Mark Koernke discussed survival preparedness and weapons, covering fire-starting techniques using primitive methods like flint and steel, char cloth, and dryer lint. The show featured extended caller discussions on improvised water filtration, hand sanitizer as a multi-use fire starter, and steel wool ignition via battery. Koernke then shifted to weapons Wednesday content, detailing traditional weapons like tomahawks, spears, and entrenching tools as defensive implements, with callers sharing information about feral pig hunting using spears and drones. The final segment explored DIY drone construction using RC toy technology and weed whacker engines, including controversial discussion of weaponized drone systems and anti-helicopter tactics.
What's better than your music on the go with the cool Live 365 iPhone app? The new and improved iPhone app, of course! With background streaming, super-fastation loading, share features, track ratings, and more! Download it now at Live365.com slash smartphone! Live 365! Okay, that's right, I'm Daryl Sivek! There you go! One day closer to victory for all of our brothers and sisters, both out of behind the lines and occupied territories west, south, southeast, and east. Ladies and gentlemen, you are listening to us on Liberty Tree Radio.4mg.com. We're on AM&FM Microstations, CV, 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. Headed Louisiana, Mississippi, Texas, Oklahoma, Big Chugga, Nebraska, a whole bunch of Wyoming to include both 5th, 3rd, 5th, and our friends in. The state of confusion also knows the California Soviet Socialist democracy but a shining star North of the Flem the spewed of the disgust the stench is the great state of Jefferson the state of Jefferson and again just came upon their birthday December 7 and For everybody out there listening to take time go to YouTube Punch-In State of Jefferson. You'll get all kinds of cool videos there. That's a great way to find out a little bit more and get a background on the history of the state. Originally, December 7, 1941 was the kickoff, but as we know it happened, Pearl Harbor. The rest is history there, as they say. But the activities continue, the disgust for the Soviet has grown to the nth degree, everybody's tired of the megalomaniacs that make up the nutcase quadriplegic homosexual Eskimos to the south. And so everybody is pretty well moving in the right direction. Turning back east we sweep across Spinesleap over the emerging banks of Mississippi Land and Smokey slash the Blue Ridge over the Wristown Crews' Grandma teams, OK teams, and the Ma'am Bela Grandma Consortium bringing us the Golden Spike. Well, Darrell, it's cool. We got moonlight out there. During the day, we're having the same kind of waves of broken up fronts. Actually, it's like if you're looking at it from the satellite, it looks like a big hurricane over Michigan, guys. Wave of clouds, wave of clear, wave on the ground, that's what it looks like for us. When the sun was out, man, it was cooking. But the sun disappeared, and it'd be gray and blah. And then it'd be sunshiny and gray and blah. So, we've had a mix of temperatures. If the sun was able to hit something and it was dark colored, it was melting stuff. So, we definitely have had some interesting mixed weather here today. What's it like in your neck of the woods, sir? What is this special day today? Let's jump it off the way. 12th? No, I'm sorry today is 11th. Tomorrow is the 12th. Then Friday is the 13th. Oh! The last Friday of the 13th we could possibly have on the 13th. Oh my, you know it's going to be disaster, don't you? Yes, yes. It's been snow flurrying here all day and it's been a high of, right now we have the daily high of 23. How about that? We made it another degree. Ouch! Man, I get my bikini out tomorrow. Oh, just the thought of that. Don't point my brain in that direction, please. I want to apologize for not being here last week. I had a funeral to go to and couldn't get back in time, so we couldn't make it because I do have a report for the first day's activity for the annual two-week December deployment of the Pennsylvania militia. On a massive scale. Yes, on a massive scale. approximately 1 million hit the woods. Now I don't have any results as to how the rest of the militia units fared, but the squad that I was with, well let's put it this way, I personally spotted seven moving targets engaged three, destroyed three with three shots in 30 minutes. Excellent. Then another two-man fire team where they engaged Well, they saw 12 all together and they engaged two of them and destroyed two targets. So between the four of us we engaged a total of five targets, a total of 12 and destroyed five. And that was all within, oh, probably 30 minutes of time span about 8 o'clock in the morning until about 8 30. Now these were hunters that you were taking in right? Oh no you're thinking of Bambi. Oh yeah. Seven hunters, two game wardens and a bright red Guernsey cow. I'm sorry pure red Guernsey cow. There we go. Well that's been known to happen. Somebody's painted cow on the side of their cows so somebody wouldn't shoot them. It's not a deer. No, it's a big deer. Actually, if you can get away with it, you knew it wasn't a deer when you shot it. The idea is to get out of the woods with it. Yeah. The argument you can use if everybody comes up, I just got excited. I didn't know. I didn't know. Oh, come on. You knew. It's just that if you shoot the deer, you get about half as much meat. If you shoot the cow and you can get out with it fast enough, you brought those extra sets of antlers to strap on with the staples, right? Yes. Well, actually you cut them off from the other one and just drag them along and cut the other ones off and say, well, see, I already cut them off so I wouldn't break them off and lose them when I was dragging them out. Exactly. Oh, so again, a couple of things here real quick. What gun shows do you have coming up before Christmas? Any? Well, there's one coming up this weekend up at Harbor Creek. That's just east of Erie about 20 miles. Not quite 20 miles, about 10 miles east of Erie. I'm not going to be able to make it. I've been having severe leg problems here. Back in May of last year I