September 14, 2016
Evening Show
1h 10m
Complete
Radio Episode
2016
▶ Audio Player
Summary
Mark Koernke discussed weapons selection and tactical preparedness, focusing on handgun choices like the 1911 and small-caliber backup weapons for concealment. He detailed force multiplication tactics for rescuing prisoners from FEMA camps, including arming liberated civilians with captured enemy weapons and equipment. Koernke explained the historical Turkey Trot marching technique used by American militia during the Revolutionary War to increase speed and reduce fatigue, and discussed command structure and leadership principles for militia operations, emphasizing that first-contact officers should maintain command authority and that new leaders must be developed from within patriot ranks rather than expecting military defectors.
- 1911 pistol
- concealed carry
- force multiplication
- fema camps
- turkey trot
- revolutionary war militia
- tactical preparedness
- weapons selection
- command structure
- battlefield commission
- m14
- ar-15
- ammunition
- gear loadout
- militia training
Transcript
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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? MaineMilitary.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. A figure walked in through the mist with a flintlock in his hand. His clothes were torn and dirty as he stood there by my bed. He took off his three cornered hat and speaking low to me, he said, we've fought a revolution to secure our liberty. We wrote the Constitution as a shield from tyranny. For future generations, this legacy we can resist the land of grave. 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, 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's spent. Your children must attend a school that doesn't educate. And your Christian values can be taught. 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 sheep. You've given government control. to those who do you harm so they could burn down churches and seemingly farm and keep our country deep. 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 will be. Your leaders send artillery and guns to forage. Send your sons to slaughter fighting other people's wars. Can you regain the freedoms for which we fought and died? Or don't you have the courage or the faith to stand with pride? And are there no more values for which you'll fight to save? Or do you wish your children to live in fear and be a slave? O sons of the Republic, arise, take a stand, defend the Constitution, the Supreme Law of the land, preserve our great Republic and each God-given right, and pray to God, freedom burning bright. As I awoke he'd vanished in the mist for whence he came. His words were true, not free, but we have ourselves to blame. For even now as tyrants trampled each god-given right, we only watching 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'd fought to keep, what would be your answer if he called out from the grave? The land of the... Gentlemen, this is the... intelligence report of our kirky and closer to victory for all of our brothers and sisters both behind the lines and occupied territories west northeast and east ladies and gentlemen you're listening to us on liberty three radio dot 4 mg dot com indiana freedom talk radio dot com and we are on a m and f m micro stations The base station Zen Ultra Net Hallmark and Golden Spike Technologies and west of the Mississippi along with Alaska. And full of our friends out there, it is a beautiful, beautiful Well, that's right. It is Weapons Wednesday. Don, what's the day today? What's jumping off the wall? What's going on in your neck of the woods, please? Hey, it is the 14th day of September. Year of Our Lord 2016. Beautiful, wonderful day at Intermittent Clouds and Sun and all of that. And, you know, the day you'd expect at the beginning of September or last week in August perhaps. But, well, it was a cold kind of a rain. Well, you know, again, 14 September 2016, strike down the middle of the week and you know all of that. Empty magazine well and a full magazine and we just solved that problem and moved one forward and up a little bit, you know, into the chamber. So we can tell you it is a weapons one thing. The perimeter needs some attention. And if you know, if you keep pulling the arm in that read over you can say to yourself like I'm about to tell myself, there's plenty more where that came from. To make an offer equal, Opportunity Coercive Force where needed and as needed. And again, the individual hand cannon is the, not the primary, but the backup. Well, it depends on what your mission is. Different tools in the toolbox, different golf clubs in the golf bag, depending upon where you are, on the green, the fairway, well, or should we say out on the road, under the vehicle, or, you know, up under the hood. Again, the hand cannon is a must, and I highly recommend, well let's put it this way, it can double a force as needed. It can double your fire power immediately if, let's say that you're moving into the field. Our units are better prepared than the average bear. Another person is standing there. You liberate a truck full of people who were on their way to the FEMA love camp for extermination. You explain to them real quick as you've killed the last of the guards, shooting each one of them with a crotch, and then leaving the bleed in the ditch, and then stripping the body's wrist away. That's why you shot them with a crotch. The whole idea is to let them bleed out, strip everything they got, take their boots before they bleed, by the way. And now you've got a whole bunch of people standing there. Three of them or five of them get equipment. Why? You've got five enemy corpses there you just made. Congratulations. Whatever you can strip off of them that's usable, take it. I mean, you want to strip them naked before you shoot them, then take all their gear, including their clothes. And I guess they're smelly underpants if you're short. Some people might be. Hell, they can be moving people naked for all we know. But we know one thing for sure, not a person that vehicle has a weapon. Right? Yup. We just got five rifles, but we have 26, 32, 40, maybe the Pac-Man saw like sardines, and we've got 60, 65 people per truck, per box. We're using the big Oshkosh trucks. You can be looking up to maybe 60 or 70 people that need to be armed. Not all can necessarily fight. Some of them are probably hurt. Many might even be deathly so. But the ones that can fight, what are you going to do? Sharp stick? I'd do that if I had to, because in fact, by the way, if we knocked out the vehicle, if it was usable, we're taking the vehicle. We'll do it for as long as we need to use it, and then we'll burn it ourselves. But anything you can beat to death somebody with, you better pick it up. Anything you can find nearby that'll put a bullet down range, everybody gets one. In fact, I'd go so far as to look at it this way. If I had that five rifles, and then there's, let's say, a squad, and we took out that little group of love-fest creatures, you know, from the FEMA, you know, FEMA government or from the UN. You know that we got a bunch of people that we pretty well probably get motivated to fight. If I had 10 grenades, 10 different people get 10 grenades, get one of the 10 grenades. If I have an extra handgun, and I can, you know, ID the person or the people, hey, who's handled a firearm before? Who actually has handled a handgun before? If I can pretty well do a quick survey of