Mark Koernke discussed emergency medical preparedness, field dressing techniques, and alternative health treatments on Communications Tuesday, October 16, 2018. He covered tourniquet application and timing protocols, the history and proper use of cravat and carlisle dressings dating to the Spanish-American War, and the medicinal properties of silver and gold in wound healing. Koernke also addressed cancer treatment alternatives including laetrile and chelation therapy, criticized processed sugar and chemotherapy, and shared historical accounts of Civil War battlefield medicine including the use of dust and soil to prevent infection. Callers contributed practical experiences with burn treatment using goldenseal and collagen, and discussed the use of sulfur, bleach, and talcum powder in historical wound care.
and occupied territory. Liberty Tree Radio is asking for your help. Keep hosts like Mark, Don, Spike, B.C., Joe from the Carolinas, and Ed the AK-47 on the air by donating to LTR's end of the year bill. Many hands make for light work, so go to libertytreeradio.4mg.com to help keep LTR in this fight. That's libertytreeradio.4mg.com. Join Mark and Todd for Weapons Wednesday, where you'll learn how to use everything from your bare hands to your average AR-15. The 12 gauge autoloader. Sure. The 45 long slide. Yep. With laser siding. You betcha. The Oozi 9mm. Yes, sir. A plasma rifle in the 41 range. What are you, crazy? Okay, we'll talk about that too. So whatever question you have about whatever weapon you have... Call Mark and Don on Weapons Wednesday and remember, your mind is your first best weapon. Let us help you find the right shotgun or rifle for you. Or if you're looking for a pistol or concealed carry, we have a nice selection of compact and subcompact pistols for that too. Check out our website at www.libertiesguardian.com. That website again is www.libertiesguardian.com. Go to the website and check out our selection today. We all need to prepare ourselves. You might have the food, water, gold and silver, but ask yourself, are you truly prepared? That's why you need to visit mainmilitary.com. Mainmilitary.com carries everything you need. Gas masks, fire starter kits, high capacity magazines, chemical suits, military surplus items and much more. Do you own a firearm? Mainmilitary.com has a large selection of pistols and rifles suited for your needs. Are your local stores sold out of ammunition? Call or visit them today for prices on hard to find ammo and bulk ammo orders. You don't need to worry about having a military surplus store in your area because mainmilitary.com is the only store you'll ever need, all from the comfort of your computer. Visit them online today at mainmilitary.com. That's main, like the state, military.com. He took off his three-cornered hat, and speaking low to me, he said, We fought a revolution to secure our liberty. We wrote the Constitution as a shield from tyranny. For future generations, this legacy we gave. In this, the land of the free and home of the brave. The freedoms we secured for you, we hoped you'd always keep. But tyrants labored endlessly while your parents were asleep. Your freedom's gone, your courage lost, you're no more than a slave. In this, the land of the free, of the brave. You buy permits to travel and permits to own a gun. Permits to start a business or to build a place for one. On land that you believe you own, you pay a yearly rent. Although you have no voice in saying how the money's spent. Your children must attend a school that doesn't educate. And your Christian values can't be taught according to the state. You read about the current news in a regulated press. And you pay a tax you do not owe to please the IRS. Your money is no longer made of silver nor of gold. You trade your wealth for paper so your life can be controlled. You pay for crimes that make our nation turn from God and shame. You've taken Satan's number and you've traded in your name. You've given government control to those who do you harm so they could burn down churches and seize the faith. family farm and keep our country deepened. Put men of God in jail. Harash your fellow countrymen while corrupted courts prevail. Your public servants don't uphold the solemn oaths they've sworn. And your daughters visit doctors so their children won't be. Your leaders send artillery and guns to foreign shores and send your sons to slaughter fighting other people's wars. Can you regain the freedoms for which we fought and died? Or don't you have to create faith to stand with pride? And are there no more values for which you will fight to save? Or do you wish your children to live in fear and be a slave? O sons of the Republic, arise, take a stand, defend the Constitution, the Supreme Law of the land, preserve our great Republic and each God-given right, and pray to God to keep the torch of freedom burning bright. As I awoke he'd vanished in the mist from whence he came His words were true, not free But we have ourselves to blame For even now as tyrants trample each God-given right We only watch him tremble, too afraid to stand and fight If he stood by your bedside in a dream while you were asleep And wondered what remains of the freedoms he'd fought to keep What would be your answer if he called out from the grave? Dill the land. intelligence report are currently on and behind the lines territories southwest and and we are on AM and FM micro stations CB base stations and the ultra and golden spy technologies and west of the Mississippi along with Alaska again we told yourself Google and Facebook farce book and the communist Chinese that run all of them including good old Looney tune apples the whole nine yards. Apples! With a Z, not an S. Anyway, like a snake, you know, or a histic. Anyway, in a clear day, we have a little bit of a cool wind, but to be quite honest, let's see, considering base temperatures right now, still 59, up to 60 degrees in the bottom of the state, 455 in the upper part of the state, northern climb, and Very bright, although we do have intermittent cloud cover, again I would say 30%. We are looking at bright and clear. Tonight's gonna be shiny. We've got a little bit more moon, of course. So we will get a little more illumination in the evening. Today's date? Well, I'm not allowed to say... Well, we... vote for... let's see... 15th? No, it'll be the 16th, I'm pretty sure, but you can slap me if I'm wrong. Forgive me, guys. The days are all running into each other with the work at hand that we're doing here. And it's non-stop. It's energy consuming. Let's put it that way. So, it is, of course, the tenth year of open and obvious, ABM Socialist and Soviet Socialist Occupation of America with a K, 1018, old Earth calendar, 1018, year of conflict, year of deception. Everybody's looking straight at them. All of our new listeners out there appreciate you guys organizing as you are. Again, down on the border, we got spy satellites that will claim they can look up your bong hole and count how many polyps you got. And they can go from either direction. Down your throat or up your hind end. But boy, the border? Well, you won't see no thinking badgers. Why? Well, hey, they're just coming across all tactified. The teeth, the government, tells you something about who's in charge. Oi, oi! there in Washington DC. Just that simple. First of all, again, Don wants to say hi, just talked to him, but I may or may not be able to get him up here on the line. We'll see what happens. Might be able to at least get him up on the program and you guys can all say hello to him. Can't talk to you very well, but you guys can say hi and it'd be appreciated. So I'll let you know. We'll see what happens here because kind of nodding off and if he's resting, we want him to rest. Okay. We're trying to, you know, again, make him as comfortable as we possibly can. And I want to say thank you to all of our friends. If you'd like to send a card or letter, do so to PBN PO Box 194 Dexter, Michigan 48130. Again, that's PBN. It'd be greatly appreciated. PBN PO Box 194 Dexter, Michigan 48130. Again, that's PBN PO Box 194 Dexter. Michigan 48130. And Don Betcher. B-O-E-T-T-C-H-E-R, Betcher. And actually, B-E-E-E-E-E-E-E-E-E-E-E-E-E-E-E-E-E-E-E-E-E-E-E-E-E-E-E-E-E-E-E-E-E-E-E-E-E-E-E-E-E-E-E-E-E-E-E-E-E-E-E-E-E-E-E-E-E-E-E-E-E-E-E-E-E-E-E-E-E-E-E-E-E-E-E-E-E-E-E-E-E-E-E-E-E-E-E-E-E-E-E-E-E-E-E the southern France. And of course there's my clippy accent from the Midwest northern and you know that we don't have an accent yet yet to. So strange to me, it's just like a person from the south would say, I don't hear the accent. And that's true. Again, where you grow up, where you grow up and the colloquialisms of your area of operation determine your history and your foundations. So anyway, a couple things real quick. communications Tuesday and one of the things that we did find, I actually have been working on a lot of different technology the last few days too, and one of the most common mistakes is assuming that because something is built to whatever that fact-back is by government, you know, government code, that's nothing. It's meant nothing for a long time. Government code, government standards, oh you mean trying to fail, sir, right? Trying to fail. Moisture kills obviously electronics and moisture don't go together and one of the things I am a firm believer in is a again electrical tape or duct tape or your friend when it comes to sealing things up and Caulk is another thing of course now We've got some power supply issues something that was becoming a problem and lo and behold Turns out hold that hammer grab could be a little better now anyway What's interesting is I know how the equipment sat before it was assembled and put together. And I know there was this major junction slash fixture that was supposed to connect everything at different points up and down the line. There are two components, 50-50. And all of a sudden power went out. Everything that I could think of I replaced in switches and connectors first above before I went to what was the transfer couplings. And then I got up under there and I'm looking up and I hear a snap when I touch one of the connectors. Well that ain't good son, cause it's not supposed to do that. So lo and behold, I, you know, extracted the component and I'm looking at it. And of course, yes I did make sure the power was off. Uncle Mark, you know, learned a long time ago. In fact, I shot probably more power off than I needed. Remember with radio equipment, there's still these things called capacitors. And that's just a sidebar. I didn't have to deal with that on this, but, you know, capacitors are very embarrassing because they store a lot of power and all you have to do is bridge with that, you know, that miver or whatever or needle-nose players are my favorite. Or you just happen to open them up and touch that other half and make that complete circuit and... Go! Now you understand what real hardcore stun guns are all about. Okay? Hey, Vern and Mod Daddy used to fix those. Well, anyway... low and behold, disintegrating material. And then just thinking about what happened here, the different assemblies were sitting here and somebody didn't tuck something in or put probably the magic plasterer over it the way they were supposed to. You see this in the military all the time with a lot of the equipment laying out. You have to clean it up. You always have to break out the magic, you know, Q-tips and the stainless steel wool if you can, or the steel wool is number four. You can easily go through each of the connections and if you do clean them off, chances are you'll get everything to work. But