June 9, 2015
Evening Show
59m
Complete
Radio Episode
2015
▶ Audio Player
Summary
Mark Koernke discussed battery types and power management for emergency communications, covering rechargeable versus alkaline batteries and their practical applications. Caller Darrell reported on preparations for a threatened confrontation on Saturday night and provided contact information for those wanting to help. The show then shifted to extensive discussion of preparedness topics including muzzleloading firearms, animal antibiotics for human use, medical supplies and field trauma treatment, with detailed guidance on wound management, antibiotic options, and building emergency medical kits.
- batteries
- alkaline
- rechargeable
- communications
- muzzleloading
- flintlock
- animal antibiotics
- tetracycline
- penicillin
- trauma medicine
- wound treatment
- tourniquets
- preparedness
- crawford county
- liberty tree radio
Transcript
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Live 365. 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 what you will 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 torture 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 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? Good afternoon ladies and gentlemen. This is the second hour of the afternoon intelligence report time our currency One day closer to victory for all of our brothers and sisters both on and behind the lines in occupied territories west, southwest, central, and north. 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 based stations and ultra-met 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, headed to Louisiana, Mississippi, Texas, Oklahoma, big chunk of Nebraska, a whole bunch of Wyoming to include both 3rd, 5th, 5th, and our friends in the recall state of Colorado. Waving the left coast where we have the great state of Jefferson, we turn back to the east. sweep across the plains, leap over the burgeoning banks of the Mississippi, and land in the Smoky slash the Blue Ridge, where the restaurant crews, grandma teams, OK teams, and the Ma Bell Grammar Consortium of Retired Telecommunications Workers bring us the golden spike. Many hands make for light work a million Pettico Junction operators, the ability to continue to function when everything else is offline, day's date. It is the 9th of June. It is Tuesday. It is the seventh year of open Fabian socialist and Soviet Socialist Occupation of America with a K-2 and 2015 Old Earth Calendar. Boy, I haven't done that all year, have I? It tells you something. There's something in order for me to do that. 2015 Old Earth Calendar or 2015 Year of Battle. And for all of our friends out there, it is Communications Tuesday. A quick reminder, radio. Single technologies, whatever you have requires power. Make sure that you've got batteries to match up what you've got. Let me give you a little case and point here about some interesting research we kind of did in the field of all of our travels this last couple of months. The rechargeable batteries that come with most of the ping-pong and gong-bo and bing-jay and you know Beijing and Bing-bao and you know hockey puck and you know ping-pong ball and Midland and also Uniden. The batteries are minimal cost obviously i'm sure they want the least expensive that they could they will charge well they do charge up quickly uh... but their duration so far have been a couple of hours to three or four hours it depends on again when i do you have the discipline to shut them off you just leave running now what is interesting is with alkali batteries two three days running time now granted not non-stop but running them for six seven eight hours at a time on the road or even in all that location Then, shutting them off and letting them set. Then, starting them up the next day and going. We're heading down the road again, turning them on and they start right back up. We've got plenty of energy and away you go. These, by the way, were mid-grade, nothing deep cell, energizer, bunny batteries. In addition to that, another set I used, the Dollar Store Red Solvania, which are of course the iron core batteries. In both cases, they ran about the same distance with the same set of batteries. In fact, the one set of energizers are still on the radio that are right behind me to my left. And they still work. Everything powers up. They're running fine. And I'm not moving them out. I want to see how long they last. So on the one hand, the rechargeables, needless to say, because power comes from the sky or from the crank phone or from the crank radio, depending on how you've got it set up with the charger. And some of you do, some of you don't. Remember that a pile of alkali batteries gets you on the table. You can go to the dollar store or go to the Distress merchandise companies that are out there and find some decent prices on AA and AAA batteries along with 9 volts. I talked about 9 volts this morning real quick. The 9 volt battery is a fascinating tool. that came out of the transistor, you know, sunrise, the very early days of transistor radio with it, came a new battery, the 9 volt battery. Now, the 9 volt battery does offer a lot of cool options with regard to energy. Government, of course, immediately took it into application for military radios. and later on for LED lighting when it first came out. They were looking for something that would give more power, more time in the field for the weight shifted and lifted, especially cargo and supply kids. And 9-volt battery with a snap-on male-female clip, just like every 9-volt with an LED infrared pack on top. A little iron rod that got pushed in the ground and you had yourself a landing zone. I have several of these packets. One of the guys picked these up. In fact, JRH Enterprises had these for a really good price years ago. I think I got the very last one he had at the time. And I don't know if JRH still has them. He may. But either way, it worked pretty well and did a good job overall of keeping up the inventory for as long as it could. Now the