June 12, 2014
Evening Show
1h 4m
Complete
Radio Episode
2014
▶ Audio Player
Summary
Mark Koernke discussed flamethrower technology, construction, and tactical deployment against armored vehicles and personnel. He covered the history of flamethrower use by Russian forces, explained fuel composition (high-burn and low-burn mixtures, gelification agents with aluminum and magnesium), and detailed ambush tactics against MRAPs and tanks using coordinated rifleman fire and flame weapons. He also addressed preparedness topics including his garden and food preservation efforts, solicited donations for the station's annual operating costs, and criticized government overreach and police state tactics.
- flamethrower
- tactical weapons
- mrap
- armored vehicles
- anti-tank
- preparedness
- self-sufficiency
- gardening
- food preservation
- militia tactics
- ambush
- constitutional rights
- police state
- ukraine
- russian military
Transcript
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Military.com. In this, the land of the free and home of the brave. The freedoms we secured for you we hoped you'd always keep. But tyrants labored endlessly while your parents were asleep. Your freedom's gone, your courage lost, you're no more than a slave. In this, the land of the free and home of the brave. You buy permits to travel and permits to own a gun. Permits to start a business or to build a place for one. On land that you believe you own, you pay a yearly rent, although you have no voice in saying how the money's spent. Your children must attend a school that doesn't educate, and your Christian values can't be taught according to the state. You read about the current news in a regulated press, and you pay a tax you do not owe to please the IRS. Your money is no longer made of silver nor of gold. You trade your wealth for paper so your life can be controlled. You pay for crimes that make our nation turn from God and shame. You trade it in your name. You've given government control to those who do you harm so they could burn down churches and seize the family farm. And keep our country deep in debt. Put men of God in jail. Harash your fellow countrymen while corrupted courts prevail. Your public servants don't uphold the solemn oaths they've sworn. And your daughters visit doctors so their children will be born. Your leaders send artillery and guns to foreign shores and send your sons to slaughter fighting other people's wars. Can you regain the freedoms for which we fought and died? Or don't you have the courage or the faith to stand with pride? And are there no more values for which you'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 bright. As I awoke, he'd vanished in the mist from whence he came. His words were true, 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 to dream while you were asleep and wondered what remains of the freedoms he'd fought to keep What would be your answer if he called out from the grave? Is this still the land of the free and good afternoon ladies and gentlemen, this is the first hour of the afternoon intelligence report I'm our quirky 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... LibertyTreeRadio.4MG.com. We are on AM&FM micro stations, CB base stations, and Ultra Net Technologies east and west of the Mississippi along with Alaska. We're on the Hallmark Network from the top of Maine to the bottom of Florida. From the bottom of Florida, across the arc of the Gulf of Mexico, headed to Louisiana, Mississippi, Texas, Oklahoma, big chunk of Nebraska, a whole bunch of Wyoming to include both the third and fifth the pit, and our friends in the recall state of Colorado. Waving to the left coast where we have the great state of Jefferson, we turn back to the east, sweep across the plains, leap over the burgeoning banks of the Mississippi, and land in the Smokies slash the Blue Ridge where the restaurant crews, grandma teams, Okay, teams in the Ma Bell Grammar Consortium have retired telecommunications workers bringing us the Golden Spike. It has turned to a somewhat clearer, you still got puffy storm clouds here and there, but a roughly clear day, a breeze out of the west, means we've probably got another storm, another rain front coming in, but it has been a beautiful day today for the plants. Everything's just springing up out of the ground and is doing its job. So for everybody out there, again Thursday. Do we have Don with us here? Or a ding? Don't want to leave Don out. It is the 12th of June. It is the sixth year of open Fabian socialist. and Soviet Socialist Occupation of America with a K2014 Old Earth Calendar or Mayan Crazy Town Crazy Town slash, that's right, Notre Dame-ous man, I didn't need a football coach, Notre Dame-ous something I think, Notre Dame-ous, Nostradamus, that's gonna be the Far Eastern Mysticism scam If you're ever going to pick in, start flapping and yapping about, everybody can go yawn and it's like they seesaw back and forth. It's like we were talking about this morning about propaganda and how you jumble up the numbers or the information. You go back and forth and back and forth. And again, more on that perhaps in the hours here coming up. But in the meantime, again, it is Thursday. It is, well, it, the 12th here guys we're looking at 1 3rd of the month gone already so for everybody out there being the 12th of June We got the growing season in gangbusters, a few plants I got to replace. It just happens. I don't know what it is because they're flawless, they look good, genetic marker, whatever happens, just boom, all of a sudden down. The good thing is we do lots of extras. I even did a couple of the non-hybrid slash heritage in particular so that as our first batch of heritage that are unique, we want to experiment with some this year. Actually, we have three new breeds we're experimenting with. Well, we're going to keep the old standbys are still there too and we're going to add to that. So I'm probably going to end up putting the other six or eight plants in the ground as quick as I can to get them beefed up a little bit before we lose anything else just in case. Now, again, some precaution, but hey, I can always use more tomatoes. We have more jars to fill. In fact, everything will be filled this year. Nancy just did strawberry jelly. Oh my goodness. Oh, that wouldn't last long and won't be any problem using it for barter if you wanted to. Everybody like you to get more of that jelly. I'll guarantee it. Special well, it's actually a strawberry jam that you did. Also rhubarb strawberry. Oh, the rhubarb is gigantis. And as a matter of fact, she made rhubarb cobbler. And oh man, I'm gonna have some of that when we have a break after the two hours here. I will have some. I haven't had any so far today, but man, a little bit of ice cream on that. Ooh. It is perfect. She just played a perfect batch and we got more rhubarb out there You know popping up as we speak with the stalks the size of my thumb and bigger, but rich very rich We've had a lot of moisture guys anyway Here we are it is Thursday a couple things I touched on today. I want to touch on again flamethrowers If you really want to do some research, now on the Internet you'll get some of the information you need, but technical manuals are still your best choice. I highly recommend if you can find a copy of the Op Force technical manuals that were done for the Warsaw Pact, Warsaw Pact Operations slash Europe. The reason? Well, the