Mark Koernke discussed music history and patriotic themes in rock and metal bands, highlighting how many musicians from the 1960s-70s held pro-liberty and pro-militia views. He explored how artists like Bob Seger, Three Dog Night, and others conveyed patriotic messages through their work, and noted the importance of discovering lesser-known tracks with substantive content. The show shifted to geopolitical analysis, with caller George from Texas discussing the 2014 Malaysia Airlines Flight 17 shootdown, Cold War-era weapons systems still in use across NATO and former Soviet states, and the capabilities and limitations of modern drone aircraft. Koernke and George debated drone effectiveness in actual combat scenarios versus asymmetric operations.
report. I'm at Net Tech, Mississippi, along with Alaska. We're in the bottom of Florida. From the bottom of Florida, across the arc of the Gulf, oh, Oklahoma, a whole bunch of Wyoming to include both the 3rd, the 5th, our friends, and the reef. The side we got, the great, all up and down, turning back to the east after waving over our shoulders to those guys. The sun will reply, they can't be. We sweep across the plains, jump over the Mississippi and land in the Smokies with the rest of the teams in the Mobile Valley, Grandma and Church, The Golden Spike, the grandmas are still there, 92 years old, 92, 2014 years. Do you realize what a linear time of America with a K-2000 and... $100? Why, you couldn't market it well. Oh, I'm sorry, I'm 1968. Hey, Twilight Zone, another cool one. Mod batteries, also by Golden Earring. Charging up mod batteries. Which, by the way, is where I charge them a battery. Here's another one that's pretty cool in that going for something that Again, it starts out off in that it's like unique. One of the most important things when you want to do a music mix is also make people think. Don't play the same artist over and over again and all of a sudden throw somebody into the mix. No, no, no, no, don't do it that way. You may want that artist's songs, use them, but don't use them in one lump and then switch them. Now sometimes we do that just for the sake of getting these out to you, congratulations, here's a disc, songs on it, use it however you want to, mix it up, play with it. You want to bring them along. You want to make them think, who the hell is? I reckon... albums that I've got. I've got a collection that fills up room. Some of you might remember, I've got stuff that original live, you know, jazz concerts you're getting on the Mississippi that nobody has. Working on the river, guys back in the day when they wanted to record live stuff like that, it was just play, it was just ad hoc play. It's like the equivalent to the casinos where all the casinos Armstrong and all these all these guys you'd recognize played up and down the Mississippi on their bay for their record. bands used to or the band members usually be one guy that said hey man we ought to just check this you know we got a copy this because you never know we're gonna do something unique because with jazz a lot of stuff is improvised and they catch it and it's like man we got to do that again and real eight hours of Louis Armstrong and it's not engineered it's all you know tinkle in the background the sound of cups wine glasses and chatter of people and card playing and then the Yeah, we got Donald this year. Donald's kicking in too. Well, it's some year. Donald's like where you are right now. Oh, it's breezy to the extent the trees here, the 30-foot tall tree. 26 mile an hour wind on this, the 22nd day of July, year of our Lord 2004. Beautiful day. It's turning out to be, it's going to be even more humid than yesterday, but into the air, don't it? Yeah, yeah. I don't know if you want to carry a thought line, Mark. Oh, it just did. And we're pretty well finished with it, guys. I'm going to ask everybody out there, go through all of your albums and even your cassettes. Your older stuff and go through the side tracks. Maybe you've got some recommendations you're gonna find something. A lot of these bands did Patriot oriented music. Pretty much every one of them did. That is, you know, either, you know, fight for your liberty, fight for your freedom, stand for your liberty, stand for your freedom. Folk type or again, epic stuff that was done. It's all through. I mean, in fact, several of the heavy metal bands guys you don't realize it pretty much in fact almost all of the metal bands are pro militia, pro patriot bands did you realize or have you known that? well I don't like heavy metal yeah but you know what you got a whole genre there you've got a whole group of people that are like-minded and you better be traveling and thinking about you know again at least shaking hands with your like-minded friends who will be there to stand with you when the time comes talking about music, or Irish music, old type of music like that, www.dolland.com and look at