October 16, 2014
Evening Show
1h 8m
Complete
Radio Episode
2014
▶ Audio Player
Summary
Mark Koernke and Don discussed Michigan DNR regulations requiring hunting licenses even on private property, wildlife management issues including feral pigs and cougars, rabies vaccination procedures, and night vision technology transitions from green-screen to white-light devices. Callers contributed stories about wildlife encounters, military service experiences, and current events including Hunter Biden's discharge from the Navy for cocaine use and a criminal case involving sexual assault of an elderly woman. The show also covered the B-52 bomber's 60-year service history.
- michigan dnr
- hunting licenses
- private property
- feral pigs
- cougars
- night vision technology
- green screen
- rabies vaccination
- hunter biden
- navy discharge
- b-52 bomber
- preparedness
- second amendment
- wildlife management
- military service
Transcript
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Live 365 Revolution. Thank you for listening to LibertyTreeRadio.4MG.com. We all need to prepare ourselves. You might have the food, water, gold and silver but ask yourself, are you truly prepared? That's why you need to visit MainMilitary.com. MainMilitary.com carries everything you need. Gas mask, fire starter kits, high capacity magazines, chemical suits, military surplus items, and much more. Do you own a firearm? MainMilitary.com has a large selection of pistols and rifles suited for your needs. Are your local store sold out of ammunition? Call or visit them today for prices on hard to find ammo and bulk ammo orders. You don't need to worry about having a military surplus store in your area because MainMilitary.com is the only store you'll ever need, all from the comfort of your computer. Visit them online today at MainMilitary.com. That's Main, like the state, Military.com. A figure walked in through the mist with a flintlock in his hand. His clothes were torn and dirty as he stood there by my bed. He took off his three-cornered hat and speaking low to me, he said, We've fought a revolution to secure our liberty. We wrote the Constitution as a shield from tyranny. For future generations, this legacy we gave. In this, the land of the free and home of the brave. The freedoms we secured for you we hoped you'd always keep. But tyrants labored endlessly while your parents were asleep. Your freedom's gone, your courage lost, you're no more than a slave. Invist 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 is spent, your children must attend a school that doesn't educate, and your Christian values can't be taught according to the state. You read about the current news in a regulated press, and you pay a tax you do not owe to please the IRS. Your money is no longer made of silver nor of gold. You trade your wealth for paper so your life can be controlled. You pay for crimes that make our nation turn from God and shame. You've taken Satan's number. You've traded in your name. You've given government control to those who do you harm so they could burn down churches and seize the family farm and keep our country deep in debt. Put men of God in jail. Harash your fellow countrymen while corrupted courts prevail. Your public servants don't uphold the solemn oaths they've sworn. And your daughters visit doctors so their children won't be born. Your leaders send artillery and guns to foreign shores and send your sons to slaughter fighting other people's wars. Can you regain the freedoms for which we fought and died? Or don't you have the courage or the faith to stand with pride? And are there no more values for which you'll fight to save? Or do you wish your children to live in fear and be a slave? O sons of the Republic, arise, take a stand, defend the Constitution, the Supreme Law of the land, preserve our great Republic and each God given right, and pray to God to keep the torch of freedom burning bright. As I awoke, he'd vanished in the mist for whence he came. His words were true, we are not free, but we have ourselves to blame. For even now as tyrants trample each God given right we only watch in tremble too afraid to stand and fight If he stood by your bedside in a dream while you were asleep and wondered what remains of the freedoms He fought to keep what would be your answer if he called out from the grave is this still the land of the free evening ladies and gentlemen this is the evening intelligence report i'm r korki and i'm don betcher one day closer to victory for all of our brothers and sisters both on and behind the lines and occupied territories south southwest southeast and north west ladies and gentlemen you're listening to us on LibertyTreeRadio.4MG.com, Indiana Freedom Talk Radio.com, we're on AM and FM Micro stations, CB Bay stations, alternate technologies east and west of the Mississippi along with Alaska. 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, ahead of Louisiana, Mississippi, Arkansas, Texas, Oklahoma. Big chunk of Nebraska, a whole bunch of Wyoming to include both 3rd and 5th pit and our friends, the recall state of Colorado, along with the 12 sisters on the left side of Wyoming. speaking of what out there on the far left coast with great state of jefferson turning back to the sweet sweet across the plains leap over the burgeoning banks of the mississippi and the land in the smoky slash the blue ridge for the restaurant crews gramiteans okay teams and the model grama consortium bring us the golden spike down it's dark out there what is the day-to-day serve what is of course uh... happen up in your neck of the woods And give us an update on night vision technology as a starter for the program, please. Well, it is the 16th day of October. You're of our Lord 2014. Beautiful day at work for the gray sky and the heat sapping breeze and low 50s and the high humidity. Only it's not clammy. It's just, you know, but it was a beautiful day at work. Again, the 16th day of October. That's a particular day for me. I won't go there, but I just want to say thanks to a lot of people who offered help in that time frame. Mark, we've got the DNR here on the public channel, WCMU out of Central Michigan University. That's what that CMU stands for, you guys. We've it the question has been asked on this hour before can you guys in