Russians have had an entire, their combat engineer corps has had an entire subdivision utilizing flamethrower technology going back to the inception of what we would call a backpack flamethrower, World War I style. Now, were they that sophisticated in World War I? Well, not everybody was, but in reality, there's not a whole lot that can really change with the concept of a flamethrower. The only issue that ever came about was the idea that, okay guys, depending on what you make it out of, you're talking 40, 60, 70 pounds for a flamethrower in combat configuration. Oh yeah! As a matter of fact, when you see even a World War II flamethrower, or if you see the flamethrower of some Korea or Vietnam, I would remind you, take a look at the size of those canisters. on the back and understand that in order to get all that flamey, burnaly, stuffaly going out there, those canisters are, well, actually remember, full of fluid. And what's that thing about the weight of fluid? Plus or minus, it'll vary depending upon, again, chemical composition, whatever you're working with. But if a pint is a pile of the world around, and each of those tanks carry two or three gallons, well, do the math. Now what's the weight of the containment vessel and the containment vessel has to be very rigid very secure so that there's no possibility of the operator thinking I'm going to turn into a mobile Zippo In other words a big Bunsen burner, you know pile of flames and roasting human flesh The other things are, you know, fittings and fixtures are all double positive, designed to keep the operator safe. But there is training involved. And even in our military, the flamethrower basically went into the engineer's detachment of a particular formation. As you get bigger, you know, in terms of going from company to, say, battalion, battalion to regiment, regiment to... Division, Division 2, well let's not forget, you know, Brigades in there, of course, up and down, depending upon what era you're talking about, but you know, Regiment or Battalion, Brigade, Division, each one has a larger engineer component, which means they have more junk in their toolbox. Down at the small unit level, typically again, where you have detachments that are part of or will be assigned to smaller units, These detachments are specialized units. There are several different types of weapons sections that were developed. The normal weapons section that you're most familiar with would be a machine gun section. It could be two or three or four Browning machine guns or M60 machine guns, depending upon the era. In addition to that, the variations in what we had in the way of loadable anti-tank weapons was also part of that weapons section. And with a platoon leader or with a company commander, the equipment would be allocated or assigned accordingly, depending upon need, and the training of the officer, depending upon the era. But the engineer units were assigned for a specific motivation. Typically, again, if it's flamethrowers or whatever, it's in some kind of assault mode, be it building structure in the field, working in an area where you might know you have hardened deployments, hardened equipment you're going to be facing. Also, again, the flamethrower is always considered part of the anti-tank battery of weapons readily available. Both the Russians and the US and typically British forces pretty well stacked the deck the same way with regard to their thought of how the weapons should be used. With regard to their perfection of the technology, once again, the Russians typically were superior in terms of how much they could field and how much working experience they had with the flamethrower when it came to operational use. Blame-thrower units, of course, well people have a tendency not to want to be too close to them. There's always that issue like you saw in Saving Ryan's privates. They had to have that shot in the background. You should remember where the guys are assaulting with the, yeah, the flamethrowers mounted and the guys thrashing around in the background. You know, nah, well actually it was the same. It was one of the few places where if that happened you'd want to be, you want to know why, jump in the water. Well Mark, its petroleum product doesn't make any difference. Jump in the water. The most important thing about being burned is to pull calories and on top of that to be able to jump into saline water would be the best thinking thing that could possibly happen to you in the next few instances. Okay, just something to think about there. When I saw that it's like, yeah, yeah, thrashing around, no, grab him, throw him in the water. Grab him, kick him in the water, drop him into the water. Why? It'll put the fire out in the process, or at least again it'll be floating around but it won't be on him. And it'll be pulling calories. Remember, it had storms, the ocean was fairly cool by comparison, and yeah, it would make a difference. It probably would have saved the guy's life. It would have been pretty with the burns he had, but it would have pulled a whole lot of the damage, you know, the deep damage from being an issue. That's the other thing I remember about burns, more on that in a little bit. Flamethrowers, otherwise, flamethrower material or, you know, flamethrower gelification agent slash enhancer can be a number of different materials. We talked about this this morning. You traditionally have been able to buy the enhancer in 40 gallon, although they can also be found depending on who's manufacturing and who's selling in 40 or 50 gallon cardboard barrels. Now these cardboard barrels are traditional industry standard. In fact, it's the same stuff we used to buy 40 pound kegs of IMR powder and Winchester powder in for our 50 cals guys. We have bought tons, not pounds, I have bought tons of powder. But let me make a point here. Back when we were buying powder and 40 pound kegs, guys cost us $2 per pound. What? Well, yeah, it turns out a guy had a whole bunch of 50 caliber powder available in a certain tunnel and he offered it in the market out there and everybody took advantage of it. Congratulations. So we had many Frito-Lays trucks that we filled with 40 pound kegs, slash arsenal kegs of powder and that's what's loading our 50 caliber ammunition right now and other heavy caliber technology. So in fact, you can use the 50 cal powders down into the large case other stuff. What we got now that we didn't have before, well we did have a 338 Winchester and that 50 cal powder works well in there, but now we have 338 Lapua. Guess what? That 50 cal powder works just fine in those cases also. And the Rigby and the other Chi-Tech and all the other almost half inch rounds or 20 millimeter rounds. So anyway. flamethrowers. Let's put it this way. You can go into a hardware, come out within about 15 minutes with everything that you need to build a flamethrower. Now it's not a hard process, it's just a matter of how adept are you at understanding plumbing. Now how sophisticated you are with regard to your experience with plumbing. We'll determine whether or not you would remember to have shut off valves and all kinds of other fun stuff that might be kind of handy to make sure that there aren't any mistakes made, but and again it also runs up the price of your flamethrower, but a basic package to include containment tanks all kinds of other stuff could be had right off the bat right there and walk out the