March 3, 2014
Evening Show
59m
Complete
Radio Episode
2014
▶ Audio Player
Summary
Mark Koernke discussed radio communications preparedness, focusing on CB single sideband technology, 2-meter and 6-meter radio systems, and repeater networks as alternatives to cell phones and commercial radio. He emphasized the importance of learning radio operation before potential government communications shutdowns, particularly in Connecticut ahead of an expected federal visit. Koernke connected radio preparedness to broader themes of constitutional defense and militia readiness, warning listeners about potential false flag operations and the need for independent communication infrastructure.
- cb radio
- single sideband
- 2 meter radio
- 6 meter radio
- repeater systems
- ham radio
- communications preparedness
- connecticut
- gun confiscation
- homeland security
- cell phone shutdown
- fm am radio
- militia communications
- radio equipment
- preparedness
Transcript
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Live 365. 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 blamed. Your leaders send artillery and guns to foreign shores and send your sons to slaughter fighting other people's wars. Can you regain the freedoms for which we fought and died? Or don't you have the courage or the faith to stand with pride? And are there no more values for which you'll fight to save? Or do you wish your children to live in fear and be a slave? O sons of the Republic, arise, take a stand, defend the Constitution, the Supreme Law of the land, preserve our great Republic and each God given right, and pray to God to keep the torch of freedom burning bright. As I awoke, he'd vanished in the mist for once 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 entremble too afraid to stand and fight If he stood by your bedside to dream while you were asleep and wondered what remains of the freedoms he fought to keep What would be your answer if he called out from the grave? Is this still the land of the good? afternoon ladies and gentlemen, this is the Second hour of the afternoon intelligence report. I'm Mark Kornke. One day closer to victory for all of our brothers and sisters both on and behind the lines in occupied territories west, southwest, east, and north. Well, ladies and gentlemen, you were listening to us on Liberty Tree Radio dot 4 mg dot com, Ronnie, and FM Microstations, CB Base Stations, and Ultra Net Technology used east and west of the Mississippi along with Alaska. We're on the Hallmark Network on the Eastern Seaboard from the top of Maine to the bottom of Florida, from the bottom of Florida across the arc of the Gulf of Mexico. Headed Louisiana, Mississippi, Texas, Oklahoma, big chunk of Nebraska, a whole bunch of Wyoming to include both 3rd and 5th to Pitt and our friends in the recall state of Colorado. Weaving to the left coast where the great state of Jefferson is there in place and doing what it's supposed to do along with the rest of our brothers and sisters there on the left coast fighting the good fight and preparing to deal with a problem organizing arming equipping and training as militia. Congratulations to all of our friends out there. Turning back to the east of the, well that's right, the snowy frosted wastelands of the plains. We sweep across them over the burgeoning banks of the Mississippi with icebergs the size of Connecticut going by and land in the smokies. Ice snow covered. The wolves have eaten all of the small people and the slow people who couldn't get to shelter fast enough. The doom of winter is upon us all! Oh, wait a minute. And all the hell with that BS! It's winter time! But it is the Smokies, where the restaurant crews, grandma teams, OK teams, and the Ma Bell Grammar Consortium of retired telecommunications workers bring us... Mmm, that's right, 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. Well, it is a beautiful, beautiful Monday out there. The sun is still shining, though not for long. And as it stands, with everybody out there listening, I would highly recommend you make sure you've got your gloves and hats if you're taking off right now, because when that sun disappears, it's already getting colder. But when that sun disappears, Oh, she's going in the basement kids. That will be the end. She is going into the basement. So for everybody out there listening, it is the, oh, that's right. It's the 3rd of March. It is the fifth year. Oh, forgive me. Sixth year of open Fabian socialist and Soviet socialist occupation of America with a K-2014 older calendar or Mayan crazy town. crazy town calendar you know are real quick and a lot of guys are posting because this is the day that the uh... again the uh... oklahoma city bombing uh... began a real closely by me get off 20 things at once here guys. I want to touch on that again too. The Branch Chavidian first day attack took place again on this day 1993 and of course four ATF agents were killed. Sadly enough more weren't. Branch Chavidians 6 were killed of course sadly enough. We only wish the numbers would have been stacked up higher. The Branch Chavidians were nice people. Should have wiped them out. The bad guys only wanted to talk because they were down to 42 rounds of ammo. Remember that with what's coming up. When they want to talk after they've attacked and attacked and attacked, we need to talk! Stand up! Boom! There we go. That's how we're going to talk. Rest you out there. You're going to die. See how that works? Because if they want to talk, as we found out again with these thing with the bat faggots at Waco, they didn't want to talk. They were communicating every step of the way. If you know, we've talked about the 9-11 tapes that are available. The original audios were in contact immediately and the Batfaggots wanted to attack. They were a conqueror army! They wanted to kill women and kids because their little cultist nun-case grand poobas told them they could. That's what it was all about. So here's how it works kids. Get your act together, prepare for what's coming and deal with it accordingly. We have again a short time to prep for what's probably going to be whatever they try to kick in in Connecticut. The fact that we have bad ears headed for Connecticut on Wednesday tells us that the Shysters are trying to stir the pot there. It has nothing to do with minimum wage. They're showing up in Connecticut. It's because they're trying to pee in the pool there guys. So, I don't know what they're, you know, what the obvious is, they create an incident, you're all supposed to apologize, bend over backwards, let them