fell off of Ladder Atlanta and raked smack dab on my kneecap. And it's been haunting me all summer. It's finally shown signs getting better, but I'm not going to be at that one. Up at Harbor Creek at the Harbor Creek Fire Hall, it's up on Route 20, east of Erie, about five miles, maybe ten at the most. And it's a nice little gun show. And that's all I have until after the first of the year and then the first weekend in January, which is the fourth and the fifth. I will be at Washington, PA for a 450 table show down there. So if there's anything you need, you need to round it up fast, get to the gun shows and pick it up. I want to reiterate that Elliott Brothers, of course you have to go through a dealer, so you'll probably have to pay the dealer a little finders fee. They use his license to get it, but they have a 500-round can of the SS-109. $223 in the $65, I'm sorry, 62 grain tip for $267 for a 500 round can. So you need to get ahold of... and they got, apparently, I just checked the site here a little while ago, apparently they have more than 100 cans because they have 99 plus listed on their webpage. So not that I want to see it all bought up, but... I want to see it all brought up. Like the old Indian Tommy Hawks. It had to warm out. It had to rock between the Y branch of a tree. Spank! That'll dent a skull real quick. So I mean you can make them out of anything that's available. You don't have to have steel. You don't have to have plastic. But Mother Nature has provided you with plenty of material to make those. Rocks are everywhere. If you are really good at it, you can maybe chip on rocks to put a sharper point on it. If it's big enough and you're good enough, you can make a stone knife. One of the things that I remember when using or when developing wood tips, just the process of heating and scoring them in a fire and heat tempering the wood, actually burning the wood. to the point, not to the point where it's hash guys, but actually hardening it in that way. You can grind it and harden it using a stone. And that's going to make a big difference with regard to your point penetration. If you're doing a primitive bow or if you're doing spear, the other mean trick is to knock it in different ways so that if you thrust and you impale somebody with it, remember it kind of sticks with the target. That's one of the advantages of using green wood, as a matter of fact. You try to pry it out. The knock, what it does is it actually moves into the tissue. You try to pull back on it and it rips and tears or ideally it might even just stay in when they pull it out. It's like, wait a minute, there's a part missing. Yeah, it's still inside. So either get it out or it's going to cause a lot of problems. If you have a defensive position and you want to make it just a little bit more cumbersome for the enemy to penetrate, remember most of the Vietnam vets will remember this, the old punty stick trip. In our particular case with the availability of some 20 penny nails, you can dig a few pits around the front of your perimeter. Well, let's just put it this way. When they step down in it, it messes up their balance even if they don't get one of the nails in their leg or foot, but it throws their balance off and makes it easier for you to draw the zero on them. Most important is it's a nutrition process with everything you can do. Anything can be used to make a punji-type steak, sticks, wire, metal. PVC pipe cut on a sharp and on an extreme angle. It's not quite as resilient as bamboo, but it really, really, really mucks with cutting a chunk out of somebody. Remember that when you're stabbed by something that is a tubular piece of material, that's called a cookie cutter cut. Everybody understand why? It makes a donut hole. Yeah, makes a donut hole. Look, there's chunk of meat there you can cook later. Look, we're going to have shish kebab. But first you do the sewers. That just happened to be his name was Shiska and he's Bobbed. Yeah, and Bobbed is going to go to town tonight. Well, the thing here again is the number of different weapons you've dealt with and in fact used in your historical works. A lot of the different traditional weapons that we talked about, for instance the Tomahawk for the Revolutionary War, War of 1812 soldiers, these were the arms that were the standard of the day, weren't they? Yeah, the standard was Tomahawk and also if you were really fortunate you may have had a flintlock pistol as a backup but then you had your rifle and then you had not but one but maybe two or three knives and you also had a a possibles bag that carried the extra balls and extra powder and jerky for your staple for food or whatever small bag of flour rice beans whatever And something else they carried in there that people ought to think. How are you going to build a fire if you're out in the wilderness and you run out of matches and your cigarette lighter don't work? And that's the old flint and steel kit. Don't take much to make one of those. In fact, you can buy through some of the primitive hunting stores out there a flint and steel kit. basic kit and all you have to do is save up all your cotton cloth because you cut it into little squares and you put it in a little container with just a tiny hole poked in the top and you put that in the fire and you watch it until all the smoke stops coming out. When it stops smoking you take the tin out but you don't open it. You leave it set until it cools. And then you get what they call char cloth. You wrap that around your piece of flint, you strike the flint against the piece of steel, that throws a spark, catches the char cloth, then you have a stuff what they call birds nest made of any kind of tender that you can find. And you put the char cloth in there once it's starting to glow, and you gently blow on it. Not hard. gently blow on it until it spreads. Then it starts the tender on fire and then you have a fire. If you practice it, you can have a fire going in about a minute. In fact, we used to have competitions for that very purpose. Yes. The idea was, it was timed, guys. That way everybody got into good practice making the tools work for them. One nice thing about a striker and a flint system is Out of the