Mark Koernke and co-host Don discussed preparedness, self-sufficiency, and tactical knowledge on October 28, 2013. The show featured extended technical discussions on helicopter and aircraft mechanics, tank vulnerabilities and battlefield tactics, and the importance of advance planning and logistics in survival scenarios. Don emphasized the value of pre-positioned supplies, iron cooking grates, and establishing remote base camps or deer blinds as potential long-term shelters. The hosts encouraged listeners to maintain pocket constitutions, develop winter survival capabilities, and understand how to defeat superior military equipment through knowledge and positioning. Technical difficulties with phone connections interrupted portions of the broadcast.
Live 365. Call 908-691-2608 or visit hempusa.org and see what our powders, seeds and oil can do for you. We all need to prepare ourselves. You might have the food, water, gold and silver, but ask yourself, are you truly prepared? That's why you need to visit mainmilitary.com. Mainmilitary.com carries everything you need. Gas mask, fire starter kits, high capacity magazines, chemical suits, military surplus items, and much more. Do you own a firearm? Mainmilitary.com has a large selection of pistols and rifles suited for your needs. Are your local stores sold out of ammunition? Call or visit them today for prices on hard to find ammo and bulk ammo orders. You don't need to worry about having a military surplus store in your area because mainmilitary.com is the only store you'll ever need all from the comfort of your computer. Visit them online today at mainmilitary.com. That's main, like the state, military.com. I had a dream the other night that, well, I didn't understand. A figure walked in through the mist with a flintlock in his hand. His clothes were torn and dirty as he stood there by my bed. He took off his three-cornered hat and speaking low to me, he said, We've fought a revolution to secure our liberty. We wrote the Constitution as a shield from tyranny. For future generations, this legacy we gave. In this, the land of the free and home of the brave. The freedoms we secured for you, we hoped you'd always keep. But tyrants labored endlessly while your parents were asleep. Your freedom's gone, your courage lost, you're no more than a slave. Invist the land of the free and home of the brave. You buy permits to travel and permits to own a gun. Permits to start a business or to build a place for one. On land that you believe you own, you pay a yearly rent. Although you have no voice in saying how the money's spent. Your children must attend a school that doesn't educate, and your Christian values can't be taught according to the state. You read about the current news in a regulated press, and you pay a tax you do not owe to please the IRS. Your money is no longer made of silver nor of gold. You trade your wealth for paper so your life can be controlled. You pay for crimes that make our nation turn from God and shame. You've taken Satan's number and you've traded in your name. You've given government control to those who do you harm so they could burn down churches and seize the family farm and keep our country deep and dead. Put men of God in jail. Harash your fellow countrymen while corrupted courts prevail. Your public servants don't uphold the solemn oaths they've sworn. And your daughters visit doctors so their children won't be born. Your leaders send artillery and guns to foreign shores and send your sons to slaughter fighting other people's wars. Can you regain the freedoms for which we fought and died? Or don't you have the courage or the faith to stand with pride? And are there no more values for which you'll fight to save? Or do you wish your children to live in fear and be a slave? O sons of the Republic, arise, take a stand, defend the Constitution, the Supreme Law of the land, preserve our great Republic and each God given right, and pray to God to keep the torture freedom burning bright. As I awoke, he'd vanished in the mist for whence he came. His words were true, we are not free, but we have ourselves to blame. For even now as tyrants trampled each God given right we only watch in tremble too afraid to stand and fight If he stood by your bedside in a dream while you were asleep and wondered what remains of the freedoms he'd fought to keep What would be your answer if he called out from the grave? Is this still the land of the free? I show up to the right joiner one one two three one two three There we go you got me There we go. I just got to confirm and good afternoon ladies and gentlemen this is Oh, but we may not have done down. They don't have me unmuted or something's going on there. Don Don Don Are you hearing static mark? No, I just heard him say he wasn't sure that he was there Oh, no, that was me saying you're up. No Don. I heard Don to check on him. Oh, yeah, he's there Can he hear us? I don't think Don can see we can I'm sure Don Don, one two three. And good afternoon ladies and gentlemen this is the first hour of the afternoon intelligence report. I'm our quirky. And Don is being real quiet still. Can we unmute him from that side? And a one and a two and the bubble machine continues to run. One day closer to victory for all of our brothers and sisters both on and behind the lines in occupied territories. West, southeast, east, and north. Well, ladies and gentlemen, you were listening to us on... liberty to radio dot for m g dot com role so on indian free of talk radio dot com run a minute and micro station cb base stations and ultra net technology and west of the mississippi along with alaska warm hallmark network on the eastern seaboard from the top of maine to the bottom of florida from the