October 11, 2016
Evening Show
1h 3m
Complete
Radio Episode
2016
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Summary
Mark Koernke discussed military tactics and preparedness, focusing on battlefield decision-making, weapon selection, and rally points for organized groups. He addressed misconceptions about combat portrayed in movies, emphasizing practical resource management and the importance of retaining weapons and tools during conflict. The show included extended discussion of squad composition, combined arms tactics, and various firearms capabilities. Koernke also covered government inefficiency, citing examples of problematic VA and law enforcement personnel being rehired despite misconduct, and discussed election fraud in New York City involving voter manipulation across districts.
- rally points
- military tactics
- preparedness
- battlefield strategy
- weapons selection
- combined arms
- m16
- m14
- shotgun
- squad tactics
- va hospital
- election fraud
- new york city
- government inefficiency
- voter manipulation
Transcript
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One god you don't want to get steamed up. It ain't. He had an evil. And beyond the world. But the dead were dumb. Because he was ruthless. I spoke to you. That's the job! Of course it could be UN garbage to with him intentionally hitting switches and piddle farting the stuff and you know moving stuff over if they proceeded with it. Who knows? There's no real verification on that. Everybody says that somebody heard somebody saw. nobody's ever said, hey, what's the situation here? It's all, well, they're the post you by such and such a date. Well, did they or didn't they? Did anybody, the people who manage these situations, in other words, the government, most of it is assumption. Well, on the other hand, there are some other issues in that they're just transferring over to foreign assets, other controls of the different systems, and Pau Poo Dung Dung Bee only gets two bowls of fish heads and rice in 2000 a year. He ain't exactly as concerned about his job, he doesn't want to starve. As concerned about his job. So that's one of the reasons everybody last night had a problem with their service in one form or another that I know. Everybody said the same thing. Hey, did you have something strange happen with your computers last night? It's like, hey, how you mean? We're standing in the bank today when the computers froze up. First, we don't know if we've got that other level of warfare going on right now. I mean, we are pissing off the, supposedly, the Russians. They have allies. And there's a lot of people out there who, well, if you just throw a little bit of chump change at them, can do a whole lot of trouble for your system, ask the Nigerians. They do it all the time. Come after you recently and then find out, oh, remember it was that clutch of Indians that they arrested two days ago, was it last week, the end of last week, three days ago now. That the end of last week, they had the whole, you know, all they rounded them up, turned out that scam, and everybody said, well, you know, I tried to warn you it was a scam. Well, a lot of people, oh my god, all I have to do is say IRS on it. Oh my god, I want math stuff. That's exactly what slaves were doing. It's rather interesting. Well, it says we've got live recording, uh, just a heads up for Ed. It's like we're, well, at least I'm getting a feed. I shouldn't turn this on while I'm talking. So, god. There was a glitch. I fixed it. It's already taken care of. Okay, very good. I see, at least my registry shows that we're up and running. So, okay, very good. Hooray! Yay! And a couple of things here too about, you know, again, the whole idea of the picket or the watchman. And as we've said before, see, what somebody always does, well, think in movies. We talked about this this morning and I've always repeated this, guys, movies are conditioners. Uh, everybody has to be a minimal peasant infantry pleave and one weapon and minimal everything and you never pick up anything else that somebody else has laying around. You just, you know, again, just keep wailing away and when you run out, I'm like, oh, they don't know what am I going to do? How about you pick up something off the corpses laying around you? You made a lot of them. Did you make like 10, 20, 30, 40, 50? It always happens in the movies. But then all of a sudden you're out of ammo and you have to throw your pistol. You look at your pistol. Let's do the classic. You look at your pistol in disgust, even though your pistol has served you well, right? You make these bodies all around you, right? And so you throw it aside like it's a disgusting, useless tool because it failed you. What? Because it ran out of ammo? You know, personally I would take the handgun and put it back in my shoulder holster, but that's just me. If I got time to throw the gun off to the side, I've got time to put the gun back in the holster, don't I? Oh yeah. Have you ever noticed