neat thing is, these are again, just snap right on a 9 volt and they're good for hours and hours and hours, which makes them, as I said before, useful tools for instance for illumination and range finding if you're fighting at night. You can pre-position these things and appointment somebody and go out and recover them later on. Should everything be secure and there's no contact or after you've won the battle and the bad guys are dead and while you're recovering everything else, one person's job, remember, snag those IR illuminators, unplug them and save the batteries. Okay, stretch out the life. Now, there are rechargeable 9-volt batteries. You don't know if most of you knew that. But there are both military and civilian 9 volt rechargeables. And I have found that they're pretty durable. They are a little different than just the square or rectangular form of the normal 9 volt. And that they're typically in a tapered cup. The base on the opposite end from where the plugs are is usually a little narrower. And they work well. I've got a bunch of them, I think maybe five or six that I picked up here about six months ago. I got my accident with a resale shop here in town. And they're good. They're military, actually. They're OD Green. And they've got a mil-spec number on them, the whole nine yards. Now, whatever they were designed for, I don't know. I mean, it could be any number of hundreds of different electronic devices. Government carries and has laying around, especially the War Department. So, again, if you run into them, even with the 9 volts, you will find that if you look inside your charger systems, oh look, there's a setup for plugging in to sometimes four 9 volt batteries and it's in the side thing. It's like, yeah, it's part of your charger system. Well, you didn't notice that? Oh, go take a look. You're ever ready. All your different name brand chargers typically accommodate for D-cell, C-cell, AA, AAA, and 9 volt batteries. So if you have a 9 volt that needs to be recharged and rechargeable, there you go. Now, don't remember, even with your alkali, and again, pay attention to what I'm saying here. Recharging an alkali battery with a solar charger is possible, but you have to pay attention because you can cook the unit. But we've done this many times as an experiment. I take these little single solar cells that are used for the lighting and I've timed them. I'll give them a date, plug in an alkali battery that's almost dead. In fact, it doesn't do anything in any other machine. Put it into one of these little AA battery holders for a solar light, put it outside, and I'll get 7 to 9 more days out of a dead battery. Now granted, probably every time it's charging, it's not going to take as deep a charge. But 9 days worth of power out of a dead battery is kind of nice. So, as I've said many times, what you need to do is come up with a rating system. And the way to do that is with, well, you can use cookie trays. You know, right now the big thing is all the meats and a lot of the other stuff is coming in these red roof, blue roof, or green clear roof, you know, Tupperware type trays that are throw away. Well, the neat thing is that they're color coded. So save up some purple ones, some green ones, and some red ones. and initially keep your brand new ones in say the red back. I would say do purple for you know on their way out you know second phase after you've used them up but they're not giving enough energy or juice for what you're using in the equipment put them into the purple tray and then from there run them down into you know either recharging with a solar power you know solar cell system careful they take that sheet on a leak or bleed and then final delegation you know final The resting place is for illumination with the LED lighting. Again, it's kind of like a guy, one person's job on a farm or a ranch, whatever it would be, light control. Kind of like in a town, you have the guys who used to go out and light the oil or the candle or the gas lamps. Oh yeah, that was a job, remember? It was one of many tasks, the only person that did the guy did for a living because he had to move around quickly, had an area of responsibility and he had to get stuff done, but it was one of an aside job that a guy get paid for. See how that works? Go ahead fellas. This is Darrell. Hey, Jim and Adair, what's going on? Well, I'll give you a little update on my situation here. Yesterday I called in about the death threat that Mike and I had received. and we're getting all kinds of support and offers for help here for Saturday night. That's another thing that radios and communications, especially this type of radio system, works out by being able to put the information out on the air and then people that are listening then can respond. So far it's working. We have an estimated about 10 soldiers going to be here on Saturday night when when the festivities are supposed to happen if they do happen. Don't forget to have the boomboxes going with you know the let's see You got to have that crease clearwater revival run through the jungle going. Oh, we thought we could do better now. We're going to open the show up with Ahab to A-Rab. I haven't heard that anywhere in a while, but I have usually to say it's not politically correct, so I guarantee we won't hear it on radio any more around here. Usually every once in a while I hear it on Dr. Demento. That's the last place they had some kind of play, and I'm sure there's a whole... With Dr. Demento, I don't know how I could even play anything anymore if he was ever on the air now. It's all reruns. Yeah, they're part of the original. Oh hell no, most everything that he played which was all spoof and goof and fun It's all politically incorrect now by the communist standard. So cool. So a a Have the Arab and then run through the jungle CCR. Yeah Bad moon rising be another good one, you know, but I'd be playing that across countryside, you know, I put the boom box outside And that would be like, you know, you were looking for you. I don't know