the manpower available, immediately if I run into any problems, I've got twice as many guns going off and doubling my numbers. It's kind of nice. Kinda nice when somebody stands there and goes, I don't have anything here, take this, point there, pull trigger. At the very least it creates confusion for the enemy because now there are more pew pew pews and boom boom booms going off. Okay? I still have those other five weapons by the way and that's a good foundation for another fire team. I've gutted the enemy of all this material. We've chopped the corpses up, we've buried them in pig feces, walked them down the road to the nearest pig farm, feed them to the pigs, that gets rid of that problem. And now I've got the impetus of a fighting unit. So here's the thing. Are you going to motivate these people? Are you just going to let them rabble around? Are you going to find out more about them? Well, certainly you are. But very quickly, you're going to have to become a judge of character, and then you're going to have to build an army. You're going to be building as you go constantly. Some people are going to have an epiphany. It's called that on their way to the death camp trip. That's probably going to create a hell of an epiphany. Know what I mean? I thought we had a deal! Now if you have somebody still repeating that, don't give them a gun. Maybe I can get back with the party! I'll kill these guys and then I'll tell them I killed them and I'll get back in with the party! Now they'll still disarm you and take you to the camp, but in the meantime you're, you know, gonna probably muck up the system. So pay attention for stupid people or idiots, you know, repeating things that, hmm, that doesn't make sense in this environment, but, well, wait a minute, maybe it does if they're a party member. No party members are going to be allowed back into our system. Does everybody understand that? Good old communist party members? I'm a party member! I'm sure you were. You'll enjoy that party over in Africa when we send you there. Yeah. Might not kill you. I could bottle a barbecue sauce with you. But I was a red jacket with Obama! I'm sure you were. Owanka, Unka, Unka, ooh. You're going to the Belgian Congo! Or whatever its latest name is, because it has changed so much. Anyway, the fact of the matter is you've got five men fairly well equipped and armed, and then at least you've got more firepower, but even the grenades, for instance. Uh, you. Do you have a gun? No. You got a grenade? Yes. You used a grenade before? Yes. Been in the military. We only have so many guns. You're the grenadier for that man. What? Well, he's not going to worry about throwing the grenade. That's your job. His job is using the rifle. Your job is using your grenade to support him when he calls for it. How's that sound? If we kill somebody, you right now have a grenade. The next step is you're gonna have a gun. And whatever goodies we can pull off that other guy's corpse, just like the smelly uniform that your buddy here is wearing right now. It's not smelling very good. Didn't smell good anyway. Some of these characters are from places, well, they don't have smell-o-vision, okay? But this is... This is force multiplication. In fact, I'm going to point out again, everybody always wants to be special whatever. Special forces. You know, super-recondo, sky drop from the sky, do double somersaults, have air tanks, and hit the ground, and you're almost like a one-man nuclear device. Okay, whatever. Now... Pazooka. Real... yeah, with two pazookas. Backpack mobbing! And the fact of the matter is that if you were Special Forces, you know what the original mission of Special Forces was? I think you should emulate them. But what was the original mission and what was the ongoing mission of SF? To build armies. A 12-man A-team was a 24-man skill group. Yep. Each man had two MOSs. Why? Those were the two trades that he taught. Does everybody understand how that works? Oh, by the way, you also, if at all possible, are required to try to learn two languages beyond English. Well, they're all big dummies. How could they do that? Well, it's amazing when you recruit the best of the best. You might actually end up with some people who really can put some things together. It's amazing. And just because they don't have collage, oh, I'm sorry, college or university, oh, wait a minute. Most every one of them does. But you're not, they don't talk about that. They try not to present that. They always try to do the Johnny Deano, the, the, uh, the, uh, knuckle-dragger routine. But originally, the idea was that the War College, uh, ongoing, uh, education processes, correspondence courses, they were flooded, literally flooded. The idea was that you embraced your trade. Okay? When those 12 men hit the ground, they would produce a 600-man battalion. Now, if you want to be SF, that's your job. Yep. That's your real job. Oh, yeah, we're gonna hold two M60s and blaze away and burn the barrels to red mud and... RUUUUUUNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNN Okay, so you gotta be thinking in advance, and that's one of the other reasons for that hand cannon. Personal defense, certainly, but also immediate force multiplication. A lot of you were talking about the idea you're gonna ride up on the enemy. You're gonna ride up on the enemy while they're kicking indoors. A lot of people in the neighborhood are gonna have an epiphany, aren't they, Don? Oh, yeah, I'm really crushed kind of one. Do you think they were coming from the house? They didn't know they could smack that person's head. Don, you got your act together? What? You want to kill somebody? Well, he did. Did you see what they did here? Yeah, that's all that they did here. How would you like to help me hunt them to kill all of them? I don't know. You might get some of your stuff back. Yeah, and you'll get the ones that did to you while you're going to do it to them. Now, by the way, you might get out of that daze real quick. Now, it's going to take a little more than that, but there's a lot of people that have the wherewithal. They get caught flat-footed. There's people that are actually all completely prepared, and they're still going to lose everything, guys. At least with whatever is directly near them. It's like I said, I've been doing this for decades. I've built armies. I don't know about you, I've built armies. That's all I've been doing for as long as I've been in the Patriot effort as one of the side tracks. I've built armies. Not squad, you can. But the fact of the matter is that you're going to be doing this. More and more Americans are going to discover the glories of the international trade organizations and what they're really all about. And the betrayal by these shysters in government would mean to be un-executed. Well, they need to get motivated and armed up to do that, but they may be late, or they may not even come to the table right away. I'll play it safe, because you know everybody always- I always love the Weisenheimers who do that. I'm gonna play it safe. You guys are the ones they're gonna shoot at. Yeah, well, you're disarmed, right? I'm gonna be politically correct. Oh, so they don't have to worry about kicking in the door with you, they can go and do whatever they want, right? What? Well, no! That's not how it's supposed to work. What do you mean that's not how it's supposed to work? If they go after me, it might be expensive. Going after you is pretty cheap. I didn't know, I didn't know. Yes you