October 29, 2014
Evening Show
1h 8m
Complete
Radio Episode
2014
▶ Audio Player
Summary
Mark Koernke discussed firearm preparedness, ammunition selection, and tactical deployment strategies for civilians preparing for potential conflict. He emphasized the reliability of ball ammunition over specialty rounds, the importance of handgun proficiency and positioning multiple weapons on the body, and referenced historical examples including the Doolittle Raid. The show featured extended discussion of 1911 pistols and alternative platforms, followed by a segment on night vision technology with pricing and contact information. Callers contributed topics including Native American history and tribal warfare, Ebola response and government overreach, and equipment repair projects involving welding and tank armor.
- 1911 pistol
- ammunition
- ball ammunition
- handgun
- night vision
- preparedness
- tactical deployment
- firearm reliability
- body armor
- doolittle raid
- ebola
- government overreach
- constitution
- militia
- nevada
Transcript
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MainMilitary.com has a large selection of pistols and rifles suited for your needs. Are your local stores 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. I had a dream the other night that Well, I didn't understand. 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? Oh, 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 vanished in the mist from 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 him 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 if he called out from the grave? still the land of the free Everybody out there it is as we know Dark it's fall And it's acting like it outside. Don, what's it like up in your neck of the woods? What's jumping off the wall there? And what's the date today, sir? Hey, it's the 29th day of October, year of our Lord 2014. And it's a beautiful day if you're like the cold and the wet and the damp and, you know, stuff like that. But I guess I'm not complaining because it's fall here in Michigan. Again, the 29th day of October. That is a particular day, though, so... I'm just going to tell you, hey, the magazine goes in the magazine well, the index finger touches that slide release and now we've got one in the chamber. And man, that's an A1-conditioned gun and it is a weapon. So Wednesday in the perimeter is secure and you know I'm going to top off my magazine while I tell you there's plenty more where that came from, Mark. And for everybody out there, that means we can offer equal opportunity coercive force. Now we're looking at again a number of different weapons systems, but that 1911 we've had a little bit of a discussion here on and off about and cannons For as long as we've had the program up, but especially well, you know today talking about the idea get one It doesn't have to be the fanciest on the planet It does not have to be you know, notice we don't do that. I won't do that with a handgun especially There are too many weapons out there available that are very decent weapons In fact pretty much everything that out there you pull the trigger at point-and-click it works The big thing is flavor change, spoilers, whether or not it has mag wheels, whether or not it has been jacked up in the rear end or jacked up all the way around. Oh, wait a minute, it's like cars. Yeah, that's when I'm planning to point. Is it a Chevy? Yep, runs, Ford, runs most of the time. And then there's also Chrysler. And then there's all the Asian. Right, does it ride low? Yeah, Asian imports, etc., are included. And Euro. How do you like that? Just like sports cars. So, or any car for that matter. So, the idea is get one. The 1911's out there. Not everybody has been able to recover. I don't know what's going on with even Armscore, because Armscore is real good about kind of getting stuff back into the country. I believe that the number of wars out there have diverted the percentage of their production, so it's headed back towards the Middle East or up towards the Ukraine. Take your pick. And there are still a lot of places getting ready to shoot at each other, and they're buying up everything they can get hold of too. So, with everyone arming or rearming up or replacing, you know, war and inventory, etc., that may also be competing especially with the foreign industries, which are more limited than the United States in terms of, you know, potential production in that respect. We already have production lines up and on running that match, you know, any couple of them match whole production capacity for many of the major countries out there, guys, despite the fact that they are already an industrial nation in many cases. So that's another part of the factor that needs to be tied in here. Also, they have to tool change and change out for different weapons systems. If they commit to a certain firearm or type of firearm, they're typically going to stick with it for the sake of production costs, especially in setup. Once you get all the tooling in place, once you lock all the nuts, bolts, and secure all the fittings, make sure all the tamps are where they should be, and then lock them in and do a test run. Yep, she's working right. Well, you know what you do. You run the puppy till the wheel falls off. That's how it works, until the wheels literally fall off. I mean, things start to get tired and you have to slow down and figure out what's going on. It happens. But that's how it works. When you've got it running right, you run to make production and then some. In hand cannons, the 1911 is an excellent choice, but there are mimics as we know, and I've pointed out that JG Sales has the Super Model B post-war for $250. It's a 9mm inline straight magazine. There are spare bags available. The gun comes with two mags. It's a 9mm and it looks like a 1911. Operates like it, function, fit, trigger, hammer, the whole nine yards. Looks like a 1911. In fact, the average person if you saw it would swear it was. Even though it might not be in 45 ACP. Okay. It's a good firearm. But as I've pointed out, there's a lot of macros out there. You've got a lot of Tokeriffs. Don't think about changing your gun out because Mark mentioned another one. If you're thinking about buying more firearms, The Tokarev's have gone up in price from back when you bought them for $69 or $100 or $129 a piece. And so if you're matching it up, it's purely for matching up your inventory. You might think that, well, I bought a pallet ammo when Mark told me to. And I've only got one or two of the handguns, so why not buy two or three more to fit out the