Mark Koernke discussed radiation preparedness and duck-and-cover protocols, promoting his YouTube channel ForbidTV and website forbiddenknowledge.info for educational resources. The show featured extensive technical discussion about automatic weapons systems, miniguns, .50 caliber rifles, and ammunition capacity in combat scenarios, with caller Don providing detailed analysis of weapon configurations and force multiplication tactics. Topics included historical military engagements, Great Lakes naval battles during the War of 1812, sentry protocols and perimeter defense, ammunition availability at retailers like Walmart, and night vision technology. The episode concluded with caller questions about the Remington 742 rifle and promotional information for Don's night vision services.
I should, because that's what I'm most known for, but we will cover it on occasion. Go into more detail about equipment, go into more detail about the actual types of radiation. I'll protect yourself more than just a duck and cover. We were talking about a grassroots effort that needs to be done. The government needs to provide the public with a very simple life-saving measure called the duck and cover. Want to change the name to protect your laughability? Then go ahead and do that, but do something. Because as you saw, as you understand now, it's not something that really needs to be laughed at. I do have also a brief video on YouTube. If you want to try to spread the word a little bit by the video on YouTube, there's probably no other videos like it on YouTube. The name of my YouTube channel is ForBidTV. And I think it's titled something like The Duck and Cover is Still Important Today. And although video is only about five or ten minutes long, that gets to the heart of the matter, the very basics. That's there for doing Anytime, whereas this program might kind of disappear before or long. It might appear as reruns, but it might not. You aren't going to be able to rely on it. Go on YouTube and watch it. ForbidTV. ForbidTV on YouTube. Website is forbiddenknowledge.info. The site to order any kind of radiation devices, depression devices, would be theprepperstop.com. Or you can visit me at any of the shows where I sell a whole lot more than I have at the prepper stop, a whole lot more available in person. And if you need to find out where I am, forbiddenknowledge.info. Saluda, North Carolina is coming up in a couple weeks, followed by Kansas City, Missouri. I'm going to be in Pensacola, Florida before long. Indianapolis, Indiana. Check the website again, forbiddenknowledge.info for a complete showing of where I am week to week. We can purchase things in person. I do recommend you purchase things in person with cash because you aren't creating a paper trail. Whereas you are going to do it on the preppershop.com, you are going to be creating a paper trail. That may be the problem. You may not think that is a problem for you. Some of the things that we offer there might be something that's a little politically incorrect because after all, why do you need to prepare? You've got FEMA. No worries, Nate. Just keep with FEMA. You'll be safe. You see? But even FEMA, even federal agencies, by the way, Red Cross, Homeland Security, last I saw, they were also basically remanding about two weeks of preparation as far as food goes, food and water. And that makes sense. So even the government is saying that. But anything beyond that, It potentially makes you a watched person, possibly. One of those crazy people who think something might happen longer than two weeks. So you might want to keep an eye on you. Paper trails, online, credit cards, might not be the best thing. But we do sell them at prepperstop.com if you want to create that paper trail. or just visit me wherever I am. Forbid knowledge that info to find out where I am. It looks like Ed is letting me run over. Stay tuned for the Mark Horne C Show. I believe it's Wednesday if you're listening on this episode every night. If you're on this episode, I'm sorry. Thanks everybody for listening. Until next time, go long. Liberty's Guardian Guns and ammunition A family owned business located in the heart of Ohio's hunting family 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 We all need to prepare ourselves. You might have the food, water, gold and silver, but ask yourself, are you truly prepared? That's why you need to visit mainmilitary.com. Mainmilitary.com carries everything you need. Gas masks, fire starter kits, high capacity magazines, chemical suits, military surplus items, and much more. Do you own a firearm? Mainmilitary.com has a large selection of pistols and rifles suited for your needs. Are your local 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 MaineMilitary.com is the only store you'll ever need, all from the comfort of your computer. Visit them online today at MaineMilitary.com. That's Maine, like the state, Military.com. I had a dream the other night that, well I didn't understand, a figure walking 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. The tyrants labored endlessly while your parents were asleep. Your freedom's gone, your courage lost, you're no more than a slave. In this, 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 traded in your name. You've given government control to those who do you harm so they could burn down churches and seedily 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 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? 