that Rick and some music there with that fellow over the weekend and before you don't go to the book. You can't even call it class guys we think is like, they show people like that. You know, you guys, people rise from all types, the name Sonny Barger. If you don't recognize the name Sonny Barger, you might recognize the name Hell's Angels. Sonny Barger was the guy who founded, that's just an example of what people call the Democrats and look what they were in the dulcimer world and then that. When you go back to people in particular groups, you know, there's a group of, they feel they have to be, and they have to money to Israel. A different group of people, right from Israel there, they watched a fellow sit in front of them, tell them about the plan back, he didn't give them that, but, you start to believe what you hear, and you cannot believe what you are told, and you cannot believe what you see. Understand that this is a man here trying to sell you justification for consider the source in this instance, because he's not telling you leave what Halas says to you about the dust and... Well first of all remember it's Nutting Honey right now? There you go. Nutting Honey. But Nutting Honey, that's not really his name. I guarantee that because guys, video right now, just to give you an idea of this punk and exactly what kind of a rat he is, You know that he would show up and was actually stuck. Remember he told you how they stacked the crowd like in Phil Donahue? Like all these different Yap talk shows back in the 60s and 70s where you were told they were all live and spontaneous? Well, if you pay attention, Netanyahu is in the crowd with about, oh, three or four different names. Kinda, sort of. I mean, they put him like... In some cases, he's right up front where it was easy to take the microphone and stuff it right in his face and go, what do you think about that? And you know, well, what do you think audience? And kill, hate, kill, hate, hate, hate, kill, kill, hate, hate. And then, and of course, every time this character was wherever he was, it was BS. But of course, it maybe it wasn't real. We don't know which one was his real name. It's like, oh, bummer. You know, his real name is. We don't know what the hell he came from, really. Like the rest of this stuff. And all these other stuff going on. So when you see them flapping their lips and they're trying to get you beat up into, you know, let's go kill fill in the blank. Everybody's learning to step back, Don. Have you noticed? Everybody's like, nah, I don't think so. You go ahead and you want to be criminal, let's watch you. And you might even get tired of you being criminal and maybe get rid of you too. How's that sound? Well, you could do that. Everything is pretty bad out there. Not that bad. It'd be a lot less worse, shall we say, with you. Anything I want you to do. Ignore the men, the eye, and the curtain. Pay no attention to the coming of the Visrio. I am the greatest powerful Izzy. Hahahaha. The day. I don't think, I think it was I wasn't it? No, you don't really understand what they were trying to tell you. Well, let's take apart that. If that's a false name, you guys, I'm not certain what the Neton, guys, that goes back to, Yahoo comes from the Babylonians, fun of many hundreds of years. Yahoo portion comes from the Babylonians calling because they were making fun of them of the yah in their own Yahweh. So in a sense, it's kind of like Google versus... Yeah. Did I say that? Yeah. Google is Babylon. Well, Yahoo is attached to Babylon now. So again, you know, behind the curtain, pay no attention. That's what they're telling. We've done it like this before. It's in all kinds of things that were brought to create the scissors. We've do it like this. But suppose the head of the Mooneys said that Michigan is the Mooneys homeland and all of the Michiganders, Michiganians if you like, have to leave to surrender their homeland to all of the Mooneys because it's historical fact that that's where the Mooneys came from and they need to return to their land. They came in and moved. The Michiganders if you like, Mooneys moved in. They had great grand, great, great, no attention and you cannot believe what you hear. telling you to question your own eyes before you have to consider, you know, we don't need to dwell on this with me. It's the mainstream and how much, how much apparently enough of America believes that well, tied to this, that we have to support them even though a group of people under live here. Mark, I yield to you. Well, I'll tell you what, before we go any farther, Don, I don't want you to stop because I want to make sure that we have information before, after, and through the hour how we can get a hold of you for night vision technology. Now, I'm going to ask a question on the air here that I got into last night. Lowest and thermal. We've got people that are asking and... the differences are so let's qualify