how hard you're looking for us, but we are looking for you. Well, they already said in the letter, they know where I am, so I don't think I need to help them get here. But I did go in and have a nice conversation with our local township police. And he said, do whatever you have to do. And he said, If something comes down and you have to, if you have time to call, he says, I realize that if something comes down you may not have time to call until it's over with. But if you have time to call, give me a holler and he says, I'll be glad to come out. He was kind of hinting at you and he didn't want to miss the fun. Very good. Well again, for everybody remember technology. That's why I say this is how when your since this is communications Tuesday One form of communication is working Why we put it up and online and anybody you know you can give updates accordingly again If anybody would like to get hold of you and or you know need to find out more How can they do that go ahead and give it you give the information on slow and repeat? Yeah, they can Give me a call at area code 814 724 I'm generally here afternoon in the mornings I do my errands and take care of any doctor's appointments that I gotta go. If you call and you don't get me, leave a message on the answer machine with a number to call you back. Again, that's area code 814-724-4011. Or you can send me an email. I generally don't put my email out, but I will for this particular subject, it's KWDWSMSN.COM. Again, KWDWS.MSN.COM. And I have one guy out in Arizona that is, I sent an email to and he was going to post it on all LTR's websites. I don't know if you have checked your websites or anything, but anyway, he was gonna send a posting. But that's about all I have for you right now, other than the fact that the local vocabulary is on my side or on our side and is aware of what's going on throughout the country and he doesn't like it any better than we do. And my voice is starting to fail, because I've been talking a lot today. And so I'm going to... Cut loose here quickly and there's some questions that you have or anybody in your well long as things here to Bring spotlights bring flares ideally parachute flares really be fun. Yes can be put out in the front and you know deployed so that they're a little more effective in general We'd be good to have them on standby, but generally it's supposed to be daylight until 9 o'clock shortly after which is When we stop broadcasting so But it's not, I've got flares, so that's no big, that's no problem there. But anybody wants to bring anything, they're welcome to it. And most important is bring your favorite smoke pole, because if this comes down, we're gonna need it. We'll basically be on our own, because I did. This shows you my regard for our federal friends. I did tell them I don't want the feds involved. I have no use for them. They are part of the problem. They are not the answer. This is yet a special issue. How do you think that the characters that are causing the problem got into the country in the first place? The feds brought them here. Exactly. And that's what the, uh, that's what the officer said. And, um, so, um, we're, I guess we're in the lucky, uh, corner here in Crawford County because the the local constabulary is... That's okay, take your time. We're pressed. You only have a moment. I gotta cut you off right now, dear. No, I don't. We own the network. Yeah. Well, it's just that my voice... I understand. That's why I'm saying. I'm filling in for you while you're busy taking a drink and relaxing a little bit. That's not a problem. So, anyway, we're fortunate to have the local constabulary on our side. And, um, you just... Like I said, he indicated that it... appreciate a call. I said, well, that's why I'm informing you now. He said, well, yeah, but he didn't really come right out and say it, but he implied that he didn't want to miss the festivity. Very good. And again, for everybody out there, if you would like to find out more, and you need to be directed into the AO, then how can we get ahold of you again? Well, you can give me a call at area code 814. 724-4011 Again, that's area code 814-724-4011 and you can send me an email at KWEWSMSN.COM Wait a minute, hold on here, that's an awful lot of lesson rights there. Hold on, one more time. Do that for me please. The email is KW. KW? DW. DW? Yeah, DW. D is in dog. MSN. Dot. So again, that's KWDWS at MSN.com. Yep, that's it. All letters, easy to ID. KWDWS at MSN. So I send an email. By the way, we're going to get one from me in a minute anyway. Well, a few minutes after we get done with the program. We got a little while ago. Real quick, give everybody information, as long as we got you here. We kind of fleetingly mentioned, but you've got programming up on LTR, so why don't you up on the air with us, by the way? Well, we're live on Saturday night from 6 to 9, 3 hours. We are probably the only station that does not, I want to say, sensor ourselves in any way shape or form. What's in our mind comes out our mouth. We do not have a cough button. We do not have a delay. So as my buddy Mike says, we're often profane, childish, we have fun, and we're like a bunch of five, a sugared up five-year-olds. And we just, we say what we think, and we think what we say, and we don't care if you find it offensive. Don't listen. But apparently we are doing okay because we have, as of yesterday, we've had hits in 95 countries throughout the world since we started broadcasting with the computer. Listen to us on the internet through Braveheartradio.net along with LTR. And I know Ed sometimes replays a replay of our show so you'd have to check his... his scheduling on Liberty Radio to find out just when that's going to happen. And again, for everybody out there, take the time. You can also plug in and listen and have your mumps ready. You can do the beep yourself. If you hear something starting up that maybe doesn't sound appropriate, okay. So this is an adult program. Repeat, this is an adult program. Yes. We've tried, we've tried over the