once you do that, you better add some kind of lubricant that's going to seal up that metal. It's going to rust or oxidize no matter what. And it's usually chintzy, China's border is almost equivalent to China's port-based metal with some kind of copper wash on it or, you know, again, metallic wash of some kind that was... just similar to whatever the real metal is that's being hidden under the fake wash. And I don't care how heavy or big this stuff is anymore. Mexico and China produced this chunk all over the place. This, I think, was a Mexican component. And so lo and behold, the wire snaps and did exactly what I expected it to already do. It was already doing it. It's just I finished eliminating that problem. Ended up hard wiring and jumping all the fixture. Now, this is where, again, remember, Guys, prior proper planning, if you're going to be storing technology and equipment, remember that there usually is a magic rubber baby buggy boot. But before you do that, hit it with some lubricant because, you know, again, whatever you've got is going to keep a percentage of the problem from staying away. GIFS is really great. for being able to use on everything. Copper, steel, plastic, leather, it works on everything, it doesn't hurt anything. On leather, in fact, the leather barn, they might be listening tonight, probably are. Down in the bottom of the state of Michigan here, down towards Dundee and Monroe, they use Gibbs, which is again a high-end penetrating lubricant. When used on the leather, it resupples it the whole nine yards, revitalizes, but also allows for reforming. They do that with a lot of different material where they're fixing or refurbishing something that somebody's brought in, but it also works with fresh leather too, so just a little heads up. So it's not going to hurt leather. It's not going to bother your wood. In fact, it'll help to preserve it too, but the big thing is that again with components, uh... you can create a pretty uh... lubricate to seal the system up special to go into storage on the same October thing reached by the number but bob but uh... that would work i mean provided you're willing to understand you gotta clean everything off your dot uh... more important those connectors or they need to be so anyway i had to make a that whole fixtures you know step cut another wire broke, had to snip it, you know, snip everything back a little farther, properly re-strip everything and finally got it going again. And we have power! We're happy! It's a warm, warm, fuzzy thing. So again, check your equipment, but before you put it in storage, you know, go do an inspection, guys. Check to make sure everything is up and tucked under where it's supposed to be, rolled up and in the proper cans. Make sure the cans are sealed. or the boxes are sealed. If they aren't, you need to do something about that because, again, water leakage, especially if they hold water, you know, really well, like airtight, well, remember, moisture inside won't be able to get out. And so you've got a nice bucket going on, and the more, you know, Chinese water-tortured dripping that takes place, the more accumulative. So water is not your friend. H2O, remember that oxygen creates oxidation. and the rest is history. Everything is trying to get back to the soil. Everything is trying to go back to its original form. Period. I don't care what it is. Humans, even any manufactured item that you have, we processed it and we changed it. It really didn't want to be changed. It wants to go back to where it was. Let's go back and be comfortable. Okay? Another thing, batteries. I have a big question about what about the, you know, the cheapie Sylvania, there's a couple of different ones that they have in the different dollar stores. Uh, the cheapest and still the f- Forgive me, the best buyer are the, uh, 10-packs. Most people are missing these and I don't know how you're doing this. If you're gonna go to the Dollar Tree and buy those red and white batteries, who cares what the flavor color name is on the outside? If you go over to those end caps, and I don't care if it's in Texas, Georgia, or Michigan, or Ohio, cause I've been all those, and to Missouri and Oklahoma, wherever you have a Dollar Tree, all over the country, in the same place. pretty cool about making the store the exact same store pretty much although they're bigger and smaller but they're always there. Go in the end tabs and look on the bottom shelves. You'll get the same battery you can get 8 out for a dollar. So why would I buy the 8 for a dollar? Look, that's the same battery. Go take a look, compare notes, check it out, try them out, see how they work. Both the same battery, both the same label, both the same color but the difference, the 8 packs are in the card type hangers. The 10 pack in both the AA and AAA are just cellophane racks. Well, by the tens. These are always nice. If you use them, maybe you don't. Who cares? You paid the same price for them. So you get more batteries. These are a good thing for another flashlight, another piece of equipment, maybe a single CD flashlight. These one AAA, those are really cool. They even sell them right there at Dollar Tree on occasion. You run into them. Sometimes they got them, sometimes they sell out. With regard to those batteries, now they're low end. However, we've already experimented, it's like, okay, we gotta run some FRS batteries, you know, FRS radios, and we're running them on regular batteries, not rechargeable to see how long they'd last. Interestingly enough, with the Dollar Tree batteries, they ran for almost two days straight. I'd say you got your money's worth out if you bought ten of them for a dollar, that's ten cents a piece. You ran the radio for, what, twenty cents? Uh, depending on which radio you're with, some have two, some have three. Well, the three, so it cost you thirty cents. They took two days' worth of operation. That was leaving them on most all the time. We did shut them down, we knew we were going to be stopping and not really having to use them. Although we keep in our pockets for, well, talking rather than shouting, that's probably a good idea. The big thing here at Ken is these batteries are at the very least volume batteries for your handouts. Like I said, 510 program. You gotta have batteries for all the little junket and trinket stuff like the LED flashlights or maybe a couple of the other fixtures and items that you have. You know, for instance, A little alarm system, there's a bunch of stuff out there. It takes the AAA batteries, and uh, you probably may, you may, I won't say probably, you may put some of the stuff in the 510 kit. Well, you keep batteries on hand, but make sure you cycle them out and use them up and get new. Uh, but do use them up. Don't let them just go to waste and rot in the package. Although, again, the logic there is, well, Mark, uh, paid for them, it's an insurance policy. You insure a car and never have an accident, you don't get the money back at the end of the month, do ya? charging more next week, next year, you don't think should say next year, next quarter, or next day, after the end of the month. But one way or another, the bottom line is you don't think twice about handing money over to strangers. Well, in this case, the insurance policy is in your hands, and even if the batteries were to go bad, let's say just in storage, and then you got to buy new, over, you know, maybe overextender not paying attention. Hey, it was a dollar's worth of insurance. What's your life worth? What are those, you know, what's the ability to see worth, or make noise, or listen to radios, you know, communication, or talk with somebody. See, that's how it works. So just a little heads up on that one. Anyway, we're almost at the bottom of the hour. We'll have the bottom of the hour break coming up here in a minute. And for everybody out there, if you would say hi to Don Betcher, or at least, you know, against keeping in your prayers, is coming by to visit, of course, on a regular basis. We're tag-teaming and making sure that somebody is constantly with him. And a lot of other people that have expressed their concerns and also have been stopping by to wish him well and to help give him strength. So guys, if you could do the same thing, we'd appreciate it. Again, bottom of the hour, break. Up to you, Edward. Steve Voss would really be great. Of course, that's Don's, one of Don's favorite artists. Even if it was the odd music out like we just saw here a little bit ago. Well, yesterday, it wasn't it's all, it was just Steve Voss, he hit it. I know what happened. There's enough things to keep him busy as it is. For everybody out there, again, take the time, check Check out Steve Voss' music, share it with people if you're listening for the first time, nor do you two punch in Steve Voss. Check out his Patriot-oriented music. The guy is a phenomenal artist. Understand that he took number one country album here just a couple years ago. You'll recognize him by his other stage name, because he has another stage name, and that's the one you'll notice and recognize if you listen to country music. Okay? That simple. Anyway, well, before we get to the break here, the music break, would remind everybody also that uh... we have the iFAC pouch back in over at uh... copestistributing.com however the latest batch if they haven't sold out and maybe they decide to go back to the other we're out of the kit now the kit's complete otherwise the pouch the inlet insert all the other accoutrements but uh... what really definitely tipped the scale was the uh... tourniquet which is now missing so apparently this batch probably the people are selling them stole them and then they're selling them off to the site. I'd be willing to bet it, if they already got them before complete, the reason they're missing is they pilfered them from the kit. Now they're not charging as much because of that. Several people did point out you can go over to eBay or a number of sites and for less than $7 you can pick up the same basic tourniquet. In groups of three or four or five they get cheaper as you go and we're talking three tourniquets to a purchase. 