that. Also again what do we have in a rifle sight that replaces the one that we've pretty well bought up and it's got to be in green screen, white screen. We're gonna have to work on the white screen but we'll only go to that but we have to. Green screen's available, how can we get hold of you, what do we have and how can we deal with that technology question. And reflecting you know you guys I'll sit and think I did remember you. Sometimes I try to follow in the structure. I was able to offer two months ago for $19.95, $1,995 right in your mailbox, and that includes delivery of all the manufacturer's warranties and everything else, and see you in the dark. And oh, by the way, you can use thermal in the daytime too. It's not affected by life level. I can put that piece in your mailbox now for $18.95. My number is 231. We talked, we rather elaborated last evening on the cyclic and the site divided into, then you'll see their foot off, wait a minute, the device will go, It's a gradient in price. 9 second is $1,895 right in your mailbox. The way you place the thermal in your mailbox, you guys, it would be a great compliment to a green screen for power first generation, the two power second generation that are my entry levels in gun sight. See lousy camouflage in the daytime would work good in the nighttime into a shadow green screen. But if you bring the thermal up and all you can see, people just had in the shoulder, we'd be happy to get $479 for it. If you call them a few times and bug them, they'll move the livery back beyond. I did mention I'd pick up the livery on that too, didn't I? My number is 231. Saving you close to, I don't know, $75 on this device, you guys. My number is 231. 70 on where you are. It might be $85. Screen guns like 308 capable in e-rail. Question again. $1895, $1895 for a handheld device. going to the bottom of the hour break in seconds now. Do we hear the music? What if we don't hear the music? I have something cute. That's a little on the quiet end, so we're gonna see if I can make it work for us. How does that sound, Don? Unless you hear the music in the background, you might hear it better than I do. Today has been tracking, guys. There's nothing to think about there. Side tracking. You just never know what you're gonna run into. And so let me see if I can cue this up right. Gonna go to a little bit of a music break. We'll handle it from this end. Don Betcher myself and 888-747-19. That's 888. Once you've been in the Serenity Valley, where did that piece of music come from? Oh, that's a surprise. I work on that. That's a little piece that is done as part of a sidetrack project. I've been talking about today. It's not all the big music that you hear. Cool stuff done by different musicians. You'll recognize them once you hear the name, but you'll go, where in the hell did that come from? It's like, you know, and again I brought this up, Night Moves by Bob Seger, okay? Now you know that album, right? Oh yeah. That's a kickin', you know, kickin' driving song album, right? Yep. But right towards the, you know, on the flip side, remember it came out as a record, guys, it's on the flip side, it's the Puffles, okay? Now it's out of sync with Looking For A Girl. All of a sudden you got this pensive beat, some music that is a ballad. Every time I've had people stop, literally when I've played that, if I usually did music mixes and I plug in the stereo and I'd do stuff at work or whatever, I usually play anything other than tan stuff that I want people to hear. And that way they get to hear the Patriot authors. Funny is a lot of people, even though they know Bob Zee, would stop because, and whenever they'd refer to the song after they'd heard it the first time, they would be like, you know, yeah, play that song again, you know, the record of the Edmund Fitzgerald. That one. Fitzgerald. I didn't play record the Edmund Fitzgerald. Oh, oh, you mean Ship of Fools. Back to the matter is, and I point this out again, how did people relate it in their mind? What did they think of? What did the author get them to do? Just by using, by painting the picture, He literally, and people disassociate in a way while they associate because, you know, you gotta remember, you reckon the Edmund Fitzgerald guys, ballad singer, famous, everybody, you know, Gordon Lightfoot. I don't know, you know, that's one of the, you know, there's one everybody might drink. Now the thing about it is, as an example, just in general, the two you would recognize, it'd be like you pick and you go, oh, that's Gordon Lightfoot. What's fascinating is, with Bob's Seeker Song, but people put the other title on it right off the bat because of the image that it paints. Now that is interesting of itself and that's one of those little things I've always paid attention to is how people associate, you know, the connectionings, you know, how they link things, but how they, again, how, you know, what do you use in