way, Purdue works under any circumstances. One of the things that the guys who are using here is when everybody uses their dryers, their clothing dryers, electric or gas, doesn't make any difference. You have a screen net that collects lint. Yes, Ziploc baggies are your friend and lots of lint. because that will catch fire. It's one hell of a fire hazard as a matter of fact in an industrial site. So just think about again that's a real simple material you have available. You can put it into a Ziploc bag, put that inside another container just to be safe, keep it dry, dry, dry. But that is a quickie for initiating. You get any spark at all, it initiates and gets the flame going. You have your other tinder and light material ready. and you go from step to step to step in building that fire up. Remember that we also don't have to light up the whole forest or we don't have to heat the whole woods. All we have to do is get that canteen cup boiling guys. So the fire we're trying to build, we want it focused and you also want to make sure that you have cooking implements for you know that kind of work that compliment. the traditional old camp coffee pots, usually they're blue or black porcelain. Those were engineered specifically to take advantage of any heat available, the way they're designed, they focus the energy that they collect. And that's an example of a device, a tool, that needs to be in your toolbox. Because again, you're not going to try to light up the forest. You're not trying to heat the whole woods. You're going to build a fire enough to get what it is that's done. And if anybody else wants to use it, they can once you've initiated it. But remember, the idea is also to get rid of it. Make it disappear as quickly as possible. Fire is your friend. And what do they say? A fearful master? Well, remember, it's something that people are looking for. So the idea is minimize. Always minimize. In your fire starting kit, if you desire to put one together, you can also put a piece of candle in there. Okay? And use your bird's nest to light the candle. And then as you're adding more wood to the, or more tender to the bird's nest when you're building the fire, you let the candle drop a little bit of wax in there. Now that'll help speed up the combustion of material. Also, if you're in a situation where likes a minimum, you can like the candle and have a candle to heat out of your canteen, if everybody should have one. Well, what are you talking about? Canteen cup. The old canteen cup. They put them in the underneath the canteen inside the canteen pouch and You take them out and you can fill it full of snow if you're lacking water. Fill it full of snow in a candle and set it over a candle and the candle will heat. We'll burn it down and next thing you know you got some warm water. Okay, so these are all things that work well and well in hand with each other and as long as you're going to get a canteen cup for your canteen, you might as well take a baggie. and put a couple of coffee filters in it and everybody says, well, what do you want coffee filters for? Well, stop and think. You run out of water, you got a stream, maybe a little muddy, maybe a little murky, or maybe clear, but it still has floaty things in it. You put the coffee filter over top of your canteen and you can proceed to filter out most of the heavy dirt while you're filling up your canteen. In fact, one of the things that hold on for just a second caller, one of the other things that thanks for bringing us about the keeping the water clean. Boiling and sanitizing is one of the several ways you can water purify in the field. If you don't have or if you've run out of all the other equipment you have, making a little quick boiling cup of water using a canteen cup or whatever you're using for your field kit is a way to sterilize the water to get the floaties out. But I would remind everybody a little trick. Coffee filters are cheap, cheap, cheap for the throwaway brand. You know, like you get $100 for $1, $50, whatever the dollar store is offering. You pour your water through that. You can even make a little frame out of a number of different things so that the coffee filter filters out the bigger chunks of stuff before you get to processing your water in a boiling container. Even a bigger one. But a smaller one for using the canteen cup filter the big chunks out. I know it's tough especially if it's windy, breezy, whatever. There's more chunks coming in. But the more that you can do to pre-filter, the better off you're going to be. Boiling eliminates most, not all, but most of the problems you're going to have to deal with. We've got a caller there. Go ahead and jump in, please. Hey, this is Jay Chief from Pennsylvania. Just wanted to add a little, I didn't catch the very beginning of your conversation on the survival kit stuff, but two things. One, hand sanitizer makes it great. fire starter due to the alcohol base plus you can use it as more than one use which is something you really want in your kit if at all possible is multiple uses for things hand sanitizer hygiene in the field you know is a big deal especially for food prep so and you can also use the hand sanitizer like I said especially for starting wet wood and it takes a spark really the other thing was the coffee filters, like he was just saying, you put it over your canteen and filter out that way. But you can also make the multi-layer, multi-granular size water filter, stuff like that. You can use the coffee filters as your... Right, exactly. There's things apart. All you need something you can fabricate into a tube to be able to run it through to run it into your canteen. Well you can, on that point if you want to do it in the field you're probably going to have a can of something, a can of beans, a can of spaghetti-o's. The tin can, which by the way is being replaced by the retort pouch, is such a utility tool. You can make a field kitchen out of it, you can make a field stove out of it. You can make kitchenware out of it, especially the newer cans now that have the single strike where the whole base is one piece along with the side walls. Those things are the best field kitchen improvised canteen cup you're going to