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, keep the torch of freedom burning bright. As I awoke he vanished in the mist for once again. His words were true, 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 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, dealt the land to the free? Intelligence report time are quirky. Air to victory for all of our brothers and sisters behind the lines in occupied territories west, south, north, on video.4mg.com, Indian Freedom Talk Radio dot com. on AM and FM micro stations, SEAB, Hallmark and Golden Spike Technologies, Sippy, Aloha, afternoon slash headed towards evening for our friends in the Rockies, especially on the Western. Daylight left to work with and reflection off the Pacific, I think. Anyway, Dom, it's like in your neck of the woods, what's the day today and what is this special day, sir? Go ahead, please. Well, that all across the state mark, the thunderstorms in the background and if I'm not here it's probably because of a lightning struck the antiquated phone there because I'm here of our Lord 2016. It's a day if you want to fly a kite in the lightning filled zone and you know, just things like that. Back down the middle of the week, got that in mind. You know, 1911 one hand with an empty magazine well and a full magazine on the other hand and we're gonna, logical thing to do is put one in the chamber and say that's a hot gun, a condition one gun that I can prove to you. attention and keep pulling the lever on that reloader yourself like many others. There's plenty more where that came from. Another step turret system. One cartridge just finished, the other one's on its way, another one's halfway there, another one just got started. It's actually, lead loaders, or not lead loaders, forgive me what I'm talking about, the blue presses, the speed presses that are out there guys. What's fun about that is with the blue press is that the automated system that he came up with years ago is basically a minigun. Really where he got the idea. Most people don't realize the automated turret system saying all they cost, they used to cost back when, you know, pay ten thousand dollars meant something back in the 70s. The first of the super autoloaders was about $10,000. One of our friends invested that. He worked for the auto industry. You know, and you could make money, hand over fist, and you could do things like this because America had wealth. Behold, the round and buying a blue machine, 10,000 rounds in an evening was nothing. In fact, the problem was having the primers, the bullets, and the cases, mostly the empty cases, to actually load. And that's where you start scavenging and scrounging everywhere you could, and the rest is history, as they say. And you know what's funny is the same company that makes those blue press machines, he also makes and has manufactured quite a few mini guns. I guess he had some experience with speed and technology and especially with brass as they say. It's just a matter of positioning. Yeah, where instead of disassembling, the idea was to make more ammo so you could have more ammo to go in the machine that eats ammo so fast, it's you know, three, four, eight thousand rounds a minute. What do you want? Pick a motor speed and dial her up. that as I've said many times. It was a neat idea. You know, the minigun is really cool. And if you understand the original miniguns in 7.62 by, you know, 51 NATO, guys, they were supposed to get rolled in with a Jeep trailer. And they were pintle-mounted on a Jeep trailer. Well because the Jeep trailers actually had segmented troughs, I don't know if you've ever seen these before, but what you call the magazine. Yeah, 29,000 rounds in the belts, ready to roll, and you had it mounted on the Jeep trailer so that you stood there and went, well that was a neat idea. You know, 6,000, 8,000 rounds per minute, 7,000 rounds per minute, it's a really cool concept, but it's like, you know, how many rounds are in the trailer? 29,000 rounds. Okay, so if I get better seven thousand rounds a minute I got three minutes worth of fire If I really go crazy for about three minutes, what do I do after that? You get in the trailer and you jump and you try to stay ahead of that horde of Chinaman. Yeah, get that deep in motion. You sure could have come in handy. Yeah, it would have been interesting during Korea. Yeah, that would be, you know, still the same problem. More Chinese to kill than, you know, anything available. And the thing is, remember you only had that 3 minutes worth of firepower, 29,000 rounds. You had to dole it out. You couldn't just burn it all at once. You got all night to fight, right? I really killed that one real good. I spent a minute and a half mowing down that tree over there and finally got to him. Yeah, but what about the other 40,000 behind him? Shoot, I forgot about that. Well, look around. And the bigger it gets, of course, that's always the dynamic. Well, we can get bigger! Yeah, well, it still comes down to how much can you carry? Well, if you have one of those pencil mounts and that kind appeared, or the Chinese version, or the Austrian version, or, you know, whatever, they're cranking out of South America in the not-too-distant future to come here to kill us, saw the rotor off of it, then saw the tail right off of it. It would be a burst about that long. Yeah, be a sheet metal cutter. Yeah. Or Kevlar Cutter, really doesn't make any difference when you start stippling. See, now just a case in point, contrary to the lies that were Desert Dust 1, it is true, and this is something I've always pointed out. They were honest for propaganda purposes, but dishonest. lost so many planes, you know, like a hundred and some aircraft were, you know, knocked out or, you know, somebody does an aircraft were knocked out. But it was actually hundreds of aircraft that were knocked out. The only thing that was a testimony, it was a testimony to the design pilots. They got the plane back. So they didn't shoot the plane down. But if you've seen, and the best place to go for this is the Time Life Air War in Iraq. That came out after Desert Dust One's The Adventure Begins, right? Well, for all their BSing, here's the bottom line. You get to see what one of those GE mini guns or what a silca ZSU 23-4, that's a 23 millimeter gun times 4, what that will do to the rear end when it's on target with, say, a F-16, guys, they literally looked like a SIV. Not a joke, not a cartoon, they literally looked like a