kick you in the crotch, steal all your weapons and just say thank you for doing it. Everybody ready for that one? Because that's exactly what, you know, if they can, they'll try to plug it in somehow. Now again, Canary Watch is in force, ADL monitoring sites need to make sure that they cover and in fact, monitor all of the safe houses we've already ID'd and checked, especially in the southwestern part of Connecticut. Remember, we've got an extensive grid there. The alternate technologies in the hallmark do a great job of overlapping and can assist with that problem. So again, keep an eye on the Mossad operatives there and their safe houses, etc. along with other facilities, clandestine facilities that we know the Homeland Security groups are using too. We all have them, we've got them pegged. We just got to make sure we keep track of who's who in the zoo, what they're up to and where they are. Okay. Now, a couple other things. I wanted to point out supply and support ammunition right now. Well, in addition ammunition in light of what we have seen out in Oklahoma here in the last couple of months. Again, I want to say thanks to the militia members in northeastern Oklahoma. The guys have been there for quite some time. They've been doing a great job since the 90s to pretty well keep everybody up to speed. A quick reminder that the Oklahoma, we know that Wyoming, we know that Colorado are all part of the NCIC scam and they've been receiving a whole bunch of other propaganda. The stuff from Oklahoma is coming out of the Mississippi Valley. mostly out of Arkansas and Missouri. So that propaganda scam is coming from there. The stuff that we're seeing on the East Coast are very reminiscent of the precursor to the Oklahoma City bombing with regard to what the Mossad and government did during the bombing activity, doing both the bombing and then trying to whip everything up afterwards. So we should not be surprised, shocked, amazed, caught off guard, nonsense. There's no reason for that. Again, prior proper planning prevents piss poor performance. So, do you have your radio grids set up? 6 meter, whatever in 2 meter, whatever in CB, whatever in, go ahead and tell the shopping list. On the east coast, marine radio is very viable, obviously. So, just something to take into consideration. You actually have more activity and traffic in. The East Coast being a waterway district as opposed to the middle of Nebraska or Kansas where again, Marine is an excellent choice Nobody on it, no waterway activity other than river activity, very minimum there, and that means marine channel radios are a big boomer. They have no competition, no issues to deal with. Remember the more built up the area or the more it's related to the radio communication standards. For example, marine radio is used on the waterways. If you are a waterway state and you have a lot of lakes and rivers, big lakes and rivers, or ocean front property, you're going to find more traffic. But there's still not as much as you'd think. In other words, it's not like the CB radio back in the 70s. It's just not like that. So either way, Marine CB, 6 meter, all these computers is affected, battle radios and battle chatter needs to be up and online. In other words, you need to be testing and experimenting now. Common sense, use any number of warm fuzzies you want to. Oh, those red snappers are biting tonight. If you're on the water, oh, those red snappers are biting tonight. See how that works? So in other words, pay attention to the environment. Use what fits with the environment that you're in. That'll allow you to test, test, test when the time comes. OK? So anyway, we've got a whole bunch of other stuff that's I want to say thank you to the people who have stepped forward from Vermont. I don't know if all of you have been watching the videos that have been showing up on YouTube, but what is interesting especially right now is that a lot of people are stepping forward and pointing out that Yes, as a matter of fact, they're in support of and they're going to stand with Connecticut as things develop. Do not surrender your weapons. Do not surrender your weapons. Hey Mark. Do not surrender your weapons. We've got a caller. Who do we have? This is Mark. Mark, go ahead. Could you please go over what a single, what a CB with a single sideband is? Well, the sideband came originally from shortwave operations. The sideband was originally with military complex radios. And the way it works, first of all, with most radio systems is you actually have three signals running simultaneously. Now you don't hear or see any of this. In fact, the machine does all the work for you. But with shortwave radio, for instance, you have a primary leg, a center signal. Then you have an upper and lower sideband signal that was traditionally sent. This is where the standard worldwide Christian radio is something everybody would recognize. Their transmitters are set up this way, unless they're sideband units. The purpose behind this was that the primary signal is received from the center of the transmitter, so to speak. The upper and lower side banner, simultaneously and depending on weather conditions or environment, your radio actually has a discriminator that IDs which leg upper or lower is superior and it will actually lock into this. Now what this has done in the past is eliminated. It prevents that so you get consistency in terms of signal. Well, after a while we figured out, wait a minute, there are some interesting sidebars here, pardon the pun, with regard to sideband, in that sideband, the sideband signal by itself can be used with the improvement in both power, clarity, and sending capacity, you know, the throw capacity with a lot of these transceivers that are out there that were progressively developed mostly for military application, but for commercial interests also. Sideband was adopted within the shortwave community years ago for military application and for civilians that had an idea of how to make signal go farther with less power. A single sideband with CB basically is doing the same thing. They're subdividing the frequencies available. Upper and lower sideband, the upper and lower leg are peeled off, and or can be isolated. And that's basically where we came up with upper and lower sideband and CB. It just basically splits up the signal available that many more times. so we have the ability to actually pick from a number of other channels. The problem is that by the very nature of the onboard discriminator circuit modifications and a few other issues having to do with power, most