did. Everybody knows the truth. They're just trying to hide from the truth. That's all. So anyway, the whole hand cannon. I want to fill this in down on one part about it. That 1911 is my first choice. Only because I know there's beautiful firearms. There's, I like, you know what, there's certain weapons I like, but it's just, I can't afford them. And I'm never gonna bother with it, because this ain't the razor. It's also the blades and the spare parts and all the other stuff that cost so god awful much because they're such bastard guns. You know, HKs, you know, they hate us. HK. Why? Because they hate you! And they build stuff that you half the time can't get magazines for in the long run. They make sure they make them obsolete. Okay, they're very ratty about that. They're horrible about that. Like some of their guns. Some of their earlier guns, actually. Some of the weapons you can't buy anymore. I've fired some of their machine pistols. Uh, the HK-7s and some of the other guns from that 60s window? Oh, they're phenomenal weapons! But HK was an at- well, excuse me, I can't say that, I shouldn't say the what, but you know, they were jacky, they were... idiots. Okay? And so, no, I probably wouldn't go with HK. Sigs? I like sigs. I really do. Uh, when I pull one off an enemy corpse, I'll have one. That's why I don't buy one now. You wanna why? Because I know that when the time comes, I'm gonna be making corpses in the enemy, and I- There's another SIG who wants one! See, P226, oh you know who these guys were. Well, they're all dead too, that's good. Yep, see, P226 says kill them all. Anyway, whatever, now Glocks, I've told you before. I'm not being mean to anybody, because every one of these weapons work, or they wouldn't be able to sell as many as they do, right? They also have interesting, strange things about them that we won't get into individually. But then 1911 for me, I grew up with it. When I was a young person, I had a 1911 put in my hand when I think it was about 6. Wow. Now, fortunately, the uncle that was helping me and my brother were standing there, and so I didn't get the notorious bump to the forehead because they want to see how you can screw up. Because like I said, I never had a French Black factor issue. Back then it was the muzzle loaders coming up on 100th anniversary when I was little, firing 65 and 70 caliber muskets all day. Original, not copies, originals. I scrounged up and found when I was like 11, I found in the junkyard, literally garbage, I found a Hawkins look-alike .45 caliber. Guess what? Load of that puppy up, soon as we could clean her up and get a nipple on it. I was shooting it, Bo-Boys. I'm telling you. But when I got that 1911, it was like, this is a gun I need to grow into. And so I did. And I became a competition shooter. And people that are better shooters than I am, they released a couple hundred ahead of me that were in the GoCom matches. But you know what? I guarantee I will get you with it. More than sufficiently accurate with it, and even with some age, because I've had the opportunity to fire tens and tens and tens of thousands of rounds. Hundreds of thousands. Nay, hundreds of thousands of rounds. They would repetition things. So for me, it's second nature. I don't need to change another weapon. I can pick up another weapon and do with it what I can do with a 1911. But if you have a problem with a 1911, then that tool should go to me because I don't. You see what I mean? If I were you, I'd actually ask you, what are you familiar with? You know, if you guys, it's like I brought up the other day, you know, I had a hard time remembering the M9 for, it just placed out of my mind because Berettas have been expensive. There haven't really been that many available and there's been no surplus. Now there's surplus. Right now, the Beretta's for a little bit. you're going to start seeing surplus guns. They just now start coming out. Now are they cheap? Well they ain't too, you know, like $69.95 like the, you know, the Macaros were, but they are, you know, about a mid-grade $300 gun. So I'm not super excited about them, but it's like hey, there'll be mags available, there's going to be leather, you know, nylon and leather available. So that makes them a cool gun. And by the way, did you grow up with that gun? When you went in the military back in the late 70s or 80s or maybe the, you know, the 90s, what was the Beretta your standard issue? Well, it's the gun I would hand you. No, I want a dirty, hairy gunner! I want a desert eagle! Did they issue a desert eagle? Have you had any time on a desert eagle? Oh no! Did you shoot a Beretta? Well, you didn't carry it all the time. I qualified with it. Well, that's the gun I'd hand you. Why? Because that brings you up to the best skill level right off the bat and that means that you can start putting bullets on target because bullets on target is what counts. And you need to sculpt your inventory this way when it comes to handing material out. Like I said, I met one of our belly gunners the other day. Haven't talked to him in a while and so like he said, all he's been doing is buying a pallet more of ammunition. He's a little older than I am. He's not just being optimistic, he just his attitude is he's boating with his wallet because that's where they... like he said, first he said, boy the writing's on the wall, isn't it? And it's like, yep, you're right, the writing is on the wall. And we're a 30 caliber club, you know, people, from that sphere. Well, the same is true with the pistol. I carry two. One is a shorter, not a commander, but one of a custom Bob 45s made by one of my friends who's listening, who has been in the business for a long time. And I carried that gun all over the country and it's been a couple million miles with me. The other would be a standard full 1911 plane Jane as dull as a gun as long. And you know what? I will hammer your arse with it every chance I get. 245's I'll carry. There's another point to be made here, and we can back up in the conversation a bit. During that policing, you know, that we're gleaning the battlefield, it has been brought to a subject matter on the hour here that some people have been searched and still had their guns after the search. Oh yes. Granted, they're not big guns, but you guys, the next time they're at a gun store, or a gun show, make it a point to look for that little 25 caliber Beretta. That doesn't even have a complete slide on the top. Just the back portion of it moves with a bar that moves from almost the muzzle to guide it. It's one of the Israelis' favorite, the Israeli Sea Service. One of their favorite little pockets gonna shoot you right behind the ear guns. So small that it could easily be overlooked in a quick search. You guys, The civilities of allowing that officer to keep his box of cigarettes, you know, like a box of Marlboro's. I had for a while a five shot long rifle 22 revolver. I could put in an empty box of Marlboro's, an empty Marlboro box. I closed the box and put it in my T-shirt pocket and it did not look as if it didn't tug the box, didn't tug the shirt down. Looked as if there was just a pack of cigarettes in my T-shirt pocket. But there were 5 .22 long rifles in there in that cigarette box. The civilities of, again, allowing that officer to keep nothing like that should happen, right? Keep your cigarettes. You might open the box and draw one out. Because you could put a couple cigarettes in if you snubbed one a little shorter. For certain, you could put at least