SIV. That plane was never rebuilt. That plane never went in the air again. That plane wasn't even good for spare parts. NRS, yeah. It wasn't anything... Not incredible to service. Yeah, the plane had to go down. Why? Well, again, it got the pilot back without ejecting, although there's several or many that they don't even want to talk about that were shot down flat out. And it was because of a volume of FUD that was put in the air with either mini guns of varying calibers and types. And by the way, they had Vulcans. This is something that we've talked about many times. The Iraqis had a preponderance of American equipment. They propagandized it by always showing you the Chinese and Russian stuff to make you believe it was the Warsaw Pact war. It was not. And the second, the reason we stopped at the border is because all of the cutting edge equipment, best equipment, was held back for the second leg of the defense. And had we gone in, Desert Dust 1 would not have been anything like what everybody was bragged up about. But they also were able to lie about the air war. Until afterwards, and then they started bragging about, well look at the way these planes got hit and they came back and, yeah, but did that plane fly again? No. Thousands or hundreds of rounds hit exactly where they were supposed to. Amazingly enough, the thermal targeting systems on the ground hit exactly what they were aiming for, the exhaust slash the rear end of that aircraft. And they literally look like SIVs. If you get a chance, dig the article. In fact, you may be able to go to YouTube and find the video. Air war over Iraq. Okay, it was an after the war thing. Now what that demonstrates is again, don't count on and don't listen to any of the BS or propaganda generated by your enemy during a conflict. You've been, you know, if you're successful, they aren't going to tell you. They're not going to now. It's all, wow, man, you guys are beating the snot out of us. We're losing secret police left and right. We can't get any more and you only takes 20 years to grow one, maybe 16 or 18 or whatever. But would you like to admit now? Yeah. You need to stop resisting. Stop resisting. Stop. Let's talk. Can we talk? Let's negotiate now. So these are classic examples of what we've been talking about. Now here's the thing. The GE Mini Gun or variation on it because it can also be a chain gun with a revolving cylinder. One barrel which means it wears a little faster, wears a little harder. That's why they came up with a multi barrel system. It can increase the cyclic rate and reduce barrel wear to a degree based upon again fire control by the operator. And that was one of the many cooling issues or a bunch of things that are tied up into why they go to different designs. And yes, the latest thing they're bragging up now, I don't know if anybody has been paying attention, is the .50 caliber, the Tri-Barrel .50, that's the big thing now. That, oh, that's so much better than the Browning M2. Really? Still comes down to, and again, yeah, you're burning lots of bullets down there. Oh, yeah, you're dumping twice, three times as many rounds, get one kill. Wow, that's really impressive. How many rounds do you carry on the vehicle? How much does that gun cost versus a good bolt gun? You will hit the target down there. Some of these guys will hit the target down there and it's the side of the barrel of a tank. And it disables that heavy gun. For the price of one depleted uranium or AP round and every other depleted uranium during the war before Desert Dust won. the units were infil-trading in and that was their job. Put bullet holes in artillery pieces. Maximum range. These are stories that nobody talks about because they don't want you to think about. You can't shoot my gun! That's a nice Abrams. And what about... Watch me. What'd you do? Nothing happened. It didn't explode. It didn't blow up. Well, if they don't check the tube, it will. Yeah, just wait till they pull the squeeze trigger on them. Wait till he pulls the trigger on that Abrams and watch to see what happens. You'll see the hatches pop open, the exhaust ports, smoke everywhere, crewmen coming out, maybe chunks of steel stuck in their head. Yeah, they're tracking the gun around. As a matter of fact, like I said, there are images of exactly what I'm talking about with our equipment during the occupation slash the second campaign. So I said, a guy coming out of a tank hatch, US tank hatch with a chunk of steel the size of two of your hands, stuck sideways in the top right side of his head. And he's moving to get the hell out of the vehicle, but come on. It's like he rolls over the back of the turret, flops along the back end of the engine compartment, flops over the side, and he doesn't go any farther with his back to the rear end of the tank. He's just sitting there going, text him as far as I can go with about 10 pounds of steel stuck in my head. That really hurts too. Yeah, I've got to keep all that weight up. So again, it's not that it can't be done. It can be and has been done repeatedly. They just don't want you to think about that. You can't shoot him in the gun. That's all I can see. That's probably a pretty good idea, isn't it? Yeah. So just some little things to think about there. Well, you gotta wait, because I've seen these movies and you have to wait until it pops out. Then you return fire in a haphazard fashion because you can't aim very well. I'm gonna just patiently figure out where the hell he is on that corner and maybe just put a boat right through it. Because we can do just that. That note again. One of the things about the 50 caliber crews and teams that are out there There are groups that have put 50 caliber rifle units together that are heavy weapons sections. But like any situation guys, remember something Don mentioned, you know that bolt gun, it can only put so much firepower out and it needs supporting weapons systems. I'll tell you what, great combination is your M4 car beans, your AR15 