December 3, 2013
Evening Show
1h 1m
Complete
Radio Episode
2013
▶ Audio Player
Summary
Mark Koernke discussed gun control legislation targeting plastic and undetectable firearms, arguing that such regulations are based on outdated technology and that improvised weapons can be easily constructed using common materials and low-tech methods. He explored various ammunition and projectile designs, including armor-piercing rounds made with phonograph needles, and discussed vehicle armor solutions with caller Ernest from Kentucky. The show covered preparedness topics including deer hunting season, venison processing, and night vision technology, with a guest vendor providing contact information for night vision equipment and videos.
- gun control
- plastic guns
- undetectable firearms
- second amendment
- improvised weapons
- armor piercing ammunition
- vehicle armor
- night vision
- preparedness
- gun owners of america
- 3d printing
- ammunition reloading
- michigan militia
- constitutional rights
- federal regulations
Transcript
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Why do music lovers love Live 365 VIP memberships? I love uninterrupted commercial-free listening. I love to access my favorite stations anytime I want. I want to support my favorite broadcaster. Want to upgrade to become a VIP too? Learn more at live365.com slash VIP. Live 365. needs. Are your local store 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. In this is the land of the free and home of the brave. You vie 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 is 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. 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 in debt. 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 will 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 will 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, eat the torch of freedom burning bright. As Iowoke 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 trample each God-given right, we only watch him tremble, too afraid to stand and fight. If he stood by your bedside to 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? And good afternoon, ladies and gentlemen. This is the... First hour of the afternoon intelligence report. I'm Mark Markey. One day closer to victory for all of our brothers and sisters both on and behind the lines in occupied territories. South, southwest, east, and north. Well, ladies and gentlemen, you were listening to us on Liberty Tree Radio dot 4 mg dot com, Indiana Freedom Talk Radio dot com, running M&M Micro stations, CB base stations, and Ultra Net technologies east and west of the Mississippi along with Alaska. We're on the Hallmark Network on 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. Head to Louisiana, Mississippi, Texas, Oklahoma, and Chumbia, Nebraska. A whole bunch of Wyoming to include both Pitts 35th and our friends. The state of Colorado. Recall them all, kids. The next one gets assigned. The next one gets fired. Recall whoever replaces the one that stepped down because they're all cut from the same cloth. Recall anyway. Make a statement of strength and show them that you mean business. Don't hesitate, don't wait. You get a name and as soon as you know who's gonna plop their Harry Heinden down in that Senate seat, time to recall them immediately. In fact, right away. It is, of course, also the left coast where Feynman's feminism vomits its wretched filth across the landscape, gritting the boots on the ground scenario for Communist Chinese occupation of America through the legalese of foreclosure. Turning back to the east, we sweep across the plains and 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 pick for like work, a million petticoat junction operators, everybody working together to come up with an independent solution. It is gray. It's been rainy, slushy, a little slushy. In fact, we got a little snow late last night. Got warm this morning and or not much warmer, but a little warmer enough so it's not freezing and the snow's pretty well gone or at least in mush form if there's a little bit left in any shadows. But I'm really sunshine-y guys, but you know how it is. There's cooler spots. Anyway, for the most part, snow's gone and it's just nasty, wet, late fall gray. Also, still, late fall gray out there right now, but let's figure it's going to eventually catch up with us, not just when. The upper part of the state of Michigan already has snow. We just haven't got it below the belt line there, below the land thing. Land thing is the snow demarcation line, a little higher than that, but a little bit, but not that much. Anyway, it's a coming so just be ready for it. Keep working away. I'm plugging away getting as much stuff undercover as we can and Squaring away the other projects in prep for any final work that needs to be done Robby's users are losing. They got some really cool stuff I've got to use up because it's really nice I don't want to make sure it doesn't get you know lost in the shuffle it is well as We know it is the third of December. It is the fifth year of open Fabian the socialist and Soviet Socialist Occupation of America with the K-2013 Old Earth Calendar or my in Crazy Town, Crazy Town Calendar. And a bunch of stuff that's happening back on the East Coast. Go to Gunowners of America, GOA. Guys, some very excellent articles there, but the most recent one on plastic. Everybody's been talking about this the last couple of days. Gun owners of America are the people who have been doing the yeoman's job on this from the get go and Larry and his son and family have been keeping up with things. The guys there are gun owners are doing their part. So if you get a chance again legislative time bomb could retroactively outlaw guns, of course with the stroke of a pen if they have their way we know how that works. But remember that The cycle babble scam that everybody was warned about, and that's one of the things they bring up here, all this BS that they're using now through the Clintanistas. It's always the demicons. Not that the neocons are any better. The neocons are the same kind of BS, different day. So you went from one communist to the other communist and back to this communist. Wow, what a surprise. It shouldn't be anything that we do any other than go. You get on when it comes to there was a change. No, it wasn't a change at all. We all told you it wasn't going