of your standard radios can't be opened up to take single sideband, which I wouldn't necessarily want anyway. There are some tricks to picking up sideband, both with CBs and with even standard For instance, shortwave transceivers. Amazingly enough, two transceivers and one rabbit ear each allow you to actually, what you do, you cross the antennas and you can bring in sideband, upper and lower, just like we're talking right now on the air. But it's not that complicated. Both are tuned into the standard sideband frequency. Each individually would not be able to pick it up. Then you take and connect and cross them like an X. The rabbit ears, one from one, one from the other. Touch them and then slide them up and down each other and adjust until you come up with a positive signal. That's a trick that you can use with shortwave and it's also a trick that you can use even with CB. Sounds weird, but you're not grounding the antennas out. Both the antennas are still isolated and separate, again, connected the way they should be. But what you do is actually slide your two primary signal poles. Once they're touching, you move them up and down, back and forth. It's a tedious process, but it can be done. Otherwise, sideband upper and lower does offer some additional separation security. However, depending on how good or bad the receivers are, bounce and reception, environmental conditions in general, you can get bleed over. It happens. So, you can see there is some out here that sound like the big dog that they're saying, but you know they're there. Because they'll just bleed over from one part of the lower upper into the primary signal. That happens. Sometimes, not always, but the farther you are away the more likely bounce and other environmental conditions are going to either enhance or degrade the signal. And that does take place. Upper and lower sideband are cool, but I would point out more likely I would put the radio into experienced hands if it's going to be used for general public communication. Upper and lower sideband until people have more time thinking about it, it creates more confusion for the average bear. And because it's more bells, whistles, more knobs and controls, if there isn't any education process, it's very quick. Very quickly, the operator can get lost on the radio. In other words, not knowing where they are or not knowing how to use the equipment, they virtually can't make contact. So that's just something to take into consideration. The best way to do this is go to the truck stop. It's a great classroom. You've got all the examples of the different radios there. The upper and lower sideband are controlled in a number of different ways. Well, two different ways. Separate switching or again even separation in the dial control. Click, click, click, click. There are different ways that they set it up. Some have a side switch or a side upper and lower sideband switching control. This is stuff that again you got to read the manual. It's not complicated per se, but the average person is expecting to pick up their cell phone and talk. So regular CB with 40 channel or 23 channel, regular marine is pretty straightforward. It's dial and play. With sideband and with all of the other adjustment controls to tweak clarity and you know, tweak the signal. They are there for people who have had a little more time on the rig. That's the best way to think about it. Go ahead. It would just be nice to have a radio where you have CB, you have VH, you have everything all in one. You have brain, you have CB. They do make those. No, they already make them. They really do. The problem is, like I said, you can buy a unit that will do that. It will go all up and down the dial. In fact, there is somebody listening right now, probably it's listening. With one of the alternate rebroadcasters in a unique frequency and they're not switching over to a regular, like another radio somewhere, they've got a multi-band, multi-output transceiver that goes all up and down the dial. And they're actually, if you want to spend the money, you've got radios out there that will do it. And the problem are two things. Number one, you're spending a bigger chunk of change on a single rig. What is great, this is a matter of what is the application for the radio. For most of what you are doing, I'd rather have separate radios. There are two reasons for that. I'll sub-categorize it. Number one, if something breaks on one, I don't lose them all. Also, if I have more than one operator available, guess what? I can put a person on a different rig and each person can be handling that radio net. with everything in one basket and it's very expensive, the other thing you cry about is when it breaks. Because when it breaks, the two things they've taken advantage of, microprocessors, in fact hyper microprocessors, and again some of the new compact sub programming systems that they have, obviously programmable chips again, they synthesize their circuits, have been greatly improved to improve quality and sound and be able to slide up and down the dial. So, what's happened is you can, again, and this is not new, you can do this already, but it's the cost factor. Somebody walks up and carries away your radio that, by the way, is only the size, a lot of them are only the size of four packs of cigarettes that will do this. So hook up to all your antennas on the roof. I know a gentleman right now that's within reasonable, you know, about six miles away to my east. and the radio he's got in the car is the size of six packs of cigarettes and it will do everything and anything he wants it to do. Of course he paid top dollar for it and if there's ever a problem it's going to be a chunk of change to fix. So there's pluses and minuses in now. If I had an aircraft for instance and I need to save space, yes. If I wanted, if I had the money, really if you're out there listening and you have unlimited cash resources, Then buying a radio like that would serve your purpose for backpacking, for minimizing the amount of material you're carrying, but to actually have greater signal potential. To be able to reach more people or a greater number of different transceivers with one piece of equipment. So, you're lightning to combat load, but when you start talking, cutting edge, it's like the difference between first generation, second generation, third and fourth generation and night vision. The closer you get to whatever everybody thinks they absolutely have to have now that's cutting edge state of the art, the more you pay through the nose. And again, the problem is, unfortunately