Mark Koernke discussed weapons, ammunition, and preparedness on Weapons Wednesday, covering topics including chamber inserts for rifles, multi-caliber adapters, 6.5x55 Swedish ammunition, and alternative ammunition solutions. He addressed the Texas power grid crisis and rolling blackouts, explaining how intentional mismanagement rather than lack of capacity caused the outages. Koernke emphasized the need for diversified infrastructure, criticized government incompetence and communist influence, and called for solutions including local self-sufficiency and removal of corrupt officials. He also discussed electric vehicles, renewable energy limitations, and the importance of backup systems and communication networks independent of government control.
A figure walked in through the mist with a flip clock in his clothes were torn and dirty as he stood there by my bed. He took off his three-cornered hat. Speaking low to me, he said, we fought a revolution. 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, 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 attacks 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 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 murdered. Your leaders send artillery and guns to foreign shores and send your sons to slaughter fighting other people's wars. Can you regain the freedoms for which we fought and died? Or don't you have the courage or the faith to stand with pride? And are there no more values for which you'll fight to save? Or do you wish your children to live in fear 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, keep the torture freedom burning bright, as Iowocke vanished in the midst of whence he came. His words were true, we are not free, but we have ourselves to blame. For even now as Tyrant trampled each God-given right, we only watch him tremble, too afraid to stand and fight. If he stood by your bedside in a dream while you were asleep and wondered what remains of the freedoms he fought to keep, what would be your answer if he called out from the grave? Afternoon Intelligence Report. I'm R. Kornke. One day closer to victory for all of our brothers and sisters, but on and behind the lines in occupied territories west southeast north and uh... ladies and gentlemen you're listening to us on liberty tree radio dot four m g dot com liberty tree radio on satellite and we are on a m f m micro stations c b base stations and uh... ultra Hallmark and Golden Spike Technologies east and west of the Mississippi along with Alaska. Good afternoon to all of our friends out there in the lower 49 including the great state of Jefferson along with CONUS, the Outlying Two States, the Territories and the Clock. It is 5.06 p.m. Eastern Standard Time. It is Wednesday, the 17th of February. the days keep ticking by. It is, well, the 13th year of open, obvious, and in your face, Fabian the socialist and Soviet socialist occupation of America with a K 2021 old earth calendar, 2021 battle for the republic, dance of swords, almost to the crossroads. And if you remember the battle for the crossroad, how it started, well, that's what's coming. So be ready. The battle for the crossroad is classic and then the battle of five corners, which well, that was the, that was the for everybody, but everybody learned a lesson. So that's how it works. You are going to be on what is a progressive OJT learning curve for most of the fighting forces out there and get over it, live with it, plan and train so that you do live. It is weapons win. So, let's see, couple things. Yeah, there's some, oh my god, prices on some of this stuff right now, including the fact that some of it is Century Arms. And it's like, oh my god, okay. Yeah, Century Arms is half the time they have their rifles put together by Hugo of Warsaw. You know, the guy that's 7'8", he has hands the size of, you know, of hams. All fingers are like thumbs, and basically they're three sizes of hammer. and that's about it walk a walk a walk a will make it fit one way or another problem for the product gets out to where you want to use it for a very different world now some things are sold by century we gotta point this out that century didn't have any uh... connection with building but they're the red a revolution company that was selling the weapon uh... in the past year century actually was mostly a conduit for what were what a revolution guns that were not anal leader overly plentiful or were not as in vogue uh... when the mop forty nine fifty six rifles came in there were about uh... sixty nine dollars apiece and they went to one twenty five which was still a good price and the rifle itself is really a night it is a good weapon i really like it i like the way it handles like the way it shoots is very comfortable to shoot by comparison to many other gas operated some of the medic rifles from the era okay not all of them were that uh... fun to shoot but well most work i mean they do work but the seven point five french round is the orphan of the bunch here and that's why somebody was asking me and i've had several requests or what about these mops raffles there's several companies that have them and uh... back in the day century had these available they actually were more expensive when they were first available surplus