July 16, 2014
Morning Show
1h 0m
Complete
Radio Episode
2014
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Summary
Mark Koernke discussed firearms and military history, including detailed comparisons of AK-74 and AK-47 rifles, ammunition specifications, and the Moody Griffin single-shot 50-caliber rifle design. Callers contributed technical information about rifle construction, barrel quality, and cost-effective firearm building. The show shifted to analysis of World War II air operations, specifically Operation Frantic—shuttle bombing missions flown from Italy to Soviet bases and back—detailing P-38 Lightning and P-51 Mustang fighter tactics against German targets in Romania and Austria. Koernke discussed how American pilots were detained in Soviet gulags after the war, connecting historical events to contemporary concerns about government overreach.
- ak-74
- ak-47
- moody griffin
- 50 caliber
- firearms
- operation frantic
- p-38 lightning
- p-51 mustang
- world war ii
- soviet union
- shuttle bombing
- romanian oilfields
- american pilots
- gulags
- preparedness
Transcript
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Take the fight enemy, because we are offensive. And we cannot be stopped. Join us as we wage war against our oppressors and the pirates by insulting them as often as we want. Yes, no matter what else you can or cannot do, you can always call your walls odious squirts. Give it a shot, you'll feel. And you'll have added to the grody offensive. The truth of the art, the f*** of providence. Where every day is a holiday. where every paycheck is a fortune, where every meal is a bank, where your instincts will serve you better than your government. The Micro Effect Live dot com. A worldwide product on the internet and on KU band satellites. Telstar 5, the micro effect live dot com. Important phone number you'll need to remember is 888-747-1968. Again 888-747-19. Figure walks into His clothes were torn and dirty as he stood there by my bed. He took off his three-cornered hat and speaking low to me, he said, we fought a revolution to secure our liberty. We wrote the Constitution as a shield from tyranny. For future generations, this legacy we gave. In this, the land is free. We secured for you, we hoped you'd always keep. Tyrants labored endlessly while your parents were asleep. Your freedom's gone, your courage lost, you're no more than a slave. And this is 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. Christian values can't be taught, according to the story. You read about the current news in a regulated press. And you pay a tax you do not owe to please the IRS. Your money is no longer made of silver nor of gold. You trade your wealth for paper so your life can be controlled. You pay for crimes that make our nation turn from God and shame. You've taken, you've given government control to those who do so they could burn down churches and feed harm and keep our country deep in debt. Put men of God in jail, harass your fellow countrymen while corrupted courts prevail. Your public servants don't uphold the solemn oaths they've sworn. And your daughters, visitors, send artillery and guns to foreign shores, and send your sons to slaughter, fighting other people's wars. Gain 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 sons of the Republic arise The Supreme Law of the plan. Preserve our great Republican each God-given right. I woke he 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 his parents trampled each God-given right. Watching 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 fought to keep, what would be your answer? he called out from the grave. These days it is the 6th Soviet Socialist Occupation of America Nostradamus Nellender Day Oh no, I'm sorry, he didn't just have calendars He had Gokukacho The words, man, the words Scammon You name it, they've all got cop-outs The next one you got for defecating in your drawers and go sitting in the corner Yes, uh, it's called Timothy I was wondering about the 1874, do you want to think about that? Yeah, go ahead If you're asking, oh, I recommended the 74 You see the thing is, the 74's come up about in equity and price to the regular A. 74 was about almost one third the price in many cases. We're reasonably priced. In ammunition it was the cheapest light rifle ammo on the market. It's still an excellent choice. There's ammunition available, but I would buy more ammo for it. If you've got an AK-74, buy as much ammo as I can. Countries that are shooting at each other. out there, but remember they're getting into a whole bunch of wars where they're shooting this stuff up, just in motion. The cheapest, cheaper by a few pennies per one, and that's where the advantage is. The other cool thing, if you train with an AK-74, the 47, you're using an AK-47, there is nothing to relearn, so that's one of the coolest things about those two, the same weapon, it's the same breakdowns, nothing you have to remember except to make sure you got the right mag and the right rifle. I like that 8k, that more... I'd say like the 4-knock now, probably 8k-47, but I think I can handle the 8k-47 before it holds off better than the 8k-47. Well, the thing is that the 74, they went with a whole family of different muzzle brakes. That was the big thing, the 74 muzzle brake was designed to reduce creep and also deal with the harmonic design, the harmonic response, so yes. 74, has an advantage over the basic rifle in that respect. But remember you can take and buy AK-74 compensators, you