one out, pull one out of the box, put it back in your pocket and light it before anybody noticed. That's a little bit shorter than it should be. in order to carry on the deception. But a dinky little gun like that could be sewn into places too. Now I know that once you sew it into somewhere, well it could be sewn in with a little bit of a tuck so that it could be retrieved without destroying anything. And that little bit of a tuck of material would keep it from jumping out no matter what you're doing, but it might just stay there through that quick path down. The jet fire is offered in two variants, a 22 rim fire and 25 automatic, 25 ACP. Both are good cartridges, both work for the range you're going to be using that weapon. The other one, a baby browning. Now remember, the jet fire, the advantage is it does have a hammer. It's a mini Beretta model 92. Think of it that way. It's an absolute micro Beretta 92. There's how you should think about it. The baby browning is flat, smaller still, and even fits more comfortably into that pack of cigarettes. There's a number of other small 25 automatics that have been built. The Colt 19, the O3s and O6s, and any of the later models work really well. They've actually been resurrected. There's a bunch of those showing up for some reason here recently. And by the way, you can get an Airsoft in those. How do you like that? You want to go buy, in fact, all metal Airsoft. a pocket colt, a baby colt, 25 colt. Nancy has one, really nice, in fact it's a gun that's been carried a long, long, long way. And she's really effective with that. 25 automatic, right up under the chins, stick it right up under the sternum and just pull the trigger real quick. You know, whack, whack, whack, whack. Make like a duck. Okay, barks like a dog. Why? Well, because it's just like a dagger. And since we don't... If you don't have the upper body strength, let the gun do it for you. Know what I mean? Girls, it works just fine. One of the things that I would recommend to help you to understand and appreciate what we're talking about, why it is you need to fight. Why it is that epiphany shouldn't be as you're going in the ditch. I want you to watch a video. There are several on the Kaitan Massacre. In fact, there's an entire movie. It is not fully accurate. with regard to the bodies and how they were dealt with because guys they did a real good job of packing and stacking the bodies. The long title for one of them which is a 9 minute 12 second version, you know, oh wow they're checking you in and they're taking your belt and you'll notice some men even had pocket knives and had you know all kinds of things on the table there that they collected and then they have you walk down a set of stairs and you're going down to the basement. Now remember we understand why the communists take people down to the basement so you can't be seen, so you can't make any last statement. They blow your brains out. 21,768 murdered in the Katin massacre by Soviet NKVD. April 1940. Joseph Stalin, Ravincia, Beria. Now... I'm sorry, Lavrentiy Beria. Okay, Beria is the bugger that was the chief executioner after, under Stalin, after Trotsky on RCAO. Trotsky was just as evil. Beria, of course, got his comeuppance because he rose through the ranks, progressively gained more power, built up a murder-incorporated operation, and then they murder-incorporated him. They didn't want him getting too Now there's another version, these are all available, if you punch in Kate and Massacre you will find these there available for you to look at. Kate and Forest Massacre by NKVD, Communist, Zionist, English subtitles, and very well done, but this is the actual movie. There's a whole, the whole movie is also posted by somebody. So you can watch it. You don't want to be in that situation. You don't want yourself to get into that situation. Okay, you don't. That we can't afford. That's 21,768 combatants who could have at least killed one other person, and that meant there would have been 21,768 of the enemy dead. That's at least the attitude you should take. And by the way, you know what? Fight like the third monkey trying to get out of Noah's Ark, and you'll be amazed at how well you survive. Okay? That's the first rule. Again, everything is a weapon. example we talk about the idea of rescuing that truck or the convoy or whatever uh... remember the bad guys are trying not to let people get away and many of the zealots i mean let's think about those social warriors they will be willing to turn the guns on unarmed prisoners and execute every last one that they can you look at those monkey screwed crazy bu- crazy buggers they are ape crazy people they are fruit loops they are as nutty as the day is long those are the kinds of people that ran the red terror Those loons that you see with the bug eyes are the kinds of loons that they used to operate the Red Terror. You gotta put a bullet in them, you need to kill them dead, and you don't think twice about it, and you'll be doing humanity a favor. Seriously. Though, again, most important is contribute. If you do have the ability, and you can put a bullet in one of them in their ear sideways, hey, that keeps the uniform cleaner. Course, they're still gonna probably be a little messy down below, but that's because things just let loose. The idea behind this is that everybody can contribute. The other thing is, I've tried, well, like I said, 100 people being walked away by three guards? No, that shouldn't, well, again, that's a matter of being a sheep until you're a sheared sheep. I should say a dead sheep. And that isn't exactly gonna work either. And before that happens, be armed, be armed well. Now immediately somebody said, well, how many mags do you carry? Because you know, we were talking earlier, okay, let me put it this way. If I were to grab an M14 kit right now, I have two M14 or, oh gee, British or Israeli double slab mag pouches. The Israeli and the British ones are knockoffs of the US M14 Vietnam era TA-56. Not the same weight. Theirs aren't as well built as ours. They don't have the armored protection. But I carry two of those on either side front and giving a little belly space in the middle so you can get down on the ground because you've got to be able to lay down. Okay? The next thing that you'll see is I have two of the HK type slab mag pouches done horizontally. They go right up the H strap and they're sewn into place. They're stitched into place. Two more on each side of the chest, two 20 round mags. I've got spare mags in the butt pack. I've got spare mag. In fact, I've got something you won't find very easily and now they want an arm and leg. Now it's classic and my God, whenever you hear classic, that means you're gonna paint through the nose. We used to get these for 10 cents a piece because nobody wanted them. When the M14 kit first came out, they had just, they had originally in 1950, they came up with another carrying system before the TA-50 says gear. The US pistol belts had snaps every so many inches. These snaps allowed for any numbers like pre-molly or, you know, modular gear like anything the Army's ever done. Each pouch had a snap in the back. The one that's the best example of this system is the curbing pouch that you put on the buttstock of a curbing. That back flap has a snap in the middle of it. Well, that was so you could literally make it, take a pistol belt, make it a Kermine cartridge belt, a magazine belt, where you could attach however many you wanted to, right around