back in the sixties or really weren't really that many of them and the model forty nine was more common than the model forty nine fifty six which is a uh... french foreign legion rifle originally uh... and also markman's rifle within the french military as i recall i think the marines had a two ccc some uh... french marina are you rifles marked as such and their collectors items out just like everything else but the rifle is a decent weapon are we have a malicious here of let me tell you what happened a lot of us bought these guns back when they came in And so they were smattered all over the place, but there's a couple things to consider. It is an orphan rifle. There's no military that carries it. So what we did is, myself included, is I sold all of the MOS 49-56 rifles to a unit to my east. But I got everybody else to basically do the same thing. It's not that we don't mind collecting guns. And by the way, you can still hang out with what you got. I mean, nobody had to do this. What we did is we centered the 7.5 ammunition to a certain unit. Most of the guys also bought the 308 versions that were available after they first started bringing in the 7.5 French models. The only difference is the caliber. and uh... the chambering forgive me and the uh... so we do we took the three oh eight from the seven point five french moss rifles all types model forty nine model forty nine fifty six isn't put them all with one group the guys love them they work on uh... the basic rule if you run into spare parts or we run into a derelict gun it goes to them Now this is cooperation. They're a separate group. They're an independent little formation of probably about 140, 150 men. And it's not the only rifle they have, but they do like the gun. And it's all in one place. The ammunition, every time we find ammo, if I'm out and about and we find ammo to yard sale on the 7.5 French, I don't keep it. It goes to those guys. Everybody is vacuum sweeping up all of the spares. And this is the kind of cooperation you guys should all have all over the country. if you're going to uh... be serious about the fact that your enemy is coming out to a they want to well they want to put you to camp know they want to kill you if you're a white person they want to murder you and your family uh... they have an agenda and it's vicious and ruthless they think and we're going to be well on that in spades on them when the time comes so you all very get rid of no cooperate a lot more uh... i do this with other guns but you know again there's not that much in the way of surplus that's out there now that we really would be jumping at the car carlos would be nice they're still not outrageous not not by today's prices but uh... again ammunition if you already have the six point five car car when you have a whole pile of the stripper clips than yeah i'm buying more of those probably would make sense because they would make a good five ten rifle other something you could hand out if your local defense of the redo like what the italian did with the seven point three five round when they had an inventory because it was they did couldn't afford to throw anything away during a war uh... initially the seven point three five car car call as they come into service it was supposed to be issued everybody but they just couldn't make production they decided to take with a six point five car car call and the seven point three five what to security and detention camps or you know personal war camps Now this centralized everything. They're not shooting somebody all the time. They're not in a running gun battle, but they would have sufficient ammunition to do so if they got into trouble. And so it made sense. Well, the same is true of these 6.5s as handout rifles. If you're looking at conventional or guerrilla warfare or security operations, if you're looking for garrison weapons that are going to stay in place, and if you already had a pile of the six point five car car people you were able for reloading maybe got dies and you got surplus ammo which there's a couple ways to that they came in but yeah by more the six point five car colors would make that but i don't know what comfortable rifle to carry easy to shoot nothing fancy but they work and they work every time so and again it's a course rifle but another thing i would say but everybody's used to a whole panel there they're expecting like a buttered thirty forty craig which those of the smoothest action could ever operate the scale from one end the car car go to the other end of the scale it's just it's a manly rifle you have to be forceful with the military gun you're not going to break it you just got to be forceful when you operate always remember that the aggressive and it will come manual the problem the mosch rifle forty nine is a better medic weapon now nothing magazines have come in and then they got stupid price i mean they are up to a hundred fifty dollars apiece and then another wave of surplus came in and drove those prices back down to where they belong and then those have disappeared so again that's another thing if we run into mags if i see them at like an odd clearance somewhere all by a handful of those and let the guys know they can pick them up for the price plus the cost of uh... shipping