can pretty much dress up a regular 47, a check with a 74. It'll do the same. There's a little more weight to the bullet with the 39, 7.62x39. The big thing was that they were trying to again address the series and kind of mimic to a degree or come up with something comparable to the ideas that were brought with the M16 route. with the US. The 53 grain bullet is very unique in several ways in that depending on which year it was produced because there are three variations on the projectile even though there's still a 53 grain projectile. Five by 39 so devastating is its tumble on impact its ability to create a more devastating wound channel. One of the reasons is that while it is an FMJ it's a full metal jacket projectile the original projectiles were were actually hollow in the front of the tip. There was no lead cast there. Now later they actually went with a fine plastic filament. It's like sand, plastic sand to fill in that space. But either way, what happens is it creates an intentional distortion in the projectile, which of course makes a pitch in a yaw and the tumble through the wound, you know, through the target. creates a whole lot more damage as it goes, which means it delivers more of the energy of the round on the target. That was the big issue switching over to the, you know, against how could they make it more damaging. So the 545 actually has several advantages and the longer bullet, the larger bullets that were made up to 60 and even to 70 grain with both experimental and with factory are against. comparable to the 223, but when they impact, they will penetrate if they hit something. They'll punch through whatever they can. But as they start to receive that energy from that crunch factor on the front of the bullet, and or it makes contact with any hard object like a bone or whatever, then it really goes to it and becomes like a buzzsaw going through the beam. So it's just one of the big advantages. The 74 is an excellent firearm. Well, the best way to get a 74 in terms of everything you want, several years ago, remember the SAGAs were only $175 a piece. And nobody was buying the 5.4.5 SAGAs. So a lot of people have the SAGAs in 5.4.5 when they first came in and got them for a couple hundred dollars a piece. Well, hell, that's everything you want to rifle and more. You took standard AK-74 mags when they were coming in. common way that people found out, hey I like that rifle. And then of course the standard 74 started to become more readily available to it. So it was an overlapping project there. I figure you probably got one then. Oh yeah, yeah I was. I had one of my favorite guns. So the cheapest shooting for the longest time, it's still cheaper to shoot than anything else out there. But as far as the rifle goes, the 74 is still the cheapest gun to buy ammo for and take to the range. Remember, a while back at Monte Griston, they paid that 50 cal and he shaved off all the volume. He didn't make it. He put zero numbers on the gun. I think they busted it, but I think he's still in prison. They say that's a real good 50 cal. I don't know if you remember that whole drive, but I remember back in the 90s, there was Monte Griston, I guess he was paid just in settlement. without having to stamp or wanting to get a V8 with you? Well, the 50 caliber gun, no. You can make any firearm without any papers. That wasn't the problem. They were harassing him because what he did, the Moddy Griffin rifle is a simple, straight, single-shot rifle. It's perfectly legal. We can make as many of them as you want to. Well, that was the problem. They didn't like that. So they fabricated stuff against the, trying to mess with them on that. But the Moddy Griffin is still being made or can still be offered in a case Manuals are still out that we send out on a regular basis. Originally the cost of the kit to do everything because you have a quiet barrel would be about $300. Now there's two ways you can do the barrel. You can go to Douglas or a number of other companies and you can get a stock blank barrel for as little as about $80 to $100. In whatever caliber you choose and you can have it chambered. So you can have a 50 caliber straight tube, heavy weight barrel, bill $10. Brand new, on a Virgin barrel, rifled the whole nine yards. It's not set to whatever, it's not machined for any particular gun, you have to do that. The Monte Griffin is a very user friendly, simple design. So you can either go with Douglas, or you could go with the 50 cal M2 barrels that originally were proposed. The M2 50 caliber barrels though have gone up quite a bit in price. And even the used ones are commanding a chunk of change down there at Knop Creek. Probably your choice would be to go with a new factory barrel from one of the And then the rest of the kit was still playing, so you can keep the price at about $400 for a Motti right now. If you have a barrel and you already paid for it years ago, the big thing is it was all done with hand tools and standard machine tools that were readily available. The Motti is out there in force. The Zusman Ackermann, that's another one that makes, you know, the designed kits. Well, the first Zusman Ackermanns are off of the Motti Griffin. cases, they're still being cranked out. There's still people making Mahdi's. You know, that's the company came up with Mahdi Griffin was the name that he came up with for the rifle. The design itself is still out there. And a lot of people still build like 50 like AKs. You can build AKs or AR-15s