this, guys? This is conditioning. Think about it. It's like, it's like in the, even in the Stinking James Bond movie, I always point that out. You know, pew, pew, pew, pew, pew, pew, pew, pew, pew, pew, pew, pew. The bad guy has telepathy. He knows my gun's empty. So I'm going to look at it in disgust and throw it over the side of the train. Didn't you know that? But I would point out that my fingers, although they are very durable and quite, you know, great strong given the opportunity, that pistol shoved into somebody's eye socket is a whole hell of a lot better than my knuckles cracking at 57 years of age. Exactly. You know what I mean? I mean, this is me, but it's like, in fact, even when I was younger, it's like, dudes, something hard for me. Is this a brawl? This is a brawl. Are there rules? There are no rules. Then guess what? So you see, what are they doing this for? Conditioning. It's like we're talking about every veteran I know, and the ones that, you know, especially survive from, you know, beginning to end, whatever disaster they were in, called war. We'll tell you the same thing. If it was nailed down and it could shoot, they collected it. And they collected everything that supported it. And they keep using it. And when they ran out or it got blowed up, they start collecting more again. And war, that happens. And the same is true with even personal, you know, close quarter combat. Okay, you got a knife. And you get a gun. You throw the knife down? No. I think the sheet that goes. Yeah, or maybe I pulled it out of somebody's corpse. I won't put it back in that. I do want to hang onto it because I had to fight with the knife earlier, didn't I? Why was that? Yeah, I had to use harsh language and, whoa! I did Bruce Lee! And I chopped him and whacked his beanie off and, you know, I smacked him inside the temple, like you said, and I got his knife. But wait, he didn't have a gun. Where'd he go? Okay, so at least he got his knife. Now, the next one I look for and run into, I'm gonna give him an opportunity to use whatever good weapons he's got because I want them. So now from knife, I go to gun, but do I get rid of the knife? Oh hell no! But if you watch the movies, what will they do? Oh, I don't need this anymore! But you were good with it, weren't you? Oh yeah, yeah, really, I'm a trained professional. I'll pull one out of my arse the next time I need one. You might if you're not paying attention, and if you don't have one when your gun runs out of ammo. See? So this is... I wish you did. Yeah, you're continue... in fact, or at least in fact, sub-cacheying stuff. Let's think about some things. Forward motion, forward motion on the battlefield, but you break, you hit a wall. You hit a wall of firepower, manpower, armor, whatever it is, you can't go any farther. Well, in your advance, or your breakout, for instance, you don't just toss it to the side. If you can, eyeball. It's kind of like if you've ever been in the military, rally points. Okay, here, this point, good location, drop here, keep moving. Pop, pop, pop, pop, still got whatever else I was already carrying. But, you know, if I have to hold for a minute, anything I can accumulate in an area or at least benchmark mentally. Because all the rally points are mental benchmarks. That big oak tree we passed, oak tree, oak tree, field, oak tree, oak tree, everybody passed oak tree. Everybody knows that big oak tree on the edge of the field, that big pillow shroud, like a big mushroom cloud, that you can't miss even at night. That is a feature. Or it can be a burned out building. Sometimes not necessarily your first choice because it might be a damaged wreck building. And damaged wreck buildings usually indicate something big probably did damage. You don't like the other side's mortar fire that's zeroed on that target? We're on their mortar sheet at the other end. It says Church and Farmhouse. Grid 4, 5 clicks, Adjustment 6. They have a little card. It already has that building mapped out. Why? Pretty good cover or concealment or a rally point, don't you think? And besides, it's a topographic feature that other than being turned into rubble isn't going to move. So I can use it as a way to adjust fire when the time comes. Oh yeah! So you see buildings and big man-made objects sometimes aren't your first best choice. Radio towers, sure, mountains, a lot of times, hills, a lot of times. Rolls in the terrain with a hill that's just as obvious but not real dominant. Rally points may, you know, again, have to serve certain security purposes too, but are designed so that everybody can identify from all directions, zero in on it, collect at that point, count to 10, count to 20, anybody else doesn't make it, you know what your second rally point, third rally point back is, and if all stills exfiltrate back to your original, you know, destination, your original departure point. Dom, you're on track, so jump in there. Go ahead, please. Well, sometimes that, let's do it like this. You guys remember as a