and you know whatever it is that that's additional but the idea is that we were keep routing the equipment so we can build up potential with those particular units the other weapons that are out there now basically again uh... it's the a k the a r uh... that's going to be dominant for the moment the p t r sir nice they're still the cheapest for magazines out there by the way uh... three-way ammunition can be had so that another thing is not like it's gone yet and there's tons and tons and tons of it going to be out there in military vehicles no matter what the enemy is not going to be able to drop the drill that this is kept not yet they will eventually but not yet too many other third and second powers are using that that particular round and they're going to have to draw in and use against the american people foreign troops so the pentagram is already planning on and is already coordinating with the canadian forces against the united states people we know that okay we understand the betray we can pretty well figure that the pentagram will also be cooperating with the chinese who are in you know operating with the canadians and so once again we have a significant betrayal just like we have the red guard on the street in washington right now a betrayal just like we have the communist in washington do what they're doing a betrayal and again this is where yes we could manage the logistics here much more efficiently uh... the reason i bring this up is because a lot of people are going to all these sites and we're all we've got well four rifles and if they do have like surplus rifles it's what the car car all of our boss couple of twenty two training rifles and maybe an f a l or something that just pops up as a century or one of the other bluster manufactured you know remanufactured from kit guns it could be a pal it could be uh... role example of the look at what you like this is stop a arms p a p m ninety one it would you know dragon off knockoff three thousand four hundred nine dollars and i'm sure and great rifle love the action love the system though they work of the first stop is are made by the ugo's three thousand four hundred nine dollars i can take that one that money and buy a whole lot of other weapons and actually get some good performance and are more people and that's really where the balance is here right now the economy was hit the way that was hit we have to we already understand the map so jump out and spending that kind of money on a single weapon if you have a handful of people that need to be armed or if you're trying to make sure you have armaments spread out so that you have a backup to a backup which is really a good idea right now uh... that kind of thought the price wise unless you're you know individually wealthy male independently wealthy of the china work for you Even these, you know, $1,000 ARs are the same thing, or AKs. Go ahead, caller. I think I hear a voice. Yes, question number four. You know how they made the inserts. I've never seen one for the .30-06 to .308. Will anybody be able to make some other inserts for current bolt-action rifles that, like a Mosin-Nagat, might fire out of a .30-06? How hard would that be to make not an insert? Oh, okay. Well, the caliber converters. Okay, now there are companies that were doing this. In fact, who just had some of those? Thank you. I'm talking about so you wouldn't have to use an insert because it ought to be in place. So you just keep running around so it's not... Right. Well, let's still an insert, but what it is like with the Navy solution, the first thing for everybody trying to understand this, is what we're talking about. When the M1 Garand was out there in force, the Navy didn't want to switch to another rifle, they had plenty of garands, but they also didn't want to re-barrel. And the idea of using an insert, a chamber insert, which made up for the difference between the .30-06 and the .308, was the Navy solution. and what they did they didn't have to rebuild the only thing they did you can find them in surplus like a uh... let's see you might be all funny and search still over at sarco dot com e dash sarco ink dot com or circle whatever their pages now circle had those but when you do that the other thing that they the navy came up with there is a plastic insert that goes inside the magazine well so that it creates an extended feed ramp for efficiency and in loading because again the three oh eight got a bit of a little bit of a jump what it's in the uh... d clip in magwell so the only two things they did they made that insert and then they made a uh... a step like alleged that went inside the fixed it locked in place didn't bounce around and admit it made up the difference for the internal magazine uh... well in magazine well area now with the others you're talking about there several that could possibly be done one would be like thirty thirty uh... you know first of all if you're like doing rimmed guns you want to made up a rim cartridge now years ago somebody was doing a step up for uh... from subject to by fifty four are to thirty thirty and that's why i mention because it's a rebel round so there was nothing that needed to be done to the ball there is nothing to be done the rest of the weapon uh... with those seven