the whole belt if you wanted to, around your whole waist. Well, they made single slab M14 mag pouches like that, and I stitched those onto my gear, just like they did on the old TA58 British gear. Now, by the time I'm done, I basically have 14 magazines that are affixed in one form or another around the assault gear. In addition to that, I have on the pack the rest of the magazines and one shoulder bag which is a Belgian engineer bag but it's a shortie. You can't get these anymore. The equivalent, the only one I found right now that's available is a French model. It was made for one of the squad guns. Strangely enough, it took a 20 round BER kind of magazine so it's really neat. It holds five magazines each. It is canvas and really well made like the M14 mag pouch. OD Green typically is how they come in. The carrying strap is about four feet long, which is pretty darn good. Okay, 24 inches to the pivot point from your shoulder, which means it doesn't get up under your armpit. The handgun, yep, right-hand side hip holster, shoulder holster up under the armpit, and the gas mask is carried in the low carry on the left leg. And you're carrying two 45s? Yeah, I carry two 45s. I've always carried two .45s. Come on, so many people have walked with me many miles around the country to talk. You might remember, either it's going to be that 1911 under the armpit, or it's going to be that model 27 under the armpit. Oh, it's going to a lot of, yeah, it is a lot of metal. Better Brigadier in .45 with a 14-shot magazine. Remember those when they came out, the stars? Yeah, I've got several of those. I've used those and carried those. Now, magazines, six for the one pistol on the hip. and then two more in a special carrier that goes counter to the other which is actually a flat, it's actually a pancake type. And that is designed so that it doesn't abrase under the arm. It's again a way to carry more mags. Lightweight is made out of sheepskin. A friend of mine made it about 1977 and I've had it ever since. He also made me a really nice sheepskin hanger set, a jackass rig for a Browning 1922. Same system. folds right to the body, don't even know it's there, no weight, really durable and properly cured. It's in suede for the external surface so it doesn't really stand out. Really a cool system. But anyway, there you go. Now, am I young enough to carry that? Yeah, I'm going to do that no matter what until I can't. The cool thing is, remember with the hanger system and the backpack, which I've changed out, I've got one Alice pack loaded up and I've got a newer pack loaded up I've got a test and I'm actually going to have to get my sari hind end out and start running with it, walking with it first, I sure as well won't run with it. But packed it up, it's grossly overweight and it's intentional. Why? I want to see what it does and see where I break it. Because I will. I guarantee I don't believe this is going to hold up as good as the old Alice pack and I was never excited about the Alice pack. The Allis-Pax work, but again, they're the older style nylon. The step up to Cordura was a big plus. It made a big difference because the material is more durable, but more expensive and because of that the government was stingier with what they surplus. and they never did really make full Cordura variant on the Alice packs except the very last model which was in Woodland. They're a very small number made. I got some of his XM models. They work. They're just like your Alice pack, but they're in Cordura. So, again, how to carry all that weight? Well, it is a big chunk of weight with the mags, with the M1A. By the way, I could switch out and I have another rig that's all set up for the AR-15. But you can add another eight mags. carry 30 mags with the AR. And everyone goes, what? Oh yeah, because I can carry more of those dump bags under my armpit over on the left side. I can carry them just like bandoliers. And I will throw them away just as quick like I've told you because I got them when they were 75 cents apiece. You're buying them when they were two, three, or four dollars apiece, maybe more. But when you buy them by the crate and buy them by the pallet, we buy them by the truck load, like some of you guys want to go and do again, we get them a lot cheaper. OK? And I won't hit those lights up to try it. Go ahead. That sounds like something to try out a running gun, Mark. Well, actually, I got to get my hang in out. You know, part of the problem has been two things. Six hours of radio a day in the schedule. Look at the schedule and what that does. Have you thought about that? Have you looked at my schedule? And God knows this, too. It is a breakup problem because I've got to still finish up certain little things or I've got thought processes I want to finish when I leave a program. And then I still gotta get out and get other stuff done, but I need to get out myself. I just need to get out. I've not been doing what I should be doing as much. We all are in the same boat. We're getting older. That's why I've already tailored other equipment. But I've got so much equipment that has been piled up intentionally in different locations, not just where I am right now. In fact, that's only a fingernail scratching of what we have out there stored. My programs are 4100 programs. 40 man platoon or a 100 man company. I can walk you, 100 of you to one place and by the time you go out the other end of that building, that little tunnel area, that garage, you will be a complete infantryman. And we've done that over and over and over. And some of you have traveled many miles and helped to support Tom and Tom. So I filled this house. Nancy has been very, very, very decent. I have filled this house with sleeping bags. And when I say fill, no, no, I don't mean stacking in rooms. I mean you had to turn sideways to walk down the stairwells. It was one big hall of fill and goose down pillow. From one end of this, this is an old two-story farmhouse. And this house has been filled to the literally from the floor to the ceiling and so much so we had to get it indoors. We got so many tons of the stuff we had to get it indoors and we couldn't pass it up. That's all in people's hands. I'm one of the few people who can tell you what kind of an army we actually have out there. The naysayers and the characters that have been backbiters and backstabbers against us people that have been in the Patriot Front, I'm totally disgusted with. Because you see they know too and they've lied to so many people. That's what really pisses me off. Or again, we've avoided them. There's people that, again, you do your own thing over there, we do our own thing over here. And they really, it's because, and I try to be polite, but it's like I said, we watch what happened with Hootari. The only reason that whatever happened with Hootari happened is because a bunch of rat bastards were into the, you know, didn't have any friends and so they went to the feds because they found friends there. And then they started making garbage up. They literally had no contact with the people they were talking about, but they were going to be junior G men. Because they weren't, you know, we weren't able to, you know, take over or take control because they had a, they created a corporation and they were going to take over everything as a business. Seriously, guys. Anyway, go ahead. Yeah, what you're saying is true, but just to, I wanted to ask you a question about the, what would help also with some of these groups and stuff. I'm