run into. That's one piece of metal. Good chunk. All done. It's seamless. I don't try to throw any of those away if I can help it. I try to keep those in my scrap metal, but I keep them covered up and I keep them off to the side because they're a utility tool for a lot of other things that can be done. If you want to make a filter, like you said, one of the tricks, poke several holes in the bottom of a can like that. Positive can, if you can, poke the holes from the inside out. and then use your coffee filter, put one in, use your sand, charcoal layer, put another coffee filter in, sand or charcoal layer, whichever way you're going to go. You make your charcoal off of one of your larger fires and by the time you're done, you can build a filter in the field. That was part of what we were doing with this video so you've escaped from a FEMA camp. The idea is that you kind of wake up stunned, you don't really know what the guy is doing, you see it from the camera operator perspective where the guy is laying on his side and you have nothing. But you've got your feet and it's time to beat feet and get the hell out of dodge. Now what do you do? Because you don't want to go near anybody, you don't want to deal with anybody because you don't know who's doing the zoo and you don't even know where the hell you are. So what are you going to do? And the important thing is the basics guys. start accumulating anything man-made can be made into something else. Start accumulating anything that you see that's man-made if it can be carried away and it's not going to be missed if it's junk garbage debris along the road it's going to be converted into something else or you know on the back 40 anything and everything plastic coffee filters, any number of different things. And you're going to have to forage. So just, you know, ideas there. But this is something from all the stuff you're already carrying. You already spent calories to get it in the field. You can already plan on building it out there and if need be even leaving it in the field when the time comes. You actually leave it pre-deployed someplace. Go ahead, caller. Jump in there, please. Well, like I said, the main thing I wanted to point out was the hand sanitizer thing because of the different uses. Also, you know, spark to get it burning. So if you're in a situation even indoors where you need to burn something, you need to use something for as a distraction or whatever, it's a lot easier getting that going than it might be if you don't have a lighter or match handy to be able to actually start a flame any other way. I mean, you can get the spark from using a 9-volt battery and two wires to get the hand sanitizer burning. And the best thing would be, you know, boil the paper in there, get it saturated with the hand sanitizer, and then spark it. Exactly. One of the things there, again, dollar store items, guys, that's one of the things you'll find very reasonably priced. Already in small containers or mid-sized containers, depending on how you buy them, that are designed for travel. So they store well, they pack well, and when you use them up, don't toss the container out. You may need it for something else, at least for a bit. Anyway, go ahead, jump in there, Darrell, please. Yeah, just add one other thing to what he was talking about since he brought up batteries and wire. Steel wool. Steel wool will glow with a burn when you put electricity to it. You can do that from a car battery or even depending on the amount you have and how far away you are you can use a little square 9 volt battery too. But it'll start that steel wool to glow and then that can act as your tri cloth for sitting on Um, your Tinder, get it going, or... be used for many other things if you follow the drift there, theoretically. You should probably have some... you... and people, you sit there and people will say, well gee, you should have this, you should have... where do you put it all? Well, like you said, you pre-deploy it someplace, you don't put it all in one place, you have a couple places that you can put it out so you can get to because you may not get out of Dodge, with everything you need. It'd be nice if you could. But then again, if you took everything you needed, then you'd have to have a pack system that's probably carried by a mule train. Well, I'll leave it in today's... environment that's not necessarily an easy thing to put together. So you need to be able to deploy it, but you need to have small amounts on hand that you could fit into little, little, there again, this is where I keep saying your sealable baggies because they will not only keep the stuff dry, but if you should drop your pack in the water, heaven forbid, it'll also help your pack float so that you can find it. or retrieve it easier and still keep your clothes dry. But yeah, there's all kinds of things out there that you can get and you should not rely on any one thing but have a small amount of everything that you can work with which will then buy you time to be able to accumulate more when it becomes, but the idea is being able to survive from point A to point B, go from there. Now interestingly enough, one of the other things to remember is fire starters. We've talked about just strikers, but fire starting technology obviously, if we can, we'll use matches, we'll use lighters. I would point out, I've noticed this west of the Mississippi. I don't see this as much on the east. But large truck stops, if they're still hanging on by their toenails and a lot of them have been going under, or you know, again, the business is drying up and has been really slow in the last year. They're not tossing stuff out like they did before, guys. We stopped at a couple of truck stops, one in Wyoming, and they had an island with Bicliders, three and four for a dollar and five for a dollar and they were inventory that were marked down from where originally they were behind the counter and they had other ones that have come in, they've changed them out. Of course, chewing gum and everything else you can imagine, hard candy too and it was so cheap, it was like 10 cents for this and nickel for that for a pack of gum. You couldn't pass it up and it was the only bigger