door with it. By the way, hey dad, okay, we got we've got it there. Yeah, I know it's a little off subject, but I gotta say this we had a A couple of donations coming today. I got to update the website, but I really I got to thank one of the listeners Richard if you're listening Thank you. You've been listening. You've done more than I asked most people to do He donated a dollar for each month of the year There we go. And what I did is if everybody just steps up and did one dollar That's not even a dollar for each month. We would have this paid off real quick and he did a dollar for every month of the year. So I gotta say thank you to Richard for the donation. I'm glad somebody's listening. The big donations, we appreciate those too, but the little donations like that, they add up. It's not breaking anybody's back. It makes a big difference, guys. It really does. When we all step up together, nobody has to hurt for this to go on. Right, and again, guys, as a reminder before we go any farther, if you look at Again, libertyfreeradio.4mg.com, libertyfreeradio.4mg.com, right in the middle of the page. We are raising $3,000 for our end of the year bill, and we have $75 raised so far. Guys, everybody keeps chugging away. If every person listens... Well, we actually have more than that, Dad. We're over the $100 mark. I just got to update it. Oh, excellent. Okay, very good. Hey, guys. Go ahead, Colin, who do we have? Yeah, this is BC down here in Carolina. I'd just like to reinforce what you're saying. And I just sent out an email to all the Liberty Bible Hour listeners and asking for us small donations and explaining where and why. And also, Liberty Bible Hour has also donated a small contribution towards the effort. So just want to go ahead and encourage all the rest of the listeners out there to participate. Like Ed said, just a little bit from all different points of the compass will make a huge difference. Very good. We appreciate that. By the way, you've got a program coming up next hour. Well, actually it's seven to eight this evening. Another hour out. Forgive me. I'm not going to rush on that. You've got an hour and a half to go still. Hold that down. There we are. still a little bit of show prep time left to go there folks and uh... there will be a lot broadcast tonight as usual world-willing and uh... hopefully the thunderstorms will stay at bay and not knock us off the air here in uh... sakar a lot of well you're getting started it whether to all you know we get a lot of sporadic uh... sudden scattered thunderstorms here this time of year. We're in our rainy season more or less and we'll have beautiful days and then all of a sudden boom. We'll get a thunderboomer at the last minute and they get pretty severe down here this time of year. Well that's exactly what we well now we'll say severe. We've had a you know the regular what we call the early early summer rains which let you know a couple years ago we had that drought but this year we are getting the perfect growing season weather here right now. Problem is it's also great for the grass. So I've got stuff that's way overgrown because I haven't had a time to do certain things I got to go back out and do some chopping and hacking and Feeding to the goats because I don't let any of the grass go to waste we cut it down bale it up I just put it in the wheelbarrow take it over and the goats go to town So again, we were we were experiencing weather. I just in fact Don did and remember out there at Kamiye, same kind of weather. So it's kind of funny for the different points of the compass where we actually do radio, we pretty well have got the same kind of weather pattern with regard to through the year, except the snow that you don't get. Well, that's true. We get the once every eight to 12 year blizzard and the rest of the time, if we get an inch or two or three, we look at it as an impromptu holiday and an excuse to sleep in and stay at home down in this part of it. We'll kind of relish that as it comes about, but we don't get it as often. as you do. But this time of the year with the thunder boomers coming and you never know or have much warning as they're coming, it's kind of difficult to try and cut the grass when it's not wet. Yeah, the other thing I was going to say when you get snow, it's a nice, soft, quiet blanket. It silences everything. Even the vehicles are going to go down the road. It's pretty cool. So. All right. Well, I'll get out of the way and let you continue with your show. And another hour and a half, you'll be up on the air. Amen. Very good. Thank you, sir. And again, for everybody out there, go to libertytreeradio.4mg.com, libertytreeradio.4mg.com. If you could take the time, pass on to our friends that aren't here, or if you're listening and you're another part of the planet, all you have to do is go to www.libertytreeradio.4mg.com. Guys, if you can donate just a dollar, like Ed said, for every month, you know, for the next 12 months, that's $12. Whatever you can do though, if all you can do is a couple dollars, if everybody that's listening just does that, you know, we've got listeners all over the planet. I don't expect people from overseas to donate, but our friends in Scotland, our friends in England, we've had our friends from Sweden send Euros. You know, we actually get money from overseas. The Euros are kind of interesting because we've gotten, you know, different, different strikings, which I think is interesting in and of itself to look at the money. But whatever we're going to do here, again, this is that one-time bill. There is an amount right there. It shows you what the goal is, what we have to spend. Were we to pay this bill every quarter, it would almost be, but not quite double. By doing it once a year, we take a big chunk out of the expenditures. And that means that we can go farther with less. So that's the whole reason behind doing this. Everybody knows what's going on. Everybody understands what the costs are, what the expenditures are, where we're going with it. So again, www.libertytreeradio.4mg.com right in the middle of the page. There's no curlicues or anything. It just has straightforward print simple font and It tells you the dollar amount we're aimed for and what our present level is of course it's gonna update that a bit because We do have other donations that were made we want to thank everybody no matter how much you're donating You know for helping out it makes a difference, okay? Now, real quick, the reason I bring up the flamethrower is because I'm hearing all this garbage about the MRAP. Again, it's, you know, there's the characters who never had to face a threat that don't understand, number one, these are what we used to call pig vehicles. No, not because they're cop vehicles or anything like that. These vehicles are not great all-terrain vehicles. Contrary to what you know, it's like a tank! No, it's a cracker box with very poor cross-country capability. In fact, where we are right now, with the weather conditions we have, those things going off-road are going to be sinking up to their axles. It won't take long because the terrain is, the weather conditions, if you fight properly and you pick the point of contact, when they try to get out of the kill zone, you can run them right into a ditch, or I'll let them, they'll run into the ditch. They'll move to get out of the way of whatever, and you can channel them into either bog points or