inventory? Well, that's possible, and that makes sense. So spending a little more money now on the handguns even though it's almost three times the cost of what it was, would be worth it. On the other hand, there are many other fine firearms out there and it's a personal choice issue. It's what fits you, what fits the wallet. I'm more concerned with the idea that you have something you can reach for if and or when there is a malfunction with your primary firearm. That's what the purpose of the handgun is. So that 1911 will serve, but if it's a .32, .380, .9mm, whatever, if you can carry more than one, if that's your personal choice thing, if you can carry it and you can get it in the battlefield on time and you use it, run with what you got. The big thing here is again, just to develop your skill in these weapon systems completely. That's all we ask. Just make sure that we develop them to the nth degree. The purpose behind that hand cannon is to get you to a heavier weapon. Always think that way. Oh, I got my handgun. Buck, buck, buck. Where's my rifle? Buck, buck, buck. Oh, it's over there. Buck, buck, buck. Now I got my rifle. Boom, boom, boom. Boom, boom, boom, boom, boom, boom, boom, boom, boom, boom. See how that works? Or, buck, buck, buck. I just got, you know, Vlad's rifle. There we go. That sounds good. I got bigger bullets and stuff going down range. Again, remember, it's degrees. Now, in some cases, maybe the handgun might be good for suppression fire under certain conditions. Maybe it's to save ammo. We've discussed that too. That's part of your tactic and, you know, concept for deployment. So that's a separate issue from, do you have one? And if you're going to commit to something by all the mags, by all the speed loaders, by all the ammunition, you can now. Just that common sense approach to it. Buy what you can, while you can, and just keep adding to the budget. Every time you have the ability to buy something, do it. Now, on that note, that 1911, of course, that you've got there is... a other than Colt model as far as it's not a Colt manufactured pistol but it's a pretty serviceable gun isn't it sir? Oh I can take all of the parts out of that Colt or that Springfield and interchange them right into here's a secret you guys my llama ha ha ha been the same gun for years and years I love my 1911 though that's a contract-built gun from Spain right to dimensions that's what I mean a contract-built gun I can use any part from any colt and it will work in my llama. Now, you might think, well gee, that's not a American gun. Well, you know, many times you've heard me say, God bless John Moses Browning, and you know, that 1911 built under contract that can swap out parts. If the parts swap out, it's just as good as that colt or that, well, that rock, or that, you know, other manufacturer. But I like that gun. I got that gun for $249, brand new. When used colts were going for $400, the ones that looked like they were beating 10 pegs in for a while, a brand new gun with a lifetime warranty for $249. I'm not complaining about that, you guys. Granted, it was 10 or 12 years ago now and I'm not bragging about that. It's just, you know, what the dollar is worth and what the demand is. We've addressed that before. But if you just have to have that Colt or that Springfield, well more power to you. But you know what? Purchasing power and money that can go in another direction is a good thing too, isn't it? I've never had anybody complain about my llama. Let's leave it at that. Now again, one of the things... There's a bunch of spare parts and pieces in the assembly's most important are magazines, guys. As I pointed out, 1911 has got... The 1911 pattern pistol has a hundred and... and four years worth, 103 years worth of stuff laying around. You can take a 1911 mag from World War I and drop it into that pistol and it locks in first time every time. We've done that many times where we had guys, World War I vets, of course we didn't squander those mags that we found, but we've had World War I vets that either sold or gave us 45 mags and a lot of other stuff from World War I that came from the trenches. And everything locked right in. You take a stainless AMT 45 hardballer, tell you what, plug it in, drop the mag in, close the slide, pop, pop, pop, pop, pop, pop, work first time every time. We didn't waste those 1917 dated rounds either that were in the magazine since World War I or maybe not far after because he did load the guns up and unload them at different times carrying the .45 through the 20s, 30s, 40s, 50s to see another war by the way since World War I and World War II. There was a Korean war thing in there somewhere. The fact of the matter is that 1911 mags especially, they are still aftermarket, less expensive out there, and they are more than serviceable enough. They do work. Many of them were actually built back 20-25 years ago and they've just been pulling them out of the greenhouse, so to speak, or the warehouse, or the cave, or the tunnel, wherever they've been stored, and they're putting them out on the market. Again, prices higher than it was, but still cheaper than the average bear so they aftermarket mags are a solution for a lot of the weapons out there that we're using right now and it needs to be something that you know i'm a list of things to do any wander through the gun show what do you see on the table they are before jeff cooper died in guns magazine i followed him a little bit now and then but i can find the i have it here the gun magazine guns When Jeff Cooper was still around he did the very back page on that and he just talked about different subjects Sometimes it was the whole of his page and a half was one subject. Sometimes it was ten You guys remember that one of the subjects he addressed a year or three before he died was he'd heard about a 1911 found in a grandfather's drawer that nobody knew about Apparently it hadn't been touched in like 45 years All springs compressed and the gun was functional hadn't been touched in 40 or 45 years in a drawer in a box Loaded all springs compressed. I have to assume Loaded because all springs were compressed now you mean everything was everything was in its set to fire mode, right? You can have all springs compressed and not have one in the chamber But again 40 or 45 years. That's a compliment. Again, God bless John Moses Browning. That's astounding, isn't it? Now, you could probably do that with your Glock because it won't rust. But just put one of your Glocks away for 40 years and just see if you take it out of the box and if it will perform. Boy, oh boy. That's