interested in it. During the April 1775 skirmishes going on, The British officers noted that the American militia moved quickly, but they moved in a strange way. They used the cadence or marks that wasn't typical, and they noted that it was very effective. Do you know what that was? That's the Turkey Trot, and BK is already angry and shakiest, I promised to do a video on it. And you know, it was designed for old people. It's called the Turkey Trot. In fact, you'll find I got a cup here. I was going to send it to BK, but actually I decided to keep it. It's a turkey trot mug for an event on the East Coast. And you know where I learned this? When I was in very early grade school, Mr. Butcher, actually, I have to correct myself because you see, he was also my first teacher. So, Matthew Boucher, your butcher, taught us the turkey trot because he was also the gym teacher. And the Turkey Trot is a game, it's an ungamely walk because it's, I'll tell you where you've seen it. Have you ever watched a guy who does vaudeville, you know, soft shoe? Ever watched soft shoe artists where they do all the dancing and such? There is a gate, if you watch, they throw the foot forward and the leg goes straight out. And they actually stand in one place but they're running. It's like they're running, but it's weird because instead of bending the knee backwards, the leg goes up and the leg stays straight and your body weight goes on what is the toe of your foot. You slap with that. And it's literally like the way turkeys run. If you watch how birds run, but they have, remember how birds legs bend, remember? You can't do that. Don't try this at home, okay? No, no, you can try this at home. But the Turkey Trot, that was what they did. They actually did it in cadence, in line, in fire teams and squads, and even whole units. A way to imagine it, think about a Barbie. You know, Barbies don't bend at the knees. Yeah. You always bend at the knees. If you could operate that Barbie with her feet and her torso would stay upright like she's running or slightly leaning forward like she's running. One foot is going to arch away from the forward path, outward a little bit, because you're not bending your knee, but you want the foot not to contact the ground. And now your body is starting to move forward, and as that foot contacts the ground, because it's over there now and you haven't bent your knee, you've swung your foot around a bit. As example, if you start with your right foot, because most people do with the... It's a psychological thing, we're right handed. It's like punching first with your right hand. When you step forward with that foot, it's starting to swing out a little bit. It's building that cadence. And as that foot touches the ground, the body's carrying the... The other foot just has to come along. It's attached, right? But that foot doesn't bend, that leg doesn't bend. That foot swings out a little bit away from the path, maybe six, maybe eight inches, and it's gaining speed. And now when it touches the ground, the same thing happens on the other side. The knee doesn't bend. The whole leg swings out just a little bit, just enough to keep you from having to bend the knee for the foot to contact the ground. And you can find that with some practice, you can move pretty quickly with this. It's kind of a good way to, man, I've been walking all day, and just to kind of relax while you're still moving. It sounds like a contradiction. but it's kind of a good way to get there because, well, you're doing something completely different than you normally do, but it is at a distance when it observed seemingly rather awkward. It looks ungainly and what it does is it reduces fatigue dramatically, especially for the joints. It also elevates you. You're actually moving at a higher level because you're working off of the front of your feet. You're actually working off the front ball and the toes. That's where the spring comes from, not bending your knee. You can get close to a running speed with this, but by that time, you pretty much mastered this little bit of... And in fact, typically the unit could move three times the normal infantry speed. That's why many units could... This was a whole process of military science developed here in the United States that nobody else used. and it was something that's been intentional, like so many things. I mean, we copied everything everybody else. No, we invented a lot of things ourselves, even for that war. And this was a developed component of our militia's effort to develop new military science concepts. One of them we knew, and many of the doctors, Dr. Warren, I've mentioned this many times, Dr. Warren is probably credited with being one of the several people because he was a medical doctor. Coming up with this idea, there are several other people that bring it forward that argue that it even probably goes back in the depths of time. It's like there's not anything that's new. But apparently they perfected this or developed it within the militias. And it came from the committees of safety. Well, it came actually pre-committees of safety because it's something that was developed and perfected within our sphere. Europeans and European troops have not seen this. The whole idea was to reduce fatigue with the older troops. What was the average age? Well, most of our guys were veterans, were veterans of the French and Indian wars. And the last major action had taken place in the late 1750s and then there were skirmishes after that through to almost 1770. In fact, there always were skirmishes. But the idea is that the the troops were older. I mean the guy might have been 18 years old when he went to war and it's 20 years later, 38, 40 years of age, nutrition maybe not necessarily the best, but it was better than Europe, and we had an older military force. Well, how do you get them to move and how can you get them to move faster and do you have enough horse to move everybody? No. Are you infantry? Yes. How can you get there quicker? The turkey trout was developed for that reason. There's a lot of them. So this is not really a heel and toe motion? No, no, it's all off the front of the foot. It's all off the front. Once you get into it, let me think, okay, how I love you, how I love you, my dear old Swami. No, no, no, no. Remember, have you ever watched that piece? If you watch, there's a dance, that dance step. One of the dance steps that they use is basically an interpretation of the turkey trot. The heel never touches the ground, the leg never bends. It doesn't bend back. In other words, you're used to shifting your weight, moving more of your hamstring, your hamstring is extended. So that your hamstring is taking, it's working like a big, long spring like you'd find on the back end of a pickup truck. Okay, think about it that way. And what's happening is that it's rebounding. You're rebounding without keeping that tension up. And the four muscles are working almost like you're skiing. If you've ever done water skiing, guys, the most thing you tread, I used to put on a lake. We ski all the time. is that first day on the lake. Why? Oh, you were great. You felt good. You rent, but you're using a totally different group of muscles to keep yourself on those skis. Because of the energy applied, you have to hold the line. That's pulling pressure and tension on certain muscles you haven't used for anything else, typically. And then the leg muscles you're using, comparable. It's the same group of muscles that you use for skiing