areas of destruction. Typically, when you want to ambush mechanized columns, you want to, of course, be able to close or, you know, choose locations where it is more difficult for them to get any range or to use their firepower effectively. Rolling terrain with bog and swamp. Well, that describes a big chunk of Michigan. Wooded areas with bog and swamp on one side, slopes and angles, preferably with a bow or a bend in the road or an arcing road turn, something like that, is your first best choice. The advantages that the armor has no place truly to go or the mechanize has nowhere to go, its maneuverability is negligible if nonexistent. I would point out that what you're looking at here are light armored reconnaissance or light patrol vehicles for a police state, not weapons for effective battlefield operations. They're punk-r-clunkers. They were made with minimal contract. They were made to minimal spec. Lowest bidder got them. And typically they're power drive train, power plant, everything is the punky-junky stuff nobody wanted to buy. Which is okay because that makes them a little cheaper. Oh, no it doesn't. They still charge full price for the things. as if they were top of the line, which they're not. That's the nature of under the kosher mafia how this country is being operated and it's been operated for quite some time. So, you know, when you look at it, it's like, well, it doesn't really have any style to it at all, does it? No, no, it's a punky, punky thing. It's, you know, they don't really value the troops that much. More people have stepped forward to work for the globalists. The more you find out you're being run by the same stinking commissars that drove like cattle, Russian soldiers to mass graves because of absolute incompetence and failure. So, expect the same with regard to how they treat their secret police, the Homeland Security Interior Police of the KGB, etc. And the rank and file idiots that are the useful fools that are local cops or county cops or state cops that drink the Kool-Aid or the Globalists? Oh, they're one step away from the grave. Not necessarily because of us, but because in the long run Interior Police, the Secret Police, kill their own, execute their own, mass murder their own. and especially since most the people who think they're their own are not. That's the first most common stupid mistake made by people like that. is, well, I'm special, you're not. What are you taking me over to the ditch for? I gotta show you something. Everybody come over here, all you guys, all the old execution squad, come here. Okay, hands up, and guns out of their holsters, and weapons off their shoulders, and down on their knees, and bop, bop, bop. And it's the new execution squad replacing the old communist execution squad. That's their nature. Okay, just the way they are. So, we got a lot of stupid people out there dumb enough to follow the orders of the communists. They're gonna have to die and we need to be creative in how we kill them, you know, how we fight them, okay? Now, one thing to think about is a flamethrower mine. Remember that it's not difficult to set up with PVC pipe a one-way system will do everything one of those constant use flamethrowers will do. Another thing is that a duck foot type distribution system can allow for the flamethrower unit to actually wash an area. Now when I say duck foot, you ever seen one of those cap and ball era duck feet, the pistols, they used to offer them in kits for like 1995, back when it was really cool in black powder, it was, you know, in vogue, back with the bicentennial. They had a single shot, basically, what was it, a Patrick Henry pistol. They had a pepper box, you know, owing brass. And the other one they had was a duck foot. Now the duck foot was the same as the Patrick Henry pistol, but it had three barrels. It had a junction point and three barrels. And when you fired one with one cap, pock, what it did is it flamed all three barrels and, kabok! You had three rounds going off. But the three rounds did not go... straight forward. The middle barrel went straight, the left barrel was 15 degrees to the left, the other one was 15 degrees to the right. The ID behind this, they were also called Well defense pistols they were called mutiny pistols they were they were typically found on board boats where the captain Needle extra fire park as he was defending a cabin But they could be used anywhere else if you had a crowd of people coming at you click-click boom And it put three rounds and three different people that was the plan okay Or at least the person you were shooting at probably wouldn't get away because either the middle one got him or if he ducked left or right either way one got him So the same idea, I think the same type of three points of expansion for the fuel and being able to activate using the same kind of system that we were talking about this morning using a barbecue igniter system. crude and rude can be activated from farther away than just right up on top of the thing but the idea behind it is you slap the paddle with the fuel under pressure because the PVC pipe can be used as pressure tanks you slap a paddle they're automatically going you hit the second switch and the fuel activates and Now I will point out again about flamethrowers. You need high low burn. You need high low burn. The movies all typically lie to you about everything because they don't want you to gain any working knowledge. You can use crankcase oil, transmission fluid, which by the way is pretty wicked in general anyway, especially heated up, okay, without having to burn it. But transmission fluid, crankcase oil, vegetable oil. Any of those will work, all of them will burn. Now if somebody says vegetable oil, well it won't burn very well, really. It'll burn more than well enough. In fact, you ever had a grease fire on the stove? Now, how does that happen? You bring the grease up to temp. In other words, it's a low burn. It doesn't burn as hot when it is burning, by the way. That's why it's called a low burn. But you have to agitate the molecules to the point where it finally activates and goes whoosh! Well, that's where your high burn comes in. Now, gasoline and or one of the een types is your first best choice. You can actually use even kerosene, although kerosene obviously is on the border headed back down towards low burn. But remember that anything that's a high burn, gasoline is typically your first best choice. Octane level, you know, use the low octane. You don't need high octane for this. Save the high octane for your aircraft and for other technologies. Or even for getting your engine to burn better, okay, as far as running. Now what you do is about a 50-50. You do half low burn, half high burn if you do a fluid mix in the field. Now let's not forget we still have this Gelified Enhancer. The Gelified Enhancer by the way has a gelling agent or it doesn't depending upon how you're mixing your you know you can order it a couple of different ways. Now with the Enhancer you actually don't have to worry about having the low burn as high or even in the inventory. If you have the gelification material, it has chipped aluminum and magnesium along with the gelifying agent, which is typically a soap slash a detergent, or in other words, a... organic that is designed to coagulate the material, bonding the material once it makes chemical contact. What it does is it works the stuff not quite