packs of gum, it just, they were outdated. But the fire starter was the big thing. small lighters, big lighters. Remember that a lot of places get packs of matches. They get them as promotional from the cigarette companies, but as a book typically will say, I'm not going to give out three matches. When I can sell them a lighter or a pack of backup, I will give my pack of something. I will sell them. I will not give it away. And that's why a lot of that stuff ends up either going home or it gets piled up in the back of the storeroom. They don't necessarily throw it out. although sometimes they do and that's what you gotta keep an eye out for. They'll want to put a yard sale. You know, cases of matches. Book matches should be kind of distributed around your person. They're lightweight, they're easy to use, they can be in little Ziploc bags with a bunch of other stuff, but pack matches everywhere you can. Matches are a tool. Fire is a tool. The TSA conditioning is to try and prevent people from having anything in their pockets. The slaves aren't supposed to be prepared for anything. You're supposed to be a good victim. No sharp objects, no flame makers. You need to have maybe a comb, but only if it's a real bendable or really, really cheap Chinese comb. And even there, we're not sure if you should be allowed that. Did you not change the subject, but since you brought up the TSA, They are one of my favorite groups. Did you see the story just today? I ran across it. Where the TSA agent, being the diligent person that they were, confiscated the sock monkeys, cowboys. toy pistol. He needed one to replace the one he had at home. He'd already stolen a monkey with the pistol, but he lost the pistol on the way home, so he had to wait till another monkey came through the system and he had to steal the little toy gun so his other monkey would be complete. Now you don't want to know why he lost it. You don't want to know what he was doing to the monkey. Eventually he did find the other one, but it just smelled very, very bad, so he figured I need a new one. It sounds like it smells like a bunch of monkey business to me. Yes it does. What it comes down to is they are bragging up about what they can steal from people. You have to remember to think about the P-brain you are dealing with. What it really comes down to is you are dealing with a bunch of... we are letting stupid people run our lives. We are letting idiots and stupid people run our lives and we need to get rid of them. We need to get rid of the idiots and stupid people that are running our lives. In fact, they're trying to ruin your life is what they're trying to do. They're just trying to make your experience rotten and that's where we need to get rid of them. We seriously do because I have no interest in flying. To me it's like all that is is a prison ship now. After you've been properly anally probed and your private parts have been fondled, then they'll decide to let you on the plane after you paid the $500 for a ticket. You paid $500 to be sexually molested by some stinking pervert who if he walked up on the street you'd shoot him. If you walked up on the street, tried to grab your child, your daughter or you, and do that, you would kill them. It's that simple. You wouldn't even think twice. You'd be like, oh, you're done. Boom. Flop, flop, bing, bing, bat, bat, beat, beat, oh, crunch, crunch, crunch, and throat jab, throat jab, throat jab, throat jab. Oh, I think he stopped moving. See, that's what you do if you ran into that punk trying that on the street. But and that's not a problem. So it's just rotten. It's just plain. You know the the idea behind doing that is what can they do to piss off or to wag their weenie in people's faces? And that's an example of a level of stupidity. We don't has nothing to do with any common sense whatsoever. Everybody knows it level of stupidity low IQ incompetent rotten Just just bitter people that need to be taken off this planet is a problem. Well, I've always said that the more incompetent you are and stupid you are the better off you are when you get a government job because then they promote you up the ladder. The higher you, the stupider you are, the higher up the ladder they promote you and you can even be, if you're so damn stupid, you could even be President of the United States. Oops, did I say that? Well yes I did. I'm in it. Aren't you the guy that stole that monkey toy? Oh you're our man! Yeah, we'll make you present. Exactly. Yeah, that's the kind of, well, but that's the kind of, you know, lame that you're dealing with here. And what gets me about it is, well, it's no different from what they're doing in the school with the children. What needs to happen is when parents, when their children are attacked, they need to go find the principal who pushed this or the teacher did, beat them with a two by four. That's been our mistake for quite some time. It's like, oh, we got to understand. No, the sooner that they hear about, yep, this one twit decided to attack the child for having a pop-tart chewed into a gun, or what she thought was a gun. It could have been a butterfly. If you've seen the pop-tart, it's like, oh, yeah, yeah, it was real threatening. That person need to be beat with a 2x4. And the sooner they hear about when people do stupid stuff and open their face like that and get beat with a 2x4, the less of this BS you'll have. It's really what it comes down to. You know there is a move in the UN to have post-birth abortions up to three or four. I think we ought to extend that, go ahead and sign on to that and extend that to say post-birth abortions. post-birth abortion to the age of 65 and then we get rid of all these stupid idiot people through the legal means of abortion. Oops, did I say that? Yeah, I did. I'm sorry. No, I'm not sorry. It's true. Either that or we start pouring bleach in the gene pool and shut them down. Well, you know, the interesting thing about it is that you're looking at the firearms attack issue. We know the UN, with what they've got going on, with every element of whatever they're doing, they're incorporating the grab the guns thing. This is Weapons Wednesday. Everything and anything can be a weapon. And