February 6, 2014
Evening Show
1h 1m
Complete
Radio Episode
2014
▶ Audio Player
Summary
Mark Koernke discussed environmental contamination issues including a coal sludge spill in North Carolina threatening Virginia's drinking water and colony collapse disorder in bee populations, which he attributed to GMO crops and mobile beekeeping operations that spread contamination across the country. He emphasized the importance of preparedness through food production, including mobile gardening using five-gallon buckets and container farming, and stressed the need for widespread community self-sufficiency. The show included technical difficulties with audio dropout, caller contributions about gardening and preparedness, and a report of military strikers on a train near Denver's Federal Reserve Building.
- coal sludge spill
- colony collapse disorder
- gmo crops
- bee contamination
- mobile beekeeping
- preparedness
- food production
- container gardening
- five-gallon buckets
- mobile farming
- water contamination
- north carolina
- virginia drinking water
- denver federal reserve
- military strikers
- interstate 25
Transcript
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Live 365. Sound of the Revolution. Thank you for listening to LibertyTreeRadio.4mg.com. We all need to prepare ourselves. You might have the food, water, gold and silver but ask yourself, are you truly prepared? That's why you need to visit MainMilitary.com. MainMilitary.com carries everything you need. Gas mask, fire starter kits, high capacity magazines, chemical suits, military surplus items and much more. Do you own a firearm? MainMilitary.com has a large selection of pistols and rifles suited for your needs. Are your local stores sold out of ammunition? Call or visit them today for prices on hard to find ammo and bulk ammo orders. You don't need to worry about having a military surplus store in your area because MainMilitary.com is the only store you'll ever need, all from the comfort of your computer. Visit them online today at MainMilitary.com. That's Main, like the state, Military.com. I had a dream the other night that Well, I didn't understand. A figure walked in through the mist with a flintlock in his hand. His clothes were torn and dirty as he stood there by my bed. He took off his three-cornered hat and speaking low to me, he said, we've fought a revolution to secure our liberty. We wrote the Constitution as a shield from tyranny. For future generations, this legacy we gave. In this, the land of the free and home of the brave. The freedoms we secured for you, we hoped you'd always keep. The tyrants labored endlessly while your parents were asleep. Your freedom's gone, your courage lost, you're no more than a slave. In this, 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 won't be born. Your leaders send artillery and guns to foreign shores and send your sons to slaughter fighting other people's wars. Can you regain the freedoms for which we fought and died? Or don't you have the courage or the faith to stand with pride? And are there no more values for which you'll fight to save? Or do you wish your children to live in fear and be a slave? Oh, sons of the Republic, arise, take a stand, defend the Constitution, the Supreme Law of the land, preserve our great Republic and each God given right, and pray to God to keep the torch of freedom burning bright. As I awoke, he'd vanished in the mist for whence he came. His words were true. We are not free, but we have ourselves to blame. For even now as tyrants trample each God given right we only watch in tremble too afraid to stand and fight If he stood by your bedside in a dream while you were asleep and wondered what remains of the freedoms he'd fought to keep What would be your answer if he called out from the grave is this still the land of the free and good afternoon ladies and gentlemen this is the First hour of the afternoon intelligence report. I am Mark Krunke. One day closer to victory for all of our brothers and sisters both on and behind the lines in occupied territories East, South East, West and North. Well ladies and gentlemen you're listening to us on LibertyTreeRadio.4MG.com, where on AM and FM microstations, CB base stations, and UltraNet Technologies east and west of the Mississippi, along with Alaska, or on the Hallmark Network on Eastern Seaboard, from the top of the middle of a four-to-four from about a four across the arc of the gulf of mexico that it will be in the mississippi texas oklahoma big chunk of rascal hoping to wyoming to include both third to fifth pet and our friends in the Recall State of Colorado where the bad guys came out to harass the clipboard carriers and we photographed the second echelon photograph videotape got plate numbers Rally point locations to include private business and government facilities Yeah, we know who was coordinating a boulder and Denver Congratulations, you got the big list and we know who's who in the zoo beyond a shadow of a doubt Don't worry things start tit for tat Anyway, waving to the left coast, where the state of Jefferson is doing a fine job of demonstrating how things can be done right, turning back to the east, we sweep across the plains, leap over the burgeoning banks of the Mississippi inland and the Smokies slash the Blue Ridge, where the restaurant crews, grandma teams, okay teams, and the mob build, grandma consortium, and retired telecommunications workers. Bring us. The Golden Spike many hands make for light work a million petticoat junction operators the ability to continue to function when everything else is offline so Just in case do we have Don there with us? I heard another ding you never know got to make sure so we don't just have a surprise that the last minute surprise Sergeant Carter well it is as you know we're headed towards the end of the 6th day of February, the 60th year of open Fabian Socialist and Soviet Socialist occupation of America with a K-2014 Old Earth Calendar or Mayan Crazy Town Calendar. And of course, for everybody out there, well, Thursday, it's that work day that typically nobody calls in the mist for obvious reasons. Usually we've got enough to keep us busy, but if you call in now, you better make sure you call in for Friday or you get punished for taking Thursday off and, you know, Friday too and, well, kind of, if not, or sort of. No matter how you look at it, you get punished for trying to take that 40-weekend. You know how it works. So you better have a doctor's excuse, almost always. Anyway, it is Thursday. It is later in the day. Gray through most of the day. We had some sun peeking out here and there. We've got mixed waves of clouds and clear coming through. It's going to be pretty bright tonight. I've got to warn you about that one because Even with the cloud cover the last couple of days don't need a flashlight