that you typically use like with a turkey trot. And so it's a different compression, it's a different working of the muscles and that's where you have to get used to it. The advantage too is that they can carry a pretty good combat load. Now remember what they would do for counterweight, your rifle is carried and this is why that handle on the M16 would be kind of cool. You carry the rifle and you carry a combat sack or a counterweight in the other arm and you let the natural long swinging motion of the arms help with the process, actually the centrifugal force process that you're developing there. It works. It does work. When I was little it was like, my God, he's torturing us. Because when you start out you're doing the gymnasium and you're doing it, you do short bursts so you can try this and it has to be shown to you. because I can talk about it on the radio until we're below the face, but you have to see it. And look up and see if you can find the Turkey Trot. And there are people, I'm sure, that have actually resurrected this, that are, you know, Civil War, forgive me, Revolutionary War reenactors. I would think, I would hope, I mean, it isn't a significant part of the unique battlefield preparedness of the militias leading up to the American War for Independence. And you know what, I'll tell you what, you're probably thinking, could I incorporate that into my rifle shoot? Right? Right. Yeah, well I gotta, I have to break down and do this, but I get my sari hind down and I'm gonna, I'll work on it, in fact I'll start tomorrow, be quite honest, because I've got something already set up and I've got to do some filming tomorrow. I've got to break away for 20 minutes. and get some filming done because we're working on, we've been putting footage in the can and John's waiting for it to edit it and we've got the night vision video for Don to finish up. We've got to get that in the can. So there's a bunch of stuff that we've had to put off. We had to deal with family issues, plus, like I said, I'm doing destruction and construction, which is looking great. I can't complain there. And in between all that, we've been inventorying technology, putting more equipment together, etc. Again, there's never a minute lost. I have to break away and do this, and since we'll have the camera out, I'll see if I can get my hind end to work right. and at least do a little caveat. In fact, I'll do it with the gear. So it'll be with the combat gear. It would not have to be with boots because traditionally, I mean, look at the legging and footwear combination they had back in the day. Now, I want to point out that there are several things that the British actually knew in advance and even talk about in many of their notes in their preparation for the attack on April 19th. And one of the things that did catch them completely off guard was that mobility factor. Whether or not it was taught deeper into the war or through all of the units, for the purpose of the beginning of the war, which was the response and reaction units that had to go into a quick, you know, get across the county to fight, the techniques that started the war were, you know, obviously essential. because we didn't know where they were going to strike. We didn't know who they were going to try and kill. And we had to be prepared. I had to protect you where you were in your part of the county, just as I would Don and his part of the county. And I hope you would do the same with me. The units already organized that way. And that's why, again, they could mobilize 10, 12, 20. There were more people that mobilized for Salem, for instance, than there were that mobilized for Lexington and Concord. When Salem was attacked earlier in the year, or when they went out to try and do the same thing, over 30,000, 30,000 to 33,000 people responded. They know that approximately 20,000 to 24,000 were able to respond on April 19th. So in reality, their actions would have been more hilacious for the British and bigger. I mean, I don't think they could have gotten away had the Salem action escalated. They should have stuck around for the party. Yeah, it would have been quite interesting because there were more water barriers and there would have been more people on the ground blocking them that would have been in place. The other part about this is management because you brought up Lexington and Concord and everybody that looks at the evaluation, well, there was no true command and that is something that needs to be addressed is straw bosses, okay? Guys, lead follower and get the hell out of the way. But any situation where you have, where we have a contact, if I came in and I had 30 men with me. The first thing I do is you seek out the individual who is the officer of contact or the NCO who was in contact or the team leader who was in contact. Why? Because that person has seen the battle from the beginning. That person has made first contact and first action. Russian policy is, even if it's a lieutenant who is the first contact officer, he is in charge until there is a significant change in the battle. In other words, if a battalion commander shows up and that lieutenant theoretically is the one that's been fighting the action and he's fixed the enemy and he's actually been performing to his abilities, everybody else who shows up are nothing but reinforcements that are under his command. You see how that works? In other words, I know where to apply for us. That's why I seek out, okay, who's the team leader here? I am. Well, how did this start? Give us a quick brief. Okay, well the cops showed up. We were, you know, we were, you know, turned out, burned down this house. We already told the fire department. The fire department knew some neighbor caused some problems. They started bringing more cops in. We decided, no, we're not going to jail today. We're going to piss around with it. They knew better. The cops know better. The fire department knows, and they're with us. Okay, and how many are on the ground? And determine deployment, you know where they are. Yeah, in fact what I'm basically describing was the Lansing standoff. We had a standoff southwest of Lansing. By the time we were done we had well over 400 people on the ground. They had probably close to 180. We were, anything could have started. That would have been the next American War for Independence. That would have been a good start right there. State Police. We had feds, I know we had all kinds of local cops, most local cops didn't want to be there, a lot of them were already trying to figure out how to get the hell out of Dodge, and they backed off, we didn't. It was like, no, you guys want to start something, I guess it's going to start here. Now, we were the ones showing up, the person who was first in contact had the working information on where the enemy was deployed, how the action had developed, what force had already been applied by the enemy and was in place, So that person has a mindset or he had an understanding of the action. So he's the person you draw on first. And if I've been fighting, it's where do you need us? Because that person's mind, you don't interfere. Don't put a stick in the spoke of that guy instead just to reverse. You know, his fight's running. He's already moving. Now, where do you need us? Well, we've got a big problem there. Actually, we've got a weapons section. Or somebody over there has got better equipment. Okay, we'll deal with them. Fire maneuver element, first squad, forward left, second