eventually, see that's the other part about this, is remember through the interpretation of some P-brain who has been given a class by that was, you know, by a bunch of other P-brains perpetrated by a character who purely wants to stir the pot, who wants to terrorize the population because that's what the Power Freaks are all about. It is inevitable that everything, no matter what you do, I said this years ago, it will be a crime. They don't want you around. This is how the death squad thing progresses. We already know everybody has been saying, yes, the death committees are back in the Obamacare thing and have been and never went anywhere. In fact, everybody tried to lie and cover it up. Well, gee, that sounds like everything about Obamacare we've heard about. Oh, bummer care, berry satoro care, uncaring, berry satoro uncaring program. So again, it's why you all need to be armed to the best of your ability and you need to practice, you need to train, you need to work a little bit at understanding what your weapons do and how to bring them into service. There's a lot of cool stuff out there, but have you actually handled it? Now you don't need to do this out in public where people are seeing what's going on. Nobody needs to see what you're doing. In fact, think about it this way. The techniques that you perfect in private mean that they will be a surprise in public. And surprise is a good thing, guys. So always remember that. With regard to a lot of the techniques you develop, keep them close to your own best. The reason I say that is because there's many, many, many different weapons out there that people have embraced. You'll notice I'm not going to ridicule any, we always joke about certain things, but that's simply because that's kind of coughing humor we learned as we've grown in life. The big thing is that anything that you deploy or anything that you deploy, try to train with it. It's one thing to talk about using an entrenching tool as a mayhem weapon. It's another thing to look at and ask yourself, how would you fight with it? How would you use it? Now of course hacking and chopping is the most common and using it literally just like you would a battle axe is one technique. Either with the blade pitched over 90 degrees to the handle or left straight and sharpening the ends of the axe. Forgive me the ends of the of the shovel head itself. So that literally it actually it has a blade. It has a bladed surface. And when you cleave somebody with it, you take chunks and dollops out, which is what it's supposed to do. The same is true with a lot of other things that we have at hand. A simple cane, a simple stick, the bow and the doe were two of the tools that were perfected by populations that weren't allowed to carry swords and spears and whatever. So as you know, if you know the history of a lot of the Asian and European personal defense weapons, well they look like farming implements because they were. It was a way that they could better at least perfect the technique with whatever you have. And notice I didn't say just the Asians. The Europeans used pretty much the same tools and perfected them in pretty much the same ways. It's just not given coverage because it doesn't fit with the movie mystique. Well then and also they don't want you to figure that out as being a legitimate weapon To defend yourself with keep them simple stupid. Oh No, they don't you can't use that you know hey Anything in the anything in the flood? One remarks go ahead caller. Who do we have? This is mark. Yeah, you know the trenches world report had an article up about the hogs that there's there They're killing you know the hogs in Texas They're a big problem and they're hitting 25 bucks a head form. The guy featured in the article was using drones with a high R to spot them at night. Then he had this really cool looking spear that he was using along with his hardware. He had a spear that he was spearing these things with. five feet long, really hard wood with a really awesome looking abalone shaped double edge point on that sucker. I was just thinking, how do you feel about that? A spare type weapon. Absolutely. In fact, the Panga or the traditional spears are still handy to have around. A lot of guys started reintroducing pig hunting with spears back in the 70s. They went with a fluted rod, typically while you might have a fluted elite type blade, in other words it has more than one cutting edge. Typically a primary blade, a couple of secondary bulges, and it may have a couple of tines so that when it sinks it sticks. They also went with a fluted channel tube or solid metal tube and with perforation like bleed holes so that when the pig was struck if you dropped on it with all of your weight, which was one of the techniques that was promoted, that if you used all of your weight, if you stuck it, needless to say, it's got more energy and it's the fight and flight thing, the spear, once it sticks in, actually becomes an open blood channel. That's a technique that was used all over the world including boar hunting throughout Europe, Eastern Europe and Central Europe for more than a few thousand years. So yeah, it works. Spears are as lethal as they've always been. One of the techniques or ways to make spears disappear is to develop a little bigger walking stick. and walking sticks can be, you know, again, well engineered so that they conceal a lot of things. Or, let's put it this way, you're thinking of it as a walking stick, not as what we're talking about. You can steal a god, a walking stick, with some really cool stuff to make it, you know, useful. Yeah, I was just, I was taken back by the fact that he was making a big deal out of showing off that spear, you know, in front of his kill. I was just wondering, you know, I guess they prefer spears. I mean, they like to kill those things with. Well spears can be. You can also look at it as hog harpooning, right? Yeah, right. It's like whaling on land. Yeah, it's like getting 25 bucks a hit for those hogs. They're making some pretty good money with those. That's the intelligent way. They're talking about how they have a feral pig problem. See, out in Arizona when I was stationed down there, back in the day before the