to monitor everything outside That's for sure. It's all sitting there and you can stare at it just fine and see exactly who's who in the zoo and what's going on so I would highly recommend you take the time to Check things out with regard to your you know night vision potential this evening in the next couple of days You're gonna be a good opportunity white on the ground no matter what you got it reflective surfaces both directions Means a little bit of light goes a long way guys So, again, a plus-plus for all of us during winter combat operations or security operations. Something to think about there. It is Thursday. Nothing dramatic jumping off the shelf, but as Henry posted in his scroll for the day here this afternoon, 82,000 tons of coal sludge spilling for days into North Carolina River threatens Virginia drinking water. Wow! This is an instant replay of what we saw back in the turn of the century. And what's fascinating is, well in this case, This is more of a through the culvert down the road and burp just kind of vomiting all over the place. Hey dad, I wonder if the Nobel Prize winner will use his Nobel Prize money to clean up his company's mess this time. Yeah, I think we need to have some help there from Al Gore. Mr. The polar bears are drowning in the penguins just don't know where to go to find ice. Of course, now they've got to walk twice as far to get to wherever they want to go if they want to find open water, right? Because everything causes global warming except for clean coal. Yeah, except for his clean coal. There's other coal that's not so clean. So for everybody out there, you might want to pay attention. Ed, you're sound a little fuzzy on the microphone there. It's probably just the microphone itself. I need to adjust it again. Just having fun with it. OK, very good. Anyway, for our friends out there listening, if you want to, find out more about what's going on there, this is going to be yet another river contaminant, and this time around it's the used stuff. Ewwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwww And that's what they're getting down there, from North Carolina now to the Virginia drinking water slash the Virginia aqua furs. We'll see what happens there. Also, again, for our friends that are listening, another thing that was touched on here, colony collapse disorder, definitely GMO related and restricted to the US. True, but I would point out, right from the get go, one of the problems that they didn't mention was transient bee populations spreading the contamination. Now that's part of the problem and if you might recall originally when we saw this a lot of people don't move their bee populations from the areas example a friend of mine that I went to school with actually went to school with this whole family all of his brothers and all of them are farmers. They've raised their own bees and they have their own colonies that they move here locally but within a very short distance you know within so many miles of the actual center of the farm. Those bees, of course, are less likely to be contaminated, but what they're realizing is, yeah, there's some crops in the area that are probably GMO, and if they travel enough, they'll connect with those. So that's another thing that would be a flag that they need to look at with any issues they've had with the domestic non-mobile populations, but the mobile populations are what spread a lot of the infection processes, guys, because what do they do? They truck them from one part of the country to the other, and they're literally moving across the nation. Now, if anything, the Department of Agriculture is supposed to, again, step in as needed and actually take care of, oh, that's right, perhaps, It's a standby. We seem to be having a technical difficulty here I'm not sure it's not like we lost mark. Maybe lost conference line altogether Still shows it he is broadcasting So I'm guessing that the end the problem is probably on our end So I'm gonna hang up from the conference line and reconnect everybody. Please stand by You're listening to Liberty Tree radio and we are going out live If you'd like to help us out the number is once Boy, I've got to look over here. 1-712-4320900 Room number 957464 and the pound sign. And you can call that number. You can tune in that way to listen and hopefully we'll be right back with Mark shortly. Six. Participants in this conference. This conference is being recorded. Please announce yourselves. Industrial production. Okay, we got you back, Dad. There we go. We had a really weird thing and we had this sound and then it went quiet, but it still showed us hooked up. I could see you talking, but we couldn't hear anything. Fascinating. Well, that means we're doing a pretty good job of drilling some teeth in, I guess. So again, well, recommendation. Two things, one more time on that. From the Trenches World Report dot com. From the Trenches World Report dot com. And I highly recommend you take the time to look at the 82,000 tons of coal sludge spilling for four days in the North Carolina River that threatens Virginia drinking water. That story is available. It's out there. Remember that the little guys are the ones that caught the last ones back around the turn of the century. The big communications components, the big industry, were told to shut up and not see it, not look at it. They you know, they did not see this this was not here. Okay The other one which by the way, we just mentioned has to do with the again for everybody out there the bee population the colony collapse disorder definitely GMO related now that I don't I don't doubt there's high probability of that because Again, the interaction with the bee population and how it could easily touch the edge of another area where there's GMO produced crops and that can assist in causing a problem with the colony because of contamination through engineered insecticides and all kinds of other fun stuff that are part of the GMO crops. Which they're not that careful nor have they ever been that accurate. They always had problems with these types of either vegetable or animal vectors. Now, in this case, what they've done is they've made the crops virtually a chemical slash or biological weapons vector slash a distribution system, guys. Why, it's got anti, you know, pesticide slash fill in the space bug repellent. And it has a particular, you know, fungus or pest repellent, other types of virus repellents, blah, blah, blah, blah. Well, when they've done this, The problem is that the bee population interacts and no matter how hard you use, there's no fencing or barrier. We don't herd bees that way and you're simply not going to be able to. So the GMO, you know, incidents taking place to me would not seem to be accidental but intentional if they're taking place. If they can be confirmed and I don't