually those are going to the guys either tonight or tomorrow. We'll see if they pick them up. But anyway, pretty cool. I've been rounding up a couple other pieces of equipment that they could use. Plus I've got miles and tons of coax that's going out. Not miles, tons of it, just a lot of it. So everybody's got spare coax and we've got a backup of everything one on one when the time comes. So that's going to be pretty good. Anybody got a spike there with a spike? What is the date today, sir? Today is Thursday, October 24th, year of our Lord 2013. Very good. Well, I'll tell you what, the article that we were talking about earlier, thanks to Kentucky and the chat room for reposting it at www.examiner.com. Now, this is the original article and what I'm curious about is we need to do a search to see if they finally gave the country of origin. I haven't had a chance this afternoon to follow up on this again and to spot check, guys, there should be other postings. I know that one of the local television networks covered this story obviously. We've got a picture of a mugshot of the two characters who were grabbed for doing what they were doing so it's not like we don't know who they are but yet again let's see The two members of a foreign military and are currently stationed at Fort Lost in the Woods. Okay, well that doesn't give me any information still. In other words, let's keep it real nebulous. And my question would have to be why are these freedom fighters for the opposition we're backing in Syria? Are these fine, outstanding Saudi Arabian tablecloth wearers? I mean, who are these people? We'd like to know. We know them by name. If I know them by name, I shouldn't have names. I've got their names. Yeah, we've got their names. In fact, let me do that again. I love the names here. It's really kind of cool anyway. Let's see. It was first of all, on Friday, Pulaski County Sheriff's deputy was arrested. Mohammed Mahmud Omar Miffly. Now guys, if you could throw that mouthful into a paragraph, tell me why you couldn't. published the name of the country they are from. You see what I mean? I mean we didn't just get his first and last name. By God we got his middle names, all of them. We know exactly who this person is. And Antoine Cleela. Now the only thing about that is A-N-T-O-I-N-E. These could be French, they could be French Foreign Legion, they could be Arab, they could, I mean the one on the right could be French. It could be any from any one of the other colonies, brought back to central France, blah blah blah blah blah. It could be any number. But you tell me guys, why is it we aren't supposed to know? Come on Fort Leonard Wood. You guys should have figured out by now who these two fools are. My next question is, how many more of these fools were out there prowling around for other little 9 or 10 or 11 or 12 year old little girls? Yeah, it says as far as this article here that I'm reading, it'll only go as far as saying they're a foreign military in a Middle Eastern country and are part of a training mission. Yeah, la la la la la la la la la la la la la la la la la la la la la la la la la la la la la la la la la la la la la la la la la la la la la la la la la la la la la la la la la la la la la la la la la la la la la la la la la la la la la la la la la la la la la la la la la la la la la la la la la la la la la la la la la la la la la la la la la la la la la la la la la la la la la la la la la la la la la la la la la la la la la la la la la la la la la la la la la la la la la la la la la la la la la la la la la la la la la la la la la la la la la He could be one of the mercenaries from Libya that the horrors are prostituting over into Syria now. It could be a number of different things. Fort Lost in the Woods specializes, well it does have a combat engineer branch for office for the General Staff War College. It has the combat engineer basic and advanced courses. That's what it would include, demolitions by the way. Hint, hint, hint. If you're going to send people to blow up things, that's one of the places where you will teach them to blow up things. Everybody understand that maybe the reason they don't want us to think about it is because these are the latest batch of terrorists and they thought they'd have some fun with some American children so they could wag their weenie at us and laugh about that while they do their dirty deeds. Think about it. Why would you be doing this? And going after a 12 year old on top of everything else. They didn't think this up overnight like just randomly off. Well guys, this is a hunting party. This isn't like one guy with a trench coat with fake pant legs going out and looking for someone to harass. This was a hunting party. This was a team that kind of knew what they wanted to do and knew how they were going to do it. And then the next question is, once they got that 12-year-old, as I point out again, what did they plan on doing with her when they were done? Of course, if they killed her anyway in some kind of twisted sacrifice thing. Then they had to get rid of the body. Apparently they already had a plan for that, didn't they guys? The more I force you to think, the more you realize just exactly how twilight and so this isn't. These are the kind of guys that Obama just feels buds with. Think about that. These are Obama's buds. Looking for the 12 year old American girl so they could grab and do whatever. land of the fee and the home of the slave and