bottom of florida karci arc of the gulf of the mexico headed louisiana texas oklahoma big chunk of rascal A whole bunch of Wyoming to include both Pithter the Fifth and our friends in the recall state of Colorado. Only a trigger finger pull away from open warfare. waiting for the left coast where Feinsteinism and the brown diaper wipe bring us the California Soviet Socialist Democracy, paint that state red and yellow, the beachhead for communist Chinese occupation, and the foreclosure of America today. Which is really strange. Don Don Don, one two three. Ed, can you play with that from that end? Maybe pull him up from the other direction? No, not really, because he's up on his own phone. It's on his end, Dad. There's nothing I can do with that. Okay, well, it's interesting. We have him. I hear a voice. I think you heard him too, right? Yeah, I heard him. He was there. I could hear calling him. It looks like he called back in though. Let's try this again. Don don don. Oh, I just heard something. Don don don. Yes, all right. One two three. One two three? Yes. Oh, right. Okay, well, let's try that for a minute. Okay. That's rather strange. We heard you twice. The third time, this time you're hooked up though. That's good. Okay. Well... I hung up and called back. Right. For whatever reason, the wiretap in between is mucking up on us. Well, you know, mucking up. You know, they're in deep mud. They're in incompetence line. Bah! They're just doing intentional. That's okay. You're trusted AT&T. Yeah. You know, wiretaps are us. Anyway, back to the east coast, Hallmark Network, Tafamein, bottom of Florida, and the Golden Spike project. It's combined in several areas now to include Bangor, Maine area, which is kind of neat. So up there in the Bangor, Maine area, we've got a couple of links that are set up that are independent. So, we're going to be looking at the expansion of the Golden Spike system. That's the way, way other end of the ridge. Anyway, Don, what's the date today, sir? And what's jumping off the wall up there in your neck of the woods? Well, Mark, it is the 28th day of October, year of our Lord, 2013. And I'm pretty certain I got the date right down to the day. But let's just be a recipient and say it's really late in October. In a few more days they won't be able to work on October's surprise on us. Well, it's not an election year anyway, but that doesn't mean that they would want to surprise us in any number of ways. But I'll stand on that because that's a real sure statement. Here we are, late in October. It's a fall day, it's been wet, we put some things out to dry. It's always good not to use the dryer if you don't have to. And they got rained on, so they're going to hang out to dry a little longer. and having to watch that meter spin and spin and spin. So with that in mind, we've talked about that before, a burden on the pocketbook in as many ways as possible. And even this late in the year, you guys, wow, that's something that you think the wife would know a lot more about than Don or somebody. But hey, if it starts raining, Don's the guy who's supposed to bring the clothes in from outside this time of year or even in the summertime when Debbie's not here. It's good to, you know, That shines over into the teamwork area, but it really is on the wallet, Mark, because if I could, I'd have a driver's license or some other form of identification made up with a middle name on it that was cheap, like Donald, cheap, betcher, because on occasion you might hear me say, my middle name is cheap. It would be kind of novel to reach into the wallet and take out a library card instead of my middle name. That comes from trying to get the most from the least. We've talked about that over the years. Earlier in the day we talked about change. We used some kind of rude and crude examples, but they are all true to life. Sometimes it isn't really something that is received with a whole bunch of... is welcomed. That's one way to put it. Let's offer up a real good example of that and there is a whole lot of meaning in this statement because you know the change that happens right at the end of that tapering long piece of leather that's woven together and gets down and... two little things and they don't even really hit together to make that snap that is the crack of a whip. Actually getting accelerated, it's snaps because it's breaking the speed of sound. It's like the tips of the rotors of a helicopter, you guys. And I've sat and even talked with some people and finally it was explained to me not that long ago. But you know, that helicopter operator, that flyer, Engines have particular little narrow, not necessarily narrow, but sometimes they're narrow, sometimes they're wider, but you want to keep an engine in a particular operating efficiency, like in a certain RPM range. You know, a minimum of X and a height, top end of X. And you could spin it faster, but to spin it faster only burns more gas and doesn't give you any more power in any way, shape, or source. It's a waste. In fact, it wears out parts. In fact, you spin it fast enough, parts come apart. So that helicopter coming up across the horizon and we hear that thump off in the distance and there's that non-helicopter simulator coming up, the tap tap tap on the chest there. When you sit down and figure the speed per second on the tips of those rotors, when you do the length and you know the RPM of the rotor versus the RPM of the motor, because you can load the rotor different than the, Oh, it's like traction. You can put slicks on your car and get better traction. You can almost do that with a helicopter on demand by changing the angle of attack of the main, the lifting rotor. But you can change the angle of attack so much