4 packs, 5 packs, it's a mix. But you gotta do the math and shop around to find the best price. Stick the tourniquet in the kit, but personally, I'd buy more tourniquets. And keep more tourniquets on your person, on your kit, where you can find them or stash an extra one in where you have the first one. Just that simple. Excuse me, Mark. Go ahead, caller. Mark, that's why I called in several times when they had those full iFAC medical kits. with the real country with the real listen gentlemen listen to me now with the real tourniquets in there the tourniquet that was supplied in those kits at the NSN number that is the real deal that is the NAR North American Rescue Combat Application Tourniquet Red Tip those tourniquets that you just referred to are Chinese Fates and or copies Well, that's for the average person. That's unfortunately, you know, again, where a lot of people are going to be trying to find spares anyway. So, they know the first choice would be the American one, but the check support will give us what we need to... Well, here's the other thing my logic was, that's why I said spares. Yes, sir. After I use one, I'm probably not going to get it back. Right. You know how it is. Oh, there goes that one. There goes that red kip current, that's why everybody in your little tribe there You know if we all have the same medical now now that's not necessarily an easy thing to do But if we do then we have familiar Erichie with what it is that each and every person is carrying over sex Yeah, that's priority one of it at least within your unit SOP you need to have the basics everybody has to have them in the same location medical communications a special tech or secured information you can't just It needs to be in a place where we can find it so we can recover it and destroy it if it's secure documents. But with medical, it needs to be there so that in total darkness or in confusion, your training takes over. The first person that's going to be dealing with it is you personally. So it needs to be, and this is another thing we need to emphasize, I know a lot of people say, you've got to put it right here. And I've explained this to you for years. The cool thing is like with With TA90 gear or TA56 gear, you can slide it all around the rig so you can make it move where you want it to. Now, you can still do that with MOLLE but it's in notched increments. But the important thing is, remember, think about the idea, if I have to reach for this with my hand, where does it need to be so that I can reach it? Always remember that, guys. It's got to be so that you can grab it. And that's where you have to do the geometry. You have to figure out, okay, if I use my left hand, can I get, yeah, okay, I can get that. If I use my right. Now, everybody still needs it in the same basic location. Because the iFAC pouches are all the same shape, it's really easy for everybody to understand how that works. So, you know, they'll know that's the pouch I'm looking for. Another thing about that is, like I said, stuffing a spare or, actually what the people do is tag it on the outside, a lot of guys do. But the spare tourniquet, Which again, by carrying extras, it may or may not be you that you're using it on yourself. But again, eventually, if everybody's carrying spares, if Doc needs another one to keep someone alive, you can throw one to him without sparing, without destroying your kit, without knocking your kit down. So that's one of the... Yeah, go right ahead. Yes, and that spare you're referring to is once again 100% good information. First of all, let us look at where that NALR red-tip cat tourniquet was in those IFAX that are gone now. Inside the IFAK, okay, so what you got to do is you reach down, you've got to unbuckle the plastic bucket, buckle on that IFAK, and then you have to pull up on the inner sleeve, and then to the outside of the inner sleeve, inside pouch will be the top of your tourniquet because they are the exact length that the height of the iFAC is in inches off of the ground. So it takes an effort, it takes time for someone to get to their tourniquet if it is inside a med kit. That is why, like you were recommending or suggesting there, to have a secondary that can be gotten to quickly, immediately, to the outside. Over. And especially because remember the first rule, everybody's being, and again this has been tradition, but it's being really emphasized now. If you don't win the fight, medical support to your buddy won't do any good. So each person needs to work on trying to address the injury as quick as they can themselves. The way to do this is through preconditioned training, just like immediate action on a rifle. The idea for years, even with a compress issue, is get it on there as quick as you can. First, of course, identify the problem. Once you do that, start applying dressings as quickly as possible to stop the bleeding, you know, prevent body fluid leakage, because as you get low pressure, you have a ton of intensity to roll your eyeballs, roll up in the back of your head, and we can't do much for you. So here again, the tourniquet serves the same purpose. It does not mean that you're not using bandages and compresses, guys. It means that if you have a traumatic, like almost, like a traumatic amputation, is be the most common. That's total shearing. That's if you're really lucky, you got a nice clean cut. And it's really easy to understand that, man, I gotta get that stump choked off or he's gonna die. Now, the problem is this, and this is something we gotta warn everybody about. In fact, this just happened to Randy's daughter here, okay? She got hit by a car. And you might recall what he described with her calf. It was mostly ripped off her leg. It was hanging by a lower flap of material, which means I don't know if it sheared the Achilles tendon. Guys, have you ever had that happen? That by itself is enough pain to make you wish somebody just put a bullet in you. But if we're lucky, it may have just only ripped the calf off. Now remember, that when you have shearing wounds that are like, could be laceration from glass, it could be sheet metal steel, you know, anti-tank rounds are really buggers when they start creating secondary spalled. And so that the tourniquet is a high priority, but you gotta use the idea you're gonna have to get past something else that doesn't look very good. That's something that we've gotta be, you know, Peter, they're trying to prepare people for, but it is tough, I mean, because if you've ever seen anything like that, But you've got to be able to get past those injuries to where you can choke off that blood flow so that we don't lose the patient. Now, another thing, you know, you've brought up the tourniquet. Here's another thing that you may have noticed, guys. There is a small banner area on the tourniquet. It says, timed, and you notice that? Now there's a reason for this. We discussed why they went away from doing tourniquets. Well, the real argument was liability with Red Cross. That is the reason tourniquets were taken out. It has nothing to do with tourniquets not working. It had to do with Red Cross, those bastards. But otherwise, regular military medics, etc., were still using the tourniquet in one form or another to a degree and still had them in their kits. You just didn't see anything about it. The idea was conditioning you to not use the tourniquet. The time signature there is so that you can benchmark when you cut off blood flow. Because we aren't necessarily thinking about amputating that lower part that's still hanging there. As is pointed out with what happened with Randy's daughter, they put everything back on. Guys, she's home already. And of course, she'd like to kick you out of the hospital anyway. But considering she had a concussion, she had three fractures of skull. She had multiple vertebrae injury. The calf on her one leg was ripped virtually off her leg as the person hit her. The car did all kinds of damage. What's amazing is resilience. The bounce of a human being there. When you watch stuff like this, they reattached everything, but they reattached the leg, everything the way they should. And she's now in recuperation phase. But that kind of injury is something you need to be prepared for, and you need to understand that the tourniquet's got to get past that. and up to the area where it's going to save the limb, initially save the patient. Step two is, we reintroduce blood flow to a limited degree. If it's a major arterial cut, we still have blood flow issues because we've got a viable limb. We just got to get to where a doctor can start doing your arterial reconstruction. Or again, it's going to be doing transfers of material from one point to the other. and graft whatever it is, whatever the procedure is, putting on the damage. Okay? So we need to keep that limb functional. This is why you're benchmarking the time. Follow the instructions for re-loosening the tourniquet for a very short time and then reapplying the tourniquet, so reactivating it so that we don't let the person bleed to death, but we do ensure that the limb does not become necrophilic because that will happen for lack of oxygen. The longer that patient's in that situation, So it's one of the math formulas that's part of it. That's why I do a little read up on that. You'll understand what I'm talking about. But it's kind of cool because they put the little flag area right there. It's contrasting to the color of the rest of the tourniquet. You'll see a little typewriter line that says time. That's what that's for. So if I loosen up the tourniquet, let's say I'm docked, but I'm going to hand you off to Bob who's in the helicopter or the pickup truck or the ambulance. While he's transporting, if the next aid station or the forward area surgery was farther away, he knows that in order for them to preserve life and limb, he were there, limb, then he's going to open up the tourniquet as needed, but he's prepared for it, you see. Now, if he sees within his timeline that he doesn't need to do that, he is also going to inform the next person in the chain of activity that we have a patient with a tourniquet applied, and this is a priority issue. Okay, communication is key. Do not assume. During the Vietnam War, you'll see a picture, typically, and this was from the middle of the war on, although earlier in the war it's pretty much standard with units, it just became SOP. You'll see they had the buddy system for casualties. One of the reasons was, you know, keep the guy talking, needless to say. The other half was if there was a casualty issue like the tourniquet application, one man had control of that situation until the patient was evacuated. So you see there's a there's method to the madness there, but what this did was created forced conservation, and that's what you're looking at. Remember, it takes time to grow a soldier. And even the one that we're talking about, while it's bad, if the individual may recuperate within a very reasonable period of time, and with modern medical procedures, or with the knowledge, even though we may not have all the technology at our fingertips, especially during a high war cycle, we still have better knowledge than even they had 50, 60 years ago in World War II about how to deal with casualties and recuperation. So we apply that, we're back in combat. And I hate to say it, guys, there's no rear if we're fighting in the United States. We're home. So there's going to be no stepping out of the war. It's going to be get back up front or get to where you can to do something. Sooner is better. So we need to turn people around. And also again, save lives. If you are in a bad situation, we have a commitment, we have a responsibility, we're going to save lives. Just that simple. Mark? Go ahead, call it. Jump in there, please. I'm sorry. Yeah, no. I'd like to just make another comment on the tourniquet. You're referring to the time or time out. Usually, that type of tourniquet, the material, the nylon material and all is, everything is going to be black. And usually, that area that you record your time is going to be white. And that is on one end of the tourniquet on one side. And what happens is, is a fairly heavy-duty piece of plastic wraps over from both sides, coming to a point, but there's a gap in between the pieces that come up. That is where the white material is adhered to on both sides of that, and then you have your gap. That gap is what takes one end of the tourniquet windlass. The windlass is the plastic device that is attached that you turn putting pressure on the tourniquet when appropriate pressure is gotten, that is when one end of that windlass goes into that plastic device that has the time area on it. I right now suggest and recommend that no one write on that timeout area unless absolutely necessary. A good way to deal with that is before you pack your tourniquet away, is get a piece of your white surgical or medical tape. A small piece, two small pieces. Stick right there on both sides on that white timeout area. You can go ahead and write on that. And Mark, real quick if you can, and if you have