to be. It just didn't happen. It's pretty well approved out across the board. Now for the idiots, the incompetence, the Iwants and the parasite, Prozac Prodigies, well, life will just go on no matter what. They just love the chief parasite, the old bad-eared teleprompter eating piece of trash to the outhouse. But, as it is, This brings us that much closer to yet another dimension with regard to where war is probably going to break out on American soil. The bad guys are going to come after the guns. There's no doubt about that. They're just trying to figure out like the old Wicked Witch of the West how to do it and how to get it in motion. The big thing is, again, how they can interpret. I think a lot of people are forgetting it doesn't have to be the 3D guns. The 3D guns are just a side bar. And to be quite honest, guys, If you can do this with polymers, which we already knew we could, how many other different ways could you do this that can be done just as easily with no programming, no third party? How is it we had to have the computer to do this when everybody pretty well has the brain God gave us and mechanical skills are kind of like something we need to apply? If the computer didn't know, everybody just gave us the brain. and get a long road on a die. Now, if you look at the 3D gun that they actually produced, it's cool, but it's like, uh, guys. Give me about, oh, 20 minutes, 30 minutes with a few, uh, set tools, and, uh, I can pretty well crank out the same zip gun. In fact, let's be honest, with a few other plastic toys that are out there, uh, for your frame and such, building the same single shot plastic zip gun is not a big deal. Seriously, this is not a new issue. It's not even a challenging issue as far as that goes. It's a cool idea, but it's not something where I can go, wow. Obviously, I hope this guy read the Undimensional Warfare Manuals generated for Korean Warters to Vietnam War Special Forces because basically he built the wooden zip gun. Only we had to make it a lot more expensive and we had to have third parties involved in computer technology to do what? we did without computers decades earlier. But if we don't have the computer, how will we get along? How quite well, as a matter of fact. In fact, let's be quite honest. Considering the velocity and the energy that are being used here with regard to the plastic gun, how many other materials that are non-strategic can we use? See, that's the other thing about it. Non-strategic and without any tech. Low tech meets high tech. Considering the performance of this weapon, I've watched most of every video that's out there and it's like, yeah, well, Zip Gun does the same thing. From the plumbing shop or from off the shelf in the standard hardware, I can do this for a lot less money, no computer work, and I can actually go with a bigger boom. Or at least the same kind of boom. See how that works? It's an interesting option. It is another direction. But it isn't necessarily even the most intelligent. However, it is interesting to note that the resurrection of the other part of this nonsense is actually going back to the gun control spectrum. Read this article through. It's very well done. It's typically the case with Gunners of America. However, the Glock, are they going to go by percentages? Are they going to declare, see this is the other thing, once they rabbit in a law like this, What's going to happen is interpretation. You've already seen this. Things are being destroyed by interpretation based upon the witch doctor and just flat out liars and the political whores that we have in Washington DC. We know how that works. I'm talking about the back faggots and all the rest of the queers that are operating in government. Again, they have an agenda to disarm America before they start the red terror in the United States, before they start killing Americans on a massive scale if they have their way. But you've got to be stupid enough to be doped up. dump the box of rocks and disarm it. Now here's the thing. The basic technology here, if you take the time and look at what they've done, just think about, well think out of the box this way. I could go with a better barrel by going with a piece of quarter inch iron or a quarter inch piece of steel, conventional plumbing couldn't I? Yeah, actually I could get better rays, more energy, and there's all kinds of creative ways that I can add to the performance of this thing. Pistol grip can be a chunk of dowel, rat-tittle file, a lot less than we have strategic inventory to worry about, and less material used. And one broom handle will get me a whole bunch of pistol grips, won't it? Ooh, that's right. Well, of course, I'm not supposed to think that way. Or one 2x4, and if I use the right saw or the jigsaw, every nut can do two jobs, or at least can start two different jobs simultaneously. Always remember that. Two by sixes, two by fours. Doesn't really have to be all that sophisticated. No. The material's available off the shelf? Yes. So, I want you all to start thinking, why make it grossly over complicated? The ammunition is an issue, but even ammunition, as we've talked about, improvised munitions, remanufacturing, is all off the shelf. Everything is readily held, even to the point where if need be, for a bullet, you could use a quarter inch piece of lag steel or a bolt, for that matter, which is what was recommended with the improvised munitions manuals. Everybody understand that? As long as you've got a cartridge to work with, and even if you don't, you can even go black powder or go in theory like a black powder piece and go with a cap. There's all kinds of alternatives. So the big thing here is that they're going after the other plastic guns. What do you mean other plastic guns? Well, everything that's got plastic in it could qualify. Let's see, we can go right down the list. What percentage makes up, for instance, the high point pistols? High point carbine. Glock, Stires, let's see, even some like HKs. Let's go right down the list. In fact, even years ago, this is what's interesting. Please stand by while we try to reconnect. Yep. It is not by any stretch of the imagination new. In fact, just reverse. They were told to shelve it because, well... and means that we could one mold the guy could be special within in industry rich society uh... you'd be cranking out a whole lot of guns and uh... nobody could do