squad, support fire, third indirect fire. In fact, by the way, let's give them some boom toys. There you go. That's why we need to be dealing with this now. One of the things that came up as an address you might recall with some of the people ended up up there in Oregon is that, well, our officers don't seem to be doing their job. Now, when we're saying officers, this is the person who's a veteran who's expecting veteran military people to risk their careers and jump over to the Patriot side right now. Everybody goes, well look they should! Well, no, most of them won't. So the problem you've got is everybody who's worshipping this government thing, you've got to get that out of their head to begin with. We create our own officers. We create our own bosses or team leaders. In fact, I try to use that mostly if you'll notice. Team leaders or group leaders. Because that's really how we need to think about it. There's no fleet commanders. We don't have any admirals. Well we do, but we don't. You know, the whole here idea here is cooperation for the sake of success. because we want to win. And this has to be addressed now and by God we've got better communication than they ever had back in 1775. So we sure as hell should be able to deal with this now. And it means each person also has to be willing to step up. But we also need to, there's time, like I said, lead, follow, get the hell out of the way. There are situations where everybody needs to understand that again, now if a person's failing us, again here's the other problem, oh wow, that, about six just went right through his chest. Guy was in charge just got a bullet. Now, remember what he said when we were soldiers? What do you do? You will learn the job of the man above you and the man below you. That's right. Men will die. There's no way to determine that. Sickle finger of fate is a terrible thing. You don't know today or tomorrow when you go out there to get the mail if some idiot isn't going to have a tire bad or pull off the road and take you right out. Your plan is to go get the mail. Reality may be something else. Now, is it less likely? No, if you're on the battlefield, the odds go up that you're gonna get hit hurt and damaged pretty much quite extensively, no matter who you are, which side you're on, okay? But the most important thing here is cooperation and again, the bunny ranch has terrified the enemy to no end. And you know, like I said, it doesn't make any difference whether or not there was contention. That's fine. That could have been dealt with. We should have probably popped our arse down on the ground there in different ways, but we were in contact with pretty much all the paid people. And one of them said the same thing again. Well, it seems like nobody is stepping forward that really knows how to manage things. Well, you're going to have to learn. I would point out that the U.S. militia of 1773, 1774, 1775, guys, they were building their own. They had sense enough to know they had to build their own. They weren't counting on the British military to flip over or the Federals to flip over, slash the Crown troops. Crown troops didn't all like what they were doing, but they were going to follow orders because it was the Crown. Just that simple. Look at how they got their grog from. Yeah, exactly. The mead was going to show up or the grog was going to show up or the beer was going to show up every day because it was part of their contract. They're going to get soused one way or another. At least from that side. We couldn't guarantee that. Well, we tried to. And we did mostly. Liquor was part of the deal, guys, for all armies. Don't forget that. Oh, you mean they liquored their troops up? Everybody liquored their troops up. I always laugh at that one. Everybody, if you don't know about the Constitution, go read the history of the Constitution and look at the quartermaster stores and what they purchased at every stop. And what the first thing is they purchased. Oh, we mean food. No, booze. Booze. Any kind of booze. Madeira, mead, you name it. Whatever it is, it could get many thousands of gallons of... Orange-squeezing. Yeah, whatever. We got a lot of work to do. But you guys, we already have the impetus, and we already have experience from the past. We have people who are, we have people who are competent. We have people who perceive themselves as NCOs when in many cases, it's just like in a battlefield situation. A lot of guys I know I grew up with and I worked with in the military, they got battlefield commissions. They were sergeants. 1966, they were sergeants. In the I-Drang, 67, 66, 67 or 68, they were lieutenants and then captains. You know why? Because a lot of people died. You know what? They took charge. And they had the common sense of the wherewithal to stay in charge. And somebody saw that, so they gave them a battlefield commission. Well, what's a battlefield commission? Somebody says, damn, you do good work. Nobody says, gives you any special squeeze or pat on the head of some college or university. He said, damn, you do good work. Congratulations, you're in charge. So you drop and we find another one. Now, all of you again need to, I don't know, it's fascinating because we, The, the, if you were to, and we have talked about this, but you know it's funny how people are just shocked or they're stunned. It's like just after the FBI stepped in front of anybody with the Hillary thing and I keep bringing up because man you could hear a pin drop for the next two days until they shot those cops. Until the feds and the, and the massage shot those cops in Dallas. You could hear a pin drop in this country. everybody thought the same thing somebody else is going to do it somebody else can take care of it boy here comes the FBI I watch Quantico and I watch all these television programs and the FBI they're just gonna jump in there they're gonna put Hillary in her plug no they're not so I guess well wait a minute saw your BS that you thought was reality you mean you watched too much television there? I watched that show once where they all had bugs in their head I watched a few minutes of that and that's far more convincing That's going to tell you, no they're not. They're after money. If they can steal money from you, they'll steal money from the OY boys. That's why they're after companies and businesses. And otherwise they're thieves. They're thieves for the international corporation and to bring us under British rule as subjects of the socialist slash the royal crown. Well, we're still in minutes from the next guy's office. Oh, God, yes we are. Matter of fact, for everybody out there, guys, again, organized Army equipment train as militia, set up a 5-10 program. Deep logistics is the key to victory. They were going to Lexington and Concord to spike guns, destroy cannon if they could, and destroy food. Again, logistics. What was the purpose behind the attack on Lexington and Milan Concord? Logistics. Destroying logistics. That is in the marching order for the command. We are at the top, it's dark outside. God bless the republic. Just the New World Order. We shall prevail, ladies and gentlemen. The Empire is on the rock. But we are on the mark, folks. A.S.M.I.C. Because we're dark out there, you're going to need to see in the dark. And Don is available here in the next few minutes. So, Don, your number for night vision on the web page, please take us out, sir. Hey, that phone number, 231796-8458, website. The sea level, that phone number is that, we call welcome.