the foreign troops have been told so and gee just so happens that right now in court a Saudi sergeant arrested admits raping 13 year old boy in Las Vegas hotel What do you know? I Found this at a place called creeping Sharia dot wordpress.com and that article that I was reading about the little girl at the bottom it said a reader reminds us of this and I went oh well look at that excuse me Well, again, that would make sense. If you catch one cockroach, the old story, how many more cockroaches are there? Well, let's see here. Judge orders Muslim naval officer from UAE to pay $1.2 million for Rhode Island slave labor. Five Iraqi immigrants arrested in Colorado gang rape. US intelligence source says that some of the so called drone missions are actually Saudi Air Force missions, which that didn't have anything to do with it. But the first two just gives you an idea of what else is going on. Well the interesting thing is also the location because that throws a big flare up anyway. Fort Leonardwood like I said, things go boom there. That's one of the things that engineers do. There is an extensive, in fact one of the best infiltration, and personally as far as I'm concerned, the ones that I've seen, the combat engineer mount warfare training area, probably one of the best and most realistic, at least up until recent years, available in the Army. On top of everything else, but the way they made all that wreckage is they blowed it up themselves kids. So, the battlefield, you know, in a condition that they created, the engineers all got a chance to do their job. That's why it looks so realistic. That's why it really, especially at night, it is, it's eerie. So, I would just remind everybody, that's a very special facility. Of course, also known as Fort Lost in the Woods, misery slash little Korea. The conditions match up pretty well with the Korean Peninsula, which is one of the reasons a lot of guys that were going overseas, that's where they cycled them through back during the Korean War. It's not the only place, but it was one of the best places. It gave everybody a pretty good feeling. Hotter than hell during the summer, colder than a witch is, you know what, during the winter. Everything in between matched up. In this case, it has to do with, I think, explosives and demolition. These characters, probably again, some of Obama's terrorists. slash the Israeli-backed Arab terrorists, the ones that the Arab terrorists are being run in Syria. Oh yeah, that's right. But they're different. They're an opposing set. No, they're not. They've been hired and run by the Israelis every step of the way. And they were told they'd be able to do a lot more of this once they get control, guys. This was just, like, shall we say, a training mission, so to speak. Go find a 12-year-old and see what you can do to her. Yeah, so oh well More of a reason to buy more ammo pick up more weapons and try to find whatever magazines you can I would think so the only it would have been better with this is if dad or the family or the neighborhood had said Oh look Somebody's dead in the front yard. They both look like foreigners. Oops. Yep That had been the best situation. Oh, yeah, of course Either way, you'd have to explain where they came from. But the other would be the two dead foreigners in the front yard. I'm sure they'd do everything they could to make it politically correct. All the poor buggers, they were just wanting to talk to the little girl. And so we just had to understand them. You just don't understand the pedophile slash the rapist mentality. You're just not relating to them. I think 30 Calbright could relate to them quite well. Yeah, I can relate to him a lot better when they ain't breathing buck buck buck buck buck there now I get a close look at him I look at him very close up. We need far away in the rifle site. Yeah, I'm gonna get real close Well, you know Let's also remind everybody it's bad enough, but they know you don't really want to shoot at close range wide create all that hydraulic mess when you've got a tomahawk Know what I mean? Let them experience the full North American cuisine. Hold still, this is going to hurt a lot. You probably heard about the Native American population and how they dealt with invaders. Well, you're going to find out real quick. Chop, chop. You're supposed to have a drywall. Yeah, that air ball peen hammer. Yeah. Well, drywall hammer, actually, you know, I've been looking around and I thank you for bringing it up. That's one of those things that hasn't lost, you know, the, you know, in the lumber yard of things to do, you know how lumber yards are, you put some, some, something somewhere covered up and can't find it for another year, you know, that kind of thing. Well, in the lumber yard called my brain here, I have been still on the, in the metal inventory guys trying to find cheap drywall hammers. There aren't any. back when the drywall hammer, when the communist Chinese first came in. Maybe we'd find them out west or somewhere there's a cache of these things. When they first came out, there's a really nice hickory handled, chromed head drywall hammer that they were bringing in from communist China coming in through Big Lot. Now the price tag says here $4.98 a piece, which is not bad. However, there are no $4.98 anythings out there in the way of a drywall hammer unless you find used and if you do, grab them. The east wings of course I have one that one of our friends