astounding. That really is. I had to interrupt you with that one, Mark. Oh, no. That's exactly what we're trying to point out here. Many of the pieces of equipment we're working with, guys, are built to a different standard. An older typically is better. That's the sad part about it. But again, there's a lot of decent weapons systems that are newer, that are out there, that are again going to be found. Whatever you commit to, though, I guess the way to describe it is commit completely to it. If you're going to invest in a handgun, invest in its entirety. That way you've got what you need for the future. When things get cut off, supplies get cut off, you will still have what you need to continue to function. And you can pass the weapon on to another person down the road when the time comes. That's the whole purpose behind doing that. And it will continue to operate flawlessly. Another thing, and again I've talked about this many times, with regard to the handguns is where to station it. And that's a personal flavor choice thing, guys. One of the things I admitted to I would say probably in the upcoming you know the conflagration if I'm able to do it I would probably be carrying a couple of Glocks in addition whatever handgun I you know probably be my primary and The reason I say that is because with the light with as lightweight as a Glock is pilots Realistically could should be carrying more than one There's no reason not to look at it as a As a survival handgun, which is really what it was meant to be when it was built in the first place, it wasn't meant to be some super-duper, all-purpose firearm guys. The Glock was built for truck drivers, artillery men, radio operators, and people who aren't going to be shooting that often. If you don't think so, look at the original criteria for the construction of the Glock. Why was it made of plastic? That's right. The guy is more likely to carry it if it's lightweight enough that it won't burden him. You see how that works? Well, because of this, a single Glock really doesn't weigh any more than another fighting knife or a dagger or even less than a single magazine loaded at .308 or for that matter, a loaded 30 round 223 magazine. So as far as being able to carry other pistols, the Glock really lends itself to this. And it's just one of those things where down the road I'd have it in different stations because if you're crouched, if you're laying down, if you're in any way, shape, or form deployed in the field, and something comes upon you. In other words, sets upon you where you've got one chance to put it down, whatever the target, whoever it is. The idea behind this is that rather than having to scramble for it, you see this all the time where some guy has to scramble for his waste gun, or he's fumbling for another location to try and reach a weapon. Consider that by positioning three weapons in three different locations on the body, Then you don't have that travel time or that scramble time to get to something that can put a bullet in somebody. It cuts down the response time a lot. Yes, it does. And that's where practice, practice, practice comes in. Now let me give you an example. I don't like the movie. Pearl Harbor, of course, is post-World War II fakery drama. It's got phenomenal imagery, but it's got a whole bunch of gobbledygook in it that has no business being in there. However, one of the things that was really obviously missing is when they did the Do Little Raid. Because, guys, it wasn't that smarmy and everybody was just so cool. The guys were, of course, a throw-together series of crews that while they had worked together, you got to remember they also knew that they were going to probably be separated and they were being dropped into enemy territory. They were going to try not to do that. But it was pretty apparent to everybody that it was a highly probable one-way mission with no return. How many hours did they leave early? How many 130-some miles early? Remember when these men were preparing, everyone was allowed to pack their personal kit however they wanted. A lot of the men carried up to 3 or 5 handguns each. Did you see that in the movie? Notice how they had them all prim and squared away and they looked like the classic World War II bomber crewmen. read the accounts of the crews preparing. Read 30 seconds over Tokyo. Not watch the movie. Yeah, don't watch the movies. Read the books. The original accounts by the men who did it. One that was very notorious, the guy thought that, well, chocolate bars. He knew that everybody loved Hershey bars, right? So, what he did is, he loaded every pocket up and had extra pockets sewn into his gear, and he also carried a whole peripheral pile of handguns, right? Well, what he did is he stuck the chocolate bars all over the place. Temperature change. Okay. Things got warm. Body's 98.6. That's milk chocolate, guys. When he jumped out of the plane to abandon the aircraft, he literally squoze chocolate in all directions from the parachute harness when it dug in. The guys said it looked like something else was coming out of him. At first they were rather concerned until they realized what it was because it was coming out from more than one orifice. It literally just squozed. All those chocolate bars were soft and mushy. His logic was not just that they were survival food, which they would be, but also they didn't have the trade with the population on the ground. I don't know that they were going to strain the chocolate out of his clothes for him. to trade, but just a little case in point, all these little things would have been fantastic in a movie under themselves. But instead what they're trying to do is the Ra-Ra to get you to go to war over in the Middle East, so they did the Pearl Harbor thing with all the classic plastic, rather than the interesting real world things that should have been done, including the idea that they were anti-gun. Only for the war do I carry weapons. No, these guys rode home. One guy had a Model 27. Smith and Wesson, same gun Patton carried by the way. He also browning high powers, they scrounged those up wherever they could. 