Michigan? Do you need a license to hunt your own land and it used to be no? But it was only for small game if you wanted to shoot a deer standing on your own property you had to have a deer license But you know all things are prone to change if you don't guard your liberties They are taken from you if you want to shoot a rabbit, you know through the be like the parlor shooter If you want to shoot that possum that's raiding the cat bowl through the window like it's a parlor game. You know, you can't shoot small game on your own property anymore here in Michigan, Mark, without paying a $10 fine or tax or license fee to the king property now. So I thought I'd bring that up just for, you know, wait a minute. What did they say? The it's 10 bucks. Now, they promote this, well that's your small game license wherever you go in Michigan now. And it's, aren't we lucky, it's five dollars cheaper than the small game license was last year. So see how they reach in your pocket. They tell you, you know, if you've got a hundred acres or even twenty acres in Michigan or even ten acres. Every once in a while you can pick up the shotgun and even five acres, even two acres in the right place, go out and take a couple of bunnies or a couple of birds every now and then. Do it when they're in season, I would advise. On your own land. Even if you choose not to hunt anywhere else, but now if you choose not to hunt anywhere else but on your own land, that one squirrel that you want to shoot that's been, you know, It's just that one squirrel that's been taking all the bird feed and the wife says, Get that squirrel! Well, if you shoot that squirrel on your own land now and you don't have a small game licensure in violation of, well, some code. And they made a point, Mark, to point out the host of this guy, Mort, somebody else who used to be host of Michigan Outdoors or something, who's posing these questions to these damn near Russians. Oh, I did say that. These DNR officers. He said, now that's Michigan law, isn't it? That's just not a DNR or a code. That's Michigan law, the DNR guy proudly boasted, because see how much influence they have over law now, not just they're saying, well, we say so, so we're going to enforce it. So that's how much more leverage they have into, well, Michigan law. So there's a number of things to pay attention to there rather than oh my gosh they have tanks over there in the desert of iraq tank in the desert of iraq is a great threat to me or to you i just can't figure out how the news tries to sell that to us mark the probably use the bridge to get here or the trouble the tunnel yeah that's where i was going to be with you have the chunnels who would have to be the uh... would you call your model nearly only a lot of the a lot of a lot of all Well, again, the DNR has got a couple of things going on right now. As we've said, go to BakersGreenAcres.com, www.bakersgreenacres.com. And Mark from Bakers Green Acres has been covering the DNR fiasco progressively and the latest scam with regard to the feral pig situation. Bottom line, put a bounty on them. No limit, no restrictions, no pissing with anybody. All you do is say, hey, I'm looking for feral pigs. You can't bother them, we're going to exterminate them, that's it. Problem is, once you have these skank, you know, these perps in there, it's just non-stop trying to suck everybody's wallet, and it gets worse and worse and worse. The bureaucracy needs to be banned. That's what we talked about. What Fred Rexer said, ban the bureaucracy. That will settle it real quick. We'll get back to being America after a while. We're going to have to fight a shoot and more to do it. There's a lot of people that are just starting to be around later. And then we'll be back to where we should be. It will work out just fine. A lot of work to do, by the way. Anyway, go ahead, Dom. Another thing that was brought to my attention today, although it wasn't here on the DNR, Michigan has a law that says it's illegal to take anything with any type of lighted device. Now that doesn't include shining that raccoon, which is a tradition for hunters, you know, the dog tree, the raccoon, you shine the light up the tree, and there's that raccoon, and moments later he falls out of the tree. But that's the only time that Michigan will allow you to use any sort of lighted device to take any game. to kill again. So again, I know a number of people who shoot coyotes with night vision. I don't think that the DNR moans too much about that in areas where it's a high infestation. But they'll be happy to run to, they ask the question from the past, are there cougars in Michigan? Now this guy looked right at the camera and lied. He said, yeah, there's about nine of them, but they're all in the Upper Peninsula. And they're all males. They're all trying to figure out. They walked in from Wisconsin, and they're all trying to figure out how to get back to Wisconsin so they can find a girlfriend. That was his exact word for word. Now he didn't mention anything about cougars in the southern peninsula, like the cougar that I have cast my eyes on more than once. I was going to say I've seen them at least three different times in recent decades. Yeah. And you know they were different animals because they were totally different counties. Yeah. But again, they deny that, but they tell you, you better not shoot it because, well, it's an indigenous animal. So see how they try to double talk you? Don't indigenous animals live in that area? I mean, truly and seriously, you can't shoot the cougar that's not there because it's an indigenous animal. understand that follow that twisted 1984 double-speak logic and then you just when you shoot the cougar you put the skull in the curio and you put the skin up in the garage and you never let the DNR guy see it that's the bottom line because cougars will take children cougars will take adult la de da I'm just jogging along and you run past the cougar and then it's on your neck and the cougar is hoping to break neck So again, I don't, you know, if it comes in and takes livestock, well, we haven't heard farmers in this area talk about a downed cow. I'm certain that they would cover that up. It would only be room or the wolf tracks over in the hay marsh mark. That's one of my other favorites. One