sent as a gift and again I've said thank you a million times over. That is my new tomahawk as opposed to my older tomahawk which is an American made case. drywall hammer that is you know proper pitch and everything really nice hammering I didn't get rid of it but the east wing is one solid piece of metal so for hacking and chopping and cleaving and beating you just can't beat it and again it's one solid piece of steel it'll go thump day or night so yes the drywall hammers guys combination e-tool mayhem weapon and carpentry tool as needed Just keep that in mind. Longer handle, longer reach. That's the other cool thing about it. So if you've got one that's got, if you can get them with a longer handle, usually that's the heavier grade too. It'll be a little heavier head and mallet and blade. That would be your better choice. You've got a little more reach, you've got a little more cleaving power. Keep it clean, keep your, it was the old story, keep your hatchet scoured and sharp. Rogers Rangers Rules, keep your hatchet scoured and sharp. Make sure your ammunition is topped off too, but the big thing is maintain it There are a number of ways you can make a better carrier the commercial carriers are okay But you want a speed carrier want something where you can if you if you watch to understand tomahawk combat or use of use of a war hammer or a war tomahawk like that watch last of the Mohicans or watch the Patriot again. But remember that in both cases they were coached by people who are very, very proficient with and throw the Tomahawk. Most important is that they actually, the photographer, when they did the cinematography for both of those movies, they did a very good job of showing you the process of recovering the Tomahawk from its resting position on your belt. There's a sweeping text with the arm. and because of the design of either the tomahawk or the drywall hammer, the drywall mallet. The reason is, if you'll pay attention, the way you're supposed to use a drywall hammer, that blade, if need be confused, be used for close-in sculpting. What you do is use it to chip away, to actually break away a certain amount of material, then your mud makes up for the difference. Well, the neat thing is because of that is your hand rides right up along the stock, along the grip, slash the handle, and your index finger will come right up under and scoop up that blade. You don't have a cutting surface there. And basically your tomahawks are built the same way, but the blade may be trumpeted in different cuts. Sometimes it's actually a very straight chisel wedge cut. In many cases you'll notice though they went with a stylized arc and since they arc the base they typically arc the roof or the top of the blade the same way. So they're very unique styles, very much. Arc was taken into consideration. It was a personal signature thing with regard to how the blades are made. Well the cool thing is that drywall mallets pretty well do the same thing. In fact what's really neat is the heads are also, if you notice, sculpted in the same way so that they actually are ergonomically comfortable for the hand to ride up from underneath, grab hold of it, take and strike, and you can either hold the handle by its extreme at the very end of the handle or you can hold it by the edge of the head, by the base of the mallet and by the base of the blade. That was so you could get those little tappet strokes in there if you've got to cut something or work with it. But because of that, that makes for a very, very efficient handling weapon. So again, watch last of the Mohicans. Pay attention to the close quarter combat scenes that they did where they were actually choreographing the tomahawk fights. Very, very, very well done. Now another thing about that is the combination of both using the tomahawk and a cleaving knife. Now, if you don't have a cleaving knife like a Bowie type or an Arkansas toothpick or even the K-bar is small by comparison to both of those I just mentioned, but if you don't have those but you are carrying a machete, remember that the machete will fit the same niche but it has a little more reach being typically an 18-inch blade. Now, they do make machetes that are shorter, but the biggest problem with a shorter machete is the cleaving potential with the blade. If it's shorter, your arm is doing more work. You are able to let centrifugal force do its job. So again, it's kind of handy if you're going to buy a machete and use that as one of your several tools in your kit, slash close order combat tool. Ontario knife and Bud K has a China export. When I haven't had a chance to test one, everybody said they like it. I haven't seen it personally, but they make one that has a buccaneer grip. Now what I mean by a buccaneer grip is that what's cool is it's a saw back on one side. It's a blade on the front the way it should be. The back strap is a saw. The front and the tip are the normal bolo type machete blades. But for the grip, and this is especially critical if you're thinking about something actually having a saw blade on it, the grip has a guard of the type that you'd see on a buccaneer cutlass. The good thing about that is if you're using it as a saw and you have a blade on the back strap and you're using the front as a saw and you've got it down on the wood, Would you really want your hand to slip past the guard and slide with all of the force of your body weight across that blade? Think about