38 snub nose revolvers, extra little pocket guns of all kinds, baby brownings, little baby Colt 1906s, all kinds of stuff. The inventory was quite extensive considering how many crews there were. Now, this was packed all over their body along with ammunition, medical supplies, you name it, whatever they could think of that they could probably use when they got on the ground, it was on their person. That way it wouldn't get lost. So again, the real world would have been a lot more interesting, but it doesn't fit the anti-gun thing where, oh, we only used what the government authorized. Hell, one guy carried a sawed-off shotgun. Oh, well, that was bad, you know, considering it was post-1933, guys. He was going to war. Yeah, he was going to war, so he didn't care. Think about it. So just a case in point there that it's been done before, but it's not in the plastic versions of anything you're going to see out of Hollywood, which is generally anti-gun, even when they do a shoot-em-up movie. So this again is why I need to take it into consideration. With the air crewmen today, there'd be no reason not to carry three clocks. Why not? I still, same magazine, all 9mm, all the same mag, every gun taken the same mag, could be a shorty, could be a standard, and then whatever else. Personal choice thing. But there would be no reason not to. That way if something happens, guess what? You got another gun. Something malfunctions, you got another gun. Another one is really nice. It's nice, more is better as we say. Now the other thing here is ammunition and I know all the arguments for special, especially for our new listeners But I'm gonna point something out. I know the arguments about you know, this is the best super duper explodes to 100, you know 100 millimeter It is the victim literally is severed in two and it's like a buzzsaw as it cuts flesh and leaves organs screwing out the back and blah blah blah blah More important is that your weapon functions And the basic rule is ball ammunition works first time every time in the weapon that it was intended for. I would rather get a good solid hit where I have a gas-operated gun or a pistol than the possibility of that one-time malfunction where that PowerPoint may just not want to go up the feed ramp. Okay, it happens. Now, does that mean that everybody is going to listen to what you know, there are different schools? But I'm going to point out that we're looking at combat operations and a lot of you have probably not been fired at before or had people even used harsh language on you. Maybe if you've ever been able to point at that. If they have used harsh language, they probably didn't have a gun in their hand in the process most of the time, right? So the most important thing here is that you're all again you're able to focus on getting the sights lined up keeping everything where it's supposed to be putting the trigger to proper station separate you know releasing the sear striking the you know moving the hammer forward striking the primer and activating the round and doing it all in such a way that it stays on target and hits something if you have a malfunction it really messes with your head Now, it doesn't mean you're not going to train for malfunctions. We all plan on that. But, remember that we're looking at fielding a massive army, in many cases, without the benefit of being able to go to the range and be a competition pistol shooter and, you know, get to be as good as that 11-year-old that presently is on YouTube that every adult would wish he could shoot like. That little girl is 11 years old. Okay, well, that's because dad has a lot of money. and the sponsors have a lot of money and she debts all she does kids. Well you don't do that. Now you're going to build up you know cumulative knowledge and you are going to get better if you are doing what you're supposed to be doing in the range which you should be we told you range time is good time but no matter how we look at it a big chunk of the people we're bringing to the table have no combat experience and are going to be building it OJT. The fewer things that interfere with their focus on your training means it's most likely they will survive their first encounter. You see how that works? Now, there's a basic rule. This is actually, if you find a copy of the book, I have one that's old, it's called 999 Survived. And it discusses two subjects about survivability. It's also in human management. They figured that if an individual could survive the first 11 to 19 engagements depending upon the type of action, that they would probably survive the war because they'd built up the cumulative knowledge and experience with regard to end results. What happens when you do this, this, and this? Well, this happens. And this is true of the recent, again, I'm giving you a broad study because the number varied depending on what you were doing. Fighter pilots gained with flight time and combat engagements. Oh yes. Naval gunnery. Men did a better job once they were settled into the job. But it took so many actions because it's one thing to watch it on film. It's another thing to have planes that are able to sink your ship and stuff flying around and other guns going off next to you and big guns trying to shoot down other aircraft. Well all that stuff flying around does create a little bit of an adrenaline rush. But it still comes down to a certain point you settle into the job and you get used to the job. Infantry, it's the same way. Tank crews, same way. Artillery, same way. Even with medics. The idea of you're not shooting back, your job is to go out there while everybody is trying to kill each other, and you're going to bring back the ones they didn't kill. How's that sound? You mean when it's all over, right? Oh, no, no. We go out there while everybody is getting shot at, typically. So that's how it works, Carmen. And policy and philosophy has changed over the years. Remember, for the most part, the idea was that they would move the battlefield or suppress the battlefield to get the wounded out, and the Doc's job was to do that, along with his litter bearers, who were whoever, depending on the situation. Well, they weren't in any better position, and in fact, typically worse, because a lot of the guys stuck to the official program wearing that big red cross, which as he used to say was that shoot-me-mark. The Japanese preferred it that way. So, again, the process of developing skill, the fewer things that can go wrong, the more the individual can focus on what you've trained them to do. And they will perfect their expertise and their discipline in the process. So ball ammunition is still your best choice for most of what you're doing. Also, remember, everybody's wearing body armor. Everybody's wearing some kind of armor. A lot of people are anyway. So you want something that's going to punch through stuff. Keep that in mind and it doesn't have to be dead center again You're trying to go for groin our groin shots and again moving the motor section, you know into instability Waller's armor down there. It's got to be flexible bullets