time, could you address the U.S. Cravat, the 37 by 37 by 52, over? Oh, okay. Well, again, well, first of all, before we go any farther, the reason for the medical tape is, again, a surface area to work with. You can also, again, if it's damaged or if you have problems, you can peel that off and still use the original surface area because it may be, again, crudted up, could be any number of issues. Now, the carless dressing, the cravat dressings, And then there was another one before that, which is as Sarah Voll, are all basically in the same category as a universal dressing slash kit item that traditionally, for instance, let's say end of the Civil War, it started to show up. The idea of actually having a standardized medical supply system for the individual. It did not catch on right away though with the Civil War. If you see into the American Indian Wars, the Western Wars, there were a lot of problems with medical field support. Now there were still medics and doctors, etc. The Spanish War is a war that they're trying to make everybody forget, by the way. You do remember that guy, it's the Spanish-American War. It is during the Spanish-American War where the Cravat dressing and the Carla dressing and There are two other French models that really didn't catch on, two other types of dressings which were very popular with Euro armies. It caught on with the advent of us going into what finally was an international war, with the war with Spain. And in each case, the idea behind this is that you had a combination dressing that could be used either for direct wound application, improvised tourniquet, or could be used even for sling purposes. Now, you can actually do that with a regular, you know, a wrap type field dressing. If you know, you'll see Docker, you'll see Medics do that with the standard compress dressing. But the dressings we're talking about were a little more complicated in terms of, well, you had to actually have a little skill in, you know, wrap and fold. But the advantage is being able to apply to angular locations or odd locations that typically were troublesome with regard to, for instance, head, eyebrow area, elbow, or flexible areas, any place where there was a taper to the body, that's always an issue. And again, remember, they did not have a elasticized or a clean-type dressing or anything like that. In fact, with all of these dressings, traditionally a double safety pin. Originally they were just brass safety pins. Eventually you've seen variations in what the military uses for the bandolier. That pin was actually a standard that was originally established for use with the medical dressings. And typically two pins were provided, they were part of the kit. They were approximately an inch and a quarter long and the idea is that between the two pins and the wrap design, you could apply pretty much any kind of casualty situation that might arise that was typical. Okay, a medium grade, we'll say a medium grade. If it was bigger, here's the thing. Almost all of these types of dressings were used as stuffers. Kind of like what you see now where we're using the rolled gauze. So the first dressing could be, again, folded or quickly overlapped, rolled tight. and that would be shoved into a larger projection hole, just like we do today. Now they didn't use load, there's all kinds of tricks they've learned. They didn't use Vaseline, although they didn't have it. They did have a number of other solutions. They did use Cayenne, and they had a Cayenne packet that actually went like sulfa dressing. The design was successful. And actually, of course, the logic is if you get shot bad enough or you're hurt bad enough, here's the old story. If you can't feel it, you know it's bad. But if you can't feel it, if somebody took a packet of cayenne pepper and dumped it in your own, you probably wouldn't notice it. At least not right away. That was the discomfort factor later, just kind of like what we see with Quick Plot, same problem in the more modern application of Quick Plot, which is kind of common. It's still out there, but it's being used in different ways, whereas the original application of Quick Plot created a lot of discomfiture in the progressive attending of the casualty. Now the dressings themselves, if you want to find out more, I'll tell you the best place to find out how to utilize them in a number of different forms. A, of course, would be the original military manuals. The Stanan manuals aren't laying around like they used to be, but there are still copies out there. World War I to World War II, the dressings, all of these dressings continue to be in service and, in fact, are still successful and useful and can be built today. The two most common, the two that we're talking about right now, We're also built by typically volunteers either in a field type environment where they would be taught how to cut proper dimension, fold for storage, and then you know, bring into use or issue out into the field as needed. I really, next I'm pretty sure they still have them in service. I mean, I still see them showing up in foreign medical kits. The Czech ones that we got a few years back, it's been a while, the Czechs were starting to dump a whole bunch of their tactical gear in favor of the next generation. And somebody did take advantage of it. Unfortunately, then they started a bunch of wars, and a lot of that stuff got eaten up and went right to where it was truly needed. But you'll notice that the... The older pattern dressings were not dropped, but rather were improved upon both in size and material since traditionally the 50-50, well actually it wasn't 50-50, forgive me, it was a woolen cotton blend that was originally used, but it was a little more cotton, let's say 60-40. The cotton blend eventually, or cotton and poly blend, really did kind of roll over. Higher dominant cotton polyester simply is put in there to stabilize the cotton. so that it's not as fretting, doesn't break down and fray and create cross-contamination into the wound. Remember guys, if it's fluffy and frizzy, it's going to adhere to the scab or to the clot area, and this of course is additional material that can create or collect infection. So during your favorite phase, the britement phase, the guy's got to break out the scrubber and do a little more work. And that's even an issue with most of the modern plug solutions. Whatever goes into a wound has got to come out of a wound. Always remember that. And even that which might be suspected to be a wound. Remember, you're fixing a hole to try and keep the guy alive. We don't know what was around on the battlefield there that might have got slid in or sluiced in while everything else was being stretched and opened up. So again, the one advantage of the felty type or the, you know, like comfy foam is that it actually does work to wick a certain amount of the alien material that's in there out during the first phase of debridement when you're, after you've got the clot, you've got the guy controlled, you kept him from bleeding. Now when we get Doc, we get him to Doc, and Doc has to deal with it. Typically in prep, mode, the doctor may or may not participate depending on how heavy a workload he has, but he'll want to see the injury as it's being debrided, so in many cases the doctors will do this or the chief medic will be doing it himself, because he wants to identify and look at the coloration, the matter and material that's evacuating from the wound, but it's a matter of time. In many cases, if it's a master surgeon or specialist, The prepping will be done by another individual who may not even be a doctor. They're going to be still observing the same way. They're going to pass on the information through their trained observation. They're going to inform the doctor of what they suspect or believe. And then they're going to proceed. Again, whatever you put into a wound like this or cover with a wound, it's got to come out eventually. It's got to be re-sterilized. It really is never sterile, never perfect. But the best, closest you can. The other thing, manuals for these dressings, before I forget. Again, Boy Scout manuals. The older ones, not the newer ones. Some of the newer ones still have part of what you need. But the older the Boy Scout manual you can find at yard sale, rummage sales, go to the used bookstores, the more medical information you're going to find. Now here's a little hint. The closer it is to World War I, a lot more medical is going to be in there. You know, you do understand there are combat veteran Boy Scouts. How many people know that? Yeah, think about that one. Well, you ever see the motorcycle riders, the Boy Scout motorcycle riders of World War I that were scouts slash, well they weren't actually scouts so much as they were messengers and couriers. Everybody in the war at one time, son, and didn't think twice about it. So just little heads up there. That's real. In fact, if you got Collier's Illustrated History of World War I, I'm actually thinking about scanning all of these that I have, because these are harder and harder to find now. But the images in there, you never see reproduced. You will never see them reproduced. They are not pretty. One of them is one of these Boy Scouts, American Boy Scout, I think it's the Marn. And the kid's got, of course, two different injuries, and he's still scout riding. He's still a messenger, a courier. And of course, he's got his little go-boy helmet slightly cocked. His head's messed up on one side and panished up. He's got another spot on his arm that's still weeping and bleeding. And he's enjoying the cigarette at the age of what, 12? You know, 11 or 12. And of course he's got Harley. Combat infantry Boy Scout son! Well, no combat, combat infantry son, but combat rider, you know. So those are the real world as opposed to the BS they're trying to sell you nowadays about, you know, how things used to be. Anyway, we are headed towards the top guys real quick. And again, Boy Scout manuals, pre-70s, there's some good stuff in all the Boy Scout manuals. But the pre-70 manuals, typically I think pre-68, pre-67, uh, the farther back you go, the more medical information you're gonna have. And the real early ones include a lot more information even on rifle marksmanship. Rifle marks, not just Trump, just like, well, that funny total. We're talking rifle marksmanship. Again, it was the Boy Scouts, it was the Boy Scouts. Uh, World War I. My grandpa was, no, my great grandpa, he was not in the war. My grandpa, my grandpa Schilling was in the war. He got gassed twice, got busted from Sergeant Corporal a couple of times. He was stealing the Major's Mule, well, the Colonel's Mule, three times. He's very proud of that, by the way. He was always proud of that. Yeah, I stole the Mule three times. Went and got liquor, we all got booze stuff, and I got busted. And everybody died, I got a promotion. And they went out, stole the Mule, went out, got some more booze. And they busted me again, everybody died, I got to be a corporal again. That's World War I in a nutshell. Oh by the way, you also got gas three times. You think they pulled him off the front? Hell no! You said, you think you got it bad? Guess what? That's why America, if we have to fight here guys, we're on our piece of real estate. We don't have anywhere to go. We gotta fight to win, we gotta kill them all. That's just all there is to it. You gotta fight? In the process, keep all of ours alive. That's what we're talking about here, is survival. Keeping everybody functional. First we gotta keep them breathing and we gotta keep them from bleeding to death. Gotta keep that blood pressure and