of my friends over in the hay marsh, which is almost in the center of the Palm of your hand, Michigan. And he's taken pictures of wolf tracks are so much bigger than the biggest dog track that you almost, unless you're really, really, it's the biggest dog track I've seen in my whole life, Wilbur. That's like saying the difference. That's the biggest deer track I ever saw when you're looking at a pig track. So again, you know, you have to, it's what you see, it's what you discern versus, and I just use this as example, Mark, because this is something hunters know. This is something a lot of people who go out hiking know. But the DNR will say, oh, that doesn't exist and you better not shoot that indigenous animal that doesn't live. I'll be quiet, Mark. Well, again, too, just remember, sometimes hide it right out in the open. You could always do a nice bike seat. Either that or find somebody who's got that classic 67 or 68 Cougar. It's like nobody else's car. And once you trim theirs out, it will be like nobody else's car. Nobody else's car. Yeah, those nice furry little headrests. Wow, that's really great. Those come standard. No, they were a custom Ford thing. Don't you like the door panels, too? Yeah, look at those little door, yeah, actually the door rest, the armrests. They're fur, but they're such a supple and fine fur. It lays so flat, so clean. Yes, yes it does. And it's that natural cougar-esque tone. Yeah, you have to have all the nomenclature prepared in advance. It's cougaresque. Yeah for that cougar. It's like the word limited edition. Yeah Mark We're gonna call her who we have yeah, George in Texas I just wonder what they're gonna call the the wild born indigenous animal along with the vodka here because There goes a lot of problems with people around here that chickens and their goats. Oh, you just can't shoot pigs in Texas You can now, right? Oh yeah, we can say we can shoot it, but now they got a new ordinance in the county. You can't discharge a firearm within the county limits. Get out your boat. Yeah, it's great practice. I can break out the... I'll tell you what, here's the thing you can do. You can go deal extreme, you can go to Bud K, and they have some really very reasonably priced crossbows that have a good strength, good sized prod, and they will do the job. Besides, it's good practice to be doing it quietly anyway, even with the pigs. I don't know if you've seen this, but there have been a couple of herd images that were done and posted on YouTube. Now, I've had my brother describe the wild pig situation in central California in the mountains, and he ran into herds of three to five to six hundred, which, like he said, when he was trapped up a tree, he said it was an ocean of pigs. But they flood. Yeah, it was a traditional actual herd the way herds are. And when he shot, he shot a 300 pounder because that was a mid small animal, but we all know the one that he saw. There are bigger sows and bigger boars, males out there, boars that were just massive. and he did not think to even engage them. Well, when he fired, it let out a squeal and everything came in from all directions. Well, right now on Facebook and a couple other social medias, I'm sure it's on YouTube. I haven't looked to find it. I should because they're standing there and this herd, the phalanx alone is about 60 to 80 pigs. And then it's just a constant stream. Not only is it in front of you at mid distance in the camera, but if you pay attention in the background, you can see another part of that herd as they're moving just a little over the roll in the terrain in the same woods. About halfway through, one of the pigs stops and looks right to where the cameraman is. It's interesting because there's a couple others. It's like zombies. They all start looking that way. Well, then there's another big boar that goes past the whole pack and kind of distracts him or keeps moving. And they're taking another double take. They look right to where the camera is. And then they keep going cross country. And the guy with the camera or the phone, whatever he was using, I don't know what he was using to shoot with, he pans to the front of the herd and then pans back through the woods so you can get an idea for distance how deep that is. Now, be quite honest, if something like that was after you, you aren't getting away from it. You might beat feet, but you better be beating feet and you better find some, you know, you got to go up, not just out. And then you better be patient about when you get up there, staying up there. But in this case, very impressive. I'm sure, I mean, every age of pig you could think of, every weight you could think of, and you could see also the regimentation of the herd. Quite clearly, you could see the individual pods for the different males with the females and the piglets with them. They were on the march, over your rolling terrain on the march. Very impressive. That's why open season with no restrictions, especially for pigs and certain other just bulk animals, with no competition they can crank out on a limited number of critters. Alligators were the same way, guys. The alligators are rare only because we thinned them out. As soon as they told everybody not to hit them, When they're back. Yeah, how many eggs per clutch, how many eggs per nest? When they would, when they'll drop 12 to 22. Of that, there's not many predators that will mess with the babies while mom's with them, and she typically is. They don't go very far from her. Those nests aren't rated. Mark, you know when they're right, when the alligator, when the population's out of hand, I know I would hear... They were feeding the alligators and there's a sign that says do not feed the alligators, do not bring snacks. Snack on a leash. Yep, and that you see is that leash right inside the gator with the person tugging away and trying to get it to work. Alligators love dog meat, I'll tell you that right now. Any small game. They'll eat everything that's along the shore. you know there would ever what anything that comes along for a drink moment my point is that all of the animals like this the problem is the again most people don't think about the structural engineering of the speaking uh... pigs have so many people for a reason and they produce so many piglets