until you lose all your lift and then you fall out of the sky. It's no fun either. But you're hearing, let's go back to, because I got a little bit ahead of myself, not necessarily ahead, but in laying down this explanation here. When you're hearing that helicopter coming from a distance away and you're hearing that thump thump thump thump thump, well there's a good load on that device and he's got everything running to the best of his ability and even at that speed, the maximum speed of the rotor and out there at the tip of the diameter and the maximum RPM, he's not approaching the speed of sound but you know the explanation for that thump thump thump which is a dinky little sonic boom. The air speeds up over the top of the rotor, doesn't it? How fast does it go? This is relative to, this goes over to, well, what we see. We can sit down and measure. how fast that rotor is moving, how fast it's spinning, and we take all the way out and do the diameter and the distance from the radius and figure out the diameter and count out the RPMs and tell everybody right down to the quarter of an RPM, rotation per minute or even finer if you want to do the math, how fast that rotor tip is spinning. It gets up there to the, oh, what's the, I'm not certain the words, there's an aeronautical phrase I want to put there, but I won't try to exhibit it right now because it doesn't want to jump out, it doesn't want to tumble out. At any rate, the tip of that rotor isn't going to exceed the speed of sound, like an airplane in straight motion would in order to make that sonic boom. The air has to speed up over the top of that, and we know that. That's how the rotor gets lift. But this goes back over to what we see versus even what we hear versus what we expect. I don't know what's, it almost sounds like that motor's coming apart on that helicopter. But we know it's not a motor sound. That womp, womp, womp of a helicopter rotor, you guys. And this is, you know, these are, it's a communications Tuesday, I know, but this is something that we hear. And you wonder where it comes from. And for a long time I wondered, and again I've sat down and thought, well if that rotor speed is this and that diameter is that and you figure out the feet per second and you convert that over and it comes up to, well it's not the speed of sound, how can that be a binky little sonic boom? Well it can't according to the speed, but it can because the speed, the air moving over the top of the rotor speeds up so fast to get that lift, to lift that device over that small little lifting area. That's where the sonic boom comes from. You might wonder why I'm going on and on about this. Even Mark might because sometimes Don just goes way off in a direction that gee whiz. Sometimes even Don is scratching his temple. This is a prime example of what we see and what we hear and what we know is happening, but how did we get there? It's like the magician's trick almost. Watch my right hand. It's a basic physics thing. But, well, it's just because I've talked with a couple of people who were rotary winged, like a crew chief in particular, I remember. He was the one who told me first, very, very long time ago, that that rotor speed doesn't speed up a whole lot to get the thing to jump into the air. Like a pilot is sitting on the ground with a propeller on the airplane, and the airplane is idling, and he wants to fly, and he gives it more and more and more gas. It doesn't work that way. This goes over to again another I'm trying to couple these two images together for you to give you example of what we see versus what and what we expect because of what we're looking at and the result there are versus what is really happening and sometimes you know they almost seem like the same world a helicopter's rotor and an airplane's propeller You know they used to fly helicopters with internal combustion engines, Mark? Well, even a jet motor is an internal combustion engine, but with piston motors. So that even linked the motors closer together versus, man, what we see and what we hear versus what's really going on. And again, it's basic physics, and it's kind of an illusion, isn't it? And if you don't really know what you're hearing and what you're seeing and what you're looking at, it appears almost as if, well, You wonder why hummingbirds can fly in bumblebees and helicopters too. We've talked about helicopters before, but this only goes over, not in this angle, not in this type of venue. What we see and what we know and what we expect. How is that happening? That's just one basic physical example. I yield before to you. Mark, we've heard a number of things. Perhaps we have a caller. Many just one example you've heard me say it specifically You know sometimes you can put something in front of somebody and they don't know what it is and in that instant of confusion You show your opponent something he's never seen before and in that instant in that moment that minute that hour You have you have that you have the fight you have the battle again mark. I told you a moment I yield to you sir Well, before we any farther, we have a number of things. It could be patient listeners or callers. Do we have a caller? And go ahead and jump in there while I'm talking. Not a problem. And in the meantime, a quick reminder here again too about rotary science. Remember guys, it's not really as hard as you'd think to fly a helicopter, but there are some basic rules. Helicopters beat the air into submission. First, they can start a particular operational speed. As you were pointing out, only a specific amount of energy is required to create limited thrust to create lift. Helicopters create their own lift. We use thrust with a prop. to actually work the foil, that