a whole lot about it cuz we were you do restrict plastic chip all yeah yeah So, you see the interesting thing is, it's not like this is the year 2013, Glocks has been around officially for what, 9 on 25 going to 30 years now for all practical purposes. First available to the military and for testing and research, then eventually brought into the public market. So, even the Glock is long the tooth now for all practical purposes, but HK had a number of weapons. Some much simpler than pretty much everything built today. In fact, they took advantage of the molding processes and infusion molding for the slide and were able to do a whole bunch of work with the casting rather than with the machine tool. Hey, wait a minute. So I guess that ain't new either. But, of course, let's remember too, that those plastic pistols are some animatic. The 3D weapons, and of course they have done. You spend more money, you get more goodies, you can make more cool stuff. The 3D45 that's been built out there, most of you have probably seen it, is an example of if you want to spend enough money on it you can do it that way but there's the old story. Well, it's nice to know how. I'm not going to say why and I'm not even going to argue about the, we should never do this. No, just reverse. Everybody needs to research and develop from every direction. Remember, we'll take every weapon we can get our hands on and use it in the battle coming up. And by diversifying, manufacture to as many different directions as we can, we'll be well off. But I want to remind everybody that it's like I don't know what happened to brains here in the last 20 years or so. Without the computer we just couldn't live! Without the computer we seem to have lived just fine and actually bought ourselves through the industrial age. Wait a minute, we are the people who developed the computer. Yeah, exactly. So I think we can get along quite fine without them. In fact, it's pretty straightforward. However, useful tool, use it while you can. Use it to the best of your ability. Not a problem there. We are headed towards, oh heck we are, well it's already 20th of you after, we got Don here with us. And real quick Don, right now, and of course this has been covered by several different websites over the last couple of days, and Gunner of America has been keeping up on it too. I think everybody is pretty well paced with Gunner of America's original releases on this. But the proposal is to activate, although nobody's bit on it yet, and we're looking for a closure on this process, but the plastic gun issue or the interpretation of enforcing the plastic gun-slash-undetectable firearms regulation-slash-laws If you want to call them that, they're regulations guys. They're really not laws. These are established for the corporation, not for us. But they're, of course, as usual, taking their people, coming out, putting a gun to everybody else's head. And there ain't no pun there. So, one of the things to take into consideration are, again, the number of different weapons that already have a significant, and if we go by percentages, see, this is the other thing, remember you got these skanks in government. doing this percentage thing with American parts even, etc., etc., etc., for ways to attack people over firearms. So expect percentages, they'll do the same thing with, well it's got like 60% of the volume of the weapon is plastic and therefore it's gonna disqualify it from sales and we might even have to go out and confiscate the ones. After all, we got people in California confiscating guns without a warrant right now. Hell, they shoot you with so much x-ray if you choose not to get the pat down at the airport, they could find a pin hidden in places where pins shouldn't be. A one-shot plastic gun is all you're going to get out of a plastic gun right now. Then you're going to have to have a primer in there somehow. I think they would find it with their massive, we'll kill you as soon as we can, x-ray machines at the airport. Right. The undetectable gun. Mark, you know it and I know it. The undetectable gun is a myth. with current technology? Oh, it has been for years. Hard-ray technology, guys, was available 70 years ago. The hard-ray technology that we're presently using in the airports. Let's qualify this again. 70 years ago, the fluoroscope. Let me ask everybody, why did the fluoroscope get taken off the market? The reason the fluoroscope got taken off the market is because, well, that thing, Redon, thought about that there, radiation stuff, you see. Because of the way that the emitter worked and how it you know lack of containment Well when you swung that thing around because it was kind of like a dental. It was like a dental light Yeah, everybody everybody four doors down in all directions I don't know the precondairi five houses down just drop dead what yeah, he just dropped dead He was just like stun for a second from his last song you know here smoked a little bit and he just flopped over and He's real stiff too. Well, actually it put me so much that he just like, eh, popped. We are kind of joking but we are not because that was the problem. It was demonstrated and in fact there were tens and tens of thousands of individuals who were again X-ray technicians who explained to everybody how this worked. We have discussed this on the air. Many of them weren't with us anymore. Yeah, some aren't with us and haven't been for a while because they were dead back after 1968 already having been washed with their job with radiation to the point where they knew they didn't have much time left. Their body said you'll never do that to me again. We've got the limit. Remember, black tag, black tag. The thing about it is that this technology has been available. It's just that again everybody backed off it because it's what I haven't talked about many times. Hard-ray technology. They've used this from the air. We have talked about this. If they do, you have every right to shoot them dead. And that's why they tried it on our CAO, especially if anybody notices anything strange. If that happens, our policy is shoot their ass out of the sky. Seriously. And that's something that after the first few incidents years ago, we just put out as a flat out policy. If they're over your house and these particular series of things occur, you might as well dump everything you got in there trying to kill you right