typically in some cases with enough food if the food is high the production of the piglets is high sometimes of course beyond to the end of the run some of them do dialed by natural causes but guess what If they all made it count one for every teat, you figure out how many times there are many females. Oh, wait a minute. Next year, every female that it just had can do it again. See, that's the problem. Force multiplication. Well, it's like a voice said, if you wanted to repopulate a species. It's like the desert tortoise. The only reason that the scum out west of BLM was breeding desert tortoise was to plant them on property, guys. It was not to repopulate because as soon as they got done and they were down to the last ranch, they executed all the leftovers rather than put them out in population. Notice that? And the tortoises? They didn't want them to get stepped on by the cows. Yeah. They protected them from that evil. They protected them by sending them to turtle heaven. So here again, if we wanted to produce them, we could. And especially when you're looking at foodstuff or predators, especially middle predators. Because middle predators, which in reality, and there are other creatures that go after alligators, and again, one of them that really serves well is man. So the middle predators, usually, the reason they have a higher production capability is because of two things, disease factor and predator consumption in the life cycle. The early life cycle is a high decimation of the population. So they might have eight, but they'll lose four or six. Well, what happens when you have optimal conditions and no competition for either the food or predators to thin out the population? That's what we're seeing with all these creatures go ahead. I got a question You know I had a shooter raccoon six weeks ago. I had a problem with raccoons You know they could be a nuisance at the time, but there's one raccoon that the kids I found out fed up stuff and When I was sitting there eating chicken outside this raccoon sat up sat like I can't right next to me hoping I would feed him and I so I said I was trapped and I Trapped the raccoon I felt like I said I have to shoot this raccoon because this raccoon lost a natural fear of humans. He's still hookies looking down from above watching where he's got all the snacks he needs. That's right. Poor little thing. But again, we've brought up on the hour many times and Buckshot will tell you Buckshot's got many videos about different wildlife and whatnot, but Buckshot will tell you how raccoons spread disease. And children will touch, well maybe the raccoon might even let that happen as it's, you know, getting a little bit of food. But what are the children doing while they're sharing their raccoons? They're eating, aren't they? Yeah, num, num, num, num. Hand to mouth? Bad, bad, bad habit. Let alone if Mr. Raccoon wants more and bites. And then runs off into the wilderness. Mark, would you describe the agony of... Oh, well, yeah, actually, we were able to give the one that tagged me, the one that hit me, that bit me up. He was ill. He didn't go very far. We were able to go back. My dad and the neighbor went back, and right where he was still not far off the road, he was right there. So there was definitely something wrong with him. Well, because of that, because when they evaluate rabies, animals that may be suspected of rabies, typically it's one of your teaching colleges in the state that covers that. Now, there are other institutions that can, but they do it for a number of different reasons. But that's usually the central location. Well guys it takes so long for them to process and do all the testing and while they're doing the testing out of for precautionary reasons you will undergo the rabies you know the rabies battery of injections and it's a lot. Okay it's a lot and a lot. It's not one shot. Oh look, Glenn Ford made it to the end of the movie. He's gonna get a rabies shot. No he's not. He's gonna get a whole lot of... He's gonna be a pin cushion. When I got my rabies shot, they gave me like five shots in the stomach. Right. Well, actually the battery, the way it's supposed to be done, I mean I've experienced firsthand is you get first they take 500 cc's of serum and they go in from behind the wound channels. However you were hit. They come in from the opposite side with a very long needle and they irrigate the entire area with, that's what they're supposed to do, is irrigate the wound with the serum until not blood, but the serum is flowing from the wounds. Okay, that's number one. Next, they give you two shots from the rear from behind. I have the traditional, like the way it's the mass battery. There's seven shots they give you in one arm, there's like eight I think they give you in the other. You start to lose count after not very long. But they give you those. Those are shots that are supplemental on top of everything else, in addition to being part of the rabies battery. But they do two of the shots from the rear, and those go into the stomach from the back. They also went to the kidneys too by the way. Then they go from the front and the initial battery from the front was 4. Then after that you do two shots. They start, of course, because they don't want to worry about scar tissue either with your outer abdominal tissue, your outer layers of skin, and also because your stomach builds up scar tissue. That's why they change the point of injection. They start at the belt line, then they go up to about just below your midway between the belt line and the belly button. Then they go up to belly button height and come down from above. and there are two shots each time. And needless to say, like I've said, if you were younger, like a child, you'd have problems with it. And that's where, you know, somebody would be showing their gumption there. But the level, the biggest problem was like when I got them, I don't know about you, you had them, George or where you had them, but there was only one nurse in the whole complex at the University of Michigan, which is one of the biggest hospitals in Michigan. There was only one nurse that had ever given the injections out. And we got to be friends real quick because she said you know what you're you know I'm the only person here that's ever done