to the level of jello, more like soupy jello that wasn't mixed right. There's a best way to describe it. Now with regard to the chipping, the material that makes up the napalm element, slash the again, flamethrower element, napalm actually came from the flamethrower school, not the other way around. Napalm is basically the jellified fuel that is mixed off the same components that are used for making flamethrower fuel. Okay, it's the same stuff. Remember that it's mixed in the drop cans and then it's dropped and splashes. There's a series of thermal igniters that are on board the drop tank. When it makes contact, it activates them and blub blub blub blub blub blub blub blub blub blub blub blub blub blub blub blub blub blub blub blub blub blub blub blub blub blub blub blub blub blub blub blub blub blub blub blub blub blub blub blub blub blub blub blub blub blub blub blub blub blub blub blub blub blub blub blub blub blub blub blub blub blub blub blub blub blub blub blub blub blub blub blub blub blub blub blub blub It coagulates material and dissipates the magnesium. The chipping on the magnesium and the aluminum is the flake is the size of pepper. A little bigger, a little smaller, but about the size of pepper. So to give you an idea about granulation or texture, now what does that do? Well, the high burn and the stabilizing gelification of the fuel ensures that the fuel bonds to the area where the magnesium and the aluminum will be projected. As it's moving through the air, the fuel air mix enhancement allows for full potential with regard to the high burn fuel. It moves through the air, It's activated by the environment it's been introduced to with of course the adding of calories. Once one element starts it's self-promoting with regard to the cascading burn. Well this burn in turn activates the magnesium and the aluminum and activates other enhancers, even zinc has been used. Zinc is not as good but zinc has been used because it's a heavy metal element. And it will of course react in a different way depending upon what other chemicals are introduced. That's a little higher tech flame agent, but it is mean. There are a number of different things that can be able to make it very mean. Aluminum and magnesium are bad enough. Now let's point out that everybody goes, well, what good would a flame grower do against filling the blank? Number one, flame throwers work on everything. Everybody understand that. I'm going to point something out. Have you ever looked seriously at a tank? If you look seriously at an MRAP, a Bradley, a BMP, a BTR 50, a BTR 60, a BTR 70, a BTR 80, a BTR 90, a BMD, a T-54 55, a T-62, T-64 slash T-72, the T-80s, the T-90s. If you look at the Sharon, bet inside one, walked around them. Have you noticed that there's a lot of things that, well, in order for the crew to operate, have to function? Now let me ask you something, if you were going to engage an armored vehicle with flame projection weapons, well where would you aim? What would you do? Now, unlike your, you know, if you had limited anti-tank capability and you only have a certain opportunity to shoot, there's only a couple of targets on the vehicles nowadays that, again, you're going to probably penetrate with heavy. With medium and light, you can knock them out all over the place. Okay, there's all kinds of damage you can do. But understand that everything on the outside of the aircraft, everything on the outside of the tank is designed to work with the outside world. You've got anywhere from three to five crewmen on an armored, you know, an armored fighting vehicle, an infantry fighting vehicle, it could be six, eight, ten, twelve, depending on how big the vehicle is. Well, what are the vision blocks and vision windows made out of that you see in those M-RAPs? Guys, have you done the research? Are they using ballistic glass or are they using Lexan? With regard to radio communications, do you see antennas on the equipment? Do you see vision blocks? Do you see plate window ports? Do you see filler points for fuel? Do you see... Oh, you see, I'm going down the shopping list. Now, let me point something out. Remember that every vehicle brings stuff with it that will die. That will help it to die. Now, in many cases, what you want to do, and this is true even with light anti-tank weapons when they're employed or medium anti-tank weapons, the idea is not that that single round is going to be a single round kill, it's just going to knock the thing out. What you're knowing is that that big vehicle coming at you is loaded up with 60, 70, 80 tank rounds of some kind. Whole strings of ammunition. It's got fuel on board. It may have pyrotechnics of many different types that are carried to include flares, smoke, and all kinds of stuff. In other words, every one of these armored battle wagons going down a road is full of stuff that in and of itself is very dangerous to be around when heat is applied. Okay? When you punch something with a nanny tank round, that spalled that comes through isn't just coming through as broken up metal, guys. The whole mechanical calorie process is such that when something cuts through metal like that, it is actually molten. that spalled is actually a temperature. Now it's a plus and a minus thing. You don't want to get hit by that. But one of the interesting things about being hit with high temp spalled is that it's a cauterizing wound. Sounds strange. There's still going to be blood, but amazingly enough, if the thing sticks with the target area, it actually burns shut a certain amount of the wound channel. So the person may not bleed to death, but if he's got 50, you know, 60 perforated holes through his head all the way to his toe, not so much. Okay. The accumulated damage and trauma, the blunt shock trauma, perforation trauma is enough to kill him. Now, what do we do with our flamethrower? Well, didn't we say that there were fuel points on the vehicle? Got an M1 Garand, got a rifleman that knows what he's doing. Well, what you do is you actually start with small arms fire engagement and you start popping holes in things. Now, what do you aim for? Filler points. Well, but they're relatively well protected. Well, yeah, they are relatively well protected. But I don't need to blow the cap off. I just need to create holes and compromise things. There is a key word when you're looking at combustibles in all directions. Compromising the containment system is critical. If you fire in an engine compartment, you won't necessarily bust that engine block, but if you compromise, for instance, the radiator system and the engine continues to run and you've taken blocked holes in it the size of 45 caliber, 50 caliber, 30 caliber and the bullets bounced around and ripped hoses it tears cables it knocks out little black boxes under the dash your Forgive me inside the engine compartment Everything in the engine typically is kind of a needy thingy. It's kind of like with planes in the air They don't put stuff on planes. They don't need or attack aircraft when you start shooting chunks of them away That just usually creates problems. Okay Well, we're going to compromise. We're going to focus on two areas. If it was an armored vehicle and it's heavier, my rifleman's job is to focus on that bread box on the roof of the tank. We've talked about this many times, but what is protecting that? Is that ballistic glass? Is that clear, clean, real, warm, fuzzy ballistic glass? A ballistic