now. Right. So you better make sure you bring them down and that helicopter isn't going to be there in a submission with enough holes in it and no matter how you look at it they're going to bring themselves close enough that they are regularly available because they have to bring the aircraft down fairly low for a hard-ray scan which is why they're also using road-ruining aircraft for the project. So, shoot their arse down, the machine is still intact, put their arse right in front of it, toast them there, start from the legs and the crotch up. Just leave it right there. Don't do the upper torso, just do the lower part of their body and just fry them. Takes a long time when the lower part is dead and the upper part is still functioning. Oh, they don't want you to know about that one either. It's kind of wicked, that's kind of mean. Yeah. And it's not the pretty Hollywood version of, oh, he just kind of fades off. No, what happens is the normal bacteria that's in the body, the good friendly bacteria, and the bad evil stuff left over that is in another part of the body, well it just kind of goes rabid. But then again, they planned on doing that to you. So, I love them spades. I think we've got a caller. Who do we have caller? Yeah, it's Ernest in Kentucky. Mark, hey, Ernest, good to hear you guys. Very good. Hey, Tom, how you doing? Okay, how about you? All doing great, guys. I just had a few quick comments here and then I'll be in and out. You know, I know Ralph there, but I've been calling in a hemorrhage-y lopper, so nice guy. And so you're almost up in areas. I've been spreading the word to those of you guys. The other thing, these Apex body armor panels. Yes, Mark, you've been covered. Has anybody talked about weaving those into the to make a quick field expedient cover behind the back of your pickup truck or something like that? Well you could, now that would be an option but there are, if you look around now you're going to have to find some sources again but armored blankets were built for the insides of APCs and heavy trucks and they are out there. In fact there's a company or a couple of them in Missouri that are surplus companies and I don't have it right at my fingertips if I got it on file in the house. The gentleman has different panels and they are already set up basically for what you are talking about doing. If you were to do anything, what I would do for instance if you had a bucket seat system like a lot of military trucks have, I would put an upper pad behind the seat, you know above, like a neck rest. And then what we used to do is we would take a vest, oversized vest and snap them together and put them right around the bucket seat. You see how that works? You don't even have to alter them or anything. You just velcro them with the old military ones. You zip them. You can armor up the back seat. You're not going to be as comfortable. You're wearing armor too, so nothing is going to bite you. That's another trick. The other thing is just to hang them. Don't modify them. In other words, the back... We talked about this with armoring up trucks. Let me give you an idea. Do you have anybody who does, you have to look around, maybe you do know or maybe you don't know, do you know anybody that does bathroom stalls, installation and bathroom installations and stuff industrially like for schools and institutions? Yeah, I've heard you talk about the Kevlar separate. Those panels are still, but those are the best choice for doing your truck because they're totally innocuous. Nobody can say anything about it. And the thing is you put a panel on the inside of your box below, cut it right to the upper edge is what I would do and contour it, bolt that into place, and then do another panel inside the cab the same way. Now, the flexible armor could still go in there, but I'd hang, I just carry extra vest and hang them. make a little hanger bar. They hang by the shoulder pads and you can put two or three of them behind the seat to offer additional protection to the rear so that if anything gets through that bullet, that becomes a bullet sock. If it gets through the Kevlar or steel panel you put in the back of the box and if it gets through the inner panel that's past that on the inside of the cab, then Kevlar works as a bullet sock to take out the rest of the energy. And they still be able to pull the vest and use it as you needed too. Which would be cool. If you had to have extra vests, you know, for people, you've got them hanging there ready to go. Well that's how we roll around here. We carry extras. So force multipliers here. Yeah. Not to forget what you were talking about. The two Mexican ladies that were shot up chasing. Where were most of the footholds at in that vehicle so some effect not to exactly pop pop pop pop pop even then or summer Let's not forget those we've pointed out many times the whole stinking neighborhood got shot up those shots that we were Everyone that hit the truck of holds thinking neighborhood needed to be armored Well, good job, guys. That's all I had. I'll let you go. Way to go, guys. Thank you. Appreciate it. And for everybody out there, guys, again, Eagle Radio, American Radio. We've got a whole bunch of possum radio networks out there. And what we'll do, as we can, we're going to bring Ralph up, other people up. Captain Monahan is in the area, but he's in the middle of a construction project. I'm very subject. We're talking about radio antennas. We're reworking some equipment right now, so we're going to try to get him up if we can. It won't be tonight, but it might be, we'll see, maybe Thursday. If he's free, we're going to have to drag him away screaming and kicking from the radio bench, is what we'll have to do now. And I think we're pretty well at the bottom of the aisle, aren't we? Oh, we're sweeping beyond it at the moment. And you'll see what you have. Night vision technology available, sir? Yes, I do. How can we get hold of you? And what do you have? The phone number is 231-79-684-58. Again, 231-79-684-58. We can talk about goggles or gun sights, green screens or thermal. We can talk about the night vision video. Hey, my number is 231-79-684-58. And if you've never seen the night vision video or if you have not purchased it for yourself, Well, there's a whole bunch of information on there. You'll see mostly third generation, some example of second generation. And you'll see the