point five french now let me give you an example both guns were rebarled uh... there was just talking about they actually bored out the chamber you know the chamber the chamber reamed and polished and then uh... double-check headspace and then they told the guns and throw away without a barrel change the uh... in some cases that would be an option uh... but like a lot of these guns for instance first of all we have to have a pile of them to justify a major program so in reality it insert like you're talking about makes more sense The Navy had the same attitude because, well, the Navy doesn't fight infantry combat operations. They needed them for boarding parties, for limited defense, and inboard close-quarter operations if they had to, you know, repel borders in theory. More likely we'd be attacking somebody else than them attacking us. But something like that could be done with a number of the weapons if we went through the inventory. Example, 6.5 Carcano. uh... the bay is close there's a couple of six point five independent rounds or all actually what was that one six point five remington now with six point five remington round the bores the same but they can again the cases different cases shorter i know it is i am sure that it is it's not a real popular round so it will be the biggest problem this day and age is that the replacement round is almost as tough to get as the original cartridge so there's where the balance is to it what could we made up to the chamber ring it is a good idea uh... and now here's another thing okay with the point something out and again don't do this don't do this don't do this but if you get it okay in other words i just said don't do this but what was already done for years if you use the a three oh eight round in a thirty-eight six chambering it will function okay but buyer beware operator don't do this But in an emergency, the bullet will step, it will walk to the lands and grooves, it'll do everything it's supposed to do, but when that case is ejected, it's blown out. The front end's gonna be opened right up. It may even have a lateral fracture along the shoulder or just around the throat because what's gonna happen is that brass is gonna stretch to compensate when the charge takes off in the 308 round. it's going to pushed you obviously do it always does but it's going to exert that pressure forward and there's no chamber maintenance to keep the brass from distorting so the process going to distort however everything is gone sufficiently that that world will jump to the barrel and you don't do what it's supposed to because in reality it is almost lined up go compare thirty-up sixty three oh eight now might away what i just told you was tested at abardin uh... proving grounds and also frankfort arsenal did all the research on on emergency cartridge use options and this goes back with frankford arsenal something i've talked about for years uh... somebody already did all the research on this and it was all combination of the nr eight and the war department of world war two coloring number four if you can try to find I believe, and it may be off, it doesn't make any difference, I just get the whole year, get the year of 1941 American Rifleman magazines, and then get the first two or three months, might as well just get the second year, of the entire magazine. You want it completely scanned, if you can, and you want to go page by page, because there were a series of articles. on the question that you're asking right now why couldn't we do this all the first solution that they came up with is and here's the here's the basic issue america is under attack we are fighting on two fronts uh... we are don't get our military mobilized we are going to be invaded everybody else has been invaded wire we get to be invaded So, everybody started to gear up by making homemade armored cars. Everybody like governors were talking about sawed-off shotguns and sawed-off rifles to make assassin weapons to play Gorilla, okay, for Gorilla Warfare. In the NRA, they talked about that a whole lot more, and in the articles that I'm referring to here, they had what was called an A, B, and C, Alternate Cartridge Schedule, and that's something all of you need to have. Well, what is this about? Well, number one, it's going to show you something that I've talked about for years about. What were the dominant cartridges before World War II, and where the hell did some of them go? Okay, because they were phenomenal rounds. The 351 Winchester round is a carbine round. It was actually a very popular rifle that was out there in force. I don't know why it went the way it did, because it didn't have any dominant problems with operation. it was more complicated or should be more expensive because of the machining involved it was an all machine gun there was very little camping on board and it was very popular with cop shops prisons and guard companies but a lot of americans bought the rifle typically because they probably work in those industries at one point or another okay Well, that round is referred to, along with many others, because it's an odd round out, so what do you do? Well, there's the A schedule where, the way this worked, there was an A, B, and C schedule. The A schedule explains what round, what