if I have my way, I'm going to have more than one operator. And each person is going to be dealing with a different part of the bandwidth anyway. The CB operators might still divide them up high and low. 23 and below on one set of transmitters, 23 and above, 24 and above on the rest. Right, well I'm in a truck all over the country and the CB is exactly, I want more, the CB is not enough. I mean, I might be in the Great Lakes one day, I might be in the West Coast to next. I got to know what the hell is going on. Well, you know what? Let me do something for you here real quick, because you got a question there that I have not bothered to look, but I know that what's interesting is DealXtreme has a lot of junk that is really cool. And in fact, did you listen to our program this morning on the Micro Effect? No. Okay, one of the things that our friend, Randy from Castle Broadcasting, as he was pointing out, he goes, you know, There's a lot of stuff out there. He's trying to just get stuff out. He's dealt with a lot of these companies out there, and he's been dealing with the China Sport stuff. And there is a lot of China Sport stuff out there that is virtually state of the art and bargain basement. Now you kind of get what you pay for. But there's middle range stuff that they have in radio technology. And I'm looking right now because we've already talked about consumer electronics. Here we go. Let's see what we have in the way of radios. Because other consumer electronics, transceivers, digital frames, e-books, digital recorders, video, TV receivers, handheld GPS projectors, other consumer electronics. Let's see. Let's get down here to radios. If we can find anything else in the radios, it might be unique. You just come out. I haven't really bothered to go in that direction. But they're of course they have walkie-talkie specifically listed. I'm gonna go back up to consumer electronics And then go over to other a suit consumer electronics and see what they have there I know they've got micro FM and they do have other transceivers transmitters and transceivers I'm gonna have to do a little shop around see what they have here. I know that somebody in China sport Several sources have the radios that we're talking about again uh... you still make some everybody makes a good variation on it my only problem is is any game like you said your truck driver if you're looking at something that man if i had to blog out could i take some with me well yeah there's stuff that small enough that you actually could take it with you of that you would be quite portable The big thing is understanding the price tag. But since you can use a number of different tools to write it off, justify it because it will have all of your commercial interest frequencies, it will go up and down the bandwidth. It will run 2 meters, definitely run 6, 10, so you can go right up and down the dial pretty much where you want to. The big thing is now as far as shortwave, not so much. Again, two meters in the right niche to begin with, and there's a lot of two meter repeaters if you get it hooked into the two meter system especially. There are some big advantages there while civilization survives. Otherwise, the six meter CB radio obviously, marine channel, those are going to be around and you've got a good long signal there. It may not be real strong, but you can get it going farther than you'd imagine, even with a small transceiver. So, 5-6 watts will go a hell of a long way with AM on the bounce. You've already seen that with CB. I mean look at what you are in experienced CB so you can see where you get bleed over from all over the planet depending on what time of day it is. It's knowing when to operate the equipment and what the capacity of the equipment is and how to modify antennas. Antenna theory is the big thing as I've said for years and understanding that it's theory, not law. It's antenna theory, so it's purely a matter of being creative. You learn some of the tricks of the trade that have already been developed. A lot of them, everybody likes to be quiet about certain things because you're planning for the future always. So one of our two meter radio, we'll basically do just about everything except VHF and just about everything, right? And you can actually get them to go UHF VHF without any problem. There's there all the selection the options are there yasoo. You know I'd look like here's the thing to do I'd go with yasoo and Motorola first and look to see what they're offering right now Okay, but yasoo. I like over Motorola for a lot for that technology. I'll tell you that right now I've handled both in the a sues that we've had we beat the snot out of And I don't have much like that, but I've never bought cutting-edge. I always buy the third generation back. You know what I mean? So, the technology is available, and now my, the one I've got now sitting here that can do what we're talking about is eight generations back, and it's still a beast. It's still an excellent radio. So the equipment is there, not very big. In this case, the one I've got, which can do pretty much all that we're talking about, I got mine used at about $89. I bought it at the Dayton O'Hare of Hamfest. And the fact that I cracked the housing on the body of the thing once, dropping it, other than that it's held up fine. And in fact it held up well over the little drop that I made with it. I didn't expect it to do what it did, but it was cold weather. Beyond that, they work flawlessly. The only problem is it's micro tech. This isn't Star Trek. I'm sorry, have you ever seen Star Trek? I'm going to make my little communicator work. Really? How? I'd love to hear about this one. In reality, if it's that micro tech, it was purely designed to be thrown away. In this case, it's one step away from that. The other thing is that typically to make it such a compressed radio, everything is jammed in tight. That's another problem with working on them. It's kind of like when you work on a transverse mounted engine vehicle. You know you can't get there from here. Right. You know when you get under the hood it's like I don't have to do what? I got to take off what? To get to where? But all I'm doing is the alternator. Yeah, congratulations. And don't think about the fuel pump. Or the water pump. Or the... When you hook these things up to your power supply, you want to go right to the battery. You don't want to go through any of the electronics in a car, right? You want to go directly through the battery. Yeah, you can go both ways. If you have a breaker box that's an industrial breaker