the way of a memory process? So, you know, the flavoring, as much as anything, while the flavoring is the author's voice, the substance, is what still misdirected the brain, the subject matter, you see? Because it's not in line with the album. I mean, the rest of the album is, you know, let's go chase down a girl. Or I got the girl and I chased her down it. Do something with her. You see what I mean? Let me think about it. That's what, gee, the title for the album. Night move. Okay, I'm gonna put the move on her, dude. See what I mean? And Ship of Fool just, it's that he had it. I'm sure here's one of the things. He had it, ready to go, wanted to get it out there and had he had a different album to theme it with, to work it with, it probably would have been the kickoff. It would have been the takeoff off that album. It would have been one of those mega play. In reality, what's bizarre about it though, guys, and I brought this up for 20 years on radio, you won't hear that song on any FM radio station because from its inception, that song was on the band music list for radio stations. Which by the way is arbitrary, it floats. Remember after 9-11, there were a whole pile of songs and they even made that little public that there were like 200 songs that were added to the no play list. There were songs everybody heard every day. I mean, or at least heard it in like a country western station or whatever. Because, you know, fill in the blank blab, blah, blah, blah, blah. That was all BS too, of course. What they did is they took a subject we've told you all about and they plugged something else in to make it part of the terrorist scam. Okay? Think about it. side tracking, there's a lot of stuff out there that is just kick butt. And we need to pull it out. And you guys need to help me with that. You need to help us. We're trying to do this. Come up on the air 888-747-1968. You know the album, you know the song, and I want to check it out because, you know, it's like my collection. I've got tens of thousands and I'm not exaggerating tens of thousands of albums. I can cover pretty much any subject matter you want in music. And I mean some of it the most eclectic stuff that I can listen to it for a minute or two, not even a minute, for 30 seconds ago. No, that's not me. It's like that's, okay, there's a difference between music and twisted instrumentation and not getting the job done, okay? Like I said, I don't care who it is, but the basic band stuff works. But, yeah, I mean, I've got... from any era, going back as far as albums that are ancient, you know, records, you know, four track, eight track cassette, CD one, the new CD, you know, generation and digital, blah, blah, blah, blah, blah. Those side tracks, there's thousands of albums, and some of you have collections out there that you don't realize that are probably unique, because a lot of stuff people assume, well, if I've got it here, it's probably still out there, and the problem is, it's not. Libraries burn books. Libraries don't preserve books. Libraries burn albums. Libraries do not preserve anything anymore. That's not their job. Their job is to own it. I'm not sure if you heard the bell of folks. Please, who do we have? Mark, George from Texas. Go ahead, George, what do you got? You know, Mark, I remember when you talked about when you had those Coca-Cola commercials. I love to see the world of tea and all that stuff. I know there's like a cute song in that same time period, like Three Dog Night, The Road to Shum-By-Law, you know, looking at the lyrics. Right. Actually, my brother knew all those guys. Three Dog Night. My little brother's name is John, spelling his mind. Years ago, Three Dog Night, see, some of the guys from Three Dog Night, some of the guys from ELO. A couple of the guys, it was actually 11 musicians got together. He never told me about this until after he came upon on MTV. But since they all knew each other and all played with each other, said, hey, you want to do some jamming? We're going to record it. And it's like, sure. He didn't know they were recording it for MTV. And they recorded like about, oh, 12 hours worth of jam, maybe 14 hours worth of nonstop jam session. And then they selected like about seven or eight hours of it and were playing it randomly on and 3 Dog Night by the way is also very period oriented most people don't know that that man everybody was up to speed everybody and they all knew what was going on and they understand the threat they've under these not only guys are dead okay unfortunately because we have to start talking that way guys we're getting along in the tooth here you know A lot of them are gone. A lot of these guys are gone from that period of time even though it was a late rock, middle rock and late rock. What's funny is these guys were playing together and everyone was an instrumentalist. My brother could jump from the guitar to the drums, to the bass, keyboard, any