all day. There's nothing they can do about it. They still want anybody to know about it. That's the thing. I mean, if you buy an 80% finished aluminum receiver and you finish it, there's nothing they can say about it. And it does not require a serial number. It does not require anything. See, and that of course is totally contrary, but what it is is that's part of old America as opposed to the Communists with all their garbage about, you know, trying to be the animal retentive control freaks that socialists and communists are. Monty, I would say there's probably half a million of them out there easily. I mean, there were so many built in the middle 90s that, you know, some guys built 30 or 40 of them here that would bring, you know, militia people in. Everybody just sets that. down here's the machinery you got to run it congratulations we're going to do a custom cut ranked out as many as we could I really lost count those are all over the countryside they don't show up at gun shows don't see a Maddy Griffin typically at a gun show but you know what there were a whole bunch of them built there someplace think about it and that's just go ahead yeah I remember back when he was traveling that's like $1,000 Well, yeah, there are different models you can build too. You can spend, you know, it's kind of like the difference between a Model 70 Sears model and a Model 70 custom deluxe from their, you know, custom shop. You know, it's all right like I got a charger, but I don't have a Hemi. And I do have a charger by the way, and it doesn't have a Hemi. It's just a, you know, standard 318, but it'll run like a rape tape. You know what I mean? They run forever. That's one thing about them. It's like a slant six. They run forever. Okay, Mark. I appreciate your time, buddy. I appreciate the program. I'm going to start my name to the micro. Appreciate that. Thank you, sir. I didn't mean to leave out the AK-74. It's just I figured, well, we'll show you a 30-caliber quick fill today because there are some good prices out there still if you look around. Yeah, I'm working. I want to be a 50-caliber. I'd like to get one of those body drippers. I figure a lot of good things about those. I'll tell you what, keep listening in because Don and I were talking about that the other day and we do have the ability to connect people with something. It's just a quality and a lot of people that hop on there, it's just the quality of the rifle is really supposed to be really good. Well the other neat thing is it's so simple a design that you really can't make a mistake with it. Okay, well again thank you sir. Okay, thank you Martin, I appreciate you. We got Dom here as a matter of fact. So Dom, jump in there. What's going on up there in that negative woods? Well, just a few minutes. If your heart's set on a... It is not a bad gun. You guys, basis of that gun is the quality of the barrel. That gun, who's going to build it with something as good as quality Luther barrel or sniper barrel isn't a bad barrel at all. That's what they call it. They're top of the line barrel. They call it the sniper barrel. It's different things. Yes, I have got no problem with the single shot breech loader, Maddy Griffin. Now, in that world wide, a lot of money for that. There are people who sell that Maddy for a brief. Guys, we've addressed this before. There's nothing wrong with a breech loader gun needed to the gun. Some guns finger it out and then older that Maddy down range from the gun. There's nothing wrong with it. It's, you know, hey, it sends 50s down range. It just has its nice color. If you're in a good position with a lot of cover around you, there's nothing wrong with that gun at all. Covering, concealment, every bit of your motion could be wrong. It's just, you want to be in the military crest behind a vehicle. You want to use that as a... You guys, again, some people are selling that money for $3,200. You're going to get a real end for it. You could build less than $1,000. If you've got a buddy who's got a machine shop and you could build a barrel, we'd build that with Group in the 50 caliber world. I had to do this building with machine gun barrels to the point that with machine gun barrel isn't built off the shirring at least one or three or seven hits. See how that works? We're looking at dotting the thigh at a thousand yards. Gonna buy, find out, we're gonna slap something together and say, hey buy this, look at what it is, and you know, before that. And a couple of them, you have the flush to the foam. So you got a real deep scope eye. That problem was brought to the manufacturer and in a few moments he fixed. But there was a little bit of arm twisting and and not, well, okay, okay, I'll take care of that now. And this is a reputable, this is someone who, I'm not gonna mention any names, some of you might have discerned from the description now who I'm talking about, but I'm not gonna put them on the spot by mentioning it. He fixed the problem. You guys were almost at the bottom, but you know, the more stuff you put on a gun, the more problems you have, the more chance for failure. One of the great images of that body is, man, there's minimal, more, much less, too. There's a great entry level 50 if you cost it in a good, price compared to what Barry Watson will offer for a true. Again, the caller sounded like that's what he wanted and I don't want to discourage anybody but let's just, you know, mind, but it's not so much maintenance. It's just the general order if you have to