that. So, instead, with that buccaneer guard in place, if you're holding it, you make sure your fingers are inside that guard, it's less likely that you're going to slip past the guard and you'll probably recover before you do any harm to yourself. So, this is actually a pretty good idea that somebody came up with, and Ontario was the first to do it, but Bud Kay is another one for about $12. It might be an interesting blade to test out. Go ahead, caller. Yeah, this is fluffy. Bud Kay was also selling, I'm not sure if they still are but don't see why they wouldn't be, a replica of the 300 Cleaver. Oh yeah. I thought it cooked, and it's a horrendous setting to all of this. They make the, what is it, oh come on, Mel Hibben makes one copy, that's the more expensive one, and Bud Kay offered another one made by another company that's much cheaper. If anybody wants to experiment, it was around $15, $20. It wasn't top quality steel, but it took an edge and it would do some serious chopping. I'm going to see if I can find those real quick while we're going to break here. Chemtrails, the modified atmosphere. Heavy metals and pesticides. Carcinogens and chemical fibers all fall into the sky. You have a choice to keep your body clean. Detoxify with micro plant powder from hempusa.org or call 908-691-2608. It's odorless and tasteless and used in any liquid or food. Protect your family now with micro plant powder. cleaning out heavy metals, parasites and toxins. Water it now for daily intake and stock it now for long-term storage. Visit hempusa.org or call 908-691-2608 today. Back to basics, a clinical reference guide for nursing students by Daniel D. Dans, now on 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. The chapter on medications covers over 125 medications with information about insulin, patient rights, a drug index for quick reference which includes generic and trade names, medical terms, medication classification, common uses for the medication, the action of the medication, nursing implications, and additional notes on the medication. There are drug and herb interaction charts, food and drug interaction charts, patient checklists, medical math equations for practice, IV flow rates, and a phone call there is always hope. Back to basics, the Clinical Reference Guide for Nursing Students has a soft cover book, 118 pages, jam packed with information a student nurse will need during their clinical. The cost is $30 for shipping and handling, and it is now available at amazon.com. The ISBN number is 978-0615-559872. When a long train of abuses and usurpations pursuing invariably the same object invinces the design to reduce the people under absolute despotism, it is their right to get their duty to throw off such government as to provide new guardians 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 AK47 on libertytrueradio.org.com. e-mail.4mg.com, live 365 on the Hallmark Network. Add your voice to the discussion by calling in on the new conference line at 712-432-0900. Then enter 957-464 in the town sign. That's Marisha Town Hall meeting every Friday at 7 on wgov.org.com. Give me one dot 4ng dot com. 5365 Mahamark network. For more information go to libgc.io.4ng.com. There's a job that truly needs to get done The job of waking up the nation to the new world order which is trying to put us under their feet. We don't hesitate anymore. Now that we've opened up our eyes and analyzed the situation, we realize that we're in a war. And it's a struggle for the life of our nation, for the survival of our sovereignty. And it's a battle for the heart and mind and soul of the people, for our freedom and our liberty. And so we gonna give an attention to your global plantation wealth. Tell them we the people on their stone walls. And if they keep forgetting just who this boss is. We might as well not pay him any more taxes If we the people ever finally get our whole act together We could have the global bankers for breakfast Our system for global communism takes some radio stations And if they flat me used to play patriotic music Then we'll know who's side they're really on We take it to the streets of our cities We'll force the mediators for our action And when we vote, we make the Rockefellers wonder What's the good public? Through faith we cannot fail of course, Carl Clang using our closing theme for the Intel report. Back when Carl did that, it was very much intentional. We'd have a problem with that guy. In fact, it's great. It's also, again, a reminder that we have a lot of friends out there. We need to try and track down Carl. We're working on that right now. I know he's changed locations, and I don't know what his condition is right now. So I do need your help. We do need to give Carl Pass on a message to him and let him know that we're trying to bring him up on the air. We'd like him to actually come up and sit with us for a spell and let us know what's going on. Hopefully he's still playing. I know that we're getting up during the years. My dad finally retired the guitar and his mandolin, but at 91 headed towards actually close to 92 now. I guess the fingers aren't quite keeping up with the mind there. So he decided that he would take a couple of his instruments down, not all of them, but he took a couple of his instruments down to Nashville. They were people standing in line to try and acquire both of these guitar and this mandolin. Both of them were made back in the 50s, guys. They were