heat up. Excuse me. And then after that, that's where Doc takes over. And if anybody and everybody, I'm just going through a couple of manuals, not just manuals, but I have a long medical library. And I need to be finding a home for the spares. So I'm gonna be probably making a little comment on that after we get into the next month here because they should not all be piled up in one place. And, you know, we're not getting any younger and we didn't put these things on the shelf so they could collect dust. The idea was I saved them so that we could down the road use them. One of the collections that I have, by the way, is re-application of limbs. This is like, I've got about 200 9x12, about 2.5 to 3 inches per volume. They came from the plastic surgery offices at the University of Michigan. They were going to throw them all out. I saved every last one of them. And it's every conceivable way you could cut a body part off and how you put it back on. And I'm not talking about theory. I'm talking about very, very precise pictures. How many ways can you chop your fingers off with a saw? And how do you put it all back on? Now that's kind of valuable because this is not a video. These don't require batteries. This is a, these are text. where they show you the original injury and I'm telling you every conceivable angle of how you could cut all your fingers off with a saw. How can you chop your arm off? How can somebody help you to chop your arm off, okay? And it's not pretty, but you know what? In other words, there's no guesswork because all you have to do is go through the, you know, it shows every type of injury, angle and approach. level of damage and then it shows the progressive constructive operation to put it back on and it's a lot of these are still images that were done God knows how many this the photographer had to be you know pretty cold but pretty impressive too and again we saved those from going to the paper mill or the land mill you know the landfill so that's part of our medical collection and it'll probably keep some body parts back, you know, at least get some body parts reattached or at least, well, keep them from falling off completely when the time comes. We'll do our part, you will keep doing yours. Anyway, we are at the top, we should be hearing the music. The top of the hour break. It is especially critical that the... We are the sons, yes, we are the sons, the sons of liberty. Behind enemy lines and occupied territories. Liberty Tree Radio is asking for your help. Keep hosts like Mark, Don, Spike, B.C., Joe from the Carolinas, and Ed the AK-47 on the air by donating to LTR's end of the year bill. Many hands make for light work, so go to libertytreeradio.4mg.com to help keep LTR in this fight. That's libertytreeradio.4mg.com. Join Mark and Todd for Weapons Wednesday, where you'll learn how to use everything from your bare hands to your average AR-15. The Torf gauge autoloader? Sure. The .45 longslide? Yep. With laser siding? You betcha. The Uzi 9mm? Yes, sir. The Faze Plasma Rifer and the .41 range? What are you, crazy? Okay, they'll talk about that too. So whatever question you have about whatever weapon you have, Call Mark and Dom on Weapons Wednesday and remember, your mind is your first best weapon. Let us help you find the right shotgun or rifle for you. Or if you're looking for a pistol or concealed carry, we have a nice selection of compact and subcompact pistols for that too. Check out our website at www.libertiesguardian.com. That website again is www.libertiesguardian.com. Go to the website and check out our selection today. We all need to prepare ourselves. You might have the food, water, gold and silver, but ask yourself, are you truly prepared? That's why you need to visit MaineMilitary.com. MaineMilitary.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 mainmilitary.com is the only store you'll ever need, all from the comfort of your computer. Visit them online today at mainmilitary.com. That's main, like the state, military.com. 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, she said, We fought a revolution to secure our liberty. We wrote the Constitution as a shield from tyranny. For future generations, this legacy we gave. In this, the land of the free and home of the brave. The freedoms we secured for you, we hoped you'd always keep. But tyrants labored endlessly while your parents were asleep. Your freedom's gone, your courage lost, you're no more than a slave. In this, the land of the free, home of the brave. You buy permits to travel and permits to own a gun. Permits to start a business or to build a place for one. On land that you believe you own, you pay a yearly rent. Although you have no voice in saying how the money's spent. Your children must attend a school that doesn't educate. And your Christian values can't be taught according to the state. You read about the current news in a regulated press. and you pay a tax you do not owe to please the IRS. Your money is no longer made of silver nor of gold. You trade your wealth for paper so your life can be controlled. You pay for crimes that make our nation turn from God and shame. You've taken Satan's number. You've traded in your name. You've given government control to those who do you harm so they could burn down churches and seize the family farm and keep our country deep in debt. Put men of God in jail. Harash your fellow countrymen while corrupted courts prevail. Your public servants don't uphold the solemn oaths they've sworn. And your daughters visit doctors so their children won't be. Your leaders send artillery and guns to foreign shores and send your sons to slaughter fighting other people's wars. Can you regain the freedoms for which we fought and died? Or don't you have the courage or the faith to stand with pride? And are there no more values for which you'll fight to save? Do you wish your children to live in fear and be a slave? Those sons of the Republic arise, take a stand, defend the Constitution, the Supreme Law of the land, preserve our great Republic and each God given right, and pray to God to keep the torch of freedom burning bright. As I awoke, he'd vanished in the mist from whence he came. His words were true, we are not free. But we have ourselves to blame. For even now as tyrants trample each god-given right, we only watch him tremble, too afraid to stand and fight. If he stood by your bedside 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? Dill the Land of the F... Gentlemen, this is the Intelligence Report. Herky, hide the lines and occupy it. Ladies and gentlemen, you are listening to us. treeradio.4mg.com. We're also on AM&FM micro stations, CB base stations, and Ultra Hallmark and Golden Spy technologies of the Mississippi. Our friends to the whole of the 49 lower states to include the set which is the border, the outlying states and territories, and the clock. Somewhere, some people get a little early, little bit of war, some are staying up late and propping up their eyeballs with tooth. Ooh, that's gotta hurt. right place, right time, you turn hit switch, you're right here with us on LibertyTreeRadio.4MG.com. And today's date, well it is Communications Tuesday, it is the 16th of October and it is the 10th year of open-Cebian socialist and Soviet socialist patient of America with a K 2018 Old Earth calendar, so 2018 year of deception and of course that's not going to be a whole lot of good. Everybody understands exactly what kind of fiddly BS is going on out there and who the problem creatures really are. It's amazing when you talk to people, I bounce up and down all over the countryside here. I always comment, especially people on the third shift, they love it when somebody at least asks them questions. They keep them awake, but you make them think. And then they, well, they make a statement. So then you ask them a few more questions and you can see the brain gears are flowing. You know, the juices are in motion. It's like, oh, Yeah, normally sometimes it's you know, yeah useless only in that well the the communist maybe didn't want to think on the other hand There's a whole bunch of people that are you're thinking and it's like oh you're feel you know what? Let me tell you what I think well, I'll listen when somebody says that Anyway, it has been a very busy busy weekend. I'll say thank you for all of you your support Of course, we Marcus Tuesday. Well, yeah, but you kind of like get a you know, it's another work day But it's still, the weekend was very busy. We've got additional people that are stopping in to help with Donald, with Don Fetcher. And his dad's here. Other family members have been able to come in from outside the state and visited Horst and everybody's kind of tag teaming. Now we've still got a week at a ways to go and know how it's going to end up. have faith and again I appreciate and I can't thank you all enough for the prayers that you've sent and for the support that you've given for a great warrior, a great friend, a faith-ward effort, and a brother-in-arms. So if you keep doing what you're doing we'd appreciate it and maybe if we're lucky, and it probably won't be now, I think he's still resting. Fortunately, by the time I started doing the program I was talking to him for a little bit there and he's kind of nodding off. So I want, we want him to do that. We need to have him sleep and rest a bit, but the pain's not as much of a problem right now. So that's a good thing. And maybe at eight o'clock what I'd like to see happen is if you could, he can't talk to you, but you could all talk to him. So just be ready for that. Eight o'clock, if you could, he can show up and listen in. If I asked, I just like Bill, what he'll do is, you know, if you can let me know, then I'll let him know and I'll pull the phone up to his ear and you guys can individually say hi to Don and wish him well, please. That would help. Great thing for a great guy. Anyway, again, I want to touch on one more thing before we leave the medical items, which it's a good subject. It's something that needs to be touched and everyone's wrong. Everybody gets ideas. Everybody has their own ideas. I don't care what I say, it's gonna be wrong to somebody who's gonna sit there and tell the other person next to them. Well, whatever guru you're listening to, that's fantastic. You just keep running with that puppy. I really... My problem, there's 300 million people in the United States. I'll probably never see you. So you can tell me whether or not it worked later if we're lucky. How's that sound? In the meantime, one more thing. You know, women's protective pads are a priceless medical item. Medical field support, guys. In fact, To be quite honest, here's how it worked. Kotex didn't come first. US military field dressings came first. The modern ones, like you see, World War II. That's where the Kotex device came from. In fact, I'll go one step farther, there was a whole system that the nurses, he figured this out, they're in the field, they got a proliferation of this stuff, they have a certain need for protection because of, you know, things that naturally occur. Because of this, when one of the people came out, and of course I don't know if it was that the company was made by some nurses who actually were paying attention or a doctor who said, hey, there's some money to be made here. But the original Kotex devices for all practical purposes were nothing more than a repackaged military field dressing. You know that, right? In fact, they were fairly crude, like that's all being done right now. His wife was who was in the kitchen. Right, no, no, you're not wrong there. We know that there's a