box, which isn't a bad idea anyway, that's simply to protect the radio from power coming down the line if there's any kind of muck up under the hood. But yeah, if you can, hard line all the way out to the battery. That's the other option. And you know how it works, heavier gauge, you know, saves, you know, in terms of, you know, finding melted wire and the smell of, you know, solder, you know, things re-soldering themselves to other components as you make an arc welder out of, I should say, a spot welder out of them. So, and again, you're not pushing that much power though. The big thing is just to get a clean supply. You know how that works. Cleaning your power supply, the better off your, the better your signal is going to be in general. So, for instance, most commonly what we do is we use a separate breaker box. You can buy them all over the place. And you purely matter how new or old. I mean, I've got them with the old fuse, the old glass fuse. I've got them with the new, you know, scabbard fuses. The heavier, under the hood type scabbard fuses. You know, the big ones, the big, wonky ones that are easy to find. So you don't have to try and figure out how to get them out with a pair of pliers because you can grab them with both hands. The big thing there again is connections, if it's quick and hasty. The other thing you bring up is a good point. Anything like that, try to solder. Try to keep it so because things work loose. You're bouncing around, it's on a truck or it's on a vehicle. Most common thing I've always found is we've had to crawl up under there sometime during the winter and fix something that came loose and we track it down those lines where you run something or you jump something and you do it with a nut and tape. and you still use the wire nut and the tape. It depends on how you solder your lines together and what you do to seal them. But no matter what, I would solder them. That's just me. Plus we're looking at battlefield situations now guys, where we're, I mean, or at least survival situations. Spend the extra few pennies. Just because. Well, there's no reason not. You can always carry a pair of wire cutters with you. If you've got to cut it loose, oh, it'll come loose. That copper ain't going to slow you down. One more. Snip, snip. And then take it off, take it with you. Yeah, I'm just taking it like a two meter and then get a handheld VHF for what I'm on the coast. Yeah. Well, the thing about it too is now there's something else. There's a lot of two meter radios very recently priced out there right now. 2 meter is still more expensive than the 6 meter radios we've been talking about. You can buy a console unit for $35 in 6 meter. You can buy handhelds for as little as $11. But in 2 meter it's come down because there are so many overlapping generations out there. And there's still pretty much every repeater out there. They may not all be 100% online anymore. But both digital and analog are in place, so they have to service both. Which is cool, and I don't see that changing dramatically example is the three motor rollers that I have in fact our friends just around the corner here Those are both all three of those are analog that are motor rollers and they were the size of half of a telephone booth and the third one fourth one is one that we hand built from scratch and that's the size of a telephone booth and All those are analog and they're all in service, and they're not going to be coming offline So just to give you an idea so I would give an older unit little bulkier But not real bulky is you know that's an option you can save on the two meter You know what I mean so you can spend more money on the other rig Well there again yeah either sit on the dash or like you like well you see you've got a rear truck so Make it you know you can be a space captain you can have console unit after console I envision most of what we're doing. We've got a radio truck that our friend here is going to work on real soon. We've got to get this out of the way now with what's going on. Each one of the units that he's built trailer-wise is mimic one of the other of the radio truck, the radio trailers, etc. It's banked. We have a single transmitter for each of the missions, each of the projects we're talking about here. CB2 meter, 6 meter, etc. and they're stacked and racked. But we also have the ability, like I said, the way it's spread out with the work desk is that we can put four operators on that desk, on that bench comfortably. That way no one person is trying to be the octopus and do everything. In your case, as a truck driver, you have to. Again, it would make sense to have cockpit control. I would. You live there. I don't know how it is. Just a matter of the mission, like we said, how many different ways are we looking at applying these different missions? If you were looking at aircraft, I'd go smallest, tiniest, everything. If you lose your aircraft anyway, if you go down, chances are you're not going to be able to save the equipment. First rule is get away from the wreckage. If you do survive the crash, which is hopefully the plan, then getting away from the wreckage is rule one. Going back, if it looks like it's not going to turn into a Bunsenburger, is the next option. So you either can pick it as you go. In other words, I'd make it so it's palletized nowadays like a mine radio so that everything's in one package. You just pull it as one unit. If I did that, I'd even have coils of copper wire, little plastic or wood insulators built into the kit bag. When I pull the radio, I wouldn't worry about even salvaging the antenna because I'll build a new one. When all this fight starts to happen, you know, cases are going to be like, damned important, obviously. And, you know, they're going to shut down everything. And so I want to be able to, you know, keep an intact, you know, report what I see on the, you know, on the ground with you or Henry or whoever the hell I got to talk to. But, so that's what I'm saying. I mean, I got to be, I want to have good communications because I'll be on the move. There's no reason why I can't report what the hell I'm seeing out here. Exactly. You've got to be able to get outside here. In fact, thank you for bringing it up because that's something for you. Good thing you kept talking. One of the things I would bring up is, remember there are things that we need to watch for. Watch the ADL slash Southern Perversion Law in Connecticut. Mossad operations are very likely. But the other thing is, signal communications guys. There are only eight counties in Connecticut. Whatever