is the wing, to create a lift bubble underneath the aircraft. That's basically what you're doing with a winged aircraft. Well, helicopters work differently. They, as we always joke, they beat the air into submission and basically accomplish the same task. Amazingly enough, as is pointed out, this is why the aircraft can hover or at least appear to. Actually, it's kind of like a shark and it's always in motion. It may be minute, but it's constantly in motion. Most important to remember, some people are a little better with a stick than others, which is why Close encounters of the helicopter kind can be pretty hair-raising or can be just plain terminal and in fact There's some I don't know if you've seen it Don there's some classic example of this you know There's there's an old saying that there are old pilots and there are bold pilots, but there are no old bold pilots Yeah, and there are several of I didn't use the clips I wanted to but I just kept the video simple so people could pull it if they you know had limited capacity if you have video like we do videos with video and on YouTube, but There is some footage of bold pilots flying those Apaches the way that they were pressing the envelope guys. Airwolf kind of. In fact even Barbie on Airwolf. Unfortunately after the winging and third pass and for whatever reason trying to come really close to the ground with those rotors, well he tried to use it. I assume he was trying to golf by the way the rotors hit. Certainly, some things were thrown for a couple of miles. Unfortunately, the wreckage of the Apache is all caught on film as it moves forward at high speed. I don't know what the condition of the crew was, terminal or un-terminal. I haven't watched all the videos. There's one and other people have reposted. It's just the same video down over and over again. There are old pilots and bold pilots, but there are no old bold pilots as we said and that's what you'll see there Wow look at that Wow look at that whoa And there's way I'm not flying with him Yeah Just something to think about doesn't mean you'll never do that again. Yeah, the government tax dollars pay for that one and then some so Doesn't mean they won't come down just reverse. It's like Abrams tanks helicopters fixed-wing aircraft, Abrams tanks. Though the only difference is with fixed-wing aircraft In this day and age when they come down usually there are only puddles of debris to worry about. Usually about the size of your hand if they don't burn or incinerate. Let's take that thought because now that you've mentioned rolling armor and it's a communications Tuesday you guys, but sometimes we don't necessarily. Let's take that thought farther because when you see a tank you think crush, crush, and oh an unbeatable and dinosaur and I'm just the next meal and all of this and that. Well, that's what they want you to think when you see a tank. And, you know, if you surrender over to that, that's what the guy driving it and the guy commanding it and the guy connected to the coaxial gun will have his way with you. But if you, again, know what you're looking at and understand what you're looking at, you have the ability to beat it. You have the ability if you know how it works. This was the thought line in, this is how a helicopter works and this is how an airplane works. They are both propellers but they work different ways. This is what was trying to be presented there. Even in a tank, when tanks come onto the battlefield, a lot of infantry, they think that where are our tanks and if our tanks don't show up, well, we are beat. But if that infantry were trained in the proper ways and equipped in the right ways, they would wait for the tanks to show a flank or to be in the right place or just to, you know, hey, we pop up, we fire this off, and we take that tank out. and the crew over there in the same instant while everybody's looking at that tank just for that moment. This goes back over to you. Show your opponent something he's never seen before. When the first tank goes pop, everybody tends to look in that direction, even if it's just for a second, maybe two. When the first tank goes pop and everybody looks over there, that might be the time to pop up your head and seven more tanks die in that instant. See how that works? It's not even a Rolling Stones song, it's the four tops or something. That's just Don's imagination. Think about it. Sometimes what we're talking about on the surface and underneath too, just dig it up. We can talk in 17 different directions at one time. Again, try to give you an example of the difference between a rotor and a propeller and what we think we're looking at and what we think we're hearing. And man, when the tanks get here, everybody just says, game over man. And I was short and I'm not going to even whine the rest of that. I was two weeks short man, no I'm a rock. Yeah, but you know that was from some science fiction movie. The fact is if you know what you're doing and you have access, even if you're calm, we can end this thought like that. Tanks love open area. Tanks are like battlefield little dinky hotels, pillboxes that can move. Pillboxes were put in particular places to overlook areas like barbed wire. Tanks are good out in the open field. Invite your tank into the downtown area. Invite the armor crew into an area where there are high rises. They'll turn down that invitation every time they get the chance to. They'll tell you, well, that's what infantry is for. And send in the rotary wing guys because, well, we don't like having 27 floors above us. Think about it. A tank is built much like a... not to be kind of rude here in graphic and whatnot, but a tank is built much like a human skull. D'oh! Well, I know it doesn't