made by one of the custom guitar manufacturers back in the day and I think he's pretty satisfied with what he got for his instruments and also he knows they went to people that will appreciate them which is really cool. So kind of bad because I tell you what growing up with my dad here's one thing it's not just my dad we used to as a family when I was small and the family was a lot closer family spread all this happens guys We used to have anywhere from 30 to 50 of us at a time get together and everybody could play something and everybody of course sang. My dad of course bought a church, a double, a two-deck organ from a church that was getting rid of it because they were talked into a newer one, which is cool. So, we had an organ that we could pick and choose and re-engineer that. Some of my uncles played the violin slash the fiddle. Some play guitar. Some play anything and everything you can imagine. And of course the classic accordion. We got at least two accordion players there. We would get everybody together and we would just go all through the evening Saturday night. And I tell you what, my dad with the mandolin is a pretty tough guy to keep up with. I've always been fascinated by anybody who can play the mandolin or any of the instruments in that class simply because even if your fingers are tiny they don't seem to be tiny enough. If you ever look at a mandolin string set the way that the instrument is set up and to get the noise out of that just in and of itself has always impressed me. To get the noise, it's music. It's sound. Go ahead George. I was going to say one thing, the banjo is very complicated to play. Yep, that's another one. And again, very much a unique American instrument like several others. It's one of those that was perfected here. The mandolin overlaps with several different societies, you know, slash civilizations in Europe, but there's a couple of instruments we develop here nobody else had to play with, although I guess the Japanese guitar is closer to a banjo if you really think about it. Ah, if you just picture Yoko no scratching next to it like a cat, you know. Whaa! Go on, chum chum, bing dong. Which I never probably, cool, it's cool music, it's just Yoko no isn't cool, that's all. Well, Mark, you know the thing is, I bought a Fender guitar from down in Houston. And I'll tell you one thing, it's made in China, and I'll tell you one thing, the bridge on that instrument. And I picked up a Gibson made in America, a Gibson SG. Well, it's a matter of what slaves you buy. You've got to remember, the ones that are usually building the type that are brought to the US aren't the tradesmen. They actually have tradesmen in China that can do pretty much everything that we do here. But that's not what they're marketing here. They've got the guy that was working in the bra plant last week. Well, if he didn't lose his fingers, they switched the production facility over to making guitars for two months. You know what I mean? And last week he was making guitar, he was making bra cross-straps. Today he's making guitar parts. Next week he'll be making automotive parts. It's purely just a matter of copying or mimicking. Same thing with Japanese and the Taiwanese did for years and years and years before World War II and our notorious war. The Asian, China has always been notorious not for inventing. They've been notorious and famous for copying and not always very well. But they can crank out numbers because they have numbers. The big thing with the quality of the instrument there, just as a note, in the prison system in Michigan they've tried everything they can to make it difficult for the prisoners, purely for the sake of just control freak BS. Well, they made it so that you couldn't buy a guitar unless it was a $50 guitar or less. Guys, there aren't a whole lot of $50 guitars out there, you know what I mean? In fact, there really aren't any unless they can get them from China and maybe from Pakistan. And so they had this one guitar, some guy who was a vendor found a guitar available for under $50. When the guys got it, it was not really to dimension what you'd normally find with any kind of normal guitar. So, I jokingly called it the Yucatar. What it was is that if you're a musician it would be enough to satisfy your needs for practice. But beyond that, no, it didn't have any kind of great sound, but at least had sound. You can make noise with it. And you've got to remember that or nothing. Well, you take what you can get, that gives you the ability to work. You've got to go sign out an instrument and you only have so much time and you're on a waiting list so maybe once a month or once every two months you'd be able to handle a guitar and even then only for an hour at a time or 40 minutes. So again having your own would make a big difference. Again these U-Guitars I don't know if they had a straight line in the warehouse or in the factory where they built them because there wasn't any right angle to anything guys. I am serious. I have never seen such, you know, well, again. The guy who did it was one step away from having his brains blown out and carried out behind the factory to be chopped up for body parts. You know what I mean? I don't doubt it because in fact I'm guaranteeing they were pressed to get them done as quick as they could because they were getting ready to switch over to automotive parts from doing guitars and after that they were going to go back to