think it should be that hard. I'll repeat again, the mobile herds, the mobile beehives that you've seen, the ones that are semi-truck loaded and they bounce around for the crops, they're the actual issue. That's where the cross-contamination had to come from. And I said this when they started talking about this years ago, because the lion's share and the reason that certain areas were kind of Pockmarked with safety zones is because the lion's share in certain areas are privately run by people locally. Example, a guy went to school with. All three of the sons, they have their own farms, they run their own crops, but they also run their own bees. and those bees stay right here within this area of activity. Now, it doesn't mean they couldn't be close to it. In fact, he's had some problems, but not on the level that we've seen with other bee populations. And everybody across the country has had this periodically anyway, different types of fungus or different types of contaminants that are viruses of different types. They bugs get colds and get flus just like everybody else does, man-made or otherwise. So, we need to take that into consideration too, and that's one of the things that they have. But the areas where you see no significant contamination are because those areas typically have their own fixed populations that move a minimal distance. So, they can't quickly transmit the disease and overpower the colonies in the area. The cross-contamination is where again, typically if you think about it, how long would it take for one bug to contact the other bug to take it to a colony to progressively build up, you know, the, shall we say, a percentage of the population of that bee colony or insect colony of whatever kind? to be contaminated to the point where it would decimate it, you know, to damage, and still allow it to move beyond its original borders by making contact in all directions through its normal cycle of activities and then spreading it again. Well, with normal motion without, you know, an 85 mile per hour semi truck moving the contaminated population around, by the time that it would move, there is a naturally occurring immune process that develops. plus mutations on the part of whatever the contaminant is. But when you're moving the population around at 85 miles an hour on the back of a semi truck and you take it into the heart of an uncontaminated area, every time you drop, it's like, you know, drop those, drop the critters, it's like dropping a biological ordinance device in the middle of the bee population. See how that works? How about chemtrails? Well, chemtrails are, that's another dimension, that's another direction. My point is that, you know, that would be one of several ways, but I don't think it's one single contaminant. I think that they're, again, targeting them with particular, you know, engineering processes, and they also experiment. See, insects are one of them, we're the first of the most, again, you know, shall we say, passive or neutral ways to deploy biological weapons? For many years, a high altitude spraying is something that's also done with resilient bonded biological ordnance or chemical ordnance. In this case with spraying, we see different types of metals, which by the way, we absorb metals just like we do anything else. Guys, we need magnesium. For instance, we know about iodine. Everybody talking about that right now, but we need magnesium, zinc, iron. All of these materials are naturally occurring in trace forms. What the system is doing by spraying is no different from radiological threat because it's known when you nuke an area. Now after having played out World War III with dropping bombs on ourselves and the Russians dropping bombs on themselves and us dropping bombs in the Japanese to create a whole bunch of guinea pigs, Well, we know what that'll do to the thyroid and the iodine issues involved there, which is really where it goes to town on the individual and kills them. Well, with other metals, it works the same way. So even if it isn't a dual bonded process, like a binary or trinary contamination, just the idea of saturating the area with a particular type of contaminant, say a particular material that has, say, Something bonded to it molecularly because we're going to absorb magnesium, we're going to absorb zinc, we're going to absorb iron. That's one of the reasons for doing the high elevation number one testing and number two then weapons deployment. Now the secondary effects may be with the bug population or even for instance the migratory animal population. Consider that as a real wicked tool. If you knew what the migratory flow of a certain animal was, You could use the biological vector, the insect as a biological vector, to contaminate that population of fowl. And you know that over the next two to three weeks those fowl are going to pass across an entire continent to get to where they're going. Think about that one, because nobody, this is where you get into wicked, wicked games. I mean just absolutely horrible, horrible games. But it's a fact, because remember, ducks, crackles, crows, Every bird out there carries parasites already. Because of that, knowing what breeds of parasites would be useful, you could mid-altitude drop or you could low-altitude drop the initial vectors into the area. Now the argument is they're supposed to be sterile. They won't be because they've always failed in that. Every time they've claimed that they had a sterile vector slash mosquitoes, gnats, midgets, widgets, dust mites. They've always been fertile. I think the percentage is about 80% failure with regard to controlling the breeding capability of the vector carrying the biological hazard, which typically is deadly. Now what that means is that when originally they deploy things, like, I mean, it's a problem with ducks, you know, bugs, and you know, I mean, forgive me, ducks, birds, and things that are bigger, they live longer. The idea behind using insects as a contaminant vector is that even if they survived, if they're sterile, let's say that they don't get wiped out because in reverse order somebody pesticides the area, something wipes them out because of cold or heat, well, they're only going to live for so long and then when they die, they're not going to re-breed or re-populate. That's the argument behind a sterile vector as in insects, mosquitoes, gnats, whatever. Problem is, they've almost always screwed up on that. So, that's one of the other problems with the idea that not only could the spring be used to kill the bugs, more likely, even with the bees, it would be more valuable for them to spray the critters to cross-contaminate the population. Because one of the other things that the bees could do as a vector would be to deliver a contaminant to every food supply across the country. And we know that the