have two orbit sockets and I know it isn't grown, but a tank is meant to face the enemy directly forward to the best of its ability to move forward in the battle. Now its flanks are pretty good and armored up, but the thickest portion of the human skull is that bone directly above your eyes. It's called a frontal plate for a reason. Mark, what do they call that frontal plate on a tank? Sometimes it's the slope, sometimes it's the glaze, but it's basically engineers call it the frontal plate for a reason, don't they? And like on a Rhino, it's supposed to be thicker. But sometimes they just figure, well, it's a lighter vehicle. Why splurge? Now when you get those tankers who don't want to go downtown You know where the high-rise buildings are when you get you've extended the invite and they're there well, you know the thinnest portion of a human skull if you if you put your hands at the base of your skull and use your fingertips at the back of the base of your skull both hands and use your fingertips to find the center and now you've got your finger on the base of your skull right where your spine connects to the skull and you start to move your middle finger out a little bit and you're in your ring finger away from it and you feel those little domes that just before your skull starts to turn toward your ear there those dinky little domes at the base of your skull those are the thinnest portion of your skull. Everybody who trains in fisticuffs, high form, non-Queensbury rules of martial arts, if you can turn your opponent and strike the base of the skull there, that is again the thinnest portion. The bone there, there is brain behind there. There is brain behind there. Let's look at a tank. There is motor behind there. Well, there are all kinds of radiators and coolant and exhaust and all kinds of things that just can't be bottled up and plumbed inside the tank because the people inside the tank could die. Again, a tank is very much built like a human skull. The second thinnest portion of your skull is your temples, right in front and slightly 45 degrees up from that ear hole there on each side. Your temples, that's the second thinnest portion of your skull. But you know what? When you're looking down on a tank and he's rolling well, downtown Baghdad does have some elevated buildings. And if I were to lean over that and aim my 50 caliber loaded with an armor piercing round just an inch or three away from and forward of and slightly fight of that 50 caliber finish ladder onto the dump. Yeah, for some reason that kind of strange is that anything you can hear your oh I heard my baby. Kite. That could be I heard Just then and again and again. Yeah Well, it's working out there. So by the way, we are at the bottom of the day. We could take a break. They'll give a reset every Working I can't take a break while I'm trying to fix it. I know what it is Okay, well good when you get on with that Give up. We go ahead and talk it. We're we're we're we gotta keep I'm saying go ahead guys. I seem to be having a network issue here I'll fix it as fast as I can What we're at the bottom of the art solo we're gonna father down. We're not well night vision Okay, you guys, if you want to talk to me about night vision, you can reach me at 231-796-8458. We can talk about goggles or gun sights, green screens or thermal. We can talk about that first generation gun sight 308 capable, you know, it'll live on top of your AR, your AR10M1, your FN FAL, you know, that 308 caliber, that, you know, main battle rifle. Manufacture award to you that for two years. They like it. They like their ability to hold, sustain that recoil. confident they are in the device. Again, with the amount of weight combined against the energy even with a longer barrel, it's negligible, very, very comfortable. We'll of course stay on target and quick recovery with that night vision scope is pretty well guaranteed. In fact, I can't see it coming off target. The big thing there is remember the traditional policy at night has been three round burst. No, you don't have to have select fire for that. Pop, pop, pop. Just quick tap, tap, tap. Even just one-two is enough typically, but you know going back even to the American Revolution for night fire Remember they carried Buck and they carried ball. Hey now at night Buck was normally the night fire. Okay. Go ahead. We got it there Did that sound clear up or do we still have it? No, you're sounding good. Everybody's not good here. Okay Yeah, it looks like it was just a lag spike in the system Very good. Yeah, I fixed itself before I could fix it Very good. And we'll go to the bottom of the hour break. Great. Ah, yeah, we can do that. And for everybody out there, it is Communications Tuesday. Let's not forget, guys. Signal operations. We have the Eagle, the American, and also the Possum Net coming up here this weekend, starting at 9 o'clock for set up, Eastern Standard Time. 10 p.m. Eastern Standard Time is when officially Eagle Radio will be plugging in. We'll be back! What happened to our pride? Since when the free Americans pulled for the other side? Since we sent food to Hitler's troops, our praise the enemy. Did all our children die in vain? Defending liberty? The Minutemen, our Church, Washington and Jefferson, our crime, tears of shame. I'd rather live to understand the man that won't defend his home. It's for Captain Monahan out there if he's listening this evening, and he may be. That's a song that actually several people have requested or tried to again bring up for us so that we could utilize it here on the air. We hope to. In fact, there was also discussion about we can modify this. So there are some people who might be actually redoing this particular song and building it up