time period to try and edit some of this stuff out, but it just doesn't work. It sounds so artificial then instead of coming straight from the heart, you know what I mean? If you want regular programming, tune in to the other guys. The mainstream, the lane stream. By the way, real quick here, we've been talking, you know, I've been wanting to try to track this down. Double-barrel flintlock shotguns. Yes. Pretty devastating little tool to begin with, guys. Again, people go, Mark, that's archaic. Yeah, well, you can find Flint and pretty much all the components can be made. And a double barrel musket slash blunderbuss slash shotgun is kind of handy, isn't it, Darrell? Yeah, it is. I have one in 20 gauge. I got it through, I believe it was Taylor Arms several years ago. It's expensive, but it's well worth it. some people never knew there was such a thing. Well, you know, years ago I kicked myself in the rumpus. I used to have a brace of the double barrel cap and ball in the 44, which basically was a 410, in the pistol. And I got them back when those things were only about like $40 a piece. Okay. And so I had a brace. I literally had like six of them. Which is a great pirate boat, you know? And then you put that one down and you pull it up and you got the other one on the other hand. There we go. That's six of them down at least, right? And the whole idea was you could load it with shot, which made for a pretty devastating little fistful of fury there being like a 10 inch barrel and a double cap. But I had one side by side flint. made by the same company, it was what, EMF out of Italy? And that one was in 56 caliber. And I made the foolish mistake years ago, one of my friends, it's like, oh my dad really collects stuff like that, and I'll give you a good price for it. It's like, well, yes, true, he finally kept begging, you know, begging, and he said, I'll give you twice what you paid for it, okay, thinking I'll go out and get another one. No, I couldn't. a 50 caliber muzzle loading rifle that I built years ago from scratch. I took a barrel blank, put the plug in it, then made the stock from scratch. And I use a 325 grain ball bullet, or not ball bullet, but a maxi ball with 90 grains of black powder. Makes a nice racket, nice crack as it's going off like a muzzleloader should. I use that same ball and same charge in a 50 caliber handgun, flintlock. Some people say, you don't shoot 90 grains of black powder in that 50 caliber, I say that most certainly do. It makes it sing when it goes off. And that's a nasty, it's a nasty hitter, I'll tell you. I don't want to be on the receiving end. It's pure and simple. Well, the interesting thing about it, too, again, they work quite well. Both as an echoing, echoing, echoing intimidation, intimidation, tube, tube, when you've got like a 50 or 60, you know, a 56 or anything bigger. They made them up to, I think, 60 or 70, you know, back during the Bicentennial and then the Rev War, you know, 1976. 70, the Charleville, The Charleyville is a 69 caliber. But the Brown Bess, I'm trying to remember because I have one and I can't remember what the bore size of it is, like 75 caliber or 72. Somewhere in that neighborhood between 72 and 75. Shoots one among us big ball and I wouldn't... The stand in front are lined up shoulder to shoulder and face off at 50 yards with these things. It takes a lot of gonads, if you know what I mean. The stander and slug away at each other that way. Because they would take an arm and a leg off in a minute without any hesitation. Go ahead George, what do you got? You know, speaking about weapons, I was sitting here listening on another network in the morning, you know, before you came on the micro effect. And this guy has former Special Operations, the host. He should have goes, his buddies used to, his fellow Special Operations people are Green Berets, said he used to go out with the Eskimos, and the Eskimos claim he used to shoot grizzly bear and polar bear with a 22 cartridge. How is that possible, Mark? Think that would be a power? Well, I guess intestinal fortitude, and before you do that, it's kind of like the old Indian trick. What you do is you cut a hole in the ice, get things wet, stick your leg in the ice, let it freeze, and then you load the gun and you're highly motivated. Because otherwise, you know, that sounds cool, but I'm here to tell you that I've had a problem even shooting pigs or cows with 22s. I mean, if you're not, again, that's with a good shot with total control in the barnyard, you know what I mean? And still, sometimes, again, that's why I used to bring the nylon 66, because that first shot and this might not quite do it. You don't want Bobbie suffering anyway, so you've got to pop one, two, three, four times and be safe. Only because they've got a thick skull. And Mr. Polar Bear and Mr. Brown Bear slash Grizzly Bear, they're doing a lot more shucking and jiving when they're hunting. You know what I mean? You. So it sounds interesting, but to me, the Inuits, they hunted, they did hunt these creatures with spear, which I think offers a little more, shall we say, motivation than probably the 22 does. And it's not that the 22 is a bad tool, and I know it would be the eyeball shot would be the most likely going around the soft point behind the eye socket and then going into the brain. That sounds really cool, but And even if you hit little lights out, shot, typically whatever you're shooting at, they're already bebopping, moving in on you, and they're kind of flexible. And they still got about a ton of weight coming up behind them. You might still be hitting by the bear, even if you got the bear. Won't be eating, but you'd be stomped on, crushed, and shredded. Mark? Just something to think about there. Anyway, go ahead, Carl, jump in there. Yeah, Katie again here. I'm going to change the subject on you, kind of back to the animals. I wanted to ask you what you know about animal antibiotics as opposed to human antibiotics. As far as cross-riffing to them for people? Yes. I've used them extensively