bra parts. So pretty scary but most likely the case. And again, most people overseas have got less than we have so for them, at least I can afford this one, that's the logic they have behind what they're doing. at least the low end ones are offering. Anyway, just a little case in point there. I want to switch back real quick to the knives guys. We've got Bud-K up. There are some sale items and always look in the close outs. It appears they got a lot of their zombie stuff is on close out right now. However, as we were talking earlier about a couple of the things that are on their main page, One of them they do have the Spartan the a copy of the 300 say forged blade For about twenty nine dollars. I think is what looks like which isn't bad enough to experiment with not so expensive you can't afford it Not so cheap that it didn't be work. It wouldn't be worth playing with So it's a matter of you know creative minds you guys want to sit down take a look at what they have there at bud k.com it's BUD K BudK.com and when you get there, yeah, it's a cleaving weapon and they do have several others that are kind of interesting although I like some of their What has been happening for years is BudK makes a they used to be a five dollar Bowie They're not five dollars anymore But it's just a big butt piece of metal now a lot of guys would use that as a project knife Because it you know brass brass guard stack leather or slab wood for the grip and a big blade which by the way guys remember if you can't cut somebody with a Bowie blade like that a Heavy you know shank like eighth inch to quarter inch thick blade The idea was you could also rather than kill them you could beat them down with it That flat blade surface is one hell of a people beater Just something to think about there. Remember, if you can't get that cutting edge in, do any damage you can until you can get to a pin to a situation where you can use the edge. The flat surface with a very heavy blade like that is more than effective at wringing somebody's gourd if you can get a good smack in with it. Yeah, that would be painful as hell. in You only got a glimpse of it for a minute. Remember when he tacks the guy to the bar guys? Remember the guy comes at him with a knife, he takes the knife, drops the guy onto the pool table and through his shoulder pins him right to the table. Pins him to the side of the table because remember the table is slate so it ain't going to work. He pins him right to the side of the table and the knife is sticking out of the guy's back. Well pay attention and look at the knife. That was the official Terminator movie knife. It has a finger ring which to me is not a real good idea because you can't get away from that knife if it gets stuck like in that situation. The thing is that every movie typically there is a blade. Remember Predator? Remember the knife they had in there? Actually it was an extended hyper buoy, almost actually a buoy machete. Remember the one that you see it a few times but in the one scene where the guy was the Indian he tosses away all of his weapons, pulls out his fighting Bowie and cuts himself on the chest. Remember that? That's where you get a good shot of that knife where you can see it but it's carried by every member in the movie. Well that was offered up as a custom knife. Yeah but let's not go cutting ourselves now. Yeah we're not going to, don't worry, what's coming at you is going to cut you just fine. I think that's a fucking short story. I've got one of those finger ring knives in my hand right now actually. only about the first knuckle bridge of your finger goes into it. You have to open it up. Yeah, that's like with a lot of these other knuckle duster type knives, the biggest problem is that the pattern was made for a smaller hand. A lot of the knives though, they've got to remember that you're looking at a knife that was carried by people a hundred years ago. Not that one, but like the knuckle dusters, a lot of them, people go, man, the grips are small. Well, it's a different sized person. And this one is the Bud-K. Yeah, the Bud, yeah, that's the one. Actually they offer that in several different configurations as far as color and finish. It's a black handle, one piece metal. Starboard shank, yep. It's got a curved blade on it, kind of like a claw. looking deal something you would slash with you wouldn't really stick with it. I don't think oh, that's No, no that okay. That's a talent right the talent blade. Yeah, I think so. Yes Oh, that's a don't know that's a different one. That was a look with movie That was from another one of the sci-fi movies too though the the one that he pinned if you watch you now everybody's gonna want to watch Terminator 2 because they're gonna fix try to figure out Mark's talking about in the bar scene where the guy takes the pool cue and smacks him remember it or a side the head and he turns and looks at him and grabs him and throws him through the window and During that fight scene is where he uses the it's a straight blade. It's actually a straight chisel blade That he uses, but I just tell you all again guys now I jot through buddy's memory now everybody's curious That knife the one you've got in your hand is similar to the one that they used in the mummy Remember there's several different blades that he has Oh, no one of one of his that cross-calen blade where the girl picks it up, and she's looking at it like you And then finally figures out