car 15s, you know we call them M4s now because they're trying to make you believe it's a different gun and it's not. But you put the tip to doom on that, a beta magazine, and you have that backed up with a whole bunch of other magazines, and you've got sufficient firepower to offer suppression in, you know, close area defense. Beta mags are actually a pretty good solution. The Chinese brought in a bunch of 125-round steel drums for the 223. I've got a couple of the first ones that came in. They work. They work well, they fit in the Air 15, they're all steel, load 125 rounds into it and see how heavy it gets. Okay? But it's just like your 75-round steel Chinese drum that you're very familiar with, only bigger. Remember, the Chinese also brought in 100-round AK mags, AK drums. These again, very large. You load up 100 rounds, you know you got 100 rounds, you're carrying some weight around, guys. The beta mag still works the same way. So one of the issues always comes back to, if you empty it, what do you do with it? Now, in normal conditions or with normal situations where you might be in a fixed position, you have time to baby the drum or baby that particular unique piece of equipment. But, in a crisis fire, drop it. Your other mags, you can secure. The drum requires too much extra handling. Now, it doesn't mean you just throw it and chuck it and forget it. Common sense, drop it where you might be able to recover it when the time comes. I've got a garber, I've got a Tasmanian devil here, it's a micro machine, it's a monster. Anyway, um... The big thing here again is drop it and then go right to your other mags, 40 rounders, 30 rounders, whatever you're going to do. Now some people have more wherewithal and have multiple beta mags. The only issue there is the volume, the size of the meal, what you're carrying. Again, it's like how much ammunition can you carry? Well, you got to remember, you got to fit through places too. You've got an assault rig or you've got your combat rig, whatever you're doing. Take a look at the size of a Beta Mag by itself and then imagine trying to carry two, three, or four of them. Now it doesn't mean we don't do that because some people consider those, you know, saw, you know, they treat that weapon like a saw, a Squadatomatic weapon. They use it for suppression fire. But it still comes down to a balancing act where, especially when it's supporting the 50 guns, you're going to probably have to be more flexible, you're going to end up having to move, you're certainly not going to be sitting in one place and firing repeatedly with that half inch gun because it's going to draw attention. People are going to become very annoyed by your special weapons that are decimating the other side. So you have to be prepared to, again, set up secondary, third, fourth, and fifth, and six fighting positions, either to advance forward, if you've planned a, say, a kill zone or an ambush, or a long range, what we call a gun ambush, on, say, a road or an objective, where you let the enemy come in and they walk into the kill zone, or they move along the kill zone. But even as you're engaging, remember, you have to also be able to extract yourself. And this is where you pick secondary, third, fourth, and fifth line shooting positions. to create a covering withdrawal. Now, during that movement phase, you better have something to kind of fill in the blank, and this is where those, you know, again, light rifles can come in very handy. You can use certainly three oasis to support the weapon system. That's a personal choice. The security element all should have at least one of those beta drums or something comparable. At least one. And again, it'd be better that every man have one, rather than one man carrying four or five or six of them. Just that simple. Again, it's also a volume. You can fear for the space. A slab mag takes up less room. A slab mag can be stored in a lot of different places. What I mean by a slab mag is a 20-rounder or a 30-rounder in standard configuration. So that's where the balance is. You've got to have supporting weapons systems, and you have to have a bit of a combined arms team, even if it's a .50 caliber crew. Some of the teams set up a weapons section almost like a weapons platoon. You'll see five 50 caliber bolt guns, a spotter with each one, and then an assigned security detail. And they may have even calculated to put in indirect fire weapons. Rifle grenade, 37 millimeter flare launchers, basically fitting the same niche as the 40 millimeter grenade launcher. And then the logic is that as these people have already gained experience with the indirect fire weapons, that would be the first prioritized towards the M203s that are captured or other comparable 40 millimeter or Russian grenade systems or Chinese grenade systems, depending on which UN kind of formation you're facing. But they're immediately prioritized towards the people with the greatest time in the saddle. It's the same with upgrades. If you're able to upgrade to other .50 caliber guns, Doesn't it make sense to put the best man you got behind the gun and then upgrade a student with something else? Your best men should be off to keep you alive. Preach the number of .50 caliber shooters, we will. Force multiplication will take place. But any army, once you've got this curve up, it's like pilots who had experience on the P-38 when they started to really push other planes would be given the preference to go to as they have more time in the stick, more time in the seat. And they would move them to the next plane, the latest plane coming up, because they were more likely to adapt to it quickly and readily. Think about that. In tanks, it's the same way. You don't throw any tanks away. You give the older equipment or the earlier equipment information to another group. Now you've created, again, you've doubled your numbers. You've increased your, it's called force multiplication. You've increased your ability to fight. That's what we need