as needed, especially during the Dagger War in the 90s and I found no difference. Most important, a lot of people are recommending the aquatic biotics. Yes. But I've used the Tetracycline successfully without any problem. Just get past the flavor. You know what I mean? Because it's ingested. You're not injecting it. Right. Make sure it water. I actually still use that extensively with pretty much all the critters too. And it's long storable. The biggest problem is moisture in the environment, as you know. And even then, what you won't have is we won't break down. What it will do is it will solidify into a block like chew, like old tobacco chew. All you do is peel that off and put that in the water. What I use is a little warm water just to activate, to break it up, and then add more cold water to reactivate it and thin it out. I've got stuff that I've been using indefinitely. We've had stored for years. I've experimented both with the stored and with fresh. I recommend you grab as much of it as you can right now if it's reasonably priced. Within reason, you don't need crates, but I would have that in your battle packs and I would have that in your first aid rigs, any of your backpacks. Uh huh. Okay. And then how about the actual tablets? I know I think the tetracycline, I can get it in a powder and you know you put it in the... Undergallon. Yeah, you can put it in the tablets. Yes, that's true. Thank you for reminding me. That's something I usually just use it in powder form and you just keep the packets because your dosages are going to stay pretty consistent. And if you've got somebody with a major injury, you're going to be loading them anyway. I heard the amoxicillin and cephalex are both strains of apenicillin and aquatic use. There were people saying, oh, this is terrible. This country is going to the dogs. People are eating cat food out of cans. They can't afford food. And here they are medicating themselves. And then you had people saying, hey. You're going to be glad you have this stuff. Anyway, I just wanted to let people know that it says for animal use only. I think they put that on. They're just to deter human beings from taking it. BK actually made just a very slight reference on Friday night's show about There was no difference between what they're using to make animal antibiotics and human antibiotics. The only difference is, in some cases, using an oil base to make it soluble as opposed to a water base. That's the only difference and that's just a matter of, again, ingestion process. It takes longer with the oil base, but it pulls it deeper into the gut so it's absorbed in different ways. What do you think? It doesn't alter the effect or the potency of it, correct? Repeat. I'm sorry, a little fuzzy there. Okay, does it not alter the effect as far as the benefits go, whether it's oil or water base? Not really, because your body is... We have a pretty long G-track and one way or another the absorption is going to take place. It's just that it will take longer for it to get to where it needs to go. because the upper part of your G-track is going to be absorbing completely everything that's been introduced so the large intestine is going to be doing its job. And remember, here's the thing we've got to mention, not a tasteful subject. Oh, it's not even tasty. Let's remember that if I cannot introduce it from the upper part of the G-track, I can always introduce it from the lower part of the G-track going in. The absorption level is quite high. This is something we talked about. Everybody hears about cocaine with the Mayans. Let's understand, guys, they weren't snorting it the way you snorted. They had special injectors that went up from another direction. And the reason they did that is like when it hits the septum, when it makes contact with the nasal passages and is absorbed that way. The colon and the area around the colon is even more efficient and the rush is even greater. Terrible subject. The important thing to remember is if you're a nurse, a lot of people, actually remember we've had several people that have come up and been on the program for years. We've talked about this, that if you have a casualty where you have the upper esophageal airway, everything is damaged. You've got throat damage, you can't ingest things directly. You can start going, and if you can't do intravenous because of, for instance, collapse, low pressure or bad circulation, some people have, yeah, I mean, ask anybody who does intravenous or does any kind of blood work. Some people are horrible for trying to get a needle into. Well, if all else fails because of injury or whatever, you go up from the other direction and inject it and the body absorbs from that direction. Anyway, the local feed store had liquid which was refrigerated and of course you inject it and of course they have the syringes and all like that. I just thought, I don't know, I'm kind of wimpy that way but I guess if I had to I could do it. If you're interested, I'll tell you what, something I have and Darrell, you guys, everybody out there, I've not mentioned these yet but I have samples. The Czechoslovakian military is dropping all of its deep medical support that it used to have and is going over to NATO junk, like I've said. They have these glass and stainless steel syringe kits that are just phenomenal. I now have examples of them and they are there. It's like everything they did. The Czechs, they were masters with machinery and these are works of art. But they're high quality, brand new, virgin glass reusable syringes. I'll get the specs on them again and we'll probably put them out on the air. You have the option to inject with fluid, I mean with any fluid as far as the penicillin goes, the only issue is absorption again and with the oil that would be a problem. Again, you're probably going to have to take it orally. If you do use it in injection form, it's going to take longer again for the absorption process through the tissue and for the circulatory system to get it to where it needs to go. But the