same scenery through the different seasons, through different levels of moonlight. Again, the same scenery. I think I'm here all to go picture. So you have consistent background to compare part of the great effort. That's one of the reasons why it took a half of a year from summertime to wintertime at any rate. talk to me about night vision you can reach me at 231-796-8458. If you want to get the night vision video put 30 bucks in an envelope one way shape or form and send it over there to Nancy Cornke at post office box 194 in Michigan where the PZ is also known as the zip code is 48130 and that will get you the night vision video and get you leaps and bounds ahead of a whole lot of people when it comes to knowledge about night vision. Again, my number is 231-796-8458. Thank you Mark. And that means the technology available to continue to operate 24-7 guys. We are looking at a 24 o'clock. It doesn't shut down. It's a two hour movie. I'm done for the moment. Can you guys stop fighting? I'm going to go check on my hot cocoa. Hey, dudes, I'm a little tired here. It doesn't work that way, guys. It's 24-7. You want to rest? You want to make sure that your people can see through the night. That's how you'll be able to rest. Of course, you might be second or third shift. a holocaust and if you are then you can spend the time at night. We'll work on it during the day. You can rest and we'll work on it during the day. How does that sound? Anyway, it is again a priority. The idea here too is also gain time on the technology. Well, it's first generation. Yep, and a big chunk of what you're going to see out there is first generation, even in military hands. Simply because everybody's using everything they've ever made and there's never enough to go around. Even as we speak, third generation equipment is dying. Second generation equipment is dying. Everything has a lifespan, guys. Equipment is it treated. It's attrition. The operation time takes its toll. Weather conditions take their toll. Things get shot. Things get run over. Oh, that looks like my box for my... I shouldn't have left it there where the Bradley went by. It's better to be my night vision. Yeah, it was my night vision. It wasn't my box. And then the night vision was in it. That's right. Oh, man. You see, the carry can was, well, it's flat too. If you mean anything inside, it's flat. Trust me, distortion is consistent. So the basic rule is that things break. Things wear out. Things get tired. And I don't care what the hell it is. Now, if we go into a major conflict and they start shutting off, the interesting stuff gets shut off, whatever they got is all they've got. Always remember that, guys. You get it from them, you take it from them, you use it on them if you want to. But to understand the basics, how to get the equipment to work and get more people, again, in the niche, in the slot, five by five. To do that, we need to make sure that we've got people trained. That's the other reason for adapting the equipment and technology now. You get a better feel for it. Now another thing, rotten weather, but as was pointed out by one of our callers, Don, Bambi season is in motion in Pennsylvania. So the hoofed creatures are dying with reckless abandon, the war against Bambi continues, combat infantry skills developed by the deer to escape are challenged by the potential for the rifleman to engage the target before it exceeds what is considered to be normal contact range. They are deer slayers in Pennsylvania. Happy! Well, as it is, we again can expect to see people eating and enjoying venison steaks, venison roast, venison ribs, venison jerky and much more. And we have here in Michigan the same way. In fact, we had some guys who were asking me about how we do deer jerky and what processes and of course, well, it's a flavor issue guys, because if you are going to marinate anything, it's purely a matter of, well, what are your taste buds demand? Some people like sweet, some people like sour, some people like spicy, some people like mild. So in some cases you don't even marinate it. It's just, well, strip it, clean it up for its fat, and get her into the dryer. So just a matter of personal taste, personal preference. Usually we do like marinating only because we've got tons of the stuff for cheap, and I've got big 2 gallon tubs that we put everything in, porcelain white tubs, you know, everything's cleaned up, sterilized, ready to go, and we are marinating pounds of flesh, pounds of muscle. Yum, yum, yum, yum. Even as I speak, I know I'm going to go into the house and break open a pack. Did you know that? I did. I just talked myself into it. It's a good idea to get into the process, guys, and know how to do it now so you'll be prepared for later and have the technology on the shelf. That's the big thing. Know what you need, know how to make it work, and work for you. Don, what else is jumping off the wall up there in that neck of the woods, sir? Well, it is a communications Tuesday and I'd urge everybody to use their computer on the quarter hour and the top and the bottom of the hour and go and check out the Obamacare website. Hey, we keep hitting at that dinosaur and if you don't let it stand up, it can't stand up. I'm told Mark the Republicans left Washington for the holidays with a list of 40 different ways to use the Obamacare website against Obama. But you know what? He's not going to run again, is he? So they would hope to use that against his plan, but we'll see what comes of that. It's not like I'm a Republican or a Democrat. Mark, did I tell you about the Louisiana politician on the radio the other day? Oh, no, go ahead please. Somebody was relating this and telling me about, they heard this Louisiana politician on the radio the other day and he was saying that he's tired of people around the nation accusing people of in Louisiana just being dumb. They're just not up to the standard of the rest of the nation. And this Louisiana politician went on to explain that that's not true and gave a pretty good example. He said, now listen, he says, what other state in the union would build a city 12 feet below sea level and then fill it with Democrats who don't know how to swim? That he got up and left to show, I'm told. That goes over to Persport. what you think of in this instance, and a Democrat, what he thought of his, so I had to relate that story, Mark, because, well, you