combined battery being used. Let's put it that way. You know what I mean? Or we'll just show that first. Again, you've got the right idea. I can't emphasize. See, I totally believe in all the homeopathic solutions. I think that they already know this. And to be quite honest, I'd have to say that I would not recommend, in fact, everybody will tell you the same thing. I would not recommend the chemotherapy at all. Big thing is to get into the homeopathic solutions right away if you suspect If you suspect, remember, the sooner you can start beating this stuff down, guys, and I've seen this over and over again, and there's more than one solution to this. Michigan is where, with cancer, the whole idea, actually, chelation therapy is tied into this too, by the way, by the Patriot movement. Going back into the 50s, there was a Russian doctor and an American doctor right here in Michigan. Willy Atrill was created here, was not created in any other part of the country, it was right here. and Leitrill is processed from, it's a side product of refined apricot bits, we've talked about this many times. Yeah, we know people have cured processed. Yeah, and the thing is, the sooner you know you've got an issue, you hit it, you hammer it. And here's the thing guys, I know this because this was one of the ways I got into the Patriot effort from another direction because, well why would anybody prevent anybody from taking care of themselves medically of their own choice? Well, the guys in the doctor eventually were attacked wherever it went more like just east of where I live and where I've always lived actually in this area. And I remember because again we eventually had to take the one doctor and I didn't know what I was doing with a friend of mine but we were moving the man to a safe place and getting him out down the road into the underground. and they viciously attacked these guys. Now two things they were attacking over was one was Leotryl, which works. There's no doubt in my mind it works because these racketeers, since before 1900, they have been in the business of promoting cancer. Yep, not stopping it, promoting it. Now the other one is chelation therapy. And George Matusik, if he were alive, and he goes, well, see, he died. Guys, in 1955, George Matusik was told you got three months to live. period. They said, well, he said, there's nothing more you can do. There's nothing we can do. Not anything we're even going to try. So he said, oh, OK, well, I'm going to go to a homeopathic doctor. Well, you can't do that. And it's like, wait a minute. OK, you just told me there's nothing you can do for me. But you see, that's the way these care this operation is. And there's a percentage of some doctors, actually many doctors were typically homeopaths. Guys, they started out as surgeons and they started out as doctors in conventional medicine. They fully understand the medicine. They understand the company and the procedure. And they still tell you, and I've had conversation after conversation after conversation in my lifetime with the men who've treated these problems and they've worked. But you have to be focused. And the other thing, and this is what I see as the most common problem. I've watched this over the years. It's almost into this candyfication thing I've been talking about. We have so sugarfied the population, and by the way, sugar is one of the big things you gotta kill. You know, the fabricated sugar, say of course one term you've heard before is the white death. That's what they call it, the white death. But there's an argument that anything that's white that's food stuff you shouldn't be eating, you know, like rice or milk or whatever, and it's like, well, yeah, okay, well by the time you've done most everything, you'd possibly be, you know, qualifying for being in the negative zone. Sugar beyond a shadow of a doubt, in the processed forms, This corn syrup I think is a core, I believe they fully know what it's doing. That's why they're putting it in everything guys. That's the biggest problem we've got and we can't really hardly avoid it anymore. Everything is sweet. So when you give somebody a lot of these medicines, man, I guess I grew up, I'm fortunate. I've got to say, thank you for my parents because you see it was eat what we put in front of you because you know, again, you don't get, they didn't say there was people starving in China. They said we starve right here in America. the attitude, you better eat it because you know where your next meal is coming from. But because of that, there's another thing, I also grew up in a lot of different cuisines, different people that were from different parts of the world. And so the advantages, I was taught not to, I mean, there again, mom and dad, when you're sitting at somebody else's table, you may not like it, but you really don't want to show that to those people and insult them because they made an effort. And part of this is that people from Romania, people from different parts of the world have different flavor ranges. And the biggest problem is, guys, bite the bullet and understand that there's a choice here. Live or die. So you gotta get past the idea it's kind of taste like candy. Okay? It's not going to. I'm not saying it's gonna taste like dog manure or anything like that. But you know, some things are bitter and in fact, this is, here's another thing. If you're a herbologist, guys, This is how you judge the quality of the different herbs that you're using for remedies. Half of it is identifying by taste. And they're not all sweet, yummy tastes. There's bitter, there's tart, and of course there's a flavor redundancy like our Retention Rainshoot where you get a different flavor. You eat an off flavor, you call it an off flavor. That's part of what you need for the healing process. And I think our population has become so juvenile, and I think that's the only term that fits. I've watched this. It's juvenile as opposed to being adults. And it's going to... Well, I think we're going to see a lot of people die flat out and have nothing we can do about it, and I'm not really fretting anymore because, you know, there's only so many times you can say something and then after a while it's like, well, okay, I tried. That's something I've had a discussion on and about treatment issues. And actually, there's a few people that are probably listening that would tell you that's what they've been trying to tell people. Okay, because, and the first thing they'll tell you to come out of their mouth is, don't you ever do chemo. And these are people who have also... The silver, remember that's a commutator. The ionic silver is the best. Water oss does, still makes it. And the ionic will transfer straight through the cell membrane. It goes right on through. Now here's the thing. If you are consuming other materials and you're breaking down with the saliva, literally the material will fall right into the cell structure and pass on to the circulatory system through the wall of the mouth even. And not only the ionic silver, but whatever is, again, being processed with it at the time. So when you're looking at the leia trail, you're absorbing it immediately in that combination. So just have a think about guys, the other thing about silver, I will warn, and it's not warning as bad, it's just that we have one of our friends that did this. I've told you this many times, using ionic silver, you will, pain is created by basically a virus, much like we know, what we know about cancer, okay? back injury. He had multiple vertebrae that needed to rest. But he was a workaholic. He would not stop. So what did he do? He bought quart-sized containers of the ionic silver from Watteras and when he'd start to hurt, he would take a swig. Pain would go away. And then he'd keep working. And then about an hour or two later, or maybe less, the wall of pain would start to... Oh, you'd take another drink. Now, I'm not saying a cap full or a little bit. I'm talking a drink. Now, the only thing is he got the old classic, you know, He got the blue blood syndrome, so to speak, not the bleeder disease, but literally the saturation of silver, he actually had skin color change, but it was because he took in massive amounts. I've got that very same, my skin is... The thing, he was looking at this, you know, the actually, the laser surgery will actually dispose of that, not laser surgery, you know, what are the, laser skin treatment for doing tattoos? They think it's silver, but eventually the body will commute it. Yeah, I mean, your body is going to anything that's, although again, in this case, this is where it takes longer because the silver is not a negative process. I would point out for everybody who's asking questions of mine to understand what we're talking about. Guys, when you have earrings or piercings, what metals do you use? Use iron? No. Well, you can, but it kind of turns green. You're in a green here. And gold. Now, why? Because they're antibacterial. They prevent the possibility of infection in those wound channels that you've created. So the wound channels, what they do is skin over, okay, literally they heal over, and you have created another, well it's like we're talking about dealing with a cancer, it's like I do with Steven. You've created new tissue, surface area is exposed, the body creates skin tissue to cover the area, and now you have a channel that you can move that little piercing through safely and without discomfort or bleeding. But the silver is what helps to create the healing process, and gold is even more valuable in that respect. In fact, one of the things I'm working on right now is I want to see how this is working with certain types of... I know silver works with burns, gold works well too, but I've got a little burn area somebody's got, and we've been using the ionic gold specifically on that, and I'm seeing really quick turnaround. Silver does the same thing though, but I'm seeing really, I think, a little faster turnaround, and I don't think there's going to be even a shred of discoloration or scarring. Well, either way, so very... You know there's an argument that, you know, we don't know what the value of gold is and that's not an accident. In other words, we don't know what it was really... somebody else knows what it was used for in the depths of time. Certainly it's valuable because it was always rare and it was easy to work. Certainly it also doesn't change color once you've formed it and melted it. But guys, there's some other value there that made it so precious because Okay, let's think about it when Jesus was born. There were a couple other things that were considered as important. And the first was, of course, gold. But then one of the other two items. And those are medicinal guys. Those aren't, you know, yeah, those aren't rubies. So think about this. The gold may not have been so much. It wasn't the idea that it was treasure so much as it was in the same category as the frankincense and myrrh. both in value because of its properties. That's why they were considered valuable. And by the way, they were as precious as gold, if not more so. Well, okay, now this is where they are using the ionic silver, okay, and the ionic gold. Think about this. They've tried to prevent everything from having silver or gold introduced. uh... and i think that's not that's an accident we met when we seen this rise in elsiders i had a friend said you know it took a lot out of everything so to speak and now we're having an all-time a problem well the metals are part of the electrical circuitry think about it guys there was one of these are but not think about it everybody's even the