the hell they are going to try and get away with, they are going to be having to shut down communications at a county level or at a part of the county level. They are going to be ready to do that. So heads up to anybody who has got relatives in communications and FM stations, AM stations. Anything out there that's signal communications, they're going to be pressured from the system or they're going to be given a, oh by the way, we may be taking over your programming or maybe taking over your transmitter. Or, remember, back in the late 90s they installed the shut off switches for FM and AM radio. If you see part of that grid go off, that is a flare. If you start tuning the dial and there's a whole big empty set of busted teeth, in other words dark, nothing coming in, that's a flare right there guys. So again, double check, don't just count on your piece of equipment. It'll be the one time your radio goes bad and you didn't know it and it's like, oh my gosh, oh wait a minute, your radio works? Oh wow. But both FM and using, again, no or interception or intercept technology to shut down radio components or cell phones. Watch the cell phone grid. If they're going into attack an area, their logic is FEMA, Homeland Security, their plan is to shut off the cell phones. We've all talked about this. Let's reinforce this. We have to have other technology on standby now, especially if you're in Connecticut. I can't emphasize enough passing this on to everybody in Connecticut. I know a lot of people are talking about, don't give up your guns, don't surrender anything, but in order to do that, it's like a little video that's on Henry's page right now, guys. We haven't seen it. Like they said, go ahead, if you are going to surrender any part of your weapons, give them the bullets. That is not a surprise, it is exactly what I expect to see happen. I don't think anybody should be surprised of that at all. But because of it, I would remind everybody again that the bad guys, they are not going to take kindly to the idea that they are going to get riddled one way or another. So they are going to try to do everything they can to gain an edge. So, signal communications, again, what was that line from Star Wars? Remember the first movie? Remember that the blocking of communications can only mean one thing, invasion. So that's just how it works. Right, but what I was thinking was, you know, maybe I don't know how it works, I'm kind of new to all this, but I mean, if I do get a two meter, I need to know how to get a hold of it. Like, if I'm trying to get a hold of you, for example, and I can't, there's no more cell phone. I mean, how do I get a hold of this? Well, the two meter would work the same, actually. The only thing is you need to get into the grid. What you want to start doing is cooperating with and getting the codes for going from one repeater to the next. and you can access the different 2 meter clubs that are out there and give them a handshake and they'll progressively, especially as a truck driver, you're kind of handy for them because they like to be able to play with or work with traveling operators. So 2 meter is not that difficult. In fact, what 2 meter used to do, 2 meter is the original cell phone. Before there was cell phone, the government was going to take the two meter system away from the ham operators and it was going to be the cell phone system. We built up the repeater grid. We put everything in place. Everybody made it work. Then Uncle Samuel said, oh, we're going to take all your repeaters. The good thing is that all the people who were the ham operators or the unique people that built these is they all had some money because it's back in the 80s when they tried to do this. We still have the economy head and tank like it is now. People fought it and won. That's the only reason you're not using 2 meter right now for your cell phones because that's where everything was headed. Instead, they had to go to 800 meg. That's just an example of bad guys don't win everything. Everybody goes, oh, they always lose their weight. No, they don't. and the 2 meter radio operators what they did years ago. This starts way back in the late 60s when the prototyping for this was done by a lot of independent hams. You get on the, what you do is you create a repeater. What you can do is hook up to the ground line. From the ground line you hook that up to your repeater station. The repeater station goes to the next repeater station, hooks up to the ground line wherever it is, say, half a state away or a quarter of a state away. So you eliminated all those long distance toll charges we used to get. And you could hook up and talk and it sounds just like you're talking on a regular cell phone today, guys. But it was actually, it was cleaner in most cases. What's fascinating is that then everybody figured out, man, this is a great idea. Industry picked this up also. A lot of industries helped us buy repeaters for their area. And you could jump across the country with two, three, four, five, six, seven repeaters. You could code that automatically be sent in with a handshake. And you'd jump from one to the next to the next. And you could go across the whole length of this country without the telephone company. And they really didn't like that. Because, again, this wasn't the cell phone system, guys. This was people privately and independently doing transceiver repeaters. They were everywhere. Then once we built them and made them to go everywhere, it was superior to the radio telephone grid. Because you've seen in the old movies, a guy comes up with a bread box size box in the old black and white movies and had a telephone on the top of it, looked like a telephone receiver, like a handset, it was. But that's the size of a, that was a cell phone back in the day. So, they planned on taking over the 2 meter, taking advantage of everything that we developed and perfected in the way of technology. Everybody stopped it, so they had to move on down the road. We told them to kick rocks and get on down the road, and that's how you ended up with 800 meg, and then the police ended up with 900 meg. Because they tried to do it a second time with 800 meg cell phones. So, we've already got the systems in place. Two meter is still out there. Two meter could be, in fact, more heavily resuscitated. I think that's actually happening. There's a lot of new people coming into it, the next generation. I'm seeing a lot of people look like in their 20s, 30s, and early 40s. Those are the next batch of spring chickens that will keep the thing