youngster reading about the Flying Tigers and seeing that jacket they wore, you know, the one with the American flag on the back. Sometimes it was a big patch underneath that. Sometimes it was sewn to the inside of the jacket. But it was something like, I am an American flyer and if you help me to X, Chinese city, you will be paid. We've talked about that. We've talked about hiding gold and silver even in the seams of your jeans. You could probably hide a half ounce or a quarter ounce in your jeans. sewn into the seams where someone patting you down real quick giving you the once over you know just to make sure you don't have a gun or a knife a fore mentioned guns and knives they might not find that by somebody next level to well now I have to do something else to get out of here but again talked about this you know that item I am an American flyer that that Chinaman was given gold there are a number of different ways to think about infiltration or exfiltration But if you're in a particular place, as an example, your group is moving through the area and something happens and now the group isn't as big or now the group's going that way and well, you're here. Now, about going someplace and coming back home, a lot of times it's not good to walk the same path, is it? Now, yet when you keep that in mind, when you think, well, the group's leaving and they're going on and they're going to finish what they're meant to do, right? Coming back this way. If you don't have the ability to move a long ways, you might want to move back toward or try to get toward one of those places that, hey, this is where we're going to be on the way out. This is like you say, Mark, rally points. This is where we're going to meet again on the way out. And it's good to have rally points on the way in. It's good to have rally points on the way out. Rally points on the way in are more called marshalling areas. Marshalling areas might be something as big as a train station. or something as big as a wide deer path, a wide animal path, where a good portion of the group can see from one end to the other the group where they're not close enough together that, you know, hey, let's drop that 88 or one motor around and watch, see how many of them walk away. I bet you most of them don't kind of deal, you know, we've talked about that. Another way to look at these, and here we go with a different a waypoint. We're going to get to a particular place and then we're going to change our course. A waypoint, a rally point. There are a number of different ways to describe it and just because you're going to change course in a particular place doesn't necessarily mean that that would be a good rally point. Don't confuse them, but they can be used together but not necessarily. So again, there's a couple of different descriptions and because one is mentioned doesn't mean it is the other doesn't work. a waypoint or a rally point, they are different things. They can both be one or they can be individual description. But it's good to know them on the way in. And if you're not coming back that same path, we've talked about bad habits and that's a bad habit. Exit a strike area the same way you went in. That's not a good habit. Right, one of the points that should be made about the phase one rally point is it's typically close to point of contact. It is purely the step back. And then from that point forward, the exfiltration out will be at the discretion of the team leader, the platoon leader, whoever the individual is that's left or alive or in charge of, depending upon the type of action that they were committed to. And that is something that we have mentioned before. Many times when you are moving into a final position, that's when you designate that first rally point. Although there are others that are designated for fallback and all of them within a particular direction, but they can be preset. They can actually be determined. essentially you actually have mapping or typically you have, not always, typically you have mapping, but you may in the process decide, hmm, considering the conditions and looking at the environment right now, this is a better choice for a rally point, so you will halt the patrol, you will identify the location, you will confirm that everybody understands what the rally point is, it will be repeated physically so that everybody confirms that they know as they move through the area. and the team leader or the squad leader is the ones, team leader depending on designation, what kind of formation you are. The guy that's in charge, the straw boss and his assistant straw bosses will be the ones who will be of course making those decisions step by step. There can be also recommendations by the team. Somebody may identify something and others did not see. Always speak up, always. Remember, that's why we have all those eyeballs out there in the first place. Because we have all those battlefield computers attached to them. It's really cool, they all think. Our side thinks. Go ahead, jump