medical people become real idiots with regard to propaganda and silver and gold say you know i keep on veterinarians right now all it's heavy battles you can't do that with any open up a shot up You think about it. I've been told. Everything is trying to copy. The artificial intelligence is all trying to copy what you've got between your ears. All the fakery that's going on is trying to duplicate the organic computer that is the most sophisticated battlefield computer on the planet. And you all have one right now. So if you think about it, these are all trace components. Another thing real quick, Selenium and the Cesium. Now when Cesium was pushed here about a decade ago, the feds screamed. They were, the ring knockers were screaming. Now cesium, we've seen direct results of that. So again, guys, there are other solutions and several overlapping that will use properly. Again, a number of different ways to kill the same problem or to eliminate not just the initial cancer issue that a lot of people are concerned with, but one of the other things is like this number for, well, again, everything from Alzheimer's to what about autistic kids. Think about it. Look at the things that we've done. It's about 50 feet from where I'm sitting here. I'm outside right now. Thank you. Bottom of the hour. Hopefully we got a bottom of the hour break that we can take. And a little bit of beer candy for everybody. The bottom of the hour. And I know Ed's been trying to fight. We've got technology issues down there and Ed's neck of the woods. And I just cured a few here. But again, that's how it works, guys. Nobody seems to be doing the job the way it's supposed to anymore. Has anybody noticed this? It's like a lot of the people that seem to have these jobs that were supposed to be relatively technical don't seem to be even remotely qualified to be doing the job that they're in. And again, typically not American. But, well, what the hell? I guess, you know, priority is, you know, buy cheap slaves and if it kills some of the other slaves, you know, you and me, all the better still. As far as they're concerned, that's a double plus good thing. Fisting on us from every direction they can. Anyway, hey Martin, we'll see. Call her who we have. If I have to wait, that's okay, I can do that if you want to take your break. Well, I don't think we're, Ed's not doing right now, so go ahead and jump in there, please. Okay, you were talking about burn, so I just happened to have a third degree burn on my leg. I just happened to have this book, Eden. Yes. That book, there is a formula with golden seal, and it has basically de-breed it, because there was an infection that, to take the infection out. I got to the point where the infection was pretty well almost, it was gone, not healing. Because it did help it to heal some, because I used the dry formula on top of it. It looked like it was pretty well done and you could tell you kind of like have this intuition that it's time to stir into something else. The physician told me that I should get some kind of, I talked to a fellow down the street and he said that I should probably use something. The thing that would be a collagen, what I did was I mixed with the collagen and started to apply that and still left the bandaid on. until it got to the point where it was very obvious that it didn't need to be there and it actually had had a skin graft and it didn't have a skin graft using these things. Well again, the silver is used by the medical industry. They just don't want you to know about it. We've talked about this many times. For the burns especially. In fact, at a certain point, it saves the biggest incident in the collection of objects. Oh, here's music. We're gonna go to break your pill steering. We are pleased. Okay. I would remind everybody to again if you go to www.treeradio.4mg.com, there, go to the donate key, your name will of course make sure, you know, mention you want to be in the drawing. At the end of the month we have a drawing until we get to the very end of the billing date and of course and what happens is your name goes in the hat for every dollar that you donate. So you can donate as many times you want, you can enter as many times that way as you want. The only thing again we ask when you do the PayPal thing, notes, Make sure you print out your address. We're here to send something. Okay? We still have Phyllis with us here? One of the things too is the silvodyne. I see that's the thing. There's a number of different ways to create a page. The ionic silver would be the way to go, but that's the other thing that we actually need to be working on a little bit. I don't know what the length in stability would be as a... because ionic, of course, any of the colloidal silver can separate. applique form like that, it would probably be stable for a much longer period of time and certainly you're not going to lose the silver even though it might leave the original water solution. It's still bonding to the creaming agent, whatever it is that you're using as the applique. And again guys, this is what they do in the burn centers. If you've ever taken the time, I know a lot of people use a visit once and they don't necessarily come back because burn patients suffer over and over and over again during treatment. And it's hard for a lot of people to actually be there because the people that work there, it's just tough on them too, but they know what they're doing and they know they're doing for a reason. But the healing process is advanced with silver. So again, so it sounds like you basically beat them to the punch is what you did. Well, what I did, well, I just wanted to point out that there are other solutions as well. Silver is probably the best. But if that's not something that's on your plate and you do have some of these other items available to you, there's always another alternative. You know what I mean? And I used a collagen that you're not really supposed to use. You're supposed to ingest it. But it worked really well in combination with these other things. And you know, I do believe that you have inspirations, you know what I mean? That all of a sudden something comes to you and you don't know where it came from, but you know that this is probably the best thing to try. Pretty much what happened. Sounds kind of like that's the way I came to go. Yeah, internal and topical though, Katie, from both directions. It is a good solution. So as far as I'm concerned, you're on the right path right from the get-go. The the other thing again too about many of the different Older quote-unquote spices guys that we're talking about Most people don't have any working knowledge or understand even if they read it They don't know why it is you know, like again, why did the wise men give Jesus or give Mary and Joseph, you know gold frankincense and mer as a gift in reality, of course also again used by as thieves oil was used especially like during the plague periods and for people who are going into pilfer stuff from other people's property where they had a plague house and maybe everybody was gone and nobody wanted to go near it. Well, there were valuables in there and wanted to be able to get in there without contracting a disease. It's also used by, by the way, by the people who were treating individuals. This is stuff they don't pass on in movies. You know, you talk about like, you know, a family member would be the one who would be committed, you know, commit to taking care of the other family members that were ill. And sometimes, if it was one child, a mom or a dad would choose to stay with the child. Well, they didn't just stand there bare but naked. There were procedures that were used for protection purposes. And the IDB behind it is that because the protection technologies were so expensive, in other words, the oils or medicinals, then only one family member could be afforded the opportunity to assist the other. You couldn't douse the whole family. It was just too expensive. Again, these objects, these products were considered to be very valuable. So typically the average poor family could afford a percentage, you know, a small amount of whatever it is that was being offered. And they would use that to treat the individual who was treating the patient. To make sure that they could control. A lot of times too, I think probably these things were a little bit more readily available than they are now. Oh yeah. I agree. In that respect, it was the first treatment. You know, there's so many things, you know, that our education system has done nothing but, you know, fail us. Because traditionally, yeah, I mean, it's like homeopathic solutions were just absolutely necessary because there was another thing you have for everybody needs to remember. How far away was the hospital? In some cases, there wasn't an hour at all. Yeah. The big thing here is, well, you know, a lot of things could happen in that hour or two or three or five hours to get where, you know, Mr. Doctor is. And for that reason, guys, as I mentioned many times, traditionally, on a farm, you had an area that was usually separate and off to the side from the kitchen. but it could also be off to the side from the study. And it was literally a little medical room, an examination or treatment room. When you watch the Patriot, they actually show you something like that with what happens. Remember when the one sun comes home? And, you know, they don't think they're... It's the nature of the design of things because no matter how you look at it, you're either on foot or you're horseback or you're bugging somebody, you know, you know, treadling somebody by buggy or carriage. to get them to wherever it is they needed to be treated. And there's only so fast they could go and there's only so much time you had. So initially, you had to the first maintenance and service right there, whatever happened. So you were the first, you were the first responder. Is that a term I don't know? That's a term they've made up I'm not even, I don't even like to use. Everybody's a first responder. They might make it sound like it's like super, super special that only these specialists can do this. It's like, no, if you wait for that, you'll be dead. That's nice, those people showed up, but you need to know more about how to deal with these problems so you don't end up gettified long before the first responders get there. Go ahead. Did they use sulfur during World War I or World War II? Sulfatrops were still being used, and are still being used today by the way, they're still in the inventory. But World War II is where they were parallel with the silins, remember, because the silins came into play. In World War I, the sulfate family of drug is basically what they had. The Spanish-American War, since usually, again, we have volumes of patients and casualties. There's an interesting story I was reading, and it's actually a good little compression. You know, one of the things that they were using was dust. And it was found out in an accidental way, but there's an excellent little write-up that somebody is circulating again, and I've got this in a larger book form. The guy was a Confederate artillery officer. He got disemboweled, literally. And they knew exactly, I mean, everybody kind of paid attention to the environment you're in. Well, the guy was gutted. And he was so severely injured. He didn't die, though. He didn't bleed to death. He was just, you know, was very ugly. And he was the same. Most of his body parts were outside and not inside. Well, the first several doctors looked at him and just gave up. They weren't going to do anything for him. Finally, he started