move away from the gun to reload it. There's motion there that mother... And again, especially with the 50s guys, like we said, you can buy an Omni or, well actually not an Omni, a Chevy, or you can go, you know, the review, it's an old fields out there too. You can even go high in the Chevy world up there to come to a Corvette. My favorite on the other end, you had the Biscayne and then you had everything above. Let's not forget there were Pontiacs in there too. It doesn't mean the Chevy doesn't get you there. See that's the whole point. In many cases if you look at World War II weapons systems, the American troops hands like at the Normandy invasion. Guys look at the airborne troops when they load the aircraft. Look at the guns. seen the highest crafted in versions of each one of them, take a look at the mid-war production models that the men are carrying. Take a look at their design, take a look at their simplicity, take a look at their finish. They're the same weapons, but therefore wartime production. They work. They work just fine. Anyway, we are at the bottom of the hour, John. We're going to break. Yeah, we got Paul and his band in the background, and we're going to go to break, you guys. That's Poker Face in the background, but we'll hear some of our sponsors coming up, you know, write down their numbers, record them, or try to remember them so you can contact our sponsors and purchase their product, you know, so you can get what they got. Here's the truth. the word fat. How about you? Call it extra weight. Burritos, double donuts, muffin top, porky, spare tires. It's just plain irritating. What to do? If you eat a lot of corn, flour, or sugar, there's garbage that goes with eating those foods. So here's a remedy. Life change tea. Drink our tea and watch unwanted pounds leave. Fat is like crud. Let life change tea clean your insides and remove the crud. Many customers have lost over 30 pounds We lost varies by how much weight you carry. Health in this day and age should be your number one priority. Don't wait. No pun intended. GetTheTea.com. Order now. Our tea tastes great. Watch it go to work on you. Log on to GetTheTea.com. That's GetTheTea.com. Or you can call 928-308-0408. Don't wait. 928-308-0408. Or log on to GetTheTea.com. America, politicians are about to vote on the creation of a police state and a permanent state of war everywhere on earth, including ze homeland, mine furope. The US senate will be voting on a bill that will give this president and every future president the power to order the military to pick up and imprison without charge or trial civilians anywhere in the world, including America. EWWW! Again, because it may seem insane or unhinged at first, The American president wants the power to arrest and detain anyone, anywhere, indefinitely, without charge. Or trial, forever. Yes, it still sounds insane. We interrupt this program for an urgent announcement. The power's gone and the lights are out. We now have an emergency situation. Time to light your emergency candles. Don't have any? Then it's time to order your supply of emergency grab and go candles from LisaKCandals.com. The emergency candles outperform even the most extreme conditions. They are stood and cost and free and have a natural extended shelf life. The time is now, so don't delay. Have emergency candles from Lisa K. Candles ready when you need them. So you remain in the light and out of the dark. Go to LisaKcandles.com. That's Lisa the letter K, candle dot com. Or call 731-441-3293. That's 731-441-3293. We now return you to the regular schedule program already in progress. This present crisis is not the solution The New Deal. We're ball making. The era of the big government is over. Micron, action, which you are about to hear. Seven in one hand and magazine in the other. I introduce some magazines to the magazine. Well, touch the slide, release it now. We've got one in the chamber. We can tell everybody it is weapons Wednesday. The perimeter is secure. And you're in a cool! For the sunshine today, isn't that? Nah, it's Michigan days, not too ha ha ha. Reporting on this weapons Wednesday, you guys will touch on. Mark, I have a couple of pages on. When I first started doing radio, almost everything I did, I read. I figured out something to put on the radio, but here's some good before we go there. I wanted to point out, you guys, that Mark does a television show called The Dome. I don't know if anybody's briefly on this. I know you don't sit in front of the television. Life inside The Dome. I've seen some of the ads. I haven't really delved into it real deep. Go ahead. Boom. A dome, isolating them from the rest of the world. An atomic bomb can't... inside the people inside are desperate there's a great angst all kinds of things the other night the problem to another inside the dome that people were in the herd. Sound familiar? There was no logic in that we have so much in the way of real estate looks like seeing environmentally controlled food if I grow food I could feed people but it's like well that raise your hand. It wasn't the proposed that we need to be killing people here raise your hand goofy bat bat wearing the mouse shirt Yeah, yeah, okay, will you raise your hands again? Everybody understand that we're planning on keeping everybody else in the lifeboat, right? What if you do that? You see, there was a teen people in the lifeboat, and who would you kill? Well, the person who first, who proposed killing people, they were the ones who had