going, but also build it up. So, two meter would be a good choice. And what you'll do is you need to get in with some of the two meter clubs. You go up on the internet, you'll find a bunch of them out there. Join up with one and start reading up on the technology. It's not that difficult to understand. In fact, it's very, very simple. Even my old Yaesu will still hook up to the 2 meter net without any complications. And while it's a lot bigger than your cell phone, it's not that much bigger when you think about it. It's the size of an old style little wonky talky. But it will punch into whatever repeater is closest here and or I can direct the signal towards whichever one is on the horizon. As long as I can point the antenna at it. And if you're mobile it would be just a matter of whatever metropolitan area is closest. And you could even put a directional antenna on the roof. That's an option. You can put a semi-directional antenna on the roof of the truck. So if I wanted to get a hold of you, you'd have to have your radio on obviously. Nope, nope. As a matter of fact, see the kicker on that one is you could call any ground line from a 2 meter. It's a cell phone, right? Think of it like a cell phone. You could call your radio, you could punch into the system. You could call back and forth, you could hook up with a repeater at the other end and call to a ground line. Or call to a 2 meter radio. People were doing this back in the 70s when it was a big deal. Long distance, long distance, everybody get over here fast, talk to Fred, it's going to be about three minutes. And then of course it would roll over and it would be $5 a minute or whatever, $2 a minute. Well, we made it possible for a lot of soldiers and a lot of people around the country or anybody around the country to talk to Fred and Wilma all day. Hi, how you doing? Oh, look at the cost you're automating! No, no it doesn't. I'm on the radio. What? You're on the phone! I'm talking to you on the phone! Yeah, I know. It's okay. Hey, you know, Nancy's here too. Or, you know, Betty's here too. So is Barney. And everybody could talk to everybody and there wasn't any restrictions. There's nothing. They could talk as long as they wanted. Nobody was used to that, guys. Nowadays you've got unlimited everything. But that's because government wants to spy on you. Yeah, that's really good to know Mark. That's going to be damned important to learn how to do all that. The other thing is picking it up for the 2 meter. Like I said, there are 2 meter repeaters out there that are sitting idle right now. Some of them have taken off line. We've had discussions about this for quite some time here. That 2 meter is something that is to a degree being resuscitated but it needs to be built back up. It could be bigger than ever before right now. And the cool thing is, is that again, the same technology could be applied to any radio. 2 meter just happened to be the niche. If you weren't worried about permission, then 2 meter radio would just be one option of many. And it's purely a matter of taking and applying the same technology with regard to the repeater system with whatever frequency or part of the bandwidth you want to use. Which, by the way, to a certain degree is done right now because you've heard some of the ham operators talk about how they have patch work that they do where they can take and put you on off a regular ground line and get you up onto the ham, you know, through a ham operator which is basically applying again the repeater system technology but getting you up into the radio net to do ham radio work, you know, from a telephone, you know, as a guest. So you can actually talk on somebody else's ham radio. That technology is already there. And in fact, that's where again, with all the micro tech that's out there, although again, if it breaks, we probably won't be able to fix it. But it's out there. It's fairly small. It's easy to use. And again, it gives us the ability to translate a lot of material and information to other parts of the bandwidth, other radio systems. I would at least, you know, one of the things, I don't know about your restrictions in the truck, but 6 meter is not really in any of the police departments anymore because they've all been demanded by Homeland Security to go to 900 meg, 800 or 900 meg, mostly 900 now. So, the other maybe fire departments out there, some of them, most of them are even fire departments, emergency services have all been demanded by Homeland Centralized Interior Police Security to go to the same thing that they're on so they can monitor and they can also block everybody. So the cool thing is that like 6 meters is pretty much wide open and that's another consideration is that we build that up. And again, we're talking here, it's a 3rd of March 2014 the bad guys are talking about confiscating everything that they can in Connecticut If that starts then will this so, you know again, it'll be a catch-as-catch can before the bullets start flying And we have this is stuff we've been talking about for the last couple years. Everybody really really really needs to be serious about The other option like you said, don't forget I know everybody a lot of the truck drivers still use CB But they really don't the way they used to do they? Not really, but they're getting back into it though. They're starting to realize that they're becoming more and more popular. They're going back the other way. They're being used mainly for going to a distribution center and the security guard will want you to have a CB and they'll call you on the CB for when your door is ready. That kind of thing. There's not too much to talk back and forth between drivers anymore, not like it was 10 years ago, but it started to come back strong. Well, I think one of the things is to be ahead of the curve on that because you know how it is. There's a lot of stuff laying around. You might want to start moving people in a certain direction just by tapping everybody's ear on that too because if they're going to be looking at alternatives, 2 meter would be something that all of them could get into where the cell phone may not be affordable anymore because you see there's no bill on a 2 meter. There's no monthly bill for a 2 meter. You're part of the club. You're part of the club. Now they might want a membership fee once a year, but as little as that would be, what that does is it enhances your potential to be able to continue to at least stay in contact when everything else is offline. My biggest concern is, like I said, they're going to shunt the 800 mag, which cuts