in there. Your first rally point away from the strike area might be heavy with medical. think about you might even yeah you might even leave the medical support right there now that has happened that's been done in the past under the logic that what you're doing is you're going in faster giving them a bloody nose you dump a lot of firepower in the you're running like hell and the ideas to not even give them the opportunity to return fire on a target that's viable but if you are in the exit no matter how hard you try you know about that best with the plans of mice and men well guys it's just a fickle finger of fate someone get a tail and you know i shot the tail and That's what Ralph and Doc's waiting for. somebody into something, you know what I mean? Fight tool, and I hate to refer to people as tools. I really do, I really do. But you might find someone who's, I don't want to fight, but you might find their ability also, and you might want to have them just away from the fight for any number of reasons, and that doesn't mean that, well, just because they're medical. Use your imagination on this, because again, talked about a Marine is a rifleman. But not every militia man, not every patriot can run to the front, can they Mark? One of the other elements here that's very, very critical is again, knowing, well, managing your manpower. Okay, finding out what the potential of each of your individuals, what their weak points are, what their strong points are. Finding out what they're capable of, what their abilities are. The first thing you want to know, especially if you're bringing a whole bunch of people together that have never worked together, the Army does this but not quite the same way. No military formation does this. It's finding out what the strong point is or what the career track has been for individuals. That's most critical because there's a lot of skilled trades or there are a lot of skills that can be transferred over or make sense to apply to an element of military science. Now because we do not have a 16 week advanced course in filling the blank, most of it is going to be OJT based upon field, again first, field training, whatever is available, hands-on training and then direct application of whatever classroom and hands-on training was provided in the shortest period of time. And then the learning curve is quite steep. Get hold of yourself real fast, understand the problem and move on it or end up being a casualty. But most important is by first being a sorter, in other words, knowing your people gives you the ability to sculpt the battlefield from your side. Some people are not as competent or capable with a firearm in general. We've talked about this many times. There is an advantage to a combined arms team. Now the bean counters just want one rifle so that, well, back when they had muskets, one musket, everybody gets one, they kind of work. How even if you're a good shot, they just still kind of work, right? There was no rear sight. And he kind of golf ball it into the target area. How well that does, you can tighten up the group a little bit and some people with a musket can perform pretty well, but that's also why they made shot. Now, in modern times, the same thing happened with one specific... It will make everything do one thing. The M14 actually was the first of those weapons. Even though people say, well, yeah, I thought they tried to do the M16. No, they actually tried to do the M14. The BAR was put out of service. The Qur'an was supposed to be put out of service. The bolt-action rifles would cease to be in the inventory, the Springfield. The M1 carbine was to be phased. All those weapons were to be replaced by the M14 and the M15 weapon system. The M14 is a rifle. Remember the M15, not the AR-15. The M15 was the squad automatic weapon. Magazine fed, it was basically just a bullied up M14, pre-designated as an M15 with a heavier barrel, bulkier, chunkier stock. Advanced pistol grip later on and also with a fore grip located to the front of the weapon in a slightly different stock. They modified the stock several times before the program was kind of just phased. And they went back to the idea of a belt fed gun and that's where you see the M60 come into service. Before that it would have been, oh by the way, did I mention the Browning was in the squad at some point as a squad gun, if not the BAR depending upon the military formation or what era. all those weapons were negated for the M14 and the M15 system. So the M16 was not the first idea or concept, nor the Stoner rifle which comes in during the Vietnam War also. On the other hand, in our situation, we don't have to... we're not waiting for any table of authorized equipment. We don't have to get a Hail Mary from a regime. If you're willing to carry it, go ahead and use it. But remember that, as I've pointed out, we're not shallow. You need firing pins, extractors, ejectors. Now it's nice if your whole unit is on the same page with basic weapons but you know again