guitar, acoustic, electronic, whatever you want. And these guys just went on and on and on. And the guys from Three Dog Night, there's a couple times that they get into a trio work with a primary backup, you know, the lead guitar, backup guitar and bass. And if you ever see that, you see the three of them together, my brother's the guy playing the bass in that particular set. And it's funny, because if you really want to know what he looks like, you remember the cover of the Steve Miller band, Fly Like an Eagle? It looks like a fat hair job. Yeah, well you want to know what he's doing. He's shaking his hair. He knows how the guy you see that's the lead, who is the lead by the way. That's what my brothers, they look like brothers. They look like they'd be one of our family members. The band did. Okay, seriously. Same with the Miller, you know, all the Miller band, all the guys were all the Miller brothers. They look like they'd be like, not cousins, but like we'd be all part of the, like an eight or eight, eight, you know, or a ten member family. That's how close they look. Like the odds. instead we were all like different you know different groups funny because Bob Seeker is the same way early Bob Seeker you know about Seeker my brother the Millers the guys from Three Dog Night the lead okay a couple the others get it all have the same this is something I've noticed years ago I got this that's why I brought this subject up today because I've been going through my collection and having to reorganize because I've got crates in order for me to get something else done here I had to move my my collection my libraries And guys, I started going through it and I started looking at the early pictures and one of the things when you got all the stuff laid out and you're trying to resort to get the rest of the inventory where it belongs, they all have the same facial structure. And it's interesting because they do have a variety of voices, but I mean certainly they have a signature voice because each one has their own background. It's interesting, same structural, cheekbone, face, jawline. You literally could throw one next to the other and replace the other and if you looked at him you'd go, oh that's so and so, he could pass for him and say, yeah dude, yeah I am Bob Seger, man. And it's interesting, or vice versa, whatever. But it's interesting that the giveaway is when they start talking. Or immediately when they start singing. And that's one of the things about musicians I was talking about here earlier in the last hour is the idea that you hear this voice but you've never heard that song. And the song is totally contrary to the popcorn BS that they've tried desperately to make sure you stay with when in reality it turns out the author had some real substance. Mark, I don't know if you heard this in the news a few days ago, but you know the last member of the Ramones finally died, I think it was the drummer. I wonder where the Ramones come into this. I know they were in the seventies. Oh there's a bunch of them. Yeah the problem is also background even with the rock bands the the problem with most of these guys is they were into drugs. Drugs got mugged. If it didn't get them right away it's the old story yeah it killed me and I didn't even know it. You know what I mean? We had that happen over and over again because everybody that period of time one of the biggest problems it wasn't just fun experimentation but there still was a lot of experimentation and drug introduction from that period that in the long term killed a lot of people. Because everyone's gonna experiment, man. Dude, that's gonna kill you. It's like, no, man. The enlightened one told me that if we do this and this and we hold our breath and keep it in, man, that we'll have the ultimate psychedelic eye. Yeah, well, you're smoking like five plasticines, two or three different ides. And by the way, that was kind of like 15 different heavy metals that were stuck in there while that junk that came from India. And how's that working out for you? Yeah. My toenails! Oh my goodness! Mark, you probably heard this news a couple weeks ago, and I know there's a lot of people coming to the fence for this rock star, but Gene Simmons said if it wasn't for the 1%, the economy would fall apart. If it wasn't for the 1% the economy wouldn't be where it is because they've intentionally helped engineer this where it is. They know what's going on. That 1% are ones that need to be blamed for what transpires. Now the other half of that is you don't get something for nothing. But I promoted that to create the internal conflict not to get rid of the upper 1%. They're doing that because the rest of the population will hate on the middle class because they can't reach the 1%. They can't remove... Now George, you have to talk... He's not... Gene wasn't talking about you and me. No, he was talking... Well, don't you know, John, that the kids, they are all