to be thinking about. Now, I'll tell you what, before we move any farther, We're at the bottom of the aisle, a little ear candy for our friends. And I've had this piece of music, but I have another, I have a same author, but a different version, and I've been trying to find it, and I can't. And this guy does some phenomenal live pieces. It's, again, Stan Rogers, for those of you who aren't familiar with him. Stan, S-T-A-N, Rogers. He does Epictasis, very similar in terms of his venue, as far as you know, is niche. Kind of like Gordon Lightfoot, he does epics, he does, he's done a lot of different historical pieces. Certainly done a lot of, you know, naval or, you know, seafaring pieces. Particular one is metal epic. So for everybody, again, historical and, oh, just, it's fun. It's just one of those pieces for driving and the battery, it's really cool. And it's relating to yet another perspective on the wars of the North American continent. Here we go. McDonald on the Heights. Well, not McDonald's in the Golden Arches. By the way, that's four eyes a couple times. Talking about the history about Michigan. It's like all those nice little Canadians across the Bay. They were shooting at us. What are you talking about? Across the river there. Yeah, we did us. Oh, and they were mean to the really bad things they were involved in. There were Italian battles. fought on the Great Lakes. And Lake Erie, that's right. We built 109, they built 119 ships during the summer, or forgive me, during the winter. Thank every last one of them, on both sides. Just, okay, there were a few left to roll back, you know, to the shore, and then they put them all back together, or built more during the winter, and came at each other again the next season. Yeah. That's the battles of the Great Lakes guys, battle for Lake Erie. And what's interesting is, only a short time ago here in Michigan, it was late 90s. That was the latest discovery again, they were working on the Windsor side of the Detroit River and they found two of the frigates that the Canadian and British forces had to burn as they retreated. What's interesting It was in such haste that both of those ships were burned with their guns on board. Yeah, we did a good job of raiding. Let's put it that way. Real fast, got across the river and moved down through to the Ontario Peninsula. And what most people don't also know is that the British Empire did exactly what the Romans did with regard to colonization. The Ontario Peninsula was occupied with Black Watch retirees. Everybody knows who the Black Watch are, right? Oh, by the way, we fought them at the other end, down there at the bottom of the Mississippi River. You might recall, yeah, we had that Battle of New Orleans thing going on. Well, on the other hand, what the British did is when the Crown troops retired, they were given land. Canada, almost like that guy from Brave Heart of the Free World, or the Patriot. Yeah, tell me about Ohio. Well, instead it would be... be about Ontario and they settled there. So their reserve forces were literally the locals but they were not as in like just quote unquote peasant farmers. These were professional soldiers that had retired onto the land. They were commissioned out and you know mustered out with their pensions and you know again also raising you know crops and production on the land. That's what was fought in the Ontario. on the Ushitz and the Ontario Peninsula. And that's part of the history that most people don't realize, you know, the battle is swaying back and forth. But what's interesting is the guns were mostly on board with both of those frigates. It settled into the mud when they were burned. And what they did is in a hurry to get the docks back up and online, they didn't dig everything out. They just filled everything in. Used the hulls of the ships as the foundation for the pier. think about it. That's it. Yeah, already sitting there. Why try to fight it? Why do you know? In other words, go get more dirt, pack more dirt in, build up everything, put your quays and pylons in, and there you go. Got yourself a dock. And some really cool antiques underneath it, so, you know, they've actually recovered all the gobs. But anyway, just a little heads up and some history and some ear candy for our friends and for our on the other side of the border. We have quite a few of them by the way. And they've actually on a regular basis supported Liberty Tree radio donations, guys. Do you want to mention that before we go any farther? We have, or we're going to have the end of the year, you know, of course, fundraising. I believe, in fact, I know Ed's already got the posting in place for if you haven't seen, if you go to libertytreeradio.4mg.com and you'll see end of the year bill 2016 we've raised $189. Our goal is $2000. This is a yearly drive that we make. We'll end December 31st but we are going to have some drawings and anybody who donates will be in the drawing. Now the way we're doing it this time around is I actually have boxes that I've been loading up. They all cool goodies in them. And you get at least two of something, two different things with every box so that you're going to have stuff you can use, practical. There are some neat little accoutrements, things that we picked up that are also neat for the household that will be quite useful. So again, if you can take the time, go to www.libertytreeradio.4mg.com. Over on the left side, or forgive me, right side, I'll get it right eventually, right, right, no not left mark, your other right, the other right, there we go. Donate key is right there on the right side of the page, right next to firearms and ammunition with Liberty Guardian, their logo and their of course banner. And it's the end of the year bill 2016. Take the time, plug in, and donate, and you'll be in the drawing. And we've got a whole bunch of stuff. In fact, I just found a cache of material. And I think, where the hell did that come from? And I realized, oh, it's the tonnage