glass would be a better choice because remember, all of your optics are being controlled in that bread box. All of these hypersensitive controls are in the roofs of all of those tanks on top of the main gun. They actually collect data, they send laser signals out, they allow for the cameras. They are where the cameras are located so that they run off those television screens now. But what happens if everybody understands that that bread box, which is a pretty good sized target, if it's engaged with all the heaviest rifles you have, what kind of damage are you doing to the Lexan? But Mark, this is called cumulative engagement, guys. This is what armor or mechanized operation or anti-armor operation is all about. It's not one shot, one kill. That's BS in the movies for the most part. It's cumulative defense damage, cumulative offensive damage in this case, done to their defensive mechanisms. But I also, let's say I've got that MRAP, I want to fire at fuel point, loading points. I want to do as much damage as quickly as I can because I'm going to eventually go with the flamethrower as part of the ambush. Now when you see movies, they always want to get that flamethrower close because they've got to have the imagery tight on their limited set. Now I think I want you all to read about what are the contact and engagement ranges with flamethrowers. When I tell you that flamethrowers can engage at 40, 50, 75, and 100 yards. That kind of changes your Hollywood image, doesn't it? But wait, I saw in the movies, the movies are designed to dumb you down to the potential of different weapons systems. Depending upon you and your experience in plumbing, you might remember, especially if you worked with fire equipment, that you direct the fuel. You direct the material with what? We have nozzles. Actually, it's the equivalent to more of a venturi that you find on a rocket motor. how well you create that cone of control, which in reality can be a stream of control, and how much pressure you put behind the fuel determines how the range and dispersal of your fuel slash agent will be. Now, typically again, you're not going to be friendly or kind, and you're not going to be a pop-up target for the bad guys, contrary to what they've been conditioned to. Your special weapons sections are defended by the infantry which means they do their job to protect and to bring in to bring to bear your anti-personnel and anti-tank weapons or anti-vehicular weapons like this. When placed properly and with again coordination it means that man the thinking animal, the tool making animal, man, you know with our the best battlefield computer on the planet, our brain, If you are thinking, certain elements keep the targets busy, certain elements engage, or at one point, all elements engage, the key points that we want to compromise, and then the utilization of the flamethrower technology becomes apparent. Once the other fuel or munitions components that are carried on board a vehicle like that are actively flamed, It is not an if they are going to contribute to the catastrophic failure, but only a matter of to what degree and how quickly. It's that simple. Now with tanks, again, remember, look at the vehicle itself. Now there is the possibility that because of drip points, gravity sucks. Remember you're dealing with flame agents, you're dealing with a fuel. So remember that dropping the fuel up on the pan of the tank, no matter what it is, is a desirable result. But you will preferably want to wash certain components. Let me ask you guys something. And this is something I watch over and over again, but there are some images from Ukraine that are going to kind of tell you a little secret. How many of you have looked any of the videos of the T-72s that were being run by Kev that were knocked out by light armored vehicles? You might notice that they're doing close-ups showing you where, oh wait a minute, what did they do? They shot the tank gun. They didn't try to punch their way through the hull of the armored vehicle, guys. They shot the main tube. Accuracy and performance and range with many weapons systems today are a matter of the man behind it. The guns, the weapons, everything you're carrying has great potential. If we get away from the Hollywood stupidity of spray and pray, and we start focusing and becoming masters of our tools, then the world changes dramatically. And so the Commissar whipped stuages will die before you that much more effectively. The Commissar trained and conditioned, the cannon fodder that are the goy for the kosher mafia overlords. Well, you can make it work for you. Okay? Now, another thing about flame weapons, remember, you don't have to expose yourself. I pointed out making flame mines. If you establish a kill zone, think about it like a little R2D you don't only be more like just a backpack mounted, you know, kit. that you are the equivalent to a backpack mounted flamethrower module but built simply as a contained system that can be stood somewhere. You can aim the projectors which are of course the funnel nozzles whatever you want to call them and I can pre-target an area hit the button and notice I didn't go because here's what's really cool about flamethrowers. Guys, with Flame Agent, you can actually use, with the Gelification Agent, you can use the Flame Agent like a minefield is laid. Now, I related this to something you saw in a movie that was quite archaic by comparison, but in Braveheart. And really what they were showing you is a technique that the Russians were first to develop, but everybody else pretty well followed suit in. is utilizing flame agent to wash an area in advance of an approaching enemy by up to 24 hours. In other words, hosing down an area that's going to be a kill zone with flame agent, if you actually have the real flame agent we've talked about. Now I can sit there with the magnesium, the aluminum, the enhancer, and the high-low burn there bonded together for anywhere from 24 to 48 hours, but 48 hours, as I said earlier today, is pushing it. However, once the agent is there, the other consideration is, well, if we got rainy days like we've had here, not so good. Because obviously the agent is not soluble, it's not water soluble, but it is communicable because it will move as a fluid or at least as a gel with the fluid that's naturally occurring if you have streamlets or things like that. So you don't want to waste the agent. You've got to know what your environmental conditions are, pay attention to what's going on. with regard to the atmosphere and environment, and then use the tool accordingly. But a Flame Mine could be pre-deployed in Killzone areas to engage without the risk to any operator. However, engaging to Compromise the containment vessels that have the enemy's fuel or components in it, that is still going to have to happen. So the idea is that your riflemen will be given key missions at points where they again fire from oblique to protect their person, but in the process engage at a given point so that when the vehicles are stopped, which they can be, and there's a number of different tricks there, the idea is that the flame mines or flamethrowers are in place to wash the area. The technique is not complicated, and remember, your flamethrowers for flame mine technology, which may or may not be reusable and they don't have to be, PVC pipe could be used for the entire fixture, for everything, even for the tanks. Only