needles are the big thing. And so I would focus first on trying to find the best buy on needles. Again, agricultural supply is still your best choice. I would do a wide spectrum of them, which is what I do. My crash kit here is a bait box. The second crash kits are traditional special forces. The old radio bags I've talked about. And in those, I still have basically breakdown kits that are made up of bait boxes. and you open the bait box and you'll find a number of different scalpels, a number of different sutures, and you'll find a wide array of needles. And the reason for that is dependent upon the task and what it is you're trying to accomplish with what you're introducing because there's a lot of stuff that we've got in the inventory. Some of it is designed to get into organs where you need to to deal with especially gastrointestinal injuries. Peritonitis is going to be a big problem. That's where these where any of the silins are especially critical. It's not that we can't survive them, it's just most people won't be prepared for it. Right. Now, can you recommend any particular, you mentioned the tetracycline, You know, I mean, what would you what do you recommend having on hand? I know there's a second and all you know what I'd say why cuz I'm doing doctoring on some of the little cats right now Give me just a moment and Daryl jump in there. You're still there. I hope yeah, yeah, I'm still almost strangled you I'm just going to do that. So Daryl give out your number of the information. I'll be right here. I want to take a minute Okay, well my phone number is area code 814-724-4011 and if you want to contact me By email you can get ahold of me through KWBSN.DOGWS at MSN.com Again that's area code 814-724-4011 and the email is KWDWSS at MSN.com And that's about that, I should use my voice again. Yeah, I used to have a veterinarian friend who was setting us up with some of the medicines for animals. And I don't know how long it's good for, but I have some tetracycline in tablet form that he got for me here, oh, I'm going to say 10 years ago. I imagine it's probably still good, so I had to take it. And the other, lost by train of thought. Did you ever do that? Lose your train of thought all the time. Another one will be coming by in a minute and we'll jump on board that one. And again, I'm back real quick to answer that. One of the packs I'd recommend right now, the Terra Myosin 343, if you can find it, it's a soluble powder. Painter size is varied. I've got some of the bigger pouches. In fact, they're one of the big ones in my hand right now. This is for stock water. Works just as well with cows and all types of, you know, again, mammals in general. But, pteromyosin, amoxicillin, if you're looking at penicillin, it's harder to find, but if you can find the older penicillin G, I'd recommend that simply because again, it was a broad spectrum used back in the day. It's not as common now. In fact, it's gone out of vogue, and if you're smart, you haven't been using a whole lot of the psilons and such. It would still be just as effective as it was when it was introduced during World War II and was of course in the Civil Defense System after World War II. Now penicillin G, but for that matter any of the biotics, 10% of the population are allergic to red off the bat. Now that's why again a precautionary introduction of the cilin, first of all asking the individual if they're conscious or functional, do you have any, you know again, do you have any allergies? Do you have any allergies to any medicines? Have you ever had an allergic reaction to antibiotics? Find out. If they're down, the first rule is if they're out for the count, so to speak, and not really conscious and not talking to anybody, what you do is an introductory dose, a very small amount, and monitor breathing, general respiratory, and you're looking for coloration change and or hives, things of that nature. But the variance is, as far as the lethal or very dangerous allergic response, it varies depending upon the age of the person. World War II vets, the allergic reaction level is quite high. Most of that comes from the fact that a lot of these guys were hit during World War II, and because of that and because of what they used, they have had long-term allergic reactions. younger people probably are going to have a much higher tolerance and are less likely to have extreme allergic reaction problems with the silins, with the different penicillins. But conventional penicillin in its form, again, there's still a response. If you talk to medical personnel, they'll explain to you the process and again, it's not trial and error, but it's precautionary. What you do is if you don't know the result, then what you do is you do an initial Low-end introduction, dosage, a few drops or again, a milligram and you wait to see whether or not you're getting any reaction. The most important is obviously respiratory breathing. If you don't have air, you're dead. Would you test that on your skin? Well, you can. That's basically the old proof test. One of the things is just like you do with an allergy test. You know where they do the patch test on your back? You can do a scratch test and introduce and see if you get inflammation or if you have any kind of small hives or blistering response. You see an extreme blistering response. It's obvious you've got a problem. How about the Sulfa drugs? Now, they're pretty good across the board. I don't know that there would be allergic reaction, but I highly recommend the Sulfadrugs. Okay, where do you get those? I mean, can you say, or I've looked on the internet, I can't see anywhere else. Actually, the best you can get is actually, it's sulfadine. Okay, go to the hard, the livestock, livestock supply. It'll come in a cream tub about the size that you get, that used to get, face cream in. Probably a pound or so. Yeah, like cold cream. Like you should get cold cream in. The sulfadine will look like a yellow paste. It is an excellent wound dresser. In fact, amazingly enough, it's the most common