California Caterers moved in, it was open season 24-7, non-stop 365 days a year, and they barely put a dent in the pigs. Well, then the Californicators came in and all of a sudden it was, oh, it was evil to hunt and they got a, and of course you've got the DNR and they got all their manipulation and control now and they've allowed for pig hunting to be opened back up and now they got all this BS paperwork with it before. You could kill as many pigs as you want and it's like jackrabbits, okay? You don't run out of them. There is another little secret about Central California and I can't stress this enough. My middle brother managed the smallest of seven ranches that this guy had. I think it was like 700,000 acres. He was out in the middle of nowhere up in the western Rockies. The pig population is just out of this world up there. In fact, he was cornered by, I've heard of about, he actually ended up up a tree. He's my size but shorter, okay? He ended up where I figured he'd shoot one pig. Well, he tried to shoot one pig with a full magazine from a nylon 22 because we killed pigs with 22s here all the time. Well, he dumped several rounds into that pig. It made noise. Hundreds, he said there were probably close to 300 to 400 pigs, piglets, and sows of all size. They just literally was a sea of pigs. and he fled up a tree and had to stand there. He had to stay up that little tree for something like six, seven hours and they all disappeared and they all got quiet and he figured no cave was going to make a dash for the rocks which were about as good as 60 yards away. The moment his feet hit the ground, he said all he heard was screaming from all directions. They were waiting for him. I never would have thought in a million years you'd have a pig prob in Northern again, California. In the Rockies, in the high country, one of these miners took the domestic pigs out in the middle of nowhere and that's what they've done. They've bred all on their own. One more thing on that article about those pigs. I mentioned that they had this drone, a six foot wingspan drone, really cool shot. I mean, this thing was getting those pigs really well. from about five, six hundred feet. It showed herds from like a hundred yards away. So that's why you are. That infra rail on drones is a really good way to go Mark. Well you couldn't work because we were doing it. Only the government could do something like that. It's fuel to resist. You and I could never figure out how to use this super high tech technology. Remember let's not call it a drone. You know what it is? It's an RC toy. It's a really big RC toy. We used to buy them by hand but now you can buy them from China Sport with a 180 inch wingspan and look like any combat aircraft you want. Think about it. Like I said, everybody needs to buy these, if nothing else. It's a great mind screw to launch one of these big, big ones into an area down the road and a little noise, speak around board and let them worry about what it is. It's really cool. It looks like combat aircraft. You can take combat aircraft that look like, again, you really can't tell them until they're really close. And the stuff is cheap by comparison. And you've got any size engine you want up to weed whacker size. The other thing is, as we pointed out, you can make, if you save the weed whack, you know I have probably 25 of them now, weed whackers, Ryobi, I just got four or five, all of them run, I mean I just, the people get rid of them at the end of the season. Those are the, that's your engine for your drones. That's an engine right there guys, we used to pay top dollar for those stupid things from Japan. made by a number of different companies. All specially engineered. Now they bring them across as all kinds of other trinket nonsense. All you got to do is remember that and a little bit of ingenuity. You can make a ram type drone, you can make an RC aircraft, you can make a sensor unit like you're talking about, you make a twin engine on top of everything else, a push-pull. Don't think side by side. Think a push-pull package. Yes, center line thrust. Yeah, with one part. And then, and what you do for about another hundred and some dollars, you can put cameras on board from all these different, from dealextreme.com. and you can even mount weapons systems, Ruger 10-22s, AR-15s with minimal recoil and everything stripped off them. Just think, pop, pop, pop, pop, pop, pop, pop, pop, pop, pop, pop, pop, pop, pop, pop, pop, pop, pop, pop, pop, pop, pop, pop, pop, pop, pop, pop, pop, pop, pop, pop, pop, pop, pop, pop, pop, pop, pop, pop, pop, pop, pop, pop, pop, pop, pop, pop, pop, pop, pop, pop, pop, pop, pop, pop, pop, pop, pop, pop, pop, pop, pop, pop, pop, pop, pop, pop, pop, pop, pop, pop, pop, pop, pop, pop, pop, pop, pop, pop, pop, pop, pop, pop, pop, pop, pop, pop, pop, pop, pop, pop, pop, pop, pop, pop, pop, pop 8 foot wingspan, HE 1111 tank buster, right? And he put two Ruger 1022s in the gun pods underneath the wings and built exactly the way the Germans built their tank buster. It had two 10 round magazines. This is back when the Tamaya tanks first came out. What they did is they had a little Tamaya tank. They would bring this thing out into public areas. They have one of the tanks put together. They'd launch this HE-111 tank buster. While the little tank is going across this field, the guy would make a swing around. He'd do a steep dive attack. And guys, this is back in 1975. And those little twin 10-22s that chew up that little toy every time, he got really good at that. Half a mile away with a camera that he got from one of those spy shops, back in the day they weren't cheap cheap, but today they are. and why use a 10-22? Could be any number of other things. You could put a single AR-15 with an electronic magneto with a little push button. Every time you push the button it fires. And with a couple of decent power packs for motors, you could carry whatever you wanted on board. Put a snail drum on it, take all the other junk off it. You don't need a buttstock, you just need to make sure you got that gas tube working right and you got to have a stock to hold in the small tiny parts. But if you carve all the junk weight off, Then you're looking