has to work once, but it'll work very well. Now, would this work against infantry? Oh yeah! Oh hell yeah! Nobody likes to get burned. Everybody learns from the age of, well, when daddy told you, don't touch the stove, don't touch the stove. Don't touch the stove, son! You should've told me! I told you several times, son, but at two or three years old you decided you're your own person and you touch the stove. Now, you found out the stove's hot, now you'll learn to listen to dad. No, probably not. But you're at least going to be paying a little more attention to the stove now, aren't you? See how that works? So nobody likes to give birth. Everybody, there's a natural aversion to flame and the idea, oh! Oh! You know, patting your arm out. Oh my! See, that really is something that's a bummer when it happens, so most people don't want to be a part of that. And you'll even find that, well Fred's on fire! Fred, leave me alone! Well, of course, that's where you have to overcome that fear and save Fred, hopefully, right? Well, you think you will. You're going to try to. I hope you are. There are people I'd save. There are people who go to hell. I won't even be on them. However, again, with regard to the flamethrower technology itself, it can be fairly crude. Some of the technologies they came up with basically a pressurized flamethrower pipe. What? Well, a simple, you know, putting a Schrader valve on one end using a PVC pipe with a cap on one end, Schrader valve introduced and heavily gooped into place. The other end, with a reducer, going down to a smaller size, creating a venturi to wash the area. The pipe could be whatever size you want. You introduce your flame propellant into the tube, of course. Once you've introduced that, you know, introduced the material and you've got it with the valve, the push valve or whatever at the other end, or a ball valve, whatever you want to use to secure what's inside the tank. Then you pressurize the tank with air. You point the tank towards the area you want to wash over and guess what you got? Well, I was real crude and rude and it may not necessarily be one way, amazingly enough, you might get more than a few uses out of that. But it's under pressure, ready to roll. It can be placed or put into hallways or into alleyways or areas on the road that you want to control. And, again, as far as an activator, you can use a flare, you can use a burning agent. Here's one of the things, most people don't think twice in battlefields, you know, areas of operation when they see something smoldering or burning. But in reality, the smoldering and burning stuff you put in place as part of the, you know, shall we say the background, when the PVC pipe unit is activated and sprays and atomizes and washes through the area, The available combustibles, the material that's already burning, activates your flame agent and the rest is history. In fact, it could be a fire and forget. One of the best ways to retreat from breaking and breaking contact in an urban environment, a PVC land mine slash flame mine. You can point it down the hole down the aisle so to speak you've already got a burner You can even take one of those nice survival flares you've got and as you're running down as you've pop pop pop pop pop pop You know done a little return fire about pop pop pop pop and you start to fall back give them ground You run like heck and what you do is around one more corner The flare was dropped halfway towards your flame projector wherever you know, it's going to be within the area of activity That flame burns at thousands of degrees on that emergency flare you dropped. Light boat flares are really great for this. They are, again, hot burners, lots of candle power. Well, as you go around the corner, you hit the valve on your, again, PVC sprayer mine, and then all of a sudden you hear, Whenever it's down that corridor that might have been coming your way, it isn't going to be too excited about burning. And by the way, you can also pre-establish other combustibles that are on, you know, in the area of activity that you initiate so that they become additional compromised burn points. In other words, more flammables that really make for nasty stuff and have a tendency to want to expand when the fuel air mix increases. There's all kinds of mean stuff you can do. And remember, the idea is to not let any of them get away or to do as much damage as you can to them as quickly as you can. Now, let's go to the next step. MRAPs, for instance. They've got doors and they've got a combat hatch up above. If you flame the upper hatch, if you project material guys, remember, this is fluid that is burning. Any place where there is an opening on the top of a vehicle where it's left open, well, gravity sucks, kids. What well, you know that guy you're all worried about my rifleman with the M and grand put five six holes in him And he's leaking with an M2 AP round so his armor plates didn't help him the ones he's wearing on his body armor My M2 AP rounds did a good job of scudding into him one way or another and I only got to hit him once but I'll put maybe a half of a d-clip into him but the reason I'm doing that is only to keep him busy and maintain confusion because my combat engineer slash flamethrower operator he just went And what he just did is rather the constant stream, he sent a wash of flame onto the target area. That's going to confuse and of course panic the operator. If he tries to duck inside, it's too late. He's bringing the combustible with him. As he clears the hatch, the next wave, that middle one splashes onto the roof, burnable goes down inside. And remember, if he's probably thrashing or beating around trying to prevent himself from burning, he may keep his wherewithal and get the hatch shut after he slid down. Not too likely because he may also have a leak and hole in him. He's more worried about getting out of the line of fire. And the thought of the flamethrower doing his job wasn't necessarily there. Now the flamethrower operator is back into the rear, left or right, preferably again you have two of them because again it's a team effort. But if you have one, remember now you've got the inside burning. Nobody wants to be inside a trash can, laid on its side with no place for the smoke and the burnables to go. Other combustibles have activated no matter how hard you try. You can have Nomex and Kevlar in all kinds of places. The problem is that even if you have Nomex or Kevlar, there's lots of other stuff that burns. If you can get a good wash with a three second burst or a five second burst off that flamethrower into that coffee can up above that chimney, What's going to happen inside is real quick the oxygen supply is not a happy camper situation. Yes, there's ventilation and there's all kinds of things to try and compensate, but it ain't going to work very well. The infantry aren't going to want to stay laid down on its side trash can with only the back doors to get out. If you do have the side doors and they can use them depending on which of the of the MRAP slash trash cans are driving, obviously your infantry will take care of the left and the right. But remember whichever door opens up first after you washed the roof and you've got that gunner dead or at least now thrashing around burning, he's also got a bullet or two in him, then you turn the flamethrower on any door that opens up and immediately scut it with another burst. Right