way. You may be able to find sulfa powdery. You may be able to order it. They probably may not have it, but you can order it. Okay, now could you not make your own? I mean I've mixed Vaseline with just like flowers with sulfur. Okay, that's basically what it is. Yeah, you can do that. But here again, the purification level and consistency and concentration, you don't have to go with the paste. Like I said, you can order the powder. You've seen it in the movies. You know, sulfur, they rip open the pack and they dump it right in the wound. Now the other thing about that is that in the powdered form, it also worked to a degree as, again, a wound coagulant. Okay, yeah. And the light kennel like dumping, we've talked about this before, cayenne pepper, a good one which your patient's not going to like, but there's a number of other things. Guys, talk about using sugar also. That's another trick. You got a bad bleeder, you can't stop it, pack it with sugar. Were you kind of going to that a little bit? We watched a movie, what was it? That movie where he went and he bought a bunch of sugar and I'm not sure if he packed it into a wound, a shooter. Did you see that? Right, well there's a number of different things. The sugar is also used for pyrotechnic, for chemistry 401. But he's medicinal. Right, what you're doing is using that as a kind of like a stopgap for bleed. But see, there's other things that work as well. Cayenne pepper is an old trick. In fact, it can be a two-stage. The sugar, of course, will help to, well, actually, it's going to be a problem. It's pretty stable. But the cayenne helps to activate the sphinguring effect that takes place in tissue. especially because of that hot reflex. So what's really cool is it helps to motivate what nature already does. If you are bit or chewed on by something, and this is where the obviousness comes from the depths of time and whatever theory we have about how people came about, if your system is chewed on or pulled at, your circulatory system has a series of stop gap of valves that are built into the veins, the arteries, the veins, and the capillaries. And there's that pull that actually creates a sphingtering response which forces the circulatory components to contract and compress to try to restrict blood flow. Now, this can be a good thing and a bad thing, and I'll give you an example. I've told everybody a million times, I want you to read Black Hawk Down. don't watch that propaganda POS that they put in the movies. It's all garbage, throw it out the window. Don't watch it. First read it and then watch the movie and you'll see what I'm talking about. Okay? But one of the things that they talk about in there is a patient, you know, the guy's got a kid that got hit in the leg. And what happened is it was an arterial hit, he's bleeding bad, and the medic is having to work fast. Now, we've talked about this a little in the past, but not so much in recent years. Guys, Doc is going to save you, but Doc is going to create a lot of pain. Okay, but the pain is a good thing because you're still alive. Okay? In that book, there's an excellent description of a capillary failure and a contraction. What happened is, he's trying to get a clamp on the artery that's damaged. It's like dealing with a piece of linguine that's basically covered in olive oil. Okay, it just doesn't want to cooperate most of the time anyway. Except this linguine It's pumping out your lifeblood. Well, there's two things. It's good and it's bad. What happens is the sphingtering effect we're talking about pulls the guy's artery up into his leg. So he literally has to start where the wound area is. He starts ripping the guy's leg apart, pulling it apart with his hands. He's got to stop the bleeding. So what he's doing is taking a scalpel. He's tearing the guy's leg open in the process, trying to chase this artery. It's very descriptive, but it gives you an understanding of how motivated the docs are going to try and keep you alive, no matter how bad it is. In this case, he keeps the guy alive a bit longer, but I don't want to ruin the story for you. You need to read it. This is stuff they left out of the movies because they're trying to rah-rah to get you in there, to get in a helicopter to go kill people in a foreign country so the Israelis can get cheap oil. But the bottom line is, in this situation, your system has a certain amount of natural defense. What we're doing is applying additional support to keep that going, you know, to make that, you know, a positive. In the smaller components like the capillaries and the mid veins, it's a good thing because typically you can still track those down. My policy has been, I was taught this from an SF Med-Ache years and years ago, don't worry about cutting in. Just take those clamps and jam it right into where you see the vein and then take everything with it. Just top it. Just get a bite on it. The more blood you lose the more hard harder we're gonna have fixing it because remember in the field as a combat soldier guys How much you're carrying everybody can only carry so much weight so you don't have enough fluids along And yeah, you can do transfusions, but how much time do you have for that in the field? Only after you've stabilized the patient and you've got to stabilize him to the best of your ability, you want to make sure you stop the bleeding as quick as you can. Now, quick clot is available in a variation that is not the first choice, but it is available in the feed industry, by the way. It's the same place you're going for the other products we're talking about. And they do make it, and you can put that into powder or packet form. like it's in powder form. You can make that, put it in packet form, but I'm going to warn everybody. I don't know what the total formula is for all the different quick clot or a quick clot claiming products are, but I'm going to tell you, there's a response to me, it seems to be the same thing as cayenne pepper, except it's blue. And it doesn't burn. It burns. It will burn, and it's going to