follow the path of least resistance as long as they hold together one piece The majority of their mass will continue to project the energy accordingly Even if it's flattened out or deflecting that you know the percentage of the bullet It has a tendency to go somewhere and it's going to find a soft chewy spot and continue to do damage. Jacket rounds, soft point and hollow point, don't do that. Typically they'll flatten out and because of the very nature of how they initiate their energy against the target, chances are that's where they stop. So those are the considerations. We're looking at a battlefield situation, not home invasion. It doesn't mean we won't use all the other rounds that are out there, but we also have to be careful about how we use them. And as people gain experience, perhaps then we will change their available inventory. But in phase one, always take into consideration the level of experience of the shooter that's being taken into combat. Minimize his turnaround time to get him back. Minimize all complications so that he can focus on the training that you gave him. We don't want to lose our students. We're past the bottom of the hour, Don, forgive me. And guys, in order for us to fight in this environment, we need night vision technology. The enemy has set a date for actions out west. We're looking at less than 71 days. In fact, now we're looking at midnight. We're looking at 70 days. And the bad guys want to try and get away with something in Nevada. Obviously, they've already set the clock in motion. We're going to be working at night, we're going to be repairing, moving, maintaining, fighting, stripping enemy dead, we're going to be doing it at night. We need to be able to see to do that. Don, you have night vision technology. What do you have? What changes are taking place? What's been happening the last couple days? And how can we get a hold of you, sir? Go ahead, please. Well, we've got goggles and gun sights and green screens and thermal, but the green screen is disappearing in first generation. We've addressed this since January, you guys. tactical thing. That's why we bring it to your attention. White light on your face isn't a good thing at night. In particular, if someone's looking for you or searching for you or panning the area that you're in with a piece of night vision, let alone that white light just attracts the naked eye. That's what will replace green screen and first generation white light coming out of your night vision device, you guys. We've addressed this and we're suffering this problem to the point now that we have the fourth gen, we have the four power first generation gun sight. That's my entry level piece in first generation now. I don't have a green screen viewer anymore. That four power gun sight, I can put it in your mailbox for $390. Now the manufacturer on a good day for the salesman, he's going to want $479 for it. He's going to want delivery above that. If he's already sold one or two that week, he might want $449 for it, but he's going to get delivery too, which will put it a lot closer to that $479. I'll put it in your mailbox for $390 and that includes delivery and everything that the manufacturer is going to put in the box if he was to sell it to you at his price. It's a four power gun sight. It is a purpose built gun sight. In fact, it'll live on top of your M1. My phone number is 23179684. Again, 2, 3, 1, 7, 9, 6, 8, 4, 5, 8. We can go up to a second generation viewer. Now this is a very consistent piece. It's 2.8 power. Again, the consistency is just tremendous in this piece. From one to the next to the next is just, it's no change, no change. It doesn't brag about for an entry level piece. And again, this is my entry-level piece in second generation. It's a viewer. The manufacturer says you can use it for a gun sight if you combine it with other gun sights like your daylight sight. Now that can get a little awkward and if you go to atncorp.com you can see what I mean. If you put this device, which is about eight inches long, behind your daylight scope, well that radically changes where your eye relief should be. You know, your eye relief is somewhere toward the end of your stock. That's a little weird. If you put it in front of your daylight scope, well, you've got the green light on your face because you'd need a pretty long boot to cover that up, conceal that. We've talked about the right tool for the right job. If we move up from that to a true gun sight, again, this one is .308 capable in second generation, I can put that right in your mailbox for $1,245. Now the manufacturer is going to want at least $13.99. That's what they want for that. My phone number is 231-796-8458. Again, 231-796-8458. When I tell you a price on the air, you guys, that includes delivery. When I give you my phone number, As I've told you before, many times you call the guy with the 800 number, then you call me, you probably ain't gonna call him back. And sometimes we strive to practice proper English, but probably you ain't gonna call him back. My phone number is 2317-96-8458. I think I heard the bells, Mark. We might have a caller, right? I know I heard a number of things there. Maybe we've got someone waiting. Let's just, you know... And do we have a caller? star six will unmute you if not I got a pretty funny I'm sorry oh hey Mark and you know I don't want to get off the topic of you where you're talking about but uh in Michigan or in the Midwest they had a thing called the Indians I'm talking about the Indians now in the early days had a god called hokey panokey or something how do you spell that? hokey Okie dokie. You look up on YouTube and stuff in Indian history and all you get is how noble they were and how we destroyed their life and all this stuff. We only had war mallets for crushing your skull. Paradise was so quiet. Firearms made it a noisy paradise. But before when they were just splitting people's throats or when they were clubbing them to death with war mallets. It was a much quieter place. Although the sound of a human skull being crushed by about a 3 pound rock on the end of about a 2 foot piece of wood is rather frightening and not very quiet. Let's not forget those warm alice where you basically made that round ball area and then they put that bird, talon, hook. right there in the middle of the ball on the end of a levered handle that basically came around like in a question mark so you had that levered action when you hit and it was designed to pierce the skull to the brain and crush the brain and work to help fracture the skull as the mallet hit. It was one shot