know, it's an example of what politicians think of the, you know, the people who employ them, you know, you and me, and the people who vote them in, be it Louisiana or Michigan or Maine or California or Oregon or Florida. And it's not a bad example, is it? Well, it is, you know, there is a song by Warren Zivat, I'm going to follow back on that. There's a song titled, Mr. Bad Example. It would seem like that politician could have his own little refrain right in there, Mark. I hear a ding. It sounds like we have a caller. Who do we have? Well, we might have a listener, but you know what? Star 6 will unmute you. Hello. We got you calling. Go ahead. Hi, this is Shawn out in Seattle. Glad to be listed in your show. I'm always thrilled to hear John talk about this night vision and the affordability of it. I know my daughter was talking to me about that last week. She's got a small night vision scope she bought somewhere online, the Russian version. Anyway, I just wanted to mention that she's very helpful. I give people a lot of hope and courage as far as trying to get set with whatever means are possible. I like your idea of the scavenging mark and putting things together from just kind of the MacGyver attitude. Well, interestingly enough, this is where we get into the whole thing about different ideas. The 3D gun idea is a workable issue, but what we talked about before, and it turns out that it progressively became an issue, the proprietary software and the patent and contract controls, that was the first thing they tried to use on everybody that was working with the technology, mostly because they were leasing. And I understand what the guys are doing. They're trying to show they could do it on cheap. But I would point out that again, most all of this was done with even lower tech and has been for years. How refined it is, is determined by the manufacturer who makes the gun. But crude and rude, I guess again, you're not worried about pretty on the outside, but does it snap the cap? Does it activate the powder? Does the bullet go down range? And does the bullet terminate the target? Long as it does that we're not worried about it too much else and pretty doesn't count for anything But the a lot of people have justified in other words a purified they made made bootiful Many of these unique firearms that are in reality one of a kind a lot of the stuff right out of the manuals the improvised munition manuals has been built as a commercial firearm at one time or another even though I was surprised because I knew the Filipinos had made water pipe guns for years but they actually brought one into the country as a finished product years ago and that was you know I've never seen it I've seen many of the homemade versions coming from the Philippines guys brought them back in World War two we got a lot of World War two vets here especially in the 70s we got to see a lot of this stuff come out of the woodwork A lot of our guys have Liberator pistols because our guys from the Pacific and from Europe came back with them from World War II and they were still in the box, they were dropped. But these Filipino shotguns, nothing more than two water pipes with a wooden stock affixed to it. A firing pin through a cap in the base and you just slam the one pipe into the other pipe and guess what happens? Pop! Boom! Boom! Yeah, but they made them with a special like four grip handle a regular stock, even a trigger, you know, technically a trigger, trigger guard, but there's no hammer. You know, a slam-fire shotgun, guys, it takes you, like I said, if you have a drill, total lapse time to make a slam-fire shotgun or whatever length barrel you want is about, oh, 15 minutes. It takes longer to be in the hardware to do it than it actually does to make it. It takes more time to pick the parts off the shelf. And there's only one thing you have to do, and that's drill the cap at the end. Once you've got that done and do a little filing when you've got everything ready to go, pop, pop, boom, boom. And again, the better the quality of the steel, the better off you'll be. Or you can use iron pipe, steel pipe, because again, this is a standard shotgun shell. And this is a trick that the Filipinos learned a long, long, long time ago. You can make them in 12 gauge, you can make them in 20 gauge. They don't even have to have a stock. They just went with a stock to try and get some accuracy so we keep it on the Japanese soldier crossbar center. I remember reading once about the guys the police pulled over who were bikers who would have shotguns in their handlebars on their bikes. Oh yeah. There was some cop away. Well, again, the thing is all you have to do is be screwed in and then what you do is you can either have just a thumb with a spring So, it's actually a dead man's release. In other words, you would push the hammer forward, the spring puts it under tension, and if you get popped off the bike or get pushed away from it without gradually releasing it, it goes off no matter what. The other technique actually puts a trigger system together. There are a number of different ways that can be done. It's purely a matter of how sophisticated you want to be. You can make it so it's cock-locked and ready to release. Or it can just be what's called a positive dead man spring, dead man hammer. The bottom line is people start panicking and writing about, oh, we can't get bullets sitting more. I called in a few weeks back and talked about all the lead that I was finding out at some of these ranges out in the woods. You can just walk up and pick it right up to the ground. I picked up over 100 pounds of it, and it made little ingots out of it, unless Schwab tires better than nothing, and it was a lot of dead. Let's qualify that. Any kind of pot metal could be used as long as it's meltable. Whatever combination or whatever combination of metal could be used to make bullets. The only reason we use lead is for the mass to outer dimension issues. If you go with a lighter bullet or if you go with different materials, the only thing that's going to change is again velocities and aerodynamic potential. based upon the design of the projectile's surface contact. Because you can accelerate around quite easily and get it up into the higher velocities, but there's two things that happen. If it's already a malleable metal, a meltable metal, let's put it that way, then it will