off a lot of the population and figure their Star Trek communicators would always work. Number two is FM and AM, like I said, and also television. They're going to shunt all of those. If they start a house to house, whatever you're going to see is going to be whatever the political commissar of communications demands through Homeland Security. Especially in Connecticut, they are already looking the Phalis big time with regard to the ring knockers, the apron wearers. They've already gotten rid of the sheriffs in Connecticut. There's a whole bunch of things here guys that, like I've said for years, it's like two different walls that were built at the same time. And they don't make sense because one part of the run is here, then another part has three bricks, and the other run has five bricks. Over here it's just a reverse and there are two corners. But then all of a sudden you look down and you realize they're on roller bars and they push the two together and clunk. Wow, that makes sense now. Because they did away with sheriffs already in Connecticut. They don't have sheriffs there. All they've got is the police state. The police state, they've already expressed to you that they're the masters. They're the masters. Everybody watch this video or listen to this video or audio with the one shyster from Sandy Hook slash Crooked Hook. Where he's you know, oh, we I am the master now if you think about the term would you actually use that if you were talking to somebody and I want to bring this up too because Is that a word that you would pull out of your vocabulary and use the way that he did? If you think about it the only place where you find that oh, yeah. Oh, yeah Oh, yeah is with the occultist guys past masters grand masters. Oh That's right I am the master! The only other place I would find that by the way is Doctor Who. If you're familiar with Doctor Who, remember his arch nemesis was the master. So I guess maybe he's Doctor Who's arch nemesis and the hater on America. I don't know. But just something to think about there because again Connecticut has got a whole bunch of engineered nonsense already in place. They've got a big Homeland Security budget. They've got two different fusion centers that have control over parts of their state. And that's bigger than most, only because of the overlap because of where they are in proportion to New York. So, they have two fusion centers for manipulation of the Homeland Security Interior Police. Homeland Security Interior Police of the KGB have at least five or six major hubs that they can operate out of in Connecticut, kind of oversized for the size of the state. They had crooked hooks and sandy hooks take place. The whole thing is either an occult murder or, again, I'd say six, one and a half, a dozen and the other. It's either an occult sacrifice where parents were told that that child you bred, time to cut their guts out and sacrifice them to ball. So everybody said, well there were funerals. Oh, I don't doubt it. But nobody got a chance to see the crime scene and nobody got chance to see any pictures, but they had open casket funerals. Now guys that tells me that somebody should have been taking kids to the hospital. Unless they had their throat slit and were disemballed and offered to the devil god there. If that's the case, in order to get their promotion into the next level of OEA, OEA, OEA to sacrifice so they could help to push the agenda for the internationalist against America to grab the gun starting with Connecticut symbolically, you tell me. All that just tied into the radio. It is. And that's why we need to be ready for it. Signal communications, every area possibly where we can fill this in. Microfemry broadcasters. For getting the signal out and for you truckers, diversify as quickly as we can. And I understand you're limited, everybody else is, so I can't expect nobody's going to be doing a mobile rat rig right off the bat. I would seriously look at 2 meter and 6 meter because those are two that are pretty much open and reasonably priced. If you can hit any ham fests, I'm told, actually 2 meters there's a glut of right now also, so prices will vary, but you can hit a nice 2 meter that sit on the dash there and work pretty well anywhere you want it to. When they do the ham fest at Dayton, O'Hara, it's probably one of the biggest 2 meter relay call-ins that the country has. They're talking all the way out from wherever people are coming from using the repeater system and all the way home from the Dayton O'Hara Arena. four or five times tonight, but you know, I mean, I hope it sinks into everyone listening. They're gonna shut down the cell phone system. And they're gonna shut down the AM and FM radio. The only way to keep in contact is gonna be like you said, through two and six with repeaters. And so we have to learn how to use them. I mean, that's just simple as that. It's like you gotta have a bullet, you gotta have a gun, and you gotta know how to use a radio. That's simple. One of the big things here too is again guys, try to get as many people to tie into this as you can. It's not that hard to do. In fact, you can make it fun for people. Remember, don't get them serious. Make them laugh about it. Oh, ha, ha, ha. It's fun and it's funny. But again, demonstrate that it's reasonably priced or inexpensive and start getting people to make it. It's your own little secret. There's another way to work it. However you can get people to expand on this idea, It needs to be done now. Most critical. Do you want to close with me, caller? We stood up. Oh, I think we lost her. Okay, God bless the Republic. After the new world order, we shall prevail ladies and gentlemen. The Empire is on the run. We're in a march. It is Monday. Ed's taking over. We'll be back at 8 o'clock with the evening intel report. It is the 3rd of March. Connecticut, pay attention. You got Obama coming in there on Wednesday. That's not an accident. Randy, stay tuned over on Monday with the Veterans Manual. Oh wait a minute we got Randy on tonight, I'm sorry, correct? Yep, doing the vet- Yep, Randy, right here, ready. Okay, very good, well you jump right in there sir, we're gonna get out of the way. Bye bye guys. Lights went out tomorrow, stores had no food, you had to leave the house in the next five minutes. the world. Also, food, water, weapons and tools will help to survive the upcoming destruction and reconstruction. Don't just survive, survive. Get Ready It's Coming teaches prepper survival from the first instance to the last hour. 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