at a fair about a three and a half, four pound weapon system that could be strapped into a hard point right in the middle of the frame underneath under the belly of the aircraft, monitored and guided and controlled by a camera that's right there on board that costs you a whopping maybe what, $19? And you could, ehhh, bah bah bah bah bah bah bah bah bah bah bah bah bah bah bah bah bah bah bah bah bah bah bah bah bah bah bah bah bah bah bah bah bah bah bah bah bah bah bah bah bah bah bah bah bah bah bah bah bah bah bah bah bah bah bah bah bah bah bah bah bah bah bah bah bah bah bah bah bah bah bah bah bah bah bah b Yeah, that is true of my project. Think about it. So again, the neat thing is, hey, pig hunting works both ways. And you can do that for a lot less than the hundreds of thousands of dollars the government pays for each one of their little huge drones. Oh yeah, as a matter of fact, well the thing is that that's what basically is happening. You've got these characters that are buying this stuff and building it for nothing. It's really all RC toy technology. That's why they're able to do it because it's all our seat toy technology that's in our venue. Guys, we have access to all of this. And I've said before, if you want to build a ram attack drone, you go punk junk. In every industry, there's always dog stuff in the industry. Well, I don't want that servo because that servo doesn't let me do a double swiggly curly cue by playing. Well, will it make it turn left and right? Yeah. Well, is it 120th the price because it's not popular? Yeah Wow, well, I'm gonna send it one way and ram somebody with it with a whole bunch of something out of the goes boom I guess that'll work just fine for the one-way trip won't it? And in fact, you don't even have it screaming. You know what would really be fun? On a little digital stick that only weighs how many tiffs of an ounce. And a speaker that you get out of an old boom box. The last thing they hear as it starts the final dive is... MUNGIE! MUNGIE! MUNGIE! Yeeeeeeeaaaah! Well we weren't supposed to figure that one out, were we? You see? Only it'll be... A.T.F. you die! A.T.F. you die! Yeah, you die! You die! We come for you Joe! We come for you! The last thing they see is that meatball on the front of the muzzle of the aircraft with the spinner going red. I saw about a $45,000 or $50,000. A380 some guy built, I mean an air blast monster with four jet engines on it that was an RC toy for crying out loud. It looked like a brand new A380. If you get everybody away from it and it's put in the right location, you can't tell it from the real thing. Well, it's amazing. Well, we are at the top guys, I'll tell you what, but again, another part of the ideas section. Hunting pigs from the air. The next thing is to actually build buzz drones that actually are released and are basically jarts. Have you ever thought about that one? Think about it. You launch something up, it's under power and it comes down with a camera controlling it, but it's nothing but a steel rod and a couple of fin stabilizers with a real, real simple drive system. And it goes straight up and you bring it straight down just like a mortar round on something. You put nice sharp points on it. She's come on! Can we, can we, can we? Yeah. and with the kinetic energy and expansion and all kinds of wicked things you could do with something like that. In fact, think about it, we were talking about JART launching like that for anti-helicopter. Why come at it from below, guys? A helicopter from above with a radio controlled JART coming down can do a hell of a lot more damage and it will not miss. Think about it. It can track every step of the way. I had 90 hours of air defense footage from the air defense research field out west. Just watching the techniques, something that nobody thinks about and it is still probably, and it's why they don't want anybody to see this footage. Everybody thinks of attacking from below. Well with all this drone technology, you launch something up straight up. You let it take altitude, then you turn it around or wait until gravity does its work. On the way down it's camera controlled, fins stabilized and you just fire it. You just aim center of mass on that hub. However many times it takes, I think the first one to be enough, garbage it. In other words, when it hits it's frangible but everything is Kevlar line, chunks of metal, garbage, pieces of rod. There's only any number of techniques could be used but that frangible impact shears or adheres to embolixes up working parts. No helicopter pilot wants to be in a mobile barbecue at 500 feet. You know what I mean? They will hit the ground fast when they think they've got a problem especially when the controls do something that they're not supposed to. Either that or they'll un-arsed the AO and leave their people on the ground abandoned. Alright, just take the tail rotor out and watch how fast you come down. Exactly. But again, from above, think about how that rotor assembly, how big a target that is, and it's not likely you're gonna miss. One way or another, you hit something and that thing, the aircraft beats the air into submission. So the way to destroy it is to deal with its lift system. And of course, its stabilizers. We gotta go guys, we're at the top. Duro, you're gonna be where in the next couple weeks? Well, I won't be anywhere until... January the 4th and 5th out of Washington, P.A. That's only three weeks away! Yeah, it is. Okay, very good sir. God bless the Republic. This is a new world order. We shall prevail, ladies and gentlemen. The Empire is on the run. We're on the march, both day and night. And don't forget to hunt your rifle. Burn there! Use that hot weapon to burn! Burn the sons of liberty! Save the trombus for boys, walk down the troops with tea And the sun will always shine on the old Liberty Tree 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 908-691-2-7. and with prices rising in every sector, the investment in your future is critical to have some storeable food available. It wasn't raining when Noah built the Ark, so be practical and be wise. Call 908-691-2608 and place your order today. 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