this well That's good because I'd rather have somebody that knows how to do it even if I don't want it done Then somebody that doesn't have a clue Which is mark you know the thing is when people used to go into town when I was in the art he's going to town and Meet that woman they get that uh that gonorrhea radio shots don't let they get in the butt you remember those When the summation treats, so I get two silts in the butt Oh, I got so many injections back when I was going in. I was in Vietnam. We got the whole Vietnam battery. Oh, God, you were a pin cushion. I don't even know what all I got shot for. I have the records. I haven't really gone through everything to see if I would else they were guinea pigging us with. But oh, no, we were buttocks, arms, buttocks again, buttocks twice, then back over to the left arm. Then they did the cattle stall thing where they run you right down the chute, literally, guys. and they had two pneumatic guns on each side. Eight injections total just with the one battery we went through. And then we went back, you know, what was it, nine days later and we did another 14. And then we did, the buttock shots were the last, that's in the rear end. One was done with a gun but we had a kid slip that was doing the injections and if you've ever seen what those pneumatic injectors do when they slip, guys, it's like somebody cut you with a Damascus butcher knife. That's the only problem with them. If you don't keep them straight on and they slide sideways, well, whatever direction you point that hydraulic jet in, it's cut meat just like a butter knife. Well, make needles look painless. No, I mean, I'd rather take the needles in those pneumatic jets. Oh, I wouldn't. Either way, I mean, the idea is they were in such a hurry because they were doing a battalion. You know, we were the first company up, but they were doing a battalion, so it was get them through, get them through. Well, the problem is he slipped on the one, cut that guy's ham butt over, you know, that ham open, you know, just like you were carving for, you know, for Christmas kids. And that was a scream. I'll never forget, like, that's one of those two, I'll remember three, maybe, I could say I've seen her repeat. The other is the grand thumb. I would say that the same bellow. from the victim was comparable, okay? The combat veteran slash 20 year veteran with a garand hanging off the end of his thumb at down at Camp Perry or the guy at Fort Lost in the Woods of Misery with about a three inch deep gash along the rear of his hind end on the left cheek sliced out and bleeding like he was a stuck pig. Mark, were you spare the malaria horse pill? We didn't have any of the pill inoculations. We didn't get any of those. No, we had we everything was that's what I'm saying I think everything pretty much at that time was injection I use those cards because I had you know I had well we all had passports So it was really cool only in that I was inoculated for garbage that most day most times they wouldn't even ask for Wow, you've got two yellow cards. Yes. Yes, I do Yeah, we have another caller who do we have Yeah, Mark, just off topic, Joe Biden's son, Hunter, was just kicked out of the Navy today for a positive test of cocaine. Wait a minute, where Pete at? Hunter, the VP's son, Hunter, Biden, just got kicked out of the Navy. He was a public affairs officer part-time. He tested positive for cocaine. Hey, he was probably just laying back with Barry Satoro having some fun in the outhouse I'll bet you that Biden's son and Barry both have the same Cabano hat You know the one you see the picture of with where his eyes look like there, you know two shades to you know to the wind Yeah, I could see the two of them laying back here in the outhouse, you know over there in the Opal office and yo, dude You want to do a line? Yo, Barry. Thanks Yeah, wow man, you got something on your nose. Yeah, his dad's been known. There's rumors his dad does it too. His dad's a quack. There's been rumors his dad does go too. Wow, it's interesting in that to a degree people are getting tired of. See, because a lot of times they'll turn a blind eye with a political officer like that. The fact that somebody zeroed on him means that everybody in the system is getting fed up with these these pieces of trash and oh yeah Yeah, they're not out John McCain overboard when he did a wet start in the hangar of the forest all yeah I was just looking at that. I was watching that fire last night. You know one of the original Yeah, let me reiterate, on the hangar deck. Yeah, yeah. He actually, what happened is, yeah, it's known that McCain is the individual that started the fire in the forest, all that killed so many men. That's why they took him off the carrier that night slash the next day. They had him off there because he otherwise would have been feeding the sharks. If he wasn't the son of an admiral, you're right. Yeah, they had him. I mean, it would have been no doubt because everybody knew exactly what happened. Guys, remember this about it. Today we have cameras everywhere. Aircraft carriers were doing full spectrum camera work all over the carrier for a number of different reasons. They always wanted to evaluate their work. Remember, I've talked about this and they used to be, they did documentaries on this. Companies actually studied aircraft carrier operations for efficiency. Because they couldn't figure out how you're doing this so well. And it's like, well, we did this, which they first they film everything. And if they could change a procedure to cut a process down in time, they did. And every action, every motion, every step serves a purpose. Again, follow the rules, nothing happens. Whenever you try to cut a corner, you get cut. That's where you see those pictures of guys getting sucked into engines and stuff like that. Or for whatever reason, they go, I'm fascinated by the couple I've seen where the guy has lived. I don't know how you could do that. Where the character literally went right through the turbo fan and I can't I don't know what size the engine fan is But it's an it was an internal ducted fan and the guy goes in one end and comes out the other Yeah, I know he had to be messed up But the fact that he was still alive and of itself is the is the short miracle You