we had carbines some people just excelled with the M1 carbine other people loathe that gun there's no it seems to me there's no in-between I mean myself I'm like in between it's like ah, not carbine okay they're dumping our own down range congratulations it works but there were two schools on that in the field I know men personally my uncle like you said Seven rifles, typically when he was dug in, they would start out with garands and work away at car beans. And that's how he fought on the Yalu. So just a heads up on that one. Same is true with the submachine gun. Hey, and you know what? The submachine guns we typically had, the Thompson family, you could write your name with if you knew what you were doing. So it really wasn't even, that wasn't a spray and pray gun. But some people just seem to work better with nothing but a chug-a-way pistol cartridge as opposed to an MBR main battle rifle in .30-06. Now today, some people will do better with a shotgun. Again, there are some big advantages to shotguns, which is why I don't poo-poo them in any way, shape, or form. Shotguns can now go to 200 yards easily, and they deliver a hell of a lot bigger slug than that 55 grain Pipsqueak. You're looking at a 500 grain hourglass copper slug traveling with the same ballistic as any light rifle. Okay, going downrange to 200 yards. Now there's a significant drop, okay, after that. But at 200 yards, with any gun with an intermediate long eye relief scope, I mean, guys, this was developed in the 80s. Actually, in the 70s is when it started, but the 80s, the early 80s is where it really took off. And from that point forward, it has them back down. So the shotgun can do everything from pump number eight shot or it can do seven and a half or close in in the house and just kind of person at close range you can pepper somebody with you know what twenty five twenty seven thirty rounds of uh... or more of number four buck and that's just like releasing an entire magazine of m sixteen ammunition all at once but a hydraulic shock is what gets you there you know all that hit at once it knocked stuff off the motor mount so to speak so again the each of these weapons the perception in fact is very different from the reality. It's just that for whatever reason, you know, here, give him a shotgun. You know, we used to joke as pistols, especially the senior sergeant, I was with him, he goes, well, you're not really that good with a pistol as, you know, he's testing people. He goes, I'm going to send you over to the belly gunners. Yeah, it should be a level enough platform. You can, you'd be good enough for them. You lay on, yeah, you can lay on your stomach and shoot a lot. There you go. You should be able to handle that. But in reality again, what do you do with the pistol? What do you do with a rifle? Apples and oranges in reality, but there was always that tongue-in-cheek, you know, ribbing going on between the belly gunners and the pistol shooters. The pistol. Just a little heads up. Each to each his own. I am not going to lament. You know, we joke about certain firearms and people get all bent up. Don't worry, you guys joke about our guns or just flat out bad mouth them. So it's like... Oh well, you know, hey get over it. We'll find out when a whole squad or platoon of people cut loose with 30-odd sexes sounds like you're talking a boom wall. You know right now they're making for the Air 15 noise hide noise, not flash hiders, noise projectors to try and make the M16 sound louder. They've already been doing this for a little bit. Why? Well, pew pew pew sometimes just doesn't seem to make it. It doesn't impress people, so we're going to direct the sound and make it so shockable. I can do that with my 308, not 6 all day. And God, you don't want a short-barreled 8mm in front of you. WOOM! And then it flames you to death at close range. You get burned and, oh my God, he's on fire! It's modernizing the wound. Yeah, see how that works? Only every time I pull the trigger and I don't need a noise maker to make it happen. I've pointed this out before, just the sound. Nobody really relates to that. And we have not seen a situation in recent years. I don't think we've seen one situation other than maybe Vietnam on our side versus the AK, but by the time we're at the AK, that's a pretty chunky 30 caliber rifle. But if you think about it, the chipmunk guns versus somebody that has a wall of .308s or a wall of .6s by the thousands, do you know how offset that battlefield sounds? It's like everybody, I've had people say, it's like everybody over there, we just got like an M60. And it's like, no. But you see, that's a matter of mental conditioning. What have they been shooting all this time? A .223 rifle. Either an M16A1, A2, or now the, instead of being the A4, calling it the M4, trying to desperately give the weapon nomenclature to make it believe it's another gun, it's not. Okay, but all of those is a specific report sound slash character to the battlefield. When all of a sudden