kissing at the doctors. You know, hey, I had a dog that had this happen and he ran for a mile or two and he caught that, you know, raccoon he was after. You know, I'm better than a dog. So a couple of doctors actually were taken into a doctor's home and it was a couple of brothers that were doctors. And the one did the initial treatment to clean him up and then the other one took over and did the reintroduction of his organs into his body. Now they were so short in medical supplies they even knew exactly what they used. They did an evaluation of this guy because the one thing that first of all didn't happen was peritonitis, which they were expecting. Everybody goes, yeah, we can put everything back together. We can stitch his guts back in play. In fact, when they finally cleaned him up, when the first doctor cleaned him up, they realized he had a second horrific injury. But the first one was so bad that it kind of, you know, bled out the second one. So they got everything cleaned up. The guy laid his organs back in basically the way they belonged. And then they stitched him up with calico cloth thread because they had, you know, they didn't have any suture and they didn't have any other materials. The wife showed up to help treat him because they, you know, they were in reasonable distance. They left the children at home, except for one that was apparently, you know, nursing. And then she showed up to help treat him, but as they waited, the guy did not develop peritonitis. In fact, just in reverse, he healed up perfectly. Now, like I said before, when the war is on your real estate, you really can't get away from it. Well, not only did he heal back up, but he went back into combat. He got wounded again, and the second time it's like, okay, you know, second time, that's enough. They pulled him out, and then they sent him to Europe for ordnance work to try and procure arms in Europe. And while he was with the Germans, well, the Prussians, they heard about what happened to the guys, so they did an evaluation. And what they figured out is a combination of dust and the fact that he was in feathered, it was the specific grass, and upon evaluating why and how he survived, they reproduced the idea, and during the Franco-Prussian Wars, they used dust to treat horrific wounds like that to buy time and to prevent infection, and it worked. I hadn't heard about that and I've been well free I haven't heard about read in a while but I know she back during the bicentennial I got you know many many many many many many books and I read this years ago and the guy was a was an artillery officer I recognized that but what's interesting is what came of it is that while he was in Europe they were all asking me oh we heard about you and so the medical people of the day were seeking him out And because of this, a lot of people's lives were saved. Now it was not penicillin guys, and it wasn't sulfa. I mean, they didn't use either of both. That eventually was being worked on and it was being developed. The sulfa drugs were available. The silins were not pre-1900. The sulfa drugs were just then starting to come into more common play. By World War I, sulfate is used, but more importantly, bleach. Bleach and salts were the big thing in World War I. There were three different types of bleaches that were used. In fact, I'm going to tell you, when Doc Robinson did surgeries on me during the Dagger War, he was from the old school, and the first thing he did is to clean out wounds, is he would use bleach. He goes, they're not going to like this. He goes, but this is the best way to eliminate any foreign matters since I'm going to have to scrape this thing and scrub this thing out. And, uh, go ahead. It wasn't the bleach like we talk about today. It wasn't like the Clorox and those types of bleach. Oh yeah, well, he used, that's what he used. He had to use it. That's what he had. No, but there were different bleaches. You're right. There were three different types of bleaches used during World War I. And before that also, by the way, go ahead. Just a question. It's just because the cloche bleach that we have today isn't the same as probably it was back in those days. No, it's a different formula. You're right. There are different formulas. Although typically again, what he was using because it's what we had available, it was most common off the shelf, is he would use regular bleach to first scrub out the wound and debride alien, you know, damaged tissue, in this case from objects that go for high velocity. Hey, Mark, how do you get... Where do you get dust from? How do you collect dust? You talking about sawdust or? No, no, actual dust. It was a feather like dust. I would say this dust of ages. What they were looking for, they actually even evaluated the soil where this guy was wounded. Where he was critically wounded. Because when he was hit, it was apparently summer day. The fields were a particular type of loam slash dirt. When he was hit, he was an artillery officer and he was hit with an artillery shell that exploded near their gun. And it ripped him, gutted him, ripped him wide open, but he was dusted from the soil that was kicked up, was actually covering all of his organs. It was one of the things... So you used a sieve to make the dirt into dust for him? I assume, yeah, I would assume they may have been used Pezel and Mortis, you know, to actually grind up and create volumes of. But it was organic, it was earth. It was not like, you know, flour or... Now the only other thing I've always been curious about, because they even evaluated, they even were looking at, well, what were the grass that was in the wound? Because he actually was, you know, smattered with a combination of dust and whatever type of breed of grass it was that also hit him. And they were trying to figure out how the hell did he survive? Because this was a horrific wound. And they finally figured out that the dust was the issue and so they actually used it as a way when they had these individuals that were wounded, they were trying to get them to the rear so they could reconnect everything. They would actually have these packets of dust that they would apply to the organs. Well you know they have that clay and that clay powder might be close to that. Yes, yes, yes. I and that's where again I would point out even the sulfate drugs remember you see it most people realize it and I was talking earlier about you know the before we had well now we have quick plot which is an organic I mean basically it's an it's both inorganic and organic I don't know if you're using a neutral talc to stabilize or to volume it out Because see, talcum powder is an interesting object unto itself, but and it's used in a lot of different products, you wouldn't even suspect, okay? You're eating it a lot of times, you wouldn't know that either, but I mean, I'm telling you, but if you look, you'll find talcum powder. For instance, if you eat rice, this little heads up, guys, the reason that Asian people teach you to wash rice, and probably mom taught you to if you're getting fresh rice, you know, like rice in a bag, not fresh, but rice in a bag, Rice is either covered with talcum powder or it is covered with rice powder to keep the weevils down when it's in storage. And the micro weevils that usually get into rice, what they'll do is they'll eat the, this is like a sacrifice, the material that they go after, the talc or the meal, they'll eat instead of actually going after the rice itself. So that's why when they recommend that you wash it, you should wash it, rinse it. And if you pay attention when you wash it, you'll see a little bit of a film. It's not an oily film, but it's like a dust. The talc, of course, is neutral, but you shouldn't really consume any more if you can help. I mean, it does pass through the system. It doesn't hurt the gut. There are a number of advantages. In fact, some people argue taking a pinch of it, depending on which home you're fast you talk to. But using a talcum powder, And I wouldn't be surprised, you know, as you think about it, that talcum powder was very common as an applique back during that period of time. Whether or not that's the dust they were using, I'd have to do more research because, again, you know, the Franco-Prussian Wars, there were three of them. And again, all of what we would see in modern, the modern warfare of World War I was, well, the precursor to that was the Franco-Prussian War. Typically in the Alsace-Lorraine region between France and Germany. I would think they would heat the dust up quite a bit, like bake it in the oven before, you know, make it killing any of the... Right, you do two things, you want to break down and destroy it as well. For application purposes, you want it as non-liquid as possible. So all of the, whatever humidity you can take out of it, yeah, you'd probably kill it, is what you'd do. Again, and be curious, now, talcum powder would qualify completely under that, now you got me thinking, that talcum powder, because I can picture all the images I've seen, of talcum powder as it was promoted, you know, pre-1900. With a lot of the stuff that I've read. And it had to do simply with just history. That's much about the idea that, you know, hey, talcum powder was used on big gaping wounds. But talcum powder would make sense because it's neutral. Okay? Diamitaceous earth is also a powder that kills the bugs because it cuts their exoskeleton up with the little... Right, but in... In this case, the idea was that also when it eliminated for whatever reason, it created an effective barrier for bacteria so that the bacteria could not attack or could not lock itself to the organs through other cross-contamination. One of the other things to take into consideration is see prisoner transportation. Again, how slow was it back then? Now, number one, you're talking about a big lineup with horrific casualties in the battlefield situation. But first you've got to get them to where they can be fixed, you see. So it's transportation time. This is something that... This was the dynamic that created the change in survivability on the battlefield. Vietnam wasn't the first place where air medic transport, you know, the rotor wing evacuation took place, but it's where they perfected it to the degree because the aircraft became faster. So it was not unheard of for a man to be hit and in anywhere from 17 to 27 minutes to actually be in a surgery. That's when you're on a helicopter and get you to it from off the battlefield, you were headed towards medical support. And those minutes, like we've said with everything, those minutes count. In this case, go ahead, go ahead please. I'm just passing on a message. I know you're not going to be able to do it right now, but on the number that you're using, there's a message for you afterwards, something that needs to be re-willed. So when you're done with this hour, hand it to Mom. Alright? Okay, very good. She's waiting right now, as a matter of fact. We got a lot of stuff we need to take care of. God bless our republic. The New World Order. Thank you. We shall prevail, ladies and gentlemen. The Empire is on the run. We are the market.
Recordings of The Intelligence Report are the intellectual property of Mark
Koernke and the Patriot Broadcasting Network, used with permission. The content
present in these recordings and the resulting transcripts are the opinions of
Mark Koernke and do not represent the opinions of the Koernke Archive, its
owners, or its service providers. This website, transcript, and summary content
has been generated with the assistance of Artificial Intelligence tools, and may
contain errors.