that I bought. And there were little items that are always in these tonnage packages of equipment and uniforms. And there's optics and everything else. Well, there were some other things. And there's so much of it, I just kind of thought, oh, I put that off to the side because it was something odd and separate. But some of the items are going to be in the drawing too, including some really nice vortex. and also headgear. So it's a mix. There's blades, there's support items, web gear, you name it, it's in there, and all of it is useful and all of it you'll like. So, and donate, go to libertytreeradio.4mg.com. If you can, well, take, you know, do it, if you can do it on a monthly basis, we've got a goal of $2,000, that'll take care of the primary service accounts so that we've got everything caught up and then we don't worry about it for the rest of your evening. We still have some random drawings and if we do, we got more cool stuff that we can provide you with. So see if we can get some more pellet throwers out there. I've been trying to find some good package deals where you get both a shoulder fired and a handheld airsoft. So we'll see what we can do there. Maybe I got some nice lined up. Don, what else is jumping out there, sir? Please, go ahead. Well, you sparked a couple of thoughts about patrol, about automatic weapons and other things. And if you mix them all together, if you look at man or if you look at the sentry that's taken out and then great amounts of force are moved into where something should have been, you know, think about the, how about that? Remember, World War Z Remember when the zombies were just running through the city? That's the kind of overrun that your opponent likes. You know, if they can get away with that if we're in one place and... and... But automatic weapons can come in for the right use at the right time. Let's go back to the front of that. Let's go back to how that happened. Because that man's sitting there making that watch. Well, somebody got to him, right? Or he's walking in patrol and... and something must have happened to him because, well... Here's the key here. We never heard from him. He didn't sing out. He didn't even discharge his gun. Here a weapon is the last thing that happens to him. And he's being crushed by, you know, the people who are trying to overrun the sneak ins so that they can be on the perch of overrunning the place. We've addressed this a number of different ways, but we haven't brought it to the hour in a while. Now, if you're moving and you're that point man, And you're moving and you're using all of your technology and you come to a point you don't know what that is, that looks like a threat, you don't walk by it. You might make that one tap on the radio with two more that Mark talked about, but you bring the gun to bear on that threat and you walk toward it. You might even move toward it rather rapidly. You might walk by it. Different code make everybody aware that, hey, 40 steps up, you know, is bad news. But the initial thought line is you move right toward that to determine whether that is a threat or not. If you're the first to make first contact, well, that's what the point man does, right? The point man walks right by something like this and doesn't challenge. There's the word. Does not challenge what appears to be a threat. He can end up unwittingly or lazily being the Judasco for the rest of the people behind him. On Century Point, You don't forget to sing out if it's the last thing you do. The last thing you do, you make that guy 20 paces or 50 yards away aware that hey, something's going on over here and you ain't gonna like it when it gets to you. Make every- you know? On that note real quick, they've done comical versions or tried to make it appear comical but, you know, sentries, pickets, and outpost operators guys literally were armed to the teeth. This is something that they try to do it where you see all these dangly weapons and whatever on somebody and they make it look like it seems goofy. For instance, the Halbrud, which is a combination of dehorsing, but it's also for anti-personnel. It's the fighting stick of the Western infantry, Western guardians. There are Asian variations on the exact same weapon. In fact, I think pretty much every part of the planet produced a comparable weapon over the eons of hacking and chopping rules. But they would also carry a personal battle axe, and in fact, a series of knives. If it wasn't because of a later age, it was a series of knives. You know why? Because knives get stuck in things, dude, and I ain't got time to get that one back. And seriously, if you look at older paintings of the different guard and the different forces, aerial guards or the watchman on the wall, the watchman on the wall would typically be armed with bow or crossbow, would be heavily armed at that. If he was carrying any bolts, he was carrying 25 to 50. If he was carrying any kind of weapon that could project strength, why? He was in a place where he was probably going to see a lot of the enemy real quick. carrying a personal, personal sword. He was carrying a personal, typical, like a eagle's claw or a battle axe, something that would give him leverage. Again, the halberd or a spear, and he might even carry darts. On a wall, that's what darts were for, guys. You threw them down, you had to bucket them. In fact, there's only one thing about the, uh, oh, Game of Thrones. I like the way they're so accurate, showing you how the fortifications are set up. If you paid attention when they're walking the wall, how there are baskets of arrows about every 25 feet. and each one is full. Have you noticed that? That's in reality. Yeah, where did all those arrows come from? Okay. Well, it's because they were right there. But the sentry, the man you're talking about, his job was to sound the alarm. The only thing that would keep him alive is if he did sound the alarm. If you think about it, I mean, nobody else is coming to your aid that's