you walk in and this also is psychological because think about it, when they do hear that, the first thing they do think of is belt fed. So psychologically, and like I've told you guys, if you have a 20 round magazine, I'll make you swear to God I've got an M60 down there. Bum bum bum, bum bum bum, bum bum bum bum. Reload. And I can do that fast enough that, bum bum, bum bum bum bum, bum bum bum bum bum. And remember you're counting your rounds, three to five, three to five, actually three five, three five, four. Three five, three five, four. That's one of the ways to think, you know, there's any number of combinations. And if you chug off two or three rounds at the end, or you know, an odd amount of four, you know what, it doesn't make any difference. Trust me, people realize they probably should get out of the way when they have a, what sounds like a suppression fire weapon in motion. And it's the same with that Barrett 50. Have you seen what, for instance, McCulloch does with a 50 caliber Barrett? 10 rounds in 4 seconds? 10 rounds? If he were actually just taking his time, you'd swear to God he had a Mod-Doo sitting down range from you. Instead of speeding up, if he were to slow down, boom, boom, boom, boom, boom, boom, boom, change mag. Or here's the other thing, have another guy with a gun you've trained to do the same. Boom, boom, boom. Boom, boom, boom. Boom, boom, boom. Boom, boom, boom. Three, three round bursts, one, one, one, one Taylor at the end. And by the time he does that, the second gun kicks back in. Could you tell whether or not it was a Ma Deuce at seven, 800 yards or a thousand yards? Hell no. Anybody want to stand up and shout at him and ask? It doesn't sound too bright, does it, though? Nah, I'll pass on that one. Ain't gonna happen on this planet, Chris Martin. You see how that works? So again guys, yeah just cause you don't have it yet doesn't mean you can't make them believe and if you got a 75 round drum on those weapons, same thing. Don't just spray and pray. Squad Gunners, take a look at how squad gunners are trained to shoot. Emulate the concept and your little magic quick twicky finger will do everything a full auto gun will do and they can't tell the difference. Seriously. You don't need to worry about this, like I told you, don't worry about a machine gun right now. Focus on guns that hit farther and harder and still offer good volume fire, if whatever possible, and then beat them. Once you shoot them and strip them dead, you will have whatever belt-fed gun your tax dollars paid for because they brought those prostitutes in under your dime. When you're killing Ching Li, we're going to be the ones paying for it. You do understand that, right? Oh, look, 293s or 94s, those would be collector items. Yes. Yeah, the world's lightest automatic 50 calibers, the Chinese paratroopers don't even like them because sometimes they explode. Well, you know, that's that when you're paying slaves to do the work. Sometimes they get tired before they collapse and have their organs taken out of them. uh... they can make mistakes but it's the world's a lot of a lot of people were i fell into my machine here that's okay we'll be taking your kidneys in a minute black color well this is like spoke with god last night and you discuss some some things about this burns or given bunker bill that i'm not just kind of wanted to touch base with the some other day would be better if you want to come up in the next hour that'd be a help to that kind of screaming and marc you know well so to speak Okay, here we go. I'll be done. Thank you. One other one other thing that has kind of come to my attention You know, we've all heard about this VA Phoenix different list for treatments of patients and the whole scandal. It's pretty much systemic New news story and I haven't ran this all the way down. I just was hearing parts and pieces of it on the radio the local AM this morning and it appears that the Phoenix VA hired a new director. Last name is Judd, I think, J-U-D-D. Fired from the Chicago VA. She had inappropriate contact with a patient or not saying what. It was somebody else that had gone and asked out of the appointments and she started arguing. I don't know if it was a wife, it was a female. And then she finally printed out one piece of paper and the lady didn't think it was proper. and wanted it up and put it back on her desk and asked for the entire print out and the lady started crying and this just not just the security guards at the VA hospital but the then came in the police got there then she cut them off and had to give her side of the story before they could figure it out. She got fired hearing she lied to the board this review and the appeal the union was there they agreed with the VA and the firing, but now, VA employees, she was put at the top of the applicants and it boiled down because she was the only one in the whole stack of applicants with past VA experience. She was the only one considered for the job, but now she's been