kill technology. Yeah, it was the magnum of the day. Yeah, otherwise, you know, there's a couple of decent movies. I think the one is the Black Robe. With the, the, the, the Jesuit coming up into this part of the, part of North America back during the, the Voyager era. And this the beginning of it is just funnier in hell because he's thinking he's going out to help the natives and save them and the whole Conversation on the boat is a debate between the two Indians that he's hired on when when or what whether or when they're going to kill him And they're smiling at him all the while They're talking about you know how to be bad luck or you know bad juju, you know and all you know They know and so the in their debate they debate so long that they get to their their destination without killing him Because it's back and forth. No, you can't do that. It would be bad luck. Somebody probably would find out. I mean, come on. And again, besides, the great spirit will be watching. That kind of thing. Blah, blah, blah, blah, blah. And of course, for stealing what Little E had, which basically included the clothes on his back. Years ago, I was going through some libraries, the university, and I pulled some books off the shelf. They were old. I can't remember what they were but I started reading these accounts. What they did to the women and children of the settlers when they got them. It just turned my stomach man. The more common... The truth or not. Well they would do it to each other because let's point out for instance, Jamestown, right? Read the accounts of Jamestown. Now, remember that way before we got there, they already had disease sweeping through different parts of North America at different times. And many reasons for the winter quartering on the coast was to try and survive the plagues. Now, this is before the white man got there. But you might also recall that there were a couple of locations they looked at and in fact they eventually were settled because one tribe had annihilated the other. Now, they didn't just attack them and have a little war. They literally annihilated them. Their area where they had their crops and everything, even their buildings, was virtually laid waste and bare. because there was nobody there to occupy and they don't know the way you know they didn't you know well here's what gets me about this is that they would have the tribal wars this happened several times and there it's heavily recorded that they would kill the entire tribe it literally exterminate them every man woman and child about indian tribe versus indian tribe but they didn't occupy This is the one part I pointed out years ago to somebody that said, did you notice the report here? The tribe went in, killed off this other tribe, and then went back to where they came from, and the whole area was left barren. There wasn't like, well, we got a new colony, let's drop everybody in here and take over the place that we just killed everybody at. No, that wasn't the reason for the attack. They didn't they just it was well, you know, Oki said we need to make some pain I'm giving you a big hint there. First of all, I'll tell you what Oki was Oki is a god of pain Now here's the logic life is pain birth is pain and because life is pain are the god Oki tells us that if we inflict more pain on somebody else and And extract that pain from them that we will take pain away from us Well, because the other tribe isn't doing dust what we're doing to them, right? Because they lost though we put lots of paint on them and so basically torture was like Saturday night television I mean they didn't have TV, but they did have torture and As is pointed out by several of the people who were the Jesuits recorded because Jesuits were tape recorders They were the spy network of the Catholic Church. They still are But the Jesuits then, they were artists so they could record everything that they saw physically and they were also authors. They were taught to report in a who, what, where, when fashion. And there are several descriptions of both the Jesuit and also survivors, in other words, when prisoners were taken in the Ohio Valley. The big thing was to take all the prisoners to like a torture meetup at Niagara Falls. Now what they would do is drag the extra women and kids along so that at night what they did with the women is they would strip them, tie them to a tree, they would take the arrow tips off of the arrows, and they'd spend the evening shooting the woman with blunt tips. And the reason they did that is because if they hit the woman in right body parts, it was very painful and she would scream a lot. Well that screaming would satiate okey because okey needed pain pain came from the world and man was filled with pain and if you could find the right way to bring pain out okey would be satisfied And so the idea was every so many miles, however, they trotted across the Ohio, they would eventually work their way to Niagara Falls. Now, of course, there was a trail of bodies on the way because they would kill many of those people, you know, ripping their entrails, cutting their entrails at the base, cutting a small slot. Tying the base of the small intestine to a tree and then taking torches and running the person around the tree until all of their intestines were wrapped around the tree pulled out through that hole cut at the bottom of their by their by their groin Yeah, there's another fun one Anyway, but they got to Niagara Falls as was witnessed by the Jesuit said more than one of these super spree occasions Apparently there were dates when you wanted to meet I would assume high moon or whatever They would take a bone knife or a stone knife. They were not supposed to use a metal knife. They would carve a square, three parts of a square on your back starting from your belt line on the left. They would go all the way up to the top. Right along the top of your collarbone they would cut across to the other side and then cut down. Then they would take talons from critters or claws or pieces of stick and they would run them through with rawhide on one end and use them like a needle to push through the corners of your skin that they would pull back. Then they would take the people over to the edge of the falls and they would tie cordage, preferably rawhide, strands to the two talons, one on each corner, after they cut deep into your skin, remember, then they would push you off, and the goal was to see if they could strip the flesh off your back from your neck all the way to your heels. As they pushed you over the fall screaming. I don't know what you'd be screaming for