bees are moved at 85 miles an hour to specific areas all over the country every so many days. I mean, you go from place to place, place to place, but they're not traveling at bug speed and, you know, moving gradually from colony to colony. One of the things about this type of contamination or attack is they're driven virtually all over the nation and the Department of Agriculture isn't doing its job because it doesn't want to. See, this is where the Department of Agriculture is supposed to do something. It's like everything is on its head. Everything. I don't care what it is. They're not protecting the border. They're leaving everything wide open. But it's the one thing the federal government is supposed to do is secure the border. Okay, every one of these government agencies, these alphabet soup agencies, are worthless for that reason. Because of political correctness, everything that they should be doing, they're not. Everything they shouldn't be involved in, they are. They're not being moved around too much right now because it's too damn cold. I'm out here every day. I haven't seen a beach in the last three months. There's two things to remember now. Normally they would be west of the mountains if they're going to be out there at all. They'd be like in the San Joaquin or you'd see them across down through the middle of California. The other area where they'll be right now is Florida. The strawberry fields, all of your fruit fields, all of your tomatoes, because they've got year round crops down there. So what they'll do is they'll hunker down and breed and weed a certain number of the hives. In other words, clean them out, kill them off if they look like they're contaminated or if they're old. and recycle their population. Now, a percentage do that, but meanwhile, the guys that were up here, say, doing apples and cherries earlier this year, they're down in Florida. They're the other end, I-75 now. They're down, you know, doing the tomato and the strawberry and everything else and anything else that they're cranking out down there. Right. Good point. That's why I never see them because they're down there where it's warm. Great. Yeah. You think about it. And again, a lot of them are centered around, not all of them, but it's almost like the circus, like the circus population where they'd winter. They're going to be down in the south. I would assume, though again, I can't be sure. I have not really looked at the numbers. I don't know what they do for Mexico. And whether or not, and that would be another factor because once it gets across the border into Mexico, anything goes. God knows what they got hit with. So the other part about that is if they've got NAFTA and GAT set up in the B population to slide on down south of the border, well, you might as well put a bullet to your head. As far as what the hell's cross-contaminated down there. That's the problem with this stuff. And this is now, this ties right in line with everything else we've seen. Once it gets but down into Mexico Hell it could be coming from anywhere that could be any could any variants on Contamination that we can imagine from any country in every point of the compass look what this China and gave me Yeah, exactly the China man or the South America. I mean it's a conduit once they can get it passing up go ahead But you never hear the Fox News, for example, or CNN, they'll say, well, B population disappearing. But you never get the bloody explanation why. And so you just laid it out. But I mean, you never hear it from the NSA. You'll never hear it from them. They'll just keep talking about it, but they'll never tell you why. They want everybody to pull their hair up, but they don't want them to sit back and go, OK, well, how do we fix this? In other words, it's just limitations for the sake of making everybody lose hair and lose sleep uh... one of the things i've seen here i'm a taste something with a couple things we experimented with and i saw plants i got a bunch of them all what two years ago dies i've applied planted a patch of those uh... nine by a three three by three nine plants in the garden okay they're basically in the middle of where the garden area is next to the water the water tank that i set up the with upon up it's elevated Now, as I pointed out while we were doing the programming this year, I have never seen so many wild bees. I have never seen so many bumblebees of so many variations. And the Anahit plants, they brought this stuff right in. So I can actually survey the population. The only other thing that did as well is our large crabapple bush slash tree. It was loaded this year. I got three or four bushels off a small tree slash large bush. The bees all through the season were just there in mass. I mean, non-stop. Mostly though, they were wild honeybees. We had a massive number of them. Looking back, we've got pictures. In fact, we haven't posted those on the webpage, and we should. But we've got photographs of them and they're literally about every three to six inches like a net. You can see all the little bumblebees that came in in the afternoon during the middle of the day. We get the big bumblebees. They come in because they don't have the heat doesn't seem to bother them as much. They come early to mid-morning and then about midday everybody disappears because of the heat. Then in the afternoon we just have waves of these smaller bumblebees. They were just massive quantities. They loved that plant. Because of that, they also go after everything else in the garden. It's a lure, but it also allowed me to survey what we've got. While we do have domestic bees here, I don't think the bees travel this far for the same reason as I've said. We've had a glut this year in all categories. Guys, the insects didn't have to travel far to feed. The rest of the animals haven't had to travel very far, even this late into the winter to feed. We haven't had a hard winter because on the one hand we have had cold and we've had real snow like we normally have. We've also had such a dense concentration of food that they've been fat right from the get-go. We still have corn in the field. We still have apples on the trees. They didn't harvest all the apples because they couldn't get them fast enough. I can show you trees with bushels of apples that are wild trees. I mean just bushels. I could count probably eight to ten bushels in the trees. They haven't quite dropped but they will progressively through the season. Deer love those. Man, that's deer candy. If you go hunting up north, if you know where all the old farmsteads are, we've got a deer every year. by simply going and knowing where the old foundations and the old orchards were in the old growth areas around the upper part of Michigan, up around Mount Marancy County. All you had to do was, these cherry trees were 67 years