Jewish? They just changed your name? Yeah, yeah. Yeah, I know. Not to mention, have you ever seen his mother on television? Well, wait a minute. Let's talk, we'll talk about that real quick. They're all Jewish mafia and they bragged about it, but they'll make a point of making it disappear unless you watch New York and New Jersey media. Yeah. Yeah. Well, if I just got rid of all my kids' RV stuff and all my albums of kids, so... Well, what is, I'm gonna point that out too. You know, like, kids have the KI and the, you know, the Lightning Room SS. And it's all tongue and cheek for the Jews to do that because you gotta remember something, the old man likes Jewish mafia, right? But what's interesting is years ago, I was dealing, I've dealt with a lot of different businesses, as you've known, in industries. And the old Jewish guys used to laugh and go, ha ha, I made one Nazi something the Nazis did, and we settled it all, and we settled it, and remember Amelia, you're like, it's collective items, ha ha ha. Seriously. You know, that's something nasty, doesn't it? You see, they play both sides. It's like even the debate in radio garbage. If you don't have a Jewish conservative to go against the Jewish hyper-liberal rabid one, then whoever it is that's the non-Jewish, you know, slash, you know, regular Gentile kind of guy, well, he's evil and bad. And his position is evil and bad until they can get a Jewish character in there to be the front meat puppet for that side, you know, the mouthpiece. Then they play both sides against the middle, raving back and forth. The other, you know, I would also point out that the same characters would also go, ha ha ha, we made more stun guns than the British Army. The Jews were smart enough to figure out what you do and I've told everybody this before, it's like, I'm not joking. If I were to have a manufacturing plant in the United States, a surreptitious one, I'd stamp Made in China on everything. I wouldn't officially do it, I'd try to crank it out like, like, Krupp and all these other secret manufacturing plants we have in Michigan we're not supposed to know about, the armored car plant here that just moved. to it, the one that was clandestine. Remember I told you guys about the warehouse? That factory that was closed that had all the big heavy frames out back that were from old Weymouth, they even had the serial numbers, we went up and got them. and the plant had been closed and had been sold and was all of a sudden full of machinery. Well that secret armaments plant has now moved just like the little crump plant that was in the farm here over across, straight across the river from me. Okay, it's gone because they had to move to another site because people started to figure out where they were bringing their slaves in until they'd work them to death. Now, with the British Sten gun, what they learned to do Israelis because the Sten gun was a $2.75 special package. It was ridiculous. It could be made right now. We could crank them out like there's no tomorrow guys. And with CNC machining, oh my god, they'd be like national match versions. Yeah, you'd think you were building Hershey's. Could you crank our Sten guns tomorrow and they'd be better than the original. We could make them better than the original. But the fact of the matter is the Israelis, he like he cried, he goes, yeah, all we do is we put the British stamp marks on everything. That way they blame the British. I've heard this over and over again. In the arms industry. That's what they did. You know, in other words, well, we found these guns and they're from blah, blah, blah. Really? How do you know? If you've got a whole clique or a clandestine culture that is undermining or intentionally targets and undermines people, that's why even this garbage, like on an expanded version of this, what we just saw with the shoot down. Well, here's how they play the game. It was a Russian-made missile! Yeah, the rocket they're claiming was used was built how long ago? All of them were Russian-made. Ukrainian, Georgian, the Polans, even Poland and East Germany. East Germany, yup. And East Germany has those rockets right now, which is now Germany, and nobody talks about this. Guys, a Western power that... back together, that has those rockets and everything else the East Germans had, and they did not throw them away because they cost millions of dollars. And they still work. And yes, so they integrated them into their national defense. They got... they inherited... Germany inherited virtually tens of thousands, if not hundreds of thousands of RPGs. millions of AK-74s. They sold most of those, by the way. Macaros, they sold most of those. But the missiles, go to James and take a look at an order of battle with regard to equipment. You'll find the missiles that shot down that airliner that they're claiming did are under the control of the German government. And the Czechs have them too. Oh, by the