know so but again, yeah They say it's Chevlar helmet did a lot of damage to the fans and I read about that too and that's why that saved them. Well I've been in the films of it. The thing about it is it was a thing to see. If it's one of the smaller engines it's just like a mix master. I can't see it coming out the other end. What I mean by small is that like the different GE power plants? and you're looking at 8 or 12 ducted fans stacked on top of each other and those are titanium blades. That's one thing that if you've ever done scrap metal in the military, guys they cut all of those up. They cut them up. You don't even have to worry about demilitarizing them. They cut them up. When they come off the flight line off of the engine building, they're already chopped into quarters. So, when you look at them as scrap, they're already cut up. They don't want anybody to get hold of those. But, I've always thought, as we talked to one guy, it'd be really cool for knife blades though. Oh yeah. I just held it sharpened, but once you got it sharp, it opened the gate for the hell of it. That's right. You'd be able to pass that down to your great grandchildren like they do with crowbars in Russia made out of titanium. There's crowbars made 300 years ago and 200 years ago of titanium, and they just hand them down from one family, you know, generation, one family member to the next. Just to give you an idea guys not that you'd all make your crowbars out of titanium, but when you got lost of it around And they do we got a member they hold 80% of the inventory of titanium on the planet Russia does you can pry almost anything with it? Yeah, and still use it for a weapon when the when they when the barbarians come around the corner real quick here before we go and you're gonna be disgusted by this too I think you guys in the chat room may have posted this already A man charged in burglary and rape of a 100 year old woman. Apparently this just happened in the background of the corner here. The individual looks much like the fine individual that was shot in St. Louis there in Ferguson. Looks very much like him. not completely, but very much like him to give you a little hint there. Anyway, he's smiling in the mugshot. He's really happy because he's a gang banger. Kansas authorities charged a Wichita man Wednesday in the sexual assault and burglary of a 100-year-old woman during a break-in at her home. Casey Nesbitt, 35, was charged. He looks very much like Mr. Brown. Just think Brown only Casey Nesbitt. is charged with rape and aggravated burglary. The woman who lives alone told police that intruders forced to open the door of her home on September 29th. She says they were in her home for several hours. Police say forensic evidence linked Nesbitt to the rape. Gee, I wonder what that would be that would be the forensic evidence. What do you think? Again, well, you know, there are certain things when you get caught up in it. depending on where you go. Some people, well, for a box of Ho-Hos, they get rid of this Ho if he's behind the wire. You know that? Did I say that? Yeah, I watched that happen. If the family members knew it, all they have to do is buy somebody for two boxes of Swisher Sweets and two boxes of Little Debbie's Cupcakes. And boy, he wouldn't be with you anymore. Let's see Nesbitt who police have reportedly documented as a gang member is being held in the Sedgwick County Jail on $250,000 bond and let's see online jail records did not indicate an attorney which of course eventually you'll get one one or another somebody will show up. So anyway, why need to be head something paying attention? Now I don't want to yourself but the people you care about guys, boy you all constantly everybody needs to be alert. Again, you don't surrender, and I'm going to tell you right now, personal experience, especially the characters behind the wire, anytime anybody stood their ground, even if they tried to grab somebody, they'd have to back off. If you stay focused and understand that if you don't fight, they plan on probably getting rid of you so there are no witnesses. Why? Because it's cheap. It's cheaper to smack you with a 2x4 or you know cut you or whatever than it is to have you around and then they can go on to do it again because they got away with it. So that's why better to be armed and better armed to know how to again fight under all conditions than to be caught in a situation where you boy I wish I'd used that knife I had or boy I should have shot him anyway shouldn't I? Yeah you should have. So, things to think about. Anyway, we're just past the bottom. We're a little more past the bottom here. Don, I want to reinforce this again. Night vision technology, guys. The acceleration on the consumption of green screen is now, it appears to be geometric. The machine is, you know, the stuff is being eaten up and the stuff is showing up now in its place is not our first choice. So, Don, give everybody an update. Give them an idea of what's going on. You already have an example of the white screens now, right? Yes, I do. And guys, that's what they're trying to push us into. Well, whatever we can get in the green screen first, Don, tell us how we can get hold of you. What do you got and what's been going on? Well, let's do this. If you want to talk about night vision, my phone number is 231798458. Maybe you got a question, you can bring it up on the hour. That's 712-09. And then the conflict would be rather 95746. 