old, if not 80, back when I was little. The deer knew right where to go when it was snowing, you could actually see right where they go, zero, right on the trees. and then right on through the woods to the next location. And this year, they're not moving. And the reason they're not moving, well, I mean, we just almost ran into a deer. One of our friends was up from Indiana. It was one of the first deer we almost ran into this year during this winter. Other than that, they're not moving around. And I'm watching the snow, the one cool thing. It's not that they aren't moving, but they're staying in their lots. They don't have to go search for food. They've got water. We've got to remember, this is Michigan. We've got water everywhere. So they're not dying for water, number one. Number two, corn production was massive, bean production was massive. Remember those little critters are out there nibbling off your best crops all through the season. So the deer are still pudgy, they're fat, they're happy, and they don't have to travel very far to stay warm and to get the calories they need to keep pumping out more heat. So I'm seeing this across the board. Well this also works with the bees. with a massive amount of water that we had a perfect combination of water and sun. And because of that moisture, we had lots of flowering. Well, if you have lots of flowering, bees can only work so many hours a day. They're not like they're putting overtime kids. They can only run 24 or 7 if they were to do anything. There's only 24 hours in the day for all creatures on this planet. So, they'll keep working like they always do and everyone you saw was loaded. They had little sacks that were massive where they were collecting the nectar or the collecting moisture. Salt. I left salt out for them. Man, that's another trick. Use salt to bring them in. You've got to put yourself some beehives, Mark, and put them out there. I'm saying I don't need to. I really don't need to. The wild, in fact, the wild propagation is really what we want. You can't target something you can't grasp, you can't zero in on. No, I mean just for the honey. Well, that's true. Yeah, we could do that. Actually, this year we... Well, what I might do is I just tell my friend, hey, drop one of your boxes over by us or two or three of them, because he does many, many, many highs, but he does it because he wants to, again, promote the fields. So, we're right in the middle of his crops, and I don't think it'd be a problem. None of us have a problem with bee stings, so that's a good thing for the moment. It doesn't mean there's any way. Like I said, we've had, well, the population we've had around here has been fantastic. One of the other things about the cherry tomatoes is that same thing, the little, this non-hybrid heritage seed cherry tomato. I've been growing now for more than a few years. They just come up on their own, and then we move them around. That's another one that the bees seem to love that particular flower. We get response to the other tomatoes but they really love this non-hybrid breed. They come in on that the same way. We get to see a lot of B, bumblebee. In fact, there's a couple others. One of them is a non-native of Michigan. It actually looks like it. You'd think it was a yellow jacket, but it has a fur and a very wasp type of body. Now, I understand that particular breed came from overseas from France, and we got it into the country. It came in the country with a bunch of really stuff we didn't need. It was pottery that was coming from communism. It was shipped to France for some reason because of what they do to it. Then they dumped it in the US. When they had it in France, the bee nests were attached to the shipping containers and to the pots, and they got distributed all over the country. We're seeing this other critter showing up. It's nectar. It will move pollen. It does what the regular wild and domestic bees do, but it isn't. the That's all I could be used, we could start planting. A lot of those little aluminum throwaway cookie trays are being on clearance right now, especially where I'm at. They're like three quarters of the price, original price, and I figured I got those little biodegradable little planters that you just put right in the ground and I could start planting my plants indoors. Yeah, if you're going to do that, make up a rack. The best way to do that is go find yourself two pieces of plywood. and some strips of furring. You can use one by two or whatever. Make yourself up some slip racks so you can lay them right in and stack them up uniformly if you've got the same model for everything. It's not that hard to do. One of the things to remember is when you do water them, if you want, your upper trays, you can poke one or two holes in them. Although again, they're already compromised yet, wait till later on. But I like to create drip points so that we don't build up too much moisture in the young plants. But whatever water you have, go whatever excess drops to the next tier and drops to the next tier and then drops to a reservoir down below. There are a couple of tricks that work really well, but they just use them the way they are, but make up a frame for them so they're not just sliding around and bouncing around. Don't apply wood and cheapie pine board, whatever you can find, and drywall screws. That will put it together. Well, I brought a folding cable that was on clearance. It's more like thin folding cables I can put in front of the window. Yes, that works. Again, if you want to do more, you can stack more of them if you make a frame. One thing I've been concentrating on, Mark, is I've been starting to look into buying some herbs, spices, medicinal as well as culinary. Going along with my plants, because I heard some of them do make a good barrier. Right, the way to do those right now would be the 2 gallon, 3 gallon or 5 gallon pails. And to be quite honest, for herbs and stuff you can do those in little 2 gallon pastry pails. They're all over the place. Look at, go check out your health food stores. Most of them have big salad bars and such. Usually they have recycling bins in the back. You'll find that they throw away every size container that you can imagine and that you could use for gardening, especially for starting plants. One of them, usually when they're doing these salad bars guys, they'll have hundreds of these clamshell clear containers that they're watertight below, not a little ventilation hole above for, you know, whatever's inside breathing in the way of a vegetable. When they're shipping them and they're perfect for starting plants and they have their own little cover, they'll allow for air to pass through but they also create another canopy to help to protect from cold just in case, which is kind of nice. So just something, I collect those all the time