heading towards you. So by God, you better raise the alarm, put the rounds downrange and fight like a dog. There's a little axiom we put on a little posting on a regular basis. Fight like you're the third monkey trying to get on Noah's Ark. Well, I'm getting on that boat. I'm getting on that boat. Go ahead, Dom. Well, again, it goes over to, if you draw that straw, that's what it amounts to, don't it? Some people like walking points. Some people, well, I gotta do it today. And you know, you can understand why, for these very reasons, why every once in a while, well, until modern history, the general has to feel like he finds this guy asleep. And what generally happened to him? he was made example of. Perhaps had he slept a little bit longer, well, might have just, well, was he dried on up to him and makes certain that, well, he was awake for about 20 seconds until he went to death, and then minutes later his heart quit pumping. So he was back to taking... He shows up in the morning with a red line on his throat, a ship permit and marker. Different ways to make people aware. But again, historically, if you were asleep at your post, You were generally shot at sunrise, deep at your post, whether it was ancient China, let me see the French-German war of the late 1800s, that was still holding at your post that only evidences the importance of what this subject is about, only brings it to the front. I'd underscore this with the first guy that smells gas, and whether it's my cigarette tastes funny, that's one of the indicators you guys. But the first guy that smells gas, he yells gas and then he puts his mask on and then he starts ringing the alarm, the triangle or the bell or the mechanical or the whistle or whatever. Thank you. I yield to you, caller. And, uh, it's been putting a lot of projectiles down range in a short amount of time. Uh, over at Walmart, in my AO here, uh, they got the box of Remington green and yellow box, uh, 15 rounds, uh, 2.75 inch buckshot for $4.94 a beat on clearance. That comes out to, I think, 33 cents a round. Wow. So, take advantage. I'll also notice they've had, uh, the Perfecta brand, uh, Like, gear rifle, you know, car engines that's in, uh, 30-odd six, 270, 240 grade, 20 rounds for seven dollars. So, I don't know what's going on over there, but, uh, they're selling ammo for stupid sheets, I think, and then... Thank you. Well, actually, what it is is they remember, they've bought, uh, in bulk, uh, they used to actually do wholesale work off to the side. I don't know that they're doing that. I think they're keeping everything for themselves and selling it all themselves now. That's been the policy. A lot of the companies that used to do that, Walmart has done it in the past. Remember, about the time they were going after the guns, Walmart refused to come off of the 11 million rounds of 223. Typically they would sell 4 million rounds sideways towards other retailers. But back after 2008 when they said get out of the guns, Walmart wouldn't come off any and initially was also not going to put it into the retail market in general. It wasn't going to put it in their own stores. So that should give you a little hint about their game. Myers, thrifty acres, Myers is another variation on Walmart, predates Walmart by a couple decades. They were doing the same thing. They used to do jobber work out of the warehouse. They would sell federal ammunition. Typically, again, they'd buy it up before hunting season on the main production runs. And most lesser companies like, oh, hardwares and, oh, farm and fleet type operations. They would buy the excess. At a reasonable price. I mean they get a good price. It was a wholesale price, but it was still a little more. So they made money. They always made money on having their warehouses full. They stopped doing that. Several companies. Kmart used to be a render revolution company. They had bolt-action surplus weapons and semi-auto guns. They also did the same thing with Centurion International Arms Ammunition. The black and white boxes. How many remember the black and white? Forgive me. Blue with white print. Remember those? Century International Arms. Well, I'm sorry, Century Arms International, because the other way it's CIA. Oh, that's right. Yeah. And Kmart was heavily attached to Century and provided, you know, bulk ammunition from behind the scenes in addition to selling it right out over the counter at the stores, which is, you know, pretty normal. I wasn't able to listen to your program this afternoon. The player for LTR was not working. I noticed when we popped up on LTR, Ed might want to check that. Ed, actually we do know about that. The SAM Cloud player is working, the other player, the IP address has changed and I have not been able to update that so the player that's on the page, when you load it, it says not found URL. But if you use the other link to the SAM Cloud player, it does work and I believe Spike is rebroadcasting now off the Indiana Freedom Talk radio site. The IP address that we had with the other company. It shifted so he's been rebroadcasting the other station without realizing it. I didn't know there was a problem with it until this morning when I got an email from the company apologizing. When we're done with the broadcast tonight, I was telling Shelly, I've got to take everything down and put everything back up with the new information. But it will be done. Anyway, we are almost to the top. Don, let's not go real fast. Night vision technology. Guys, in a few minutes you could actually A, check out the webpage and B, call Don. Don, how can we do that? Jump in there. Well, if you go over to ydtoe.us, again, a bunch of information there and I encourage you to read the, you know, fine speak, you know, the text. You'll know more about what you see when you scroll down into the digital and that form. device. We've talked about that best to leave it on the shelf. It has its own performance problem. If you look over to the thermal, well