why she's looking at it like what it really is for it. It's like Oh, yes. Oh, that's wicked. I was like, oh, yes, that is. Mark, go ahead, caller. Hey, it's JC from Penn State. I missed the last cut to your conversation, but I'd heard you earlier talk about with a second knife. What I practiced with was a anti-tomahawk. Yep. In fact, a lot of the guys I know that were SF in the early Vietnam days, as a policy, everybody in the unit carried a kukri. Seriously, I basically picked it up back in the late the old heads on basically said that was the best field knife a bunch of guys that had gone and actually received you know their reputation Yeah, in fact another company and forgive me. I don't have it right here. It'll not Atlanta cutlery Oh, come on. Maybe just Atlanta right now. They're offering all of the different sized cookies They are made in the far east or made as issue blades. They are actually the issue blades. Now the issue blades are a lot more expensive but there are some really nice copies that they offer also. It is the same company that is offering the rifles from Nepal. I don't have it right in my fingertips. I am thinking it is Atlantic Cutlery. But, that's not the only one. They both offer the same collection. I think they're sister companies anyway. But the Kukris are offered for a pretty good price. It used to be you could get them for $18 apiece, which again, the dollar is adjusted from 30 years ago. That was a pretty good price even then. Usually it comes with the two working blades, the small working blades with the primary blade. And of course it has the blood chip because if you draw the knife, the knife spirit must draw blood. And so you're supposed to tag yourself. If you drew the knife, you had to tag yourself somewhere. If you couldn't find somebody else to cut with it, you better cut somebody or it would be bad spirits. Bad magumbo. Yeah. Well that's what those little tags are for. Just pass the guard guys. That's what that's for. Those are a blood tag those are do those are a chip those are designed to snap you you have to tick yourself with that to draw blood The blade off where you obviously you do not draw that blade for fun That's the whole point and it thank you for bringing it up because the kukriig bowie the kukri Of course working man's machetes are out there in force and they're both the Ontario blades and a lot of other variations in fact blood K right now on their main page I haven't had a chance to look at this. I don't know how the hilts are actually built on it. Again, it's not expensive, but it's called a war hunter sawback blade machete and sheath. Just the idea that it would be just a good mayhem, close in, short term weapon. Something for $13 a piece would be worth experimenting with, but it does have a sawback. Again, it does not have the buccaneer grip. But the I don't know I don't know actually that Bud K offers a cookery. I have to look at that now You know what? One of the things that I've been shedding with seen to $25 and I mean cold steel makes good stuff steel machete It's not nearly as heavy as a cordura sheet, but that's but their quality no matter if it's the the machete Hard to beat and especially for the price $25 for a And one of the things about them, one of our friends started carrying those for one of the militia units down in Mylin, Michigan. We've got a whole bunch of guys just south of Mylin, due south of where we are now by about 40 minutes. They started carrying those and there's an excellent price and they've got a warranty on them too, amazingly enough guys for as inexpensive as they are, but I've never seen one chip unless you do something really stupid with it. Well, I've actually met Lynn Thompson and he is one of the employers at the NRA convention passing out a certain amount of DVDs. They didn't even know that was the thing, but he gave 20 employees didn't know what was coming at the end of that first day. I mean, he's an American company. You can't beat his warranty. Videos of him, he will abuse and abuse that stuff trying to make it fail. You guys are getting a good product. In fact, that's the best way to do it. Again, like we said, test the destruction. In fact, you'd be amazed how long it might take to actually get there. Yep. All right, well, I'm out. Appreciate that, sir. Thank you for bringing it up and reminding us. The Kukris are something, like I said, I don't see as many companies carrying them, but I know Atlantic cutlery does have. I'm not sure about Bud K right now. Go ahead, caller. Yeah, this is BC down in Carolina. Hey, BC. I got a Bud K by United Cut. Excellent. Well, that's the one we'd be interested in, so we're going to have to order a couple and experiment. Actually, somebody wanted one and his birthday is coming up, so I think that's what I'm going to do. He doesn't know it yet, but you just found me a location. Now I've got to go order it. I've got to talk to Nancy about that one so we can do it quietly without somebody catching on. I agree. Talk to you soon. Thank you very much. Thank you very much. We appreciate that too. Catalog. We've got to see if we can get a copy of it too guys. Everybody out there, blades, tomahawks, does the main numbers, what it is. Understand how your weapon works and experiment with them guys. Play with them. You actually have to handle the weapon to become proficient with it. God bless the Republic. 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