and even though I may not use them, well they were free and I got a stack of like 60 or 100 of them and they're all the exact same container. So, again, what am I losing? Nothing. If I want to throw them out later, fine. But if I use them, I've got a whole bunch of them. They're all exactly the same. And I can fill in the greenhouse with them. Hey, go to your vegetable markets where they'll move tomatoes and green peppers and such, not in cardboard boxes, but almost nostalgic-like in thin wooden crates. They'll have like a half inch piece of wood on each end and just enough wood to connect them together and hold the tomatoes until they get to market. Those people throw those out. They're one time use. Furring strip like three quarters by one inch at each corner and you can have those three layers deep in your window, George. And that's it. Those would work to hold your trays. Oh yes, a far better way than one layer or a table in your window. You're using a lot more effective space. You can go through the times as much. But you know, Mark, it's not just me doing it. Everybody's talking about it. Or they're starting to pre-plant their plants indoors, getting ready for the planting. This is all around the country. Everybody needs to keep promoting it. Even if the people aren't completely successful, it's like everything else we're talking about with preparedness, guys. The bad guys, let's say that they are listening in. We saturate the battlefield and the echo of what we say permeates the population. Well, they can't be sure, but they at least get an idea that everybody is pretty well moving in the same general mindset. We've created a macro motion. That's what I've been talking about for years. I don't care if they do everything exactly the same way. In fact, just a reverse. Everybody's got their own way of doing things. Let's experiment and see what works best. But, yes, everybody is talking about this in one form or another. At least enough people are that we have made a significant difference in being able to get people pretty well squared away and prepared with all the different tools and resources that either we've provided or we've connected people to that other people have provided. And that's one of the things that you'll just... The best way to treat people that are... To make any snide comment is that they're an idiot. We need to do to them what they think that they, in their stupidity, they think they're going to do to us. And I'm disgusted and tired of these fools. These idiots are the drowning people that will drag you down later because they will demand what you have. Well, the more people that we can wake up, the fewer people even have an idea of that, at least initially, and you change the attack pattern that the bad guys were hoping to plug in. Some people, well they'll listen, but maybe they only do three or four months worth of food supplies, maybe they only do a little bit of work in gardening or, you know, in developing food production. But every pound that they do and every hour that they're not worrying about, you know, being on the door, having to try and do something to get something from somebody else changes the manipulation formula that the parasites, the filth in the system thought they were going to use. That's why we need to talk about this wherever we can and stress doing this wherever we can. The more people that are prepared as combat worthy militia in one form or another, the worse it is for the Shysters on the other side. The more people we can get to be on the up curve with understanding how to produce food, the better off we'll be. The other thing is mobility farming is a good idea anyway. We're talking about the five gallon pails and the two gallon pails. It behooves everybody out there listening to have a percentage of your food production in that area. I've got greenhouses, we've got water tanks. We've got all kinds of fixed technology, but every year I also do mobile food production. That's not necessarily the highest priority. Sometimes it makes it, sometimes it doesn't. But you know what, it's because in that way we're diversified and ready to move. Go ahead. We had another caller there, or I heard a voice. What exactly is mobile food production, Mark? Well, like I said, five-gallon pails. Think about this. A five-gallon pail with potato plants. I can move virtually the entire crop with one pickup truck. Example is, as I've done several times this last, well, actually, every year for the last four or five years, we've done a certain amount of tomato plants where I've transferred them over to five-gallon pails. and or three gallon or two gallon containers and you know we actually I wanted to see how far through the winter I could get them to go with minimal maintenance. In other words, we didn't put a wood burning stove in or even a salamander. The idea was that I created a sunroom off of the house here and utilizing, you know what I would do, I would take the ash bucket from the fireplace, put it in the middle of another metal container and that was the heat source for the night. to keep the temperature just a little above freezing. Then the sun comes up and you're back into the 40, 50 or 60 degree range, sometimes even hotter depending on how much sun there is. And then the end of the day before it's too late, you pull the ash out of the fireplace, throw that into the fire bucket, take the old stuff, put that on the garden, take the cold stuff, take the warm bucket, put it back in there, and heat up the area again. I had 22 tomato plants that were functioning through most of the winter last year. There are several plants that I had going that actually, well let's see, we had several ornamentals. I had several different little, oh come on, ornamental cabbage, but they were edible cabbage. We didn't really do anything with them, but we was able to keep them going. So there's a number of different crops we've experimented with. The tomatoes were the most successful. I also wanted to see what one of those hen-ice plants would do, and it fared very well and was quite strong through the whole of the winter. So that's an example of a herb slash a medicinal that it's a licorice is what it is, guys. But licorice is actually a medicinal. It's not just for making candies. And that fared exceptionally well with medium to low temperatures, which I thought was rather fascinating. And that's again a five gallon bucket, well actually two gallon, three gallon and five gallon pails. And that's what I used for the operation. Now the advantages if I needed to, I could take that entire crop, put that in, like I said, put it in the pickup truck, put it in the trailer, take it down the road, reestablish it somewhere else, keep right on going. Keep right on producing. So we would be producing through the year. And that's without