for use on the network here are also again reminded me that music any kind of patriot music we don't care what it is bring it on down as they say come on down as a matter of fact we'd like to hear from you if you've got patriot music on hand uh... plug it into uh... cd drop it the mail will give you information uh... Again, PBN PO Box 194, Dexter, Michigan 48130. Again, that's PBN PO Box 194, Dexter, Michigan 48130. Take the time. Plug in. Put it on the disc and throw it in an envelope and get it to us and we will try to make the effort to get it up on the air. That way we get the opportunity to increase the repertoire. Or the bouquet of music that is available. Once again, you've got technology available out there and night vision. How can we get a hold of you if we want to try and see what we can do with that night vision technology? We'd like to have it ourselves. Well, if you want to get a hold of me, my phone number is 231-796-8458. Again, 231-796-8400. We could talk about goggles or gun sights. We could talk about thermal or green screens. The number is 231-796-8458. It's interesting you should use that phrase, Mark. I was looking through some of the votes from that vote. What was that? The 3rd Army General there. World War II era. And prior to between wars, he talked about armor, Patton did. And he talked about armor, it should be its own, it shouldn't be assigned to the infantry or to the artillery or anything, it should be its own arm in the army, its own finger on the hand, so to speak. He didn't use that analogy. One thing he did say was every commander should be able to add it to his symphony. He's building a music score. Patton had acquainted a general sitting, planning the day, the battle. You can have plans for a day, and you can have plans for a battle, and you can even have plans for a war. You really, really can. As Mark points out many times, what do you got going on after? It's like at the beginning here, am I in the right joint? Is this the right place? What do you got going after the war? In fact, I think there was a movie along that title and another one at any rate, the planning the day. Now the day can be the attack, the concert, the carrying on, the battle, the end, the withdrawal, all of that. What do you got planned for the day? And hey, is there another one next week? We're going to do a matinee over the weekend? The matinee, I think, kind of refers to the double bill, like two times on Saturday morning and Saturday evening performance. That can get kind of rough, can it? And we're not talking about singing and dancing here. Think about it. Again, this goes back over to, you know, we bring that word out a whole bunch of times, preparation. You know, eek, eek, eek, here come we roll that drum out and there's that squeaky wheel and we try to keep that squeaky wheel. But we beat that drum called preparation all the time. Big as can be. And planning is preparation too. We think about a big pile of food or a big pile of bullets and they're here and they're there and man I got 17 guns and 4 helmets and going on and on and right down the list. And to think about the planning that is involved, even in the purchasing of that stuff, all of that stuff we could talk about, George Carlin for a minute, all of that stuff, that's logistics. There's a type of planning, that's to put a word on that overview of that planning, to get all that you need in one place, or to have it here and to have it there with forethought. to have it not only here but the battle might be over there and somewhere twixt here and there and I'm not talking about two candy bars and one wrapper somewhere twixt here and there I'm going to need a resupply. Now that's planning as much as preparation isn't it? So again, it goes over to the beginning, the middle, and the end of the battle. And that might be a few moments. And that goes over to the day. And that goes over to the month and the year. And the whole of the war. But what do you plan to do after the war? Because what a whole lot of us are, well, I'd like to say us, but a whole lot of people are going to get through to the other side. And what are you going to do when you get there? Back that question up with another question here. And then we offer some purpose. Do you have your pocket constitution? You keep it in a place that's waterproof because you might be fording that stream, that river, that creek someday. You get out on the other side and you reach in this pocket and you're drying that off. We're on this side of the river. We're kind of safe now. We were going to be here in camp anyway. All of those other things that almost create civilization, caveman, know what be. Dry things off and you get into that pocket. There's that pocket constitution that's 17 pages at the bottom. It's even worse just to get half of a book like that wet rather than get the whole thing wet. It really, really is because if you try to open dry pages and wet pages together like that, it's better to let the whole thing dry of its own accord and uniformly rather than to have it half wet and half dry. I'm not certain, but talk to the people who restore books. If you know anybody who does that or look up the techniques on the internet and you'll find out that I don't just flap my jaw on that portion of that subject. But man, my pocket constitution is half or it's completely soaked. Again, do you keep your pocket constitution in a Ziploc baggie or do you keep one of them in a Ziploc baggie in the bottom of your ruck, way back in the safe of your house? We're talking about big, big changes here. That safe in your house can be that little, wow you guys, that little nylon, that little ballistic nylon, that little canvas pocket in the very bottom and back of