4 and touch the pound sign and then star 6 will unmute you if you want to bring a question on to the air. The green screen is disappearing in first generation. We addressed this in January. The day after Al was made aware of it, we brought it to the air. But you guys, the light that comes out of a green screen device is barely perceptible, almost invisible to a piece of green screen night vision and to thermal. It is so faint that Where a flash in the distance of the human eye might not catch it, but white light, we've talked about this a number of times, the replacement for first generation goggles and gun sights and green screen, or rather gun sights, goggles, or binoculars is going to be a, so it'll amplify light pretty good. It'll work in low light, almost, or if not to the equivalent of first generation. If there's no moon in sky and you're 80 yards from a pine, a line of pines, you'll see the top of the pine trees. If there's no moon in the sky, you'll see the skyline at the top of the pine trees. You'll see things on the ground closer than the pine trees by about two to about 40 yards. But unless something has major contrast, the pine trees again, no light, just no moon, you'll probably be hard pressed. to make it out at the tree line. So again, it's hard many times. I'm trying to deal in a visual, in an audio medium with a visual. I'm trying to get that description out, but we'll see. Again, the problem from it is the white light that comes out of the device, that's easily, that would attract a human eye if it's just for the flash in the distance. We've addressed this a number of times. If you're looking for some of the last of the 4 power gun sights you guys. Now this gun sight is .308 capable. It'll live on top of your M1. If you're looking for some of the last of those, I'm pretty near not going to beat the price unless somebody gets so mad at me and they have a hundred of them on their table and they decide... At any rate, if you want to talk about that gun sight, give me a call. My number is 231968458. If you want to move up to... second-generation gun sight. So, it's capable. It'll thumbscrew down to your Weaver or your Picatinny rail, your 7'8", or your 1-inch rail as the first-generation gun sight. Well, you can put that in your mailbox for $48. My phone number is 231-796-8458. Again, 231-796-8458. Thank you, Mark. Again, guys, the system is... What it is is people are buying what we're talking about. The technology is moving. Part of this is at the retail end because it's absorbed as the market needs stock to put on the shelf. A percentage is direct purchase. You know, numbers going right from distributors, personnel, etcetera, that you're, again, looking for the product that fits their needs. Right now, it's green screen. They're trying to figure out how to make white screen work for them and not that many people, at least those that are in the know, that are military buyers are going to be excited about it. People who are just casually perusing their backyard trying to catch something in their site for entertainment purposes are not going to worry about white screen. But those in the know understand why we want to go with green screen and it has to do with your natural night vision. Distortion or destruction, it's not destroyed permanently. It's just part of the natural cycle of light exposed to your eye surface where you have element purple, you build it up during the day, you consume it at night. So why do you build night blind when you're moving from one environment to the other? Especially if you have white light and you go out, guys, it takes time for that material to ooze back into the areas for the collectors and open up the collectors so that you can see. That's what it does. So again, appreciate that Don. Also, by the way, the B-52 bomber turns 60! Happy birthday, Bob. Happy birthday, Clint Pickens. I told you you'd make it all the way to the secondary target. I didn't fly this bird all the way across the planet so I could drop her in the drink and get picked up by a trawler. Give me a target. Give me a target. Give me something. Major Kong. Anyway, the B-52 in the air. It was at the Vanguard Aviation Technology in the 1950s and it's still going strong today. Meet the B-52 Stratofortress. Like the multi-purpose C-130 and the high flying, super-flying U-2 which we just never get away from. You know, if you think about how many of the spy planes have we had in service that we've retired but the U-2 is still flying. Oh yeah. Also, products of the 1950s, the B-52 Heavy Bomber continues to show that old doesn't have to mean outdated, even in an era of rapid technological change. Well, yeah, but the cool thing is they also look forward to plug and play. So guys, remember that as upgrades were available, it was not difficult to run adapters to all of the systems, changing the configuration to the need of the electronic era that the plan is serving in. It should be noted, and I don't think they do in the article. It's just a short blurb article here. According to the company history on Boeing's website, pilots A. M. Tex Johnson and Guy Townsend on April 15, 1952 flew a B-52 prototype from Boeing Field in Seattle to Larson Air Force Base in Moses Lake, Washington, the aircraft in the photo. is a more modern B-52 cruising over the Pacific Ocean in July of 2010. Well, that's a heavily upgraded B-52, like I said. The original prototype was not even jet, guys. They did not have the engines complete pre-1950 for the original airframe test, and the original airframe was tested with turboprop engines. I know that. It's very impressive and that predates of course a lot of pictures. The other interesting thing is they went with separate, originally it would have had separate bubble canopies for the pilot and the co-pilot. It was really neat. It looked like a big old bug going down down range. They switched over to what had been the traditional cockpit configuration that most everybody expects. from modern aircraft that are larger and that it has the step nose, where you have the front cowling, etc. And one of the reasons for that that they don't talk about, number one, the bomber was going to be going a long, long, long, long, long, long, long, and then refuel and long, long way. Well, the problem with those little canopies, They're really neat, except they're like greenhouses. Place heat up quickly, fellows. And if you're a fighter pilot or a jet jock, that's not a problem. You do have air circulating in there, guys. And they do offer good observable performance. With regard to the aircraft, you can see everything around you. But the problem is, you're going to be in that position for hours and hours and hours. Oh, you get to jump out of the seat and somebody else can take your place. or at least a co-pilot can take over, but typically you want another person in the second seat no matter what pilot-co-pilot. And the idea there was that the general utility cockpit made more sense. So that was the most significant first step change. And there are a very few number of pictures of the turboprop test platform pre-1950, but they're out there. The