underground technology That's using off-the-shelf experience with bucket or with container farming. The other option would be to go with hydroponic. Hydroponic can be done a number of ways. It would be fairly stable. Mostly you see hydroponic. They look kind of like to be rather flimsy for transport. But there's a whole bunch of tricks done with that with another five-gallon bucket, drilling holes, and creating a frame for the plant. so that you sacrifice a junk bucket, something that's damaged, cut it up, chop it up, and basically create an upper structure that you wire to the original five gallon pail used for the hydroponics for your water, and that could be totally mobile. And that's actually an old trick from back in the 60s and 70s, when I guess five gallon pails started to become the norm. Well, it used to be they were metal pails. And then all of a sudden the wonders of plastic came about. So that's mobility gardening there. That's where you actually can move your crops from point to point. Just keep them as warm and again as healthy as possible between moves. And that's not a big deal if you know what you're doing. The big thing again is when you get to the other end, making sure you have everything prepped and ready to go. So you should have a percentage of your food production or you could have a percentage of your food production in that particular category and there's no reason not to. If you have a greenhouse, the greenhouse is where you can maintain most of that. You could also do temporary hot boxes like we've talked about using windows that window companies have taken out and create mini greenhouses. That way there's all kinds of different solutions. And we've experimented pretty much with all of them. So then everything, they all work. It's just how much time are you going to commit to constantly working the plants or doctoring them. The more time you have and the more resource you have in terms of fertilizers, enhancement, you know, trimming and cleaning and all the other stuff that, you know, if you do that, you can cultivate that plant quite dramatically too, which is something I didn't really, the idea was minimal effort, maximum result, which is how we need to be thinking about everything, guys, because if we can get a plant to be doing something on its own over there, I can do something else while it's growing, right? That means I've got more food out there. Anyway, Don, I know you've got stuff to cover. I don't want to lose you here before the top of the hour. What's been jumping off up in that neck of the woods, sir? Well, we could go in a couple of directions, but you guys, we could talk about the cold. We could talk about, oh, the, hey, we mentioned earlier in the day and the other day that Traverse Bay is frozen over. It's frozen under the Mackinac Bridge across the straits. cold outside. We've talked about that. We could go looking forward to springtime. Hooray. But again, hey, this weekend, it's not that far away, is it? If you can get to a range this weekend, you guys, take a gun with you. Take your handgun. Make sure your handgun, set it outside. Let it get room temperature. Ambient temperature is more proper for the use of the term to be applied in that, in this instance. But let it come to ambient temperature. and then pick it up. The first one you pull the hammer back if there's one in the chamber, it'll probably cycle. I'm curious about the next one and the one after that because well, cold does funny things to lubricants and metals and your hands. We've addressed this. We talked about this just yesterday, but this is something that you can't address this in the middle of the summer. You can't find out. The other thing to do is Well, we can play with charts and if you've got a good drop chart in the summertime that references across temperature and distance, well, you can probably transfer that drop chart to wintertime with your computer. But if you don't have a drop chart falling out of your computer every bit of pun intended there, you can get some really cold temperatures right now and build a drop chart. And when you have the deep temperature and the hot temperature, as reference, as real world reference, then you're a lot closer to recognizing and believing the computer references that they would talk about medium temperatures. You know, medium temperatures, like about 40 degrees. Oh man, I hate that. We might see 30 degrees in a week in the middle of Michigan. Although that isn't really a real drain and rain of thaw, we need a winter thaw. Otherwise we'll be playing hell around here across the middle of Michigan and across a lot of the Midwest with floods. Everybody call Al Gore and tell him we need to heat the place up a little bit. Al, old boy. Bring out some of that global warning because we need that January thaw two weeks ago. So, you know, hey, there's a whole bunch of things going on. And if this runs like this, we talk about crops. And if this runs like this, there will be a whole lot of Michigan farmers and Ohio farmers, Indiana, Wisconsin, over into Pennsylvania, that won't be able to put anything in because their tractors are stuck in the mud if they chose to drive it out into the field. So again, we pray for rain in the right places. Looks like California is going to get some or did get some rain. Hooray. That's not going to make the Colorado River run like it ever did before, but hooray. Mark, the governor of California there, was talking about bringing more water down in order to keep all the citizens happy. And I don't remember which affiliate he is, a Democrat or Republican. But the other side was saying even if the governor brought all of the water that's available into California, it wouldn't be enough. And if you know the governor brought all the water that was available into California, where would the people in Arizona get their water? So again, we've pointed this out water, we've pointed out food, we've pointed out as of late. It's almost you know, if they don't if they won't starve you, they'll kill you from thirst. If that won't work, they'll drop something out of the sky on you. Cough, cough. If that won't work, well, hmm, do you have to drink bottled water in your community? Because that goes back over to thirst, doesn't it? There's whole communities here in Michigan where the companies that killed, literally killed the groundwater are meant to supply the families there with bottled water into perpetuity. You know, the legal term for or at least until they leave that contaminated property. So we could talk about that. Did you know that Mexico gets 30% of the Colorado River? Oh, no kidding. Yeah. That's because it used to flow almost 100% into the Baja, between the Baja Peninsula. What are they, the Gulf of Mexico there? Yeah, they get 30% of the Colorado's rotted right in the Mexico. Okay, that's