actually heat in flight. This has been a problem with getting into the hyperballistic rounds and why solid shot is more likely. I was amazed on the internet some guy was making AP rounds by taking bullets and drilling the tips and then blowing a piece of flint in the front of the bullet. I just laughed at it but then when he shot at the target and I saw the steel melt away I went, oh God, that's unbelievable. You're a backyard genius. Well the thing is that in fact as a matter of fact right here, here this, can you hear that Don? Can you guys hear the rattling? Oh yeah. You know what that is? Sorry, that's my focus baggie. These are bag shawls. Now listen to what this is guys. I'm going to read right off the box because this is the original research box. These are brag shawls made in the USA. Brilliant tone! Regulation, US patent pending, needles, extra loud tone, extra loud tone, extra loud tone. These are phonograph needles. This is a box. a box of, well, 100 per envelope as a matter of fact. And I would say I still probably got about, hold on here, I'm going to tell you real quick, probably around 700 phonograph needles. These are what we use to make the 388-piece ACP armor piercing bullets from years ago using cupped hollow point, or forgive me, cupped soft point projectile. We centered and drilled it. We took the phonograph needle, put that in the middle, and that became the dart penetrator. And this was the original box. I pulled it out. Everybody should kind of hear that over the air. I've got to be careful because a couple of them came out of one of the open doors. Can I share something with you, Mark? For people who do build prospecting, a lot of them find garnet, industrial diamond, ruby and sapphire in their pans, and ruby and sapphire as well as to garnet are from the corundum family which are almost the same hardness as diamond. So if you're able to get those and experiment with those, they might pierce armor as well. Well, the big thing is, remember it's not the material point of contact, it's also the dimension of the material, what it's reinforced by. Because what happens with a, the reason you want to use a cupped soft point is because as the round is being pushed into the target, the cup base slaps the penetrator into the material. It continues to create stability and it works like an hydraulic ram. That's one of the reasons that you need to use a cup base round or you can use a gas check. We've talked about this several times. When you create a penetrator in the center of the unit, if you're not going to go with what the military does where they use a cup jacket, And then they of course centrifuge. It's really bizarre the way they do these. There's a lot of tech into the bullets that we've produced. It's why the M2AP round is more accurate than the regular ball round. The centrifugal process and then the introduction of the penetrator into the bullet is a science unto itself that nobody else spent the time on. We're one of the few countries that actually did that in World War II. It's high tech and extreme high tech and low tech for its day. Well, we're going to go low tech and rather than centrifuging it, we're just going to center it by reversing the cup. In other words, using a jacketed round where the soft point is the introduction point for the lead into the vessel. We then bore that and whatever we put in the way of the penetrator even if you use that rod that diamond or if you use that piece of Ruby It would only be a small chip and you'd still need a reinforcing rod then you need a second component you want a rod that is Small enough that it's not going to be to it You know does not going to take too much of the lead away so that you reduce the weight by any significant matter But you need that rod in place so that that component of material, whatever it is, is actually hydraulically pushed into the material that it's making contact with. And so it's a two-fold process. What happens is the penetrator makes contact with the surface, because usually it would be a protrusion at the very end of the malleable material, the lead or whatever you've cast around the penetrator. That works as a lubricant as calories build up in the target area when it starts to thermally activate from friction, which is all happening in a matter of nanoseconds. What's interesting is lead works as a lubricant or it could be tin or whatever you've got for material. Even aluminum does the same thing. In fact, aluminum is quite monstrous in this respect. What happens is that the base of the cup slaps and continues to push the rod through. It's lubricated by the softer metal and it shears through whatever it's in front of. It will shear through steel just as well as it will shear through Kevlar. What's interesting is though with the aluminum, unlike the lead's bad enough, but the aluminum does some really weird things when it hyperactivates, when it becomes molten. When it gets through the wound channel, it starts to cool almost immediately by the nature of the properties of the metal. and it creates these long striated rods of debris that are in the wound channel and in the muscle tissue depending on what it hits. If it hits bone at higher velocities with more energy, the aluminum literally will shear and pierce bone at radical angles and then it solidifies in place. So you have these, not only these wound channels, but you have frangible material that no matter how you move creates pain. Think about that. It's really cool stuff. When we started talking about going to aluminum, we were laughing our arse off because knowing what we saw that the government had done, Bendix Corporation, General Dynamics, let's see who else did Rockwell, they did research in all of these materials because when they started to build the GE mini guns, they were looking for contractors to build new and unique ammunition to go along with those hyper-ballistic GE mini guns. And they did all kinds of fascinating research. It was just monstrous. So once you get up into those higher velocities and that rain of lead going down range at the same time, oh yeah. Especially if you pushed around, if you go with a rifle round, you go with aluminum or any of the malleable metals. Then you're pushing it to the molten range before it even hits because of the applied calories and the friction between the air and the surface of the projectile. The aluminum when