your ruck that you've put there because that's where you keep bits of paper that all you have left of civilization because that's your house now that you carry on your back. What you got is all you got. Again, we've talked about change throughout the day. We're going along one way and we're talking about this and talking about planning and all of a sudden change. But you do that in order to illustrate the subject. And like you say Mark, what is all you got? Could you live like that? We're coming up on the hunting season here. In fact both seasons are in full swing now here in Michigan. You know that large land animal game, large game animal here in Michigan, you know the deer. and uh... we've we've run this challenge out before more specifically when we get over to gun season but you guys will go out and sit near you know a bowl hunter hill climb into it he might just stand on a two-by-ten or you know rather yet to two-by-ten on a situated on our tree limb and or he might sit in a you know these little profession blinds that are hung into the side of a tree strapped onto the side of a tree or whatnot But that's not like a little outhouse building that a lot of hunters will build or carry back into the back of the woods. They're hunting blind and sit there and it rains and it snows and they just close the windows a little. But even in that comfortable situation, a lot of those guys, they're out there before dawn and at about 10.30 they go back, at 11 o'clock they go back and men, they have that hot meal because men, they've been sitting in that blind all morning and they're cold now. They have that hot meal and they wait until about 2 o'clock. It's a contract. I jokingly say this, the deer are all going to lay down for that time while you're not in your bind. They're not going to move. They're going to wait for you to come back before they start to move. That's not true. I only bring that as an example because the enemy boots on the ground aren't going to wait while you go to lunch, are they? I've never done it. We've never presented it exactly like that before. But you know what? Sometimes we ask you to compare an inch to a mile. Let's compare a morning in your deer blind to seven years that George Washington did not see, Mount Vernon. Wow, there's a change right there, isn't there? Now many times we've asked you to compare an inch to a mile, but that's a severe difference between a morning in your deer blind. Because, man, I'm ready and I can do this and I know how and I know what I'm doing and spend, you know, from before dusk, before dawn rather, to about 11 o'clock or 11.30 because, man, you're really committed. You stay in the deer blind till 11.30 before you go home for that nice warm meal. Could you stay in that deer blind for a week? Could you stay in that deer blind for a month? Could you stay in that deer blind, using it, not staying in there? You know what I'm trying to tell you? Using it as your base of operations. Could you live in that deer blind for the winter? Because it's a roof over your head and nobody's discovered it yet. And it's yours, all yours, all winter long. Could you get through that? Now again, many times we ask you to compare an inch to a mile. We do that, but somewhere in between. Spending the morning in the deer blind and not seeing your home for seven years is the answer to that question. A war that's coming to this continent might roll back and forth. God forbid it rolls for seven years. God forbid it wages that long. Would you be able to if it started up tomorrow? Would you be able to? Let's mix those two thoughts together and would you be able to live without seeing your home until springtime just that short duration just half a year could you be away could you be in the field fighting the boots that are here to kill us for that winter are you would you be able to do that ask yourself that mark I yield the floor to you sir most important here again guys what we've talked about that by the way there are deer blinds and then there are deer blinds you do understand that guys Some people have set them up in such a way that you can step away from society and virtually spend the rest of your life there comfortably. Here in Michigan, a lot of people spend... Of course, I've seen this all over the country. We were actually... We spoke at Don... Do we have Don still? Yes. Okay. I spoke at a meetup that was in the mountains in... This was back in a bear camp. The bear camp was established as a regular fire base where it was set up. I'll tell you what, there was more than a bear camp actually. Not uncommon for the bears to waddle in by the way. It's purely a matter of how much time you want to spend. Here's the thing about it. Remember, when you build places like this, isn't there a lot of stuff you've run into that's like, man, it's not the fanciest. I wouldn't care if somebody stole it if I put it there. If you think about it, it's not that hard to build something nice up, and not just one, but more than one, so you can actually pre-deploy the material and equipment in place. One of the things, for instance, I've been getting recently ironed grates. Now what does Martin mean by iron grate? You know those fire grates that go inside the fireplace that are the iron and they stand off, you know, four inches, five inches, so you got a good ventilation under the wood, you know, the ash drops. I don't want to go out and buy those but for some strange reason it's weird it's the however the matrix is set up or however Karma or again to the rather than crucial and whatever washes the shore. Yeah, exactly in this case It's like I don't know why but I have seven of them now. I mean, that's all at once It's like, you know, I'm not gonna toss these out