more. The idea of falling over that height or the horrible pain of being half stripped alive while you were busy falling to your death. Oh, Saturday Night Television with Oki is a lot of fun, but Oki was satiated. Now, the Jesuits reported that if you're familiar with Niagara Falls, there's the Whirlpool downstream. During the high season, that whirlpool was virtually full of bodies. Virtually hundreds and hundreds, like caribou drowning in a river. Only it was just clogged with human bodies from the festivities of the tribes. Oh, the fun of paradise and why we miss it so much. So what years were those at that, those, these monks? Oh, that was back through to the, well, that's through to the 1600s and 1700s. The 1700s, you start to see a more extensive colonization, but that doesn't mean that we had control. Example is the Ohio, remember, was originally called the West. That's why we're known as the Midwest, where we are here in Michigan, where we're south of Territorial Road, right? Well, that territorial border didn't exist until the early 1800s. And what territorial road is, which runs from Lake Huron, actually runs from what you call the Detroit River, but it's from the lower end of Lake Huron and Lake St. Clair, all the way over to Lake Michigan, and that was the border between the Indian territories and the semi-settled lands. And the Huron-Indian is well-stir-rated. The Huron Indians are still rated deep into settled territory. as opposed to the other elements of the Huron Nation, worked all up and down the Erie into the Ohio. And they wiped out a couple of tribes, actually, which are well documented in taking more real estate, even right up until the 1800s, the early 1800s. Does Okiha have any new Okihoma? Well, no, but Oklahoma. Oklahoma. Oklahoma. Oklahoma. Oklahoma. Oklahoma. Oklahoma. Oklahoma. Oklahoma. Oklahoma. Oklahoma. Oklahoma. Oklahoma. Oklahoma. Oklahoma. Oklahoma. Oklahoma. Oklahoma. Oklahoma. Oklahoma. Oklahoma. Oklahoma. Oklahoma. Oklahoma. Oklahoma. Oklahoma. Oklahoma. Oklahoma. Oklahoma. Oklahoma. Oklahoma. Oklahoma. Oklahoma. Oklahoma. Oklahoma. Oklahoma. Oklahoma. Oklahoma. Oklahoma. Oklahoma. Oklahoma. Oklahoma. Oklahoma. Oklahoma. Oklahoma. Oklahoma. Oklahoma. Oklahoma. Oklahoma. Oklahoma. Oklahoma. Oklahoma. Oklahoma. Oklahoma. Oklahoma. Oklahoma. Oklahoma. Oklahoma. Oklahoma. Oklahoma. Oklahoma. Oklahoma. Oklahoma. Oklahoma. Oklahoma. Oklahoma. Oklahoma. Oklahoma. Oklahoma. Oklahoma. Oklahoma. Oklahoma. Oklahoma. Oklahoma. Oklahoma. Oklahoma. Oklahoma. Oklahoma. Oklahoma. Oklahoma. Oklahoma. Oklahoma. Oklahoma. Oklahoma. Oklahoma. Oklahoma. Oklahoma. Oklahoma. Oklahoma. Oklahoma. Oklahoma. Oklahoma. Oklahoma. Oklahoma. Oklahoma. Oklahoma. Oklahoma. Oklahoma. Oklahoma. Oklahoma. Oklahoma. Oklahoma. Oklahoma. Oklahoma. Oklahoma. Oklahoma. Oklahoma. Oklahoma. Oklahoma. Oklahoma We're about to get to the top of the hour, but I don't mean to change the subject. Would you please tell us about that little green fellow with the pointy ears and his name starts with a Y? Oh yeah, interestingly enough. I was going to pull this up again for everybody. Inside the masons and in the occult circles, guys, just as a little stub note, when you think one thing is something when in reality it's so cute. Yeah, he's so cute. And by the way, he's leading the Jedi. Well, Yoda, the term Yoda, and in fact even the description of the character that you see in Star Wars, I think he knew exactly what he was doing because, interestingly enough, that is the centerpiece of the occult with regard to the Ringknockers, the master or grandmaster Yoda. A small, short individual, large ears, and greenish of color, you know, that of course wore a master's robe. And his name was Yoda! Ha, ha, ha! We need to go around as Halloween characters and dress up like Jedi. Watch your children, watch your children, boys. Exactly. We haven't brought this to the hour in a good long time. How thick are those damnable Harry Potter books? And how many of them? Four or five or seven of them? A thousand pages each if they're five. How many of your children have read every one of them but haven't read the Bible once? A lot. A lot. Far too many. Not here. And even the attitude there is that arrogance thing where everybody, you know, where the average person is a muddle. As in like mud people, as in we're like just plain peasants. Yeah. Yes. Absolutely. Pay attention to construction and the agenda. Here's one of the things, and by the way, tying this in, okay you've got, and Henry posted this on From the Trenches, saying she will not be bullied, nurse fights, main Ebola quarantine. Now, I would point out again, guys, it's like the other story that comes up right behind this, by the way, just a little farther back. I just read it here. Maybe somebody had it in Facebook here a minute ago. It turns out that the doctor, remember in New York when he was first challenged about, hey, it looks like he – oh, it's right here. Here it is. Ebola doctor lied about NYC travels. It turns out that when this doctor against borders, when they first questioned him, he claimed that he didn't go anywhere, that he self-quarantined. Turns out that he told them, oh no, no, no, that he had isolated himself in his Harlem apartment. He didn't go anywhere. Now guys, he knows the ramifications and this is when he was showing symptoms, right? So why lie about it? On the other hand, like all the rest of these anti-American and internationalist parasites at Allfield, they're above all of you and me, that they're higher people. They are usually on some kind of drug. Anyway, the interesting thing is remember spreading the disease to kill more of us in their mind is a good thing. So by lying he bought time for the disease to spread if he was fortunate enough to get it spread around to all of us. Every one of these characters have said the same thing. It's like these nurses. They know what they've done. They know what the conditions are. I believe, number one, they're pushing this to try and override our liberties. We know this. The Constitution and the Bill of Rights are under attack. So these characters, who really don't have much of an interest in the Constitution and the Bill of Rights at all, they're being put forward for this. Because it turns out the one nurse that was what, in New Jersey? Well, they finally found out she really does work for the CDC. Well, duh. So again, what we're seeing is a planned mapped out attack on several tiers. Another thing I'd point out about this Ebola scam thing. Again guys, all of this stuff is the farthest western point for any of this has been Texas. And