hired to be the director of the VA hospital in Phoenix. Love ya, love it, don't ya? Man, it makes me wish I used to know all about Arabian horses. You know what I mean? No, sir, you'd have to go to FEMA for that. Yeah, yeah. You'd be hired by FEMA for that one. Uh-huh. Don't forget that. That's like the wandering cop, isn't it? You know what I mean? The cop that, well, he crashed the police car and gets fired, or he shoots somebody and gets fired, or beats up an old lady and gets fired. Next month, he's working in another police department, and maybe another county, maybe another state. There's a lot of cops, not a great proportion, but there's a lot of cops out there that's, you know, broad broad. In the city of Gilbert, his name was Lovelace. I don't know where he is now, but against department policy, he's chasing people through red light. He teed the car in the intersection. There was some serious injuries. About a year or so later, there was a lady that was trying to pass a friction at a Walgreens through the drive. They kind of stalled called the police. police. This guy shows up riding a motorcycle and parks it in front of her but not like directly kind of off to the... and she puts the vehicle into like at one mile an hour or something and he claims that he was in fear of his life because she tapped his motorcycle and it fell all over because he had parked it and as he passed him he drew his service, fired around and shot her Of course he was found not guilty and then soon after that he's a sheriff's deputy over at the department guarding the jail inmates and stuff and now they've got surveillance of him and there were some people acting up in there and he just goes in with the billy club and just lays in some people in there and it's just like you say it's that traveling cop just goes around there the avallon va there was a whole list of them something came out a couple of these VA people and they just shovel them around from place to place to place. Government to me an inefficiency doesn't it? The previous that I think her name was Susan Hellman that was the past but I guess there's some I don't know quote the law but somehow she claimed that because her firing because there's something in some you've got a 21-day appeal. The the arbitration he has the final decision and she appealed to the Department of Justice and Jessica Lynch that yes in fact that it was constitutional because of this certain you know taking care of government employees act that was passed in whenever it was that because it really didn't give her for defense or some like that so no I just run each other up for ammunition. There are a few ways to clean out the house and pretty much all of them require scrubbing. That's all there is to it. Interesting. There's a piece right now and from the trenches I'll probably play it at the very beginning of the next hour. Guys, check this out. It's Hidden Cam, New York City Democratic Election Commissioner. They bust people around to vote. He says a lot more than that. share this. It's a three minute and 52 second video and he maps it out. He says, oh no, there's no ID. They won't allow any ID. These characters are voting repeatedly. They take them from district to district. And this is the guy who is the commissioner of the board of elections for New York City. and keep and ask them, well, why don't they listen to you? And he goes, well, the legislature makes the rules and they aren't going to change it. They've got it just the way they want it. They can move anybody into office and out of office they want with a complete lie. Well, this is New York, where, oh by the way, Hillary the Hutt, and I would also point out Trump came from... Just a little heads up, I understand why they hate Trump, and I understand what's going on here, but these are power factions. However, say Hillary's got the better ground game, though. This is what they're talking about. Yeah, and they're showing their true colors. True colors. Members like that, that little, uh, advertising. True colors. And the word alarm, which brought up a little while ago. Oh, let's just put it this way guys. We promise we are not going to evacuate the United States. Don, you're not going to evacuate the United States, are you? I promise I don't have a Rolex. I ain't heading for the foreign borders. On the other hand, I'm sure Mike's in the same boat. He's right on the border, right? We're close to another country you get, but I don't think Mike Flynn's out running over the border. He's trying to hold the border, right? Something's in here, guys. Yeah, we're staying here. This is our country. God bless the Republic. Definitely the world's order. We shall prevail, ladies and gentlemen. The Empire is on the run. But we are. Mark, hope to stay in. But there's other people there saying they're going to evacuate because they do well. And you and I aren't. We'll be back. Take us out, please. May if you're looking for an idea, move it to the website, that's why. 2015 was the year.