away. I don't care if it all gets in there, but remember as a door opens up it that angle that piece of metal Is going to help to vent into or splash material inside that's on fire This is going to consume more oxygen. It's going to create more confusion Some are going to get splashed in the face some are going to get splashed on the arms They're going to have legs that are not going to be too happy Any place, even where you have body armor, the bunker suit, so to speak, the Kevlar that makes up the body armor, that's going to actually give them some protection for a few moments, or a minute or two, depending on how the fluid leaks around the body armor, and then works the skin tissue and starts burning yet, and all those sensors that are around the skin make everybody know that, let everybody know that, man, that flame is trapped, or that heat is trapped underneath something now, and keeping the heat in. So, dancing around to get out of the vehicle, they try to, and the flamethrower operator waits until the back doors, or you know, of course, backs up. Because, again, change position. Don't just stay in one place and wait to be shot. Move. Have your positions planned out. Step back, move to another location. Back doors open up. They're trying to get out. Hose down the back end a little bit more, catch him in the face on the way out. Remember, aim low, don't aim high. Remember, flame rises. This is another mistake made, it's like rifle fire. You don't want to aim high. I'm going to aim for the headshot. Oh, piss on that headshot garbage. I'm tired of that. No, how about crotch shot? Crotch shot, crotch shot. Guys coming out of the back end of a vehicle if you're a rifleman, if you bust their legs up, what do you think is going to happen? This is like when you knock out a train on a bridge. You knock out a train on a bridge so that the kinetic energy and the available energy created by busting the slats off from underneath the bridge. The train is moving at so many miles per hour. It has so many tons of applied energy. So many pounds per square inch applied. Now there's a cascading failure and all the other energy that was just brought into play destroys the bridge and does more damage to material and equipment that will not be fixable. Okay, now think the same way. Someone's trying to get out of the back end of an MRAP. You want to fire up their legs. You want to fire them up at leg level as they're coming out. Don't aim high. They got body armor. You all know that. Aim for the legs, aim for the crotch, aim for the feet, blow a foot off, blow a knee off, whatever. In fact, just put a hole in it. You just snapped a bone on a leg. You put all kinds of holes into places that hurt. But they're jumping out of a vehicle. It's how many feet off the ground. Just like that train wreck, when they come down, you snap the bone a little bit. Now you get a compound fracture because they're trying to stabilize themselves. They're still in there. It's happening in moments. So when they drop to the ground that bone just comes up through the top of the leg or comes to the side of the calf or whatever. Now you got a real bad injury. That person's not thinking too much about the idea of putting rounds toward you and you don't necessarily want to shoot him. If he's screaming and thrashing around he's screaming and thrashing around screaming into his radio. The radios are V.O.X. a lot of times although not always. But one way or another he's adding to the confusion. Focus on the ones you didn't hit. Don't worry about the ones you already gave compound fractures to or blow their balls off or you've you know shattered their hips Whatever you've done to them. They're finished for the time being Make you can finish them off in a minute first you focus on the ones that still can kind of move around and think they're gonna return fire All of them are engaged by every rifle when you've got on the count of three. Remember we've talked about squad leaders focusing fire Switch over follow my tracer follow my tracer follow my tracer Three, three round bursts towards a target. Everybody all at once turns and fires three rounds on that target to put him down. Blop, blop, blop. Three more rounds in that area right there. There's another person we gotta worry about, maybe two or maybe two. Free. People have a tendency in panic to cluster. I've told you before about this. Being close to your friends is not being friendly. It makes you all a target of opportunity. Spread out! Make a point of spreading out. My god these cluster screws I've seen in all these images. Well, it looks great for the movies and you notice they've done this in Iraq It's like man, you're not fighting a regular combatant because if you were and it was an equal power battle You know, in other words, everybody's doing the same thing trying to kill each other That's a problem when you're killing Iraqi kids that are wearing sandals and got an AK If that was a regular real battlefield, like what we're going to see coming up here with this situation with Ukraine, that whole cluster screw thing is going to last very long. Huddling around armor is something everybody has tendency to do, and they're going to do that because if you're out in open fields, you're looking for anything that's going to offer, shall we say, be more of a bullet magnet than you are and hopefully take the round. Well, the problem with that is then when somebody else is at planned, it understands that that was going to probably be your mindset. Your second wave of fire is going to be into the area where you thought you were going to take cover, the back of the vehicle, different positions and locations around a corner. How many scenes have you seen where, you know, we're all bullying up on the kids with the tennis shoes and, you know, and one AK? Where if this was a regular or conventional urban warfare fight, half of those fools would have never come back. Mr. Grenade, every time I look at some of these cluster screws, it's like just one grenade, just one American grenade. One standard American grenade rolled right in the middle, all those legs standing there, clustered in one place. What do you think would have happened? So that tells you that it's a police state action, it's not a military action. It's all police state actions. Because if it was a fighting force and it was a well-trained fighting force or a motivated fighting force that knew what it was doing, then a whirlwind situation takes place where it's, you know, tit for tat, tit for tat, tit for tat, and that's what you want to do. Only less of the tit for tat, so to speak, from your side. Yeah, I just think, Ed, you're defending. Oh, we're past the topic there, Mike. What about you? Hey, Dad. Go ahead, Ed. The station's been delisted too. I'm gonna do a quick slip for everybody so if you're listening you're gonna have to tune back in real quick but the station will only be down for a second. We're slipping to be up, right? I'll be up on the line. Yeah, you'll still be up on the conference line. Everybody's listening. Okay, very good. We'll be able to hear you. But I know we got a lot of people who are listening on Live 365. We'll be right back. And again, God bless the Republic. Good night! Ladies and gentlemen, the Empire is on the run. We're in a march. Stay tuned. We'll be back for the next hour of the Intel Report coming up right here on LDR and Indiana Freedom Talk Radio. Bye-bye.