or turn them in the scrap. They're completely functional iron doesn't go bad Okay, everybody remember that you can heat it up and it'll bend and But you can also heat it up and bend it back, which is everybody seems to forget. That's what made iron so wonderful to work with. In this case, none of them are messed up. They're just older. And it's like somebody said, well, you should go to one of those or whatever, I am sure. And so they got a new one, probably communist Chinese made. And boy, this one's lighter than that one I got rid of. And it's like, yep, I'll bet it was. You know what I mean? The difference between American virgin iron and materials and the stuff that's coming in a scrap. Another thing is, I should have mentioned this before Don, especially for those outpost camps like we're talking about, how can you make it livable? Has everybody noticed what's happened with the barbecues coming from communist China and everywhere now? Which mostly are from all from communist China. Have you noticed that most of the mid and lower ones do not have iron grates anymore? It's just wire, heavy wire. Oh no, stamped steel. Oh no kidding. Don, you need to go take a look. Go to Lowe's and take a look at their bar by cues and then take a look at what's holding everything up. And what I thought was fascinating is guys, it'll work. And they're porcelain, I'm sure, or in some cases heavier gauge, but still stamped steel. Stamped sheet metal, they're not. And stamped recycled metal, I guarantee. not even a cheap malleable cast iron. So if you run into those grates in any wrecks, I know it's weight, but those iron grates are awfully handy for being able to leave somewhere and just let them sit and if they rust a little bit it makes no difference. First time you start a fire up guys, there won't be any rust there. You get how that works? In fact, here's an old trick with ironware. What they used to do when they had coal burners or if you had oil burner furnaces where you had oil guns into the old octopus type coal burner, guys used to have a wire hanger and what you would do is you'd take the pans when they get overly gunked up because you don't just scour off iron pans. You let them build up and cure. Well, when they get too heavy, you know, too thick, You hang them up inside the furnace and let them go to Cherry Red. Then pull them back out, let them hang and cool. Obviously let's not play Indiana Jones. Remember when he was after that medallion? We don't need Ironworks USA number 12 on your hand. Where did that come from? It's really embarrassing. So again, common sense. But remember fire is a cleansing and cleaning tool helps to open up the crystal structure of the metal and oxidation will fall off basically again or you can tap it. The old iron monger trick would be to tap it lightly and everything just falls off. It cleans off on its own. The heat does the job. The iron can handle the heat. So just remember that if you need something for that kind of work, it can sit for a while somewhere. You put it in the flame, get the fire going, do what it's supposed to do, cook it and cure it, and you can be using it for whatever you need to as a cooking grill or whatnot. The other thing is again, it means you don't have to improvise with clay and stone and blah blah blah blah blah. In other words, it's all ready to go. You got your pit, you put the grate in, congratulations you're done. Oh, isn't it wonderful what you do with man-made junk? So that's an improvement right there. Fire is your friend and heat is your friend when it's winter. Oh yeah. Just remember, you don't have to make it a living room size thing. It only needs to be enough heat to warm you and to heat a smaller chamber. You don't want to cook everything or drive everything out. Just keep that in mind too. We are headed towards the top and I don't want to rush you down. You may be able to stick around or you got to go. I got a gold market. I'll tell you what, night vision technology, you have it. Dom, how can we get old of you? Hey, that number is 23179684. 5'8", again, 231-796-8458. I don't have the number for the Obamacare or the website, but I'm certain you can find it at the top of the hour, the quarter hour, the bottom of the hour. Just make contact with them until we crush that system. It's like the little poster we just had done here. It's like the little poster we were just reading to you here before we came up on the air an hour ago, Don. Yeah, there are 300 fake sites for Obamacare. It's easy to identify the real one. It doesn't work. It's that simple. Anyway, we are the top. You know what we're not busy getting there? That number's 231-796-8458. God bless the Republic. Death to the New World Order. We shall prevail ladies and gentlemen, the Empire is on the run. But we are on the march, both day and night. And in some dear blinds, a lazy boy, a coffee table, and doors that fold up and allow you to sit there and relax while you do the thing. You're a dear and you're a leisure. Yeah! Michigan! People are creative. Well done. Close us and put a never again plea. Hey, don't forget to call and cancel your cable. But if you're not doing that, call the 800 number guy with the 800 number and get a price and then call me at 231796-8458. I'll be happy to beat his price when it comes to night vision, thermal, or green screen. My number is 231796-8458. Thank you Mark. God bless you. God bless you. Come here. 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-I-G-H, highgrounds.us. Hope for the best, but prepare for the worst. 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 storable 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 908-691-2608. 608 today.
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