the bright idea that they wanted to kill somebody in the lifeboat. Didn't you? Yeah, that's how you spot it up. I'm sure it was self-sacrifice, right? Yeah. I gotta kill myself to save all these people in the boat. Yeah, okay. I'm just thinking, I'm gonna kill somebody else in here and I gotta get all the other idiots to go over it until there's less of them and I can kill the ones that go along with it. So again, instead of common sense or intelligence, this has the common core values incorporated immediately. Did anybody try tunneling? Oh, they tried tunneling. Yeah, so the dome is a wall? Yeah, the dome is a wall. how far down did we go? I don't know. We're getting in a coal mine, mankind. Look, he's digging down, kids. How far do you want to be a freedom kid? I mean, because Space Aliens just figured, wow, they're stupid. They'll only go a couple of stories. What? This tube? I mean, is it a ball? Like a dome? You're not supposed to ask. It's like, well, so where does the water go? Well, of course, also the question is where does the water come from? So obviously, you're in your own biosphere, ecosphere. So right off the bat, the The proposal was, well, since we're in limited resources, we need to start building a greenhouse system in here, don't we? We got all kinds of material and we got no place to go, right? I mean, it didn't like, they didn't burn down all the houses, right? They're still breathing oxygen, right? They didn't turn purple and flop over and go fetal and no. But you see, right off the bat, the first ones that leap forward are the stinking socialists that need to die first. And you really want them to do that. I really would. I'd be like, so long with this idea. I think it's good. I think it's good. Yeah, Loy, I'm telling you, I think it's really good. We should kill some of you. I won't be here that day. Yeah, it's gonna hurt a lot for all you fools opening your face like that. And bop bop bop bop bop and bop. Okay, now we've got fertilizer for the new gardens. Oh, they plant them in the cornfield, yeah. Actually, here's the problem with the communists. The communists would think this way. They would just simply use you as food. So don't let that food go to waste. So the other angle here is this is conditioning. Yes, exactly. We'll go ahead and jump in there. You know, when you've heard it subtly on some fictional television show, some point in the back of your mind, people would rush there because it's conditioning, you guys. It's preparation for the other side. That's another way to put it. I just thought I'd bring that to the hour to make everybody aware of it because, you know, you sometimes pay attention to them and I remind you, garbage in, garbage out. I wonder how many children... Let's switch gears here because I think we've got enough time You guys have brought you some things from the, sometimes a paragraph, sometimes a page, and we've talked about the capabilities of the Lightning and service performance and whatnot, but there's something here I want you to read just that are in, and this is like three and a half pages. There's actually, there's two stinky, one two and a quarter pages, and then another almost page and a third on these two different subjects. So bear with me on this, okay? There's a lot to be learned. Did you know about frantic, entitled this chat using air bases in the Soviet Union? terminal point for shuttle bombing. Bombers and fighters would operate from England, Africa, and Italy against enemy targets on one-way missions terminating the opposite ends of the frantic mission lines. It began in 1943. It dragged on for month after month while the Russians procured. Finally, with the intervention of... it says, with the intervention of... we're figuring the Army Air Force, the problems of range would be reduced. It certainly hit from all sides. And by the Army Air Force first, it struck me against Japan immediately, however, laid a means to strike at targets that otherwise would not be reached with B17 to me. And that means major work. Finally provided field, Mark Gorgor it. Control tower supplies a few. Boo found, ammunition spare parts, hangers were just some of the items. Sounds like we beat, we have an air base here and then we went in and finished the deal. Back to tech. West Azar, through Murmansk and Persia. We are preparing the bases and seeing the target. Time is one of monumental institutions on the part of the Russians who were poor, often uncommunicative, unfriendly, and sometimes uncoroperative, and even hostile. That was the official attitude. were friendly, all together open armed about well. 1944, the missions were flown from Italy to bomb targets and then on to Russia. Later the strikes and mustangs went back to Italy. 