we've got a piece of thermal that's considerably less than a third generation gun. Do you have any questions like, what does this do compared to that? Or if I have one of these out here, or if I'm standing at a gun show, what is this like compared to what you've got? Or, you know, questions. Call me. My number is 231-796-58. I answer questions from people standing in gun stores. looking at night vision and standing at gun shows, looking at night vision and standing in their friend's house. Hey, my, I can get this from this guy. Questions about like, what's the real price of after that too? I can give you a code enter a cheaper price. There's the, as far as an overwatch, someone buys out of there. It happens on occasion. Some of the website and buy and they pay the, they're not a listener because well, you can call me. write down this number 231-796-8458 again 231-796-58 you know many of you have written it down over the years I've had people call me for years and and talk about what's what's the latest in this and that and then finally make a purchase you know but if you've never written it down yet you probably aren't gonna at any rate that that will allow you to reduce the price at the website and places I brag about my 796 5'8". A few minutes you'll be able to talk to Don because we're almost to the top, not quite yet. There is a new... Oh, go ahead, Golar. Jump in there. Hey, I know you don't have much time with the speed of deck. I have an opportunity to maybe pick up a Remington 742. I don't know a whole lot about the model. Can you briefly give me a rundown on it? Oh, the Remington? Oh, no. It's just a perfect issue rifle. I mean, it'd be something if you're serious about it. stick with factory mags although there are some 10 rounders out there and 20 rounders out there you can take a you know try to find I've noticed nobody's picked up on the industry on that recently as far as you know making additional mags. So what are you looking at 38.6, 243 what's it in? 308 is fine. The rifle has been around a long time it was Remington's well the rifle that it replaced Remington had a good design but they had a terrible time with the gas the gas projection block, oxidizing, rusting. Mostly because people didn't know how to do maintenance on the gun and because of that it would rust closed. The next two family of guns that they started to push to replace that particular weapon and its sister, another pump gun, semi-automatic and the other was a pump rifle, both weapons. Really haven't changed significantly for Nion what? Well, 61, 62 was the introduction or 58. Got a figure half a century in service already and not really any major changes. The good rifle, I'd pick it up using a heartbeat. It's already set up. They came from the factory with Ironsight, yeah? Huh? They came from the factory with Ironsight? It came with iron sights, typically yes, and that's a good thing because the gun actually is pretty accurate with the existing simple iron sights that were applied for typical deer operations. So it's comparable to say, well hell, I guess Tokarev or Goran in that respect. The cool thing is it was already tapped for a scope, which obviously everybody jumped to real quick, and it was not abusive to whatever scope you put on the top of the rifle. The cyclic stroke of the gun with regard to recoil, felt recoil is quite mild for the weapon system itself. The big thing is that they improved dramatically on the gas. The gas system was a semi, with a pump gun, they had issues similar with the resting station for the driving rods. And they would rust. Now that's all back in the 50s and of course I still had a lot of those guns around and we already experienced having to change out the gas block on one. Now it's a newer model but the older models, which were the generation before. I'd say they held up pretty well with 50 years of service. So I wouldn't have any problem carrying them. I'd use them. I'm going to be shopping up up their comparable guns, comparable to the Garand, comparable to say the Eastern 43. Sound good? Yes, thank you. 308, I'd pick it up in a heartbeat. You can buy whatever you want all day and that gun. Oh yeah. It's just very comfortably. Anyway guys, we are at the top. Dom's gonna be available in just a few minutes. Please take the time to give him a call. Check out the West 8. We've got the Western Republic. We've got the New World Order. We shall prevail as the gentleman, the Empire's on the run. But we are on the mark. Dan Nigh-hoorah. And uh, Mel Gibson has a new movie out called X's uh... It's actually a real life story about a U.S. military medic. One battle of honor, but we're used to fighting as a medic. Kind of an interesting piece, just got a war to go over seas. We'll see what's going on with that when it shows up here. The dining number for night vision, the web page, will take us up for the hour, please, and for the day. The date at number is 231-796-84-582. I'm sorry, why? Oh, gosh. He's Guardian, located in the heart of Ohio's Huntington. Do 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. We all need to prepare ourselves. You might have the food, water, gold and silver, but ask yourself, are you truly prepared? That's why you need to visit mainmilitary.com. Mainmilitary.com carries everything you need. Gas masks, fire starter kits, high capacity magazines, chemical suits, military surplus items, and much more. Do you own a firearm? Mainmilitary.com has a large selection of pistols and rifles suited for your needs. Are your local 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 MaineMilitary.com is the only story you'll ever need, all from the comfort of your computer. Visit them online today at MaineMilitary.com. That's Maine, like the state, Military.com. I had a dream the other night that, well, I didn't understand. A figure walking 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 fought a revolution to secure our liberty.
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