burn the wound area. This is something we've had a lot of talk about with, it's chemically burned. But what it's doing is to a degree, again, it's helping to motivate that spintering effect. It's helping to clot the material and to, of course, slow down and stop the bleeding. So again, for instance, we talked about blowout kits. Remember that was something we talked about on the air a little bit ago? Yeah. I highly recommend everybody build one. But what I would put in there, and most of them do, is a good set of German or American-made clamps. Okay, forceps with a with an aggressive bite to them not a smooth blade an aggressive bite Because I'd rather you cause a little bit of pain for me and stop the bleeding the me turning a pasty blue and not being able to really you know Come out of that tailspin. You know what I mean? So that and that's one of the things that is one of the several tools you have pressure is your friend Ternicus should be built Compresses are obvious. The other thing about, you were asking about the, for instance, the Sulfa drugs. Remember that the Sulfa drug is a complement to breaking down and destroying bacteria that has been introduced because of a traumatic perforation. You don't know what you picked up as that thing sucked through you or went past you or went around you. You don't know what it hit before it got to you. Hey Mark? Yeah, go ahead, Gaur. Yeah, that injury you were talking about with the leg, I mean, I know nothing about it, but if I were to cross something like that, would he get to tie a tourniquet before he'd try and find the artery? The problem is that the artery will pull right up into the... and this is what it did. I'm not going to ruin this. In fact, we need to talk about this. What happened is the artery literally contracted right up into almost the groin area. And he was chasing it. What he's doing is he's chasing it. The problem is it's up where you can't get to it with a tourniquet. and part of this is because of the nature of a lot of the different types of injuries. Grenades are not your friend. Mr. Grenade is very messy. Grenades are not all, you know, well it depends. Some are offensive grenades. Remember our short burst radius are not fragmentation typically though they can be. Most grenades are not just that hole on the outside shearing you. You know, like chunks of sheet metal. What they are, most grenades are either steel or copper wire. and what happens is they either knock it, there's a little clipping machine that goes click, click, click every half inch. The wire is wrapped around a mandrel. That mandrel allows for all of that wire to be formed in the same shape repeatedly, a machine, you know, spin after spin after spin. The mandrel comes out. This wrapping of copper or steel that has been hardened has been made stiff. is inserted and the fuse charge and the explosive charge is put around it. When the grenade goes off, it's not the perforations on the outside that make a grenade mean. Those copper wires or steel wire pieces of steel cabling a wire that have been knocked, the explosion will of course cut each of those knocks like a diamond cutter cuts diamond. And then you have four or five hundred or a thousand little needles coming out spinning at 40,000 feet per second and they find your leg, your body, skin, whatever they run into. And it's totally random shearing. And because of that, you have shredding that can take place depending on how close you are in proximity to the explosion and the device itself. Mortar shells do the same thing. Renates do the same thing. Car explosions can do the same thing with all the stuff that are around things that go boom if it's like a gas tank. Not very often you get much spalled off it, but it can happen. So anyway, yeah, we're at the top. Oh my goodness. and we got Joe from the Carolinas coming up next. Most important thing here is number one, build a blowout kit guys. Go to our webpage, go back to our history on YouTube or just go into YouTube and take a look at what the guys have built. The elder things we talked about here are supplemental for step one, procedure, stop the bleeding, keep the guy breathing, treat for shock. The next step is keeping them alive and keeping the infection down like killing in the next five to seven days that you have to move him from where he was hit or she was hit back to where you can help them. You may be carrying them, maybe dragging them in a cart, you may be walking them somewhere, not to see much helicopter work. You may not be able to use a truck, so the first wound has got to be on TP-C-O-E, cash-key line 567-8. It expects to do that as a medic or as a person supporting a medic. You may be assigned to do it even though you're not a medic, because every person that's wounded will happen to sign individual wisdom. That's our problem. Anyway, uh, they're all worth the top 30. Uh, your number again if anybody wants to hold you. Uh, area code 814. 724-4011 Very good, and if you need any help again, jump up on the air right away. God bless the Republic. Just put a new world order. We shall prevail, ladies and gentlemen. The Empire is on the run. We're on the march, and don't forget to hug your rifle. Cars, puds, cars! But it feels so good. Thank you, Daryl. You're welcome, sir. We're going to keep our people alive, we're going to win this thing, and we're going to build stronger countries. Y'all need to be a student. Thank you all for helping out. Let us help you find the right shotgun or rifle for you. Or if you're looking for a pistol or concealed carry, we have a nice selection of compact and subcompact pistols for that too. Check out our website at www.libertiesguardian.com. That website again is www.libertiesguardian.com. Go to the website and check out our selection today. The Sound of the Revolution. Thank you for listening to Liberty Tree Radio dot 4 mg dot 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 MaineMilitary.com. MaineMilitary.com carries everything you need. 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