most common is you'll see a series of wine drawings that were done by the engineers. And again, so that plane, while theoretically, it first flew in 1952 and its prototype formed in its jet prototype. It's in 1952 where the initial tests that were done with regard to short flight burned on the ground, the whole nine yards, that brought them to 1952. The plane was done, the engines weren't. So then they finally could confirm that the engines could be worked and operated accordingly. They did their first test flight, and the rest is history. Anyway, pretty cool, although wait a minute, wait, I want to state on that. Hold on here a second. Wait a minute. There's a girl, it's part of the show, she's wearing a t-shirt. That's terrible. Anyway, uh, doo doo doo. Well, it's a 2012 article, so sorry guys, it's 62 years old. I wondered about that. Wait a minute. So it's 62 years old. Okay, grandpa could have flown your plane, couldn't he? In fact, in one case they did. They actually have a... I just read a piece for one of the bomber crews, the guy that's flying the plane. Well, his dad flew the plane. Well, no. His grandpa flew the plane. Oops. Three generations. Yeah. Now, as long as he didn't scratch things in the hull, Fred Schmidlap was here. And then so was his dad. And so was his son. Oh, wait a minute. Oh, no. It'd be Fred Schmidlap. That's right. So something to think about there, especially with the S. So the B-52, 62 years old, by the way, guys. Just a little sub point that somebody came out of that. Hold on, here's yours. The real quick, Biden-Sun discharges from Navy after reported testing positive for cocaine. www.foxnews.com. This is dated October 16, 2014. It is apparently a Fox News. It's in the politics section. And it is not a very long article. Looks like it's about 10 short paragraphs, some of them a couple liners. So in reality, about six paragraphs if you were to properly condense it. Six pages back. Yeah, it's funny, the one picture they chose though is Biden's of course going, ahh! He's pointing at somebody out there in the crowd to make wave high. But the sun's right next to you when the sun's eyes are kind of like, ahh! Oh, dude. Which means, I don't know, I think he could have been using it that time. Because he had a little white line around his nose. I figure, yeah, he was doing it before he came out there with that. Anyway, so not a surprise, but the fact that they're even doing that, to me, that demonstrates a power struggle inside the system, guys. Because otherwise, they'd turn a blind eye so quick and make your head swim. My question, Al Gore, Special Hits, and who else? John McCain, too. When they were in Vietnam. Do you think? Could that have happened? Yeah, he didn't come back. Probably not, as the crew chief hands were a handful of nuts, bolts and screws. Yes. Trinkling him out of his hand, maybe 20 or 30 of them. I didn't think he'd be back in it. I was probably, and I made sure I did more than was necessary just to be safe. Well, Mark, I said, did you hold onto all your S2T manuals? Oh yeah, well actually I had more because remember when they changed them out, the manuals, they would, we used them to train a whole lot of people, I would save them. And unless there was a PXing requirement, because for some MOSs there are, then they would be tossed. Because the new ones come in, and the old ones, there's no accountability on the old ones. So we always saved them. The reason, like I said, they're more effective than a field manual, especially if you're interested in a particular MOS. If you're looking to be an infantryman or indirect fire crewman, threadhead, aviation, the SQT manuals provide everything. The only thing is they do include administrative requirements. which can include your obligations if you are again in any post or position where you have particular documents that need to be discharged and you know administrative activities that you're participant in. You're tested on that also. So it depends on the job. I mean like I said you've got 72 Lima, Clark typist. Okay well what does a Clark typist do? So guess how dry that particular SQT manual would be. Don't forget by the way, a clerk typist actually has a field issued typewriter with a combat package the whole nine yards. Most people don't know that. A nurse practitioner asked me to copy the level four containment in my SQT manuals. Shall I give it to her, the level four containment, what the Army tells us to do? Well, actually yes any of the basic policies with regard to step-by-step mop operations There's nothing that's going to change in a reality. We're gonna have to although you're gonna be fast going on with regard to decontamination Processes gonna have to follow through on those and the best way to do that to teach people is integrate a standard is to utilize existing measures that are already proven Army doesn't do anything in that with regard to that, but it doesn't have to they don't like spending money on us in the first place remember that So whatever they're doing, it's because they knew they had to do it in order to get the job done. That's the basic rule about NBC procedures, guys. Hey, you're just a number. They'd like to see you gone without any expense to them, but they got to kind of try and make the effort to keep you alive. So they actually have to produce something, at least a minimal standard, and that's what you're getting. Anyway, we're at the top. Now, do you remember for a message in place? That number is 2317968458. 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, both day and night. Doctor, your number for night is being closed for this hour, please. Hey, goggles or gun sights? Two three one seven nine six eight four five eight. Green screens are thermal. Two three one seven nine six eight four five eight. Thanks, march. God bless America. Looking for more ways to control your live 365 listening experience? Help your favorite DJs enhance their playlist by rating their tracks. It's easy. Simply click one of the thumbs at the top left of the album arc on the web-based player. Or, if you're using the mobile or desktop application, click the thumbs up or down at the bottom left of the player. This gives live 365 DJs a better idea of what their listeners want and helps great tunes get into your ears.