not a bad trade because we keep two-thirds of it. Well, that would answer your question where would Arizona get its water? I mean, if we cut off Mexico, then Arizona would have their water. Yeah, but you know, then the Chinese would throw a little more backing into Mexico and there'd be a water war and that'd be another way to start it. So that only brings up the point that we sit on a powder keg, you guys, if you're not ready for it, if you're not ready for it, at a moment's notice, well, some of us will be crushed by the wave. Think about it. If you're not ready with food, if you're not ready with water, and we'll extend that thought line, if you're not ready to protect that, which is yours, well, you're kind of SOL. And you can figure out whatever those letters stand for, whatever you want. sunny outside Los Angeles. Other than that, we've done this for years. We have. One of the things that we've kind of moved along with this thought line is the butter knife brigade. The guy comes to your door and says, I know you've been telling me for years and I don't have anything and please help me out. You hand them a butter knife. We talked about that. You guys, to hand these people a butter knife is going to be a kind thing. Mark, you talk about the 510 program, and now the guy that you've been telling to buy food for, for you telling him to store up food for his family and other things, and he says, well, I didn't do it. Now you're going to hand him a gun when he knows you've got food. There's a bit of discernment that you're going to have to figure out if that's a worthwhile endeavor for yourself, aren't you? There's a cautionary, there's a caveat to be put there. I actually had someone tell me, and I brought this thought line to the hour before, I actually had someone tell me while I was sitting in my own living room in Detroit, showing this person a piece of night vision. And he seemed to be all interested at the beginning and at the get-go, and he wanted to know prices and this and that, and I showed him a gun sight and I showed him a viewer. And when things were all done, he says, well, I don't need it right now, but at least Now if things get bad, I know where to get it. Now the whole thought line there is I'll put it off until maybe if need be, kind of sorta, you know. And we've talked about this before because if we were to push it enough, we could generate a toilet paper shortage. If we were to push it enough, we could generate a drywall shortage, a two by four shortage. The point is everything is just enough to be there to what seems like it's going to be there. That's across the board. That's at the lumber. That's at the food mart. That's at the gas station. So again, when someone says that, oh, things are getting really bad. I think I'll run down to the grocery store and buy out a shelf of food. How many other people do you think are thinking that same line or beating that person to the grocery store? Most of the stuff you buy at the grocery store isn't long-term storage. No matter how many polysorbates or whatever other chemicals they put in it to preserve it, they're not really long-term storage. So again, that's food that will come and go real quick, much like turning off the electricity and wondering how many times you can open the refrigerator before, well, it's not cold in there anymore. And wondering how long after that, the food in the refrigerator will be good. And we've talked about that's a simple thing to solve. We've talked about that, you know, a generator and five or 10 gallons of gasoline will generally last long enough until well, you don't have any need to run the refrigerator anymore because it's empty. And that five or 10 gallons of gasoline will probably get you to there. If you're I was going to say judicious, but I didn't want to use it. If you're the Scotsman of the gasoline department, If you're frugal now you might have one of those uh oh let me think of that that those is it What's the name of the candle the K? Candle you can read once the Sun goes down with the candle rather than burn gasoline So that you can run the generator to read caller I do that to be a little bit put a good face collar, but what do you call her? Yeah, call you got you that hard way here I got a little piece of information here. In Denver, Colorado, off of Interstate 25 at mile marker 209, the east side of the road, there appears to be about 100 strikers on train with all kinds of stuff on top of the striker that the guy that called me said he didn't recognize. This is off I-25, mile marker 209, east side of the road, 100 strikers on train. We'd like to get somebody down there to get some pictures and get these things posted. Go ahead and give them a mile marker again, road and mile marker for everybody listening. Interstate 25, Colorado, Denver, mile marker 209, east side of the road, about 100 strikers. It's near the Federal Reserve Building. It gave me that information that it's kind of odd that those strikers are down where they are because they're great targets for graffiti. In other words, it's not a real secure area, apparently. Plus, they're having a lot of garbage on the roof, usually stuff that gets stolen if it's not properly secured. Remember, we've talked about this before, usually when they're rail transporting. You stole everything. You can even disassemble, knock the barrels off of the main armament if it's an APC. There's a stowage point on board, on the hull, for the gun, for the fixture, the barrel and the assemblies. And then there's cap assemblies that go on the stations where the weapons are mounted or goes over the primary receiver. another little kid that you'd be mark or a head or head call fact they have an ad that c o l f a x it'll it's not straight there where the units are located that if not be information that is a little something from two days ago or three weeks ago this is from about thirty or forty minutes ago So if we got somebody in Denver, please get in your car, take a camera, take lots of really good pictures of everything. Serial numbers, numbers, anything you can get. People standing by, people looking at you pointing. Take their pictures. We need pictures of these people. Yeah, who are the people that are standing there staring at your cross-eyed? Well, I want to know where he lives. Yes, exactly. I want to know where he lives. Get on Global Earth, Mark. You might get lucky and see him sitting there. Global Earth. This rail is running parallel with the highway, right? So it appears. Very good. Okay. All right, that's all I have. Well, that's a good update for us. And again, for everybody out there listening, again, Interstate 25, mile marker 209 on the east side of the road, a column of strikers rail mounted. Again, I don't know how many per, I would assume two strikers per flatbed. That's what