way, the Yugos have them. And they're all Russian made because they were Russian made. But they weren't made yesterday. They were made 20. Oh, you'll probably see them in Vietnam. Yeah, oh yes. Actually, that missile pack, in its export slash prototype model for testing, showed up at the very end in Vietnam. Mark, you know, I didn't know you were trying to play Russia for the slaughter because they showed airstrikes and I know the Ukraine has and the Kiev has and they're using the old Heinz helicopter. Well, the Hind is no old, actually, think about this. We've still got Hueys flying in NATO. So the Hind is 20 years newer than the Hueys we're flying. And we haven't thrown away the Kiowa either, have we? And the Hind is not an outdated aircraft by any stretch of the imagination. It's just that there are other aircraft they've come up with, but not necessarily preferred. Ask the Afghanis. When it comes to helicopters, the Hind is a tough nut to crack. Yeah, they didn't mind the MI6s and the MI8s. Those are no problem. They can keep hopping those, which of course the equivalent to our Huey and our Schittooks. But the fact of the matter is that it's not old because everybody's driving old. Think about this. The Hind D, same age as what aircraft? The Apache. Still flying the Apache too, aren't we? What about the Cobra? It was Vietnam. still and yes the Cobra 2 is a slash the marine I don't know if the Marines are running in the store if they got Apaches replaced completely seems to me they were still running off old parts you know the old part off the parts inventory so I'm pretty sure there's still some cobras at least the Cobra 2 last variants are probably in service because those are a tow and hellfire capable hey you want to talk about old oh well that's the whole point my whole stinking we're running off the space age and we don't have any space We're spaced out. We've got space out age to work off of. Our idea of a big deal are RC toys. You give him a name like Drone and do propaganda behind him and everybody goes ooh and ahh. And in reality, drones are real scabby aircraft. Well, Mark, you know they just had a news piece on our local. He's got this kid building drones. He says, oh, these things are so wonderful. They can pick up a payload of 40 pounds, which is really not that much. No, actually the problem is like we said it what you it doesn't take much it look at me most drone aircraft are like an Arringer and If you can wave a whole bunch of Matt somebody fine, otherwise there an assassin's weapon Okay, the assassin weapon of choice is a 22 you get up close you pop somebody in the back of the head and you disappear in the crowd or you walk away or you do whatever mob used to do it all the time where they take a semi-auto 22 and pop pop pop pop pop pop and Yup, gone That's just how it works. That's why I've been joking for years. Eventually when they get everything but the .22s, then they'll start calling them with the industry ad years ago. The Assassin's Weapon of Choice, the .22 highly powerful .22 long rifle. You see? Well, drones are the same way. They're actually, again, they don't have superior firepower. The only reason they're working right now is because we're doing criminal operations. If this was a battlefield situation, The drone survivability is down to about zero. Nobody wants to talk about that because drones... Well, let's put it this way. It's kind of like update this thing. The Germans have a B-1 rocket and the B-1 Buzzbomb is bombing London. The Buzzbomb, the terror weapon. How did they eventually decide to go after it? They set up fighter cap cover. They went down, came up and one of the techniques was literally to tip it over. Right, they didn't even wait bullets. They punched the wing tip, the wing tip and the barrel rolled and it would offset the gyros and it would fly into the ground. And she popped in there, we didn't have to worry about it hitting the city. Right. Well, modern drones aren't in any better shape as far as performance when it comes to opposition aircraft that are actually manned. and being dealt with in a dynamic AAA battlefield, and I say AAA, I'm not talking air defense, I'm talking AAA is in class A and AA and AAA armies going at each other. Damn, we are at the top. Drones are throwaways, kids. Drones are absolutely trash. Yeah. That's why they don't put a pilot in them. Yeah, exactly. Okay, we gotta let you go, George. Thank you, sir. Thank you. We are at the top. Down in your number for night vision. That number is 231796. 8458. God bless the republic. Death to the new world order. We shall prevail ladies and gentlemen. The empire is on the run. But we are on the march for day and night. Ooh, keeping the slides speeding without hearts open. We got Jeff Bennett coming up next time. You remember for night vision to close this please. That number is 231-796-8458. God bless America. 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