Texas is the invasion route and the epicenter for an invasion route into this country to cut it in two. Because Texas is the big piece of real estate that has to be, that again is standing in the way. Other than that, everything has been east of the Mississippi. Have you noticed this? Everything has been to focus the Ebola scam, the Ebola attack east of the Mississippi. West of the Mississippi is the property attack and the land attack by the Chinese. Take a look at it. Don't focus. In other words, fog your eyes a little bit to look at motion. Go ahead, caller, jump in there. Yeah, this is Mike from Ohio. It's just weren't enough you got ahold of Captain Monahan about the welder. I did, but we had another person pass away and he's supposed to get back with me today. I haven't seen him for a day. I know that in this time it was a family member, not mine, one of his. So he should be back with us tonight because the funeral was today. So, about the time, obviously we don't schedule these deaths, it popped in and it was the last surviving member, I think, on his mother's side of his family. Again, it happens. Again, I have to double check, but I'm pretty sure it's what he said. It was the last surviving member on his mother's side of the family. So, he should be all set with that. I'm sorry because we're ready to get ready Wednesday, Monday, but this thing popped up and he knew he'd be having a travel. So, I'll get back with you. I didn't forget you. Okay, well. I know it's a clock ticking, but he's got the best transport for it. That's the thing. And we've got to be able to probably winch it, is what we're going to do. We'll just pledge it up onto the trailer. Yeah, you can get it and hopefully you get it up and running and use it for for what's coming so oh It'll be put to use actually I guess said I've got rods if it takes the older style rods I got buckets of those things virtually brand new from the government liquidation sale Years ago. I bought a pallet of mixed metals mixed stuff industrial stuff and I didn't even look that closely and I ended up with like three quarters of a pallet of welding rods for Miller you know for the Miller welders and In fact, it was made by them every size rod most of them were like one of the welders said man This is some exotic stuff. I mean it's up the scale and down the scale None of the middle stuff. It was either really really pricey or yeah, I run in the middle easy quick welding, you know spot-spot boom done So, I've got some rod to experiment with or use. The higher end stuff is for repairing tank armor. It's comparable when it's welded, it's welded. And tempering, it can be tempered on site and bumped and bump face hardened. That's what it was designed for. So, we want to use it. We've got tanks, and we have stuff we'd like to fix holes on. Years ago, I was able to move. I had five Stewart tank holes here that were just north of us. and almost had the rest of the parts. Unfortunately, the tax people grabbed all the stuff off this guy's property at a massive junkyard. But we got the five Stuart hulls out of there. They're heavily chopped already because they were cut for scrap. You know, they were being cut up for scrap. But the front glacis plate and the front hole plates, which are the thickest, which are homogeneous armor plate, that doesn't go bad. And what we're planning on doing is we were going to be cutting more of that and we can face or replace armor if there are holes in pieces of equipment, we can patch them. You do an over-scab and you just weld out another three inches of armor plate over the hole. That will of course beef up the armor around and replace the armor that's been perforated depending on the type of hit that it takes. But it's a small caliber, something really big, nowadays turns into a big canole. Well, it's more like a big rose pedal, you know, open. But they are at the top, but before we go, I gotta say, you know, we've got Ebola in America and there's Ebola in Africa, and if Ebola ever gets to Iran, I guess they'll just have to get themselves an Ayatollah of Ebola. We have a star! Yeah, the Ayatollah of Ebola. My man. I know, I couldn't read this. I stole that from Arizona. I was going to say I'm going to have some AK Potschitz for sale here pretty soon. I'll just have to pull them out of the garage. I'll probably have about 100 or so to get rid of. About AK mags? No, not mags, mag pouches. Oh, mag pouches. Well, you let people know. I'll tell you what, call back in tomorrow and let people know what you want for them. Remember, there's a lot of people listening that might have an interest. We've got to go for now, guys. Thank you, sir. We are at the top. Everybody out there listening, guys, stay frosty, stay focused, replace what you've used, add to your inventory. We've got a date coming up, the bad guys have said it, we've got to make sure we're ready for it. Don, your number for night vision? Hey, 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, both day and night. Rock, keep him in the class. We've been in town so hard to wish you God's enemy showed up and then go find him. Now, to do that, we'll track him at night with your night vision. How can we hold you? Give the number out twice, please, and closer. Hey, goggles or gun sights? Green screens or thermal? My phone number is 231-796-8458. Binoculars, binoculars, or gun sight? 2317968458 Thank you, Mark. God bless you. God bless America. Whether or not you believe in karma, consider this. VIP membership supports your favorite broadcasters and artists, and it also means great benefits right back at ya. You get ultimate access to thousands of commercial-free, live 365 stations in hundreds of genres, and you can also take your music and talk stations wherever you go with your mobile device. So be it radio karma or not, becoming a VIP member is simply a great choice. For a free five day VIP trial, go to live365.com slash register. Okay forest animals, kids are coming to the forest and it's up to us to make their visit a good one. Sparrow, have you practiced the most popular bird songs for the year? Of course! Catchy I like it river. How's the temperature refreshing 52 degrees man? I love it turtle. He's not here yet, man He's late every morning Okay, swirl the forest has been preparing just for you to learn more about cool things to do in the forest visit discover the forest org Brought to you by the US Forest Service and the add council You are a waste. A loser. Everyone hates you. Why don't you just stay in your car and keep driving? I'm serious. 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