it gets there tends to act as an incendiary bolt. Yeah, and it'll be actually it will not be on the edge of liquid when it gets there. If you're at 4,000 to 5,000 feet per second, The outer casing would have to be or should be either a high-end copper, and even there that'll be somewhat soft by the time it gets to the target, but a high-end alloyed copper or a steel jacket. A jacket out of wash. Yeah, a jacket would be a steel, it has to be a jacket. But that aluminum encased in it will have built up so many calories that it actually will be sloppy. It would actually, the adhesion between the wall of the outer jacket and the material that fills up the inner component would be liquid. When that hits, that would of course, by combination of heat and energy, will permeate, will perforate the Kevlar or perforate the steel, work as a lubricant, push through the object and then it will immediately start to cool as it makes contact with tissue or material that is, you know, even air itself, which will allow it to re-solidify. And just imagine the random ways that that material will follow the path of least resistance. Ooh. And again, we're not talking big 20 millimeter. They did do this with 20 millimeter rounds, by the way. But in fact, when they were looking at the 20s, they were looking at .308, because .308G, mini guns were in .308, then they went down to .223. But let's not forget that we went the other way with the mini guns, too, didn't we, guys? In fact, they're not so many when we go there. When we go the other way, they are just chain fed, oh my god, gallium. 20-40mm cannon. Yeah. Then you are talking. It's just burst a stream out. You are talking the beasts of the air then. Or the beast of the air defense tank family, which they remember we tried to build the Sergeant York and then they did away with that. But that was a GE gun. That was a carousel gun. It was built. So anyway, point is, we can do it below check-in. and whatever penetrator you use you've got to have additional support for that. Remember that. Remember Mark 60 minutes beating the hell out of the Sergeant York gun one Sunday night? Oh yeah, of course because it wasn't perfect and it's like oh that's a crock of BS. None of nothing. Air defense as long as we remind everybody guys, air defense the reason they didn't like the Sergeant York is because it didn't cost us any money. That was the most efficiently built firearm or forgive me firearms weapon system and platform we ever Would have bought we didn't buy it, but we would have bought it in fact We were on the edge of buying it because they built so many rounds it for about what 15 years guys you could buy The training rounds for the sergeant York you could buy the projectiles still can The guy got fired that developed the sergeant York round because he saved the taxpayers about 80% of the budget he was given He was outright fired. The major who developed the rounds for the Sergeant York was given an estimated price of $37 per round for the HE standard and the training round and the AP round respectively, I think the training round was given about $11. up and down somewhere in that spec and I think $16 or $17 for the AP round. Well, he combined the AP and the training round into one and brought the cost in at about $12. In fact, by the time they got with production, they said it would have been $9. And for that reason, well, he didn't spend the money. He came under budget. You can't do that. So that major got punished and of course the sergeant York was based on the what? Oh we had we had thousands and still do we had thousands of m48 chassis and So what they were going to do is take the m48 which by the way eventually they would have taken the older and the newer m60 chassis They could have just taken the whole turret module dropped it onto an m60 chassis. We could have run it for another 20 years. Yep That was the most efficient air defense platform ever built for the price and it was basically on the same thing the Russians do. The Russians take a system they already have, take another weapons system they either already have or what the Russians did for years, they didn't even make new guns guys. They used naval guns. They used naval air defense guns because they were designed to put a lot of crap up and shoot things down. Yep. So of course, oh hell, heaven forbid we should have an efficient gun like that Don. Yeah, so anyway well I'm boy. We have a long way from our little 30 380 auto or from our you know other innovative bullet designs, but It's just an example guys. You know think outside the box look at anything and everything you have this junk or stuff laying around Now to be quite honest this box of phonograph needles is worth a hell of a lot more than it used to be So I'm not going to make projectiles out of that anymore They're antiques and they're collectible, but also if somebody's got a Victrola, these are Victrola needles. This literally is the case hardened, hyperpoint Victrola needle that's used for playing records. That's what we did hundreds of AP rounds out of. In fact, this is the last box out of a case I had. We probably had close to 40,000 needles in one case. We used another one up completely, so you got to figure, oh, we probably did what, 78,000 AP rounds? Total, no exaggeration. Did them in the basement. Nipps, Lanny, Michigan. Crank, crank, crank. Everybody had a job. Everybody did their part. We made all those and put them into service. We know they work because I've got the case of Kevlar we tested. Oh, that's right. In fact, I just picked that up about two hours ago, Don. I just moved it again. So I can even show you the test Kevlar we used, guys, and what it did. And we had Kevlar straight from second chance. the guys who were building it when nobody else was. Anyway, we are heading towards the top. I know we gotta be close. Oh, we're past! Oh, we're there, yeah. Yeah, Don, your number for Night Vision, please. Hey, my number is... 2-3-1-7-9-6. 8 4 5 8 and we are the top god bless the republic death is in 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 hoorah don you gotta go? i gotta go be careful sir your number for night vision imposes please oh hey that number is 2 3 1 7 9 6 8 4 5 8 2 3 1 7 9 6 8-4-5-8 Thank you much, God bless you God bless America 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. 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