114B1770 mustangs in perfect weather and then heading for Polva. I've butchered that but Polva, that's what we'll call it. Come to the American Strike Force they were being trailed by a Yinkle HE 177 with perfect timing and astonishing accuracy and a complete disregard for the Russian night defenses, the Luftwaffe straw. Something on the order of 110 tons of bombs, they demolished the port. They were through dropping bombs. They came down on the deck strafing and scattering small but murderous personnel bombs. Single plane and what the Army Air Force was later to admit was a brilliant, successful strike. Small wonder. Supposedly no loss of life. The Germans destroyed 40 B-17, 15 muffins, large number of Russians, 450,000 gallons of aviation gasoline, The horrendous cost and effort and wrecked facilities everywhere. The same Russians who had proven so deplorable in their conduct with the Americans now refused to let the Americans endanger themselves in fighting. Only one American was told as the Russians ordered them away from the blazing explosions. They went into them to fight Russian side that night. They passed and the Army Air Force decided to do its best to keep Franek alive in several missions that for some reason had remained obscure and known by relatively few people. It was time lightning. On July 22, 1944, a task of six years 76 P-38s and 58 P-51s, 15th Air Force, set out for Romania. As they neared their targets, another force of B-17s was hammering the Polesti oilfield. The machines and Mustangs freed from restrictive escort duty ran wild against the German installations and found a mission officially described as devastating. 51 destroyed 56 German fighters and bombers, continued on to their Russian base. Three days later, the mixed force of lightings and Mustangs hit the Romanian targets, crippled a major airfield and chalked up seven destroyed. The next day on the 26th, Italy had on their way slammed into several more airfields and destroyed another 20 planes. A week later, another huge this time made up only a P-38 operated for several days in direct support of the Russians and shuttle missions between Italy and Russia, railroad lines. Three days of heavy strikes, the P-38 pilots reportedly were running out of target, decided fighter bomber attacks using Russian airfields simply weren't worth the hassle. Future missions of this sort were dropped. Mission and shuttle bombing in August. By then the front lines had changed so greatly that the value of frantic bases had been dissolved. From that, I came to bring in another tax explanation here. These little one-page chapters by building muscle. An idea of how the fortune of the fighters changed in a period of only a few months as seen in the buildup of fighters from the 15th Air Force. It came to start it off in 1944 with an equipment and organization. It had four past strengths. Until May 44, it had received seven groups. It was exchanging its old P-38s for the new J model. for a month and was accepting P40s. German learned that it was an all-new ballgame. An idea of what this kind of equipment means was masterful demonstration in a one-two-punch German airfields in Austria, which the Army Air Force history unabashedly claims was one of the cleverest tricks in the air war. The B-17s and five bomber groups, heavy escort of three fighter groups, two fighter fields of Austria. Soldiers made certain that the P-38s and their bombers flew at normal altitude. would be plotting their position and their approach. And it also meant heavy fighter interception, the Air Force wanted. Because, known to the Germans, P-47s and the fighter group had taken off well ahead of the bombers and were from their home field. The Thunderbolts put over the Adriatic on the deck and finally caught up to this with the P-38s escorting liberators. At this point, the P-47s climbed as fast as they could to get altitude and raced ahead of the big formation. just as the enemy planes were in the process of taking off, climbing slowly and positioning themselves for formation assembly. The pilots have ever been greeted by so glorious a sight. Thunderbolts came in, including 14 ME 109s, and probably destroyed another eight. The bombardment with 29,000 fragmentation bombs by the days in at six bombers and three fighters. Another 140 German airplanes. Now, we've got a couple minutes to analyze that. One might leave a base and not go back to that base. One always has to many times, if you heard it say, keep looking, you can kind of lead somebody to where you're going. It's a basic, isn't it? What happened with, if they're with the MOSIS, they're wheels up into the wheel wells. Just with the MOSIS. You've heard that here before. I don't remember the Southern general, but will we stick ideal to you? And remember the other half of the problem with dealing with the Russians, probably the reason the Russian curse told everybody not to fight the fires. Christelen said, if any of them are killed in any way, I will tell them you. Let's not forget that a whole lot of people who flew those leap missions in distress came back because of the Congo. When they knew the situation where we were in a big lump, they had a hard time making people disappear. But many a plane went over to Russia to land an emergency because it went straight through because they couldn't turn around during the long missions. And when they got there, they were kept. that were taken from the Germans that were American, 27,000 Americans died in Russian gulags after World War II because the Communists... Can you say Odessa? There's a reason why Odessa is mentioned in a lot of spy films. Yeah, and everybody who was in the know knows exactly, and the enemy likes to do his tongue in cheek. We are already... Oh my goodness, we're the third hour's over, we're headed out. We got Jeff Bennett coming up next time. Your number for Night Vision now, please. Hey, that number's 231796. 845-8231-7858. Fire is on the run. Both of the slats beat them down so hard they wished it got. They never even showed up. Don, you never ever night because you give it up twice and close us. We got another live hour coming up right here on the micro effect. Goggles are gun sights. 3179-6796-8458. Thank you, Mark. God bless you. God bless America.