cartridge, what chambering you can take. Well, I heard a cat fight in the background. I think Mark had some cats going at it, so... Well, it's mating season for cats. Sorry about that. but we don't know what the at that at that point when another cat here there decided they want to be the same question next to me what doing the program that i have helpers but anyway uh... the a schedule what is designed to do is uh... take one round that it presently exist that you know how many routes can you take for instance in thirty out six it used in the thirty out six without any significant issues no back pressures no case failures uh... and even ejection and it what it would basically is kind of like a bar chart because it or it goes from one round to the next and it shows you what the integrating cartridges are now then there's what is the the b category now the b category is a little different the b category is well you're going to load it will do what it's supposed to the bullets going to go down range but you may have case rupture or damage you may or may not have complete and repetitive successful here you are uh... you're each ejection of the round you have the empty case however the b schedule you can pull the trigger and it's probably going to be okay okay there's no very likely to have a weapon failure with the existing weapons you know the old farmers winchester uh... the uh... brand new savage whatever got it was in nineteen forty one that you had the peace schedule would allow you to take other round that you might not normally a thought man should i put that in that gun and you could do it and it would be where you probably kill a chap or you could kill a you know an invading german appear trooper blah blah blah but then there's a few schedule and it's like i said a minute ago here although again the stuff or trouble that really would fit into the category a but buyer beware ok category he was on my god i've used everything i've used everything with the last twenty five rounds and i've got them but do they work in my god and it says right there if you read the scheduling it goes well here's how this works it probably mad most of the time it may do what it's supposed to do the bullet will probably go down right it will However, we can't guarantee what's going to happen to you on the shooter end, depending on the rifle you're using. Because it's buyer beware time. This is dangerous. Better dangerous than a bullet in that Jap soldier because it's the last round you had. And maybe that was the last Jap you had to kill. So that's when you look over and you see Uncle Frank putting a little jelly down the barrel. You say, what are you doing Uncle Jack? Putting that jelly down there. Well, the bullet might need to squeeze a little through the tube. That's right. It's gonna weeble wobble. but this but guys you gotta remember he they wouldn't do this now all liability because even though you would play like a good buyer beware buyer beware don't do this don't do this don't do this and you know if i said three times their people that or could it do it could you be like a nuclear device you know in other words they were listening okay But the fact of the matter is that we're looking at war. Everybody now all of a sudden was serious. Nobody was thinking twice about, you know, hey, what do you think is going to happen? What will ramifications be? Well, if we're at war and we're fighting the Japanese and we lose, the ramifications will be that the Japanese will own America, so maybe we should kill them. You see how that works? That's why Uncle Fred is missing front teeth. He put that 50 caliber in that 12 gauge and he's got a couple of tickles missing. You know what? He did do it. Yeah, he got the guy, but he lost his head. Yeah, he's carrying an air soccer rifle now too, by the way. Don't forget that. What did he do that for? You know, damn, that's the last round I got, but I need that rifle. I got the rifle. A single shot is better than a piece of water pipe with a butcher knife taped to the end. Oh, hell yeah. Well, and again, let's look at what was happening at the same time, guys. You know, first of all, and this is really cute, on the one hand, For those of you who think that we've never seen this ammunition shortage in America, what do you think it was like in 1941? Now, by the way, not 1941, after December 7th, let me point something out. You've probably seen articles. In fact, if you've seen the Honolulu Papers, they told everybody that Pearl Harbor was coming. Pearl Harbor was going to be there this weekend. Remember that article, which they've tried to not let anybody see and then nobody talks about it? Oh, FDR didn't set us up. Yes, he did, that bastard. Son of a bitch should have been dragged out and hung strapped to his wheelchair. That asshat communist should have been dead before that, 1933. Okay, now beyond that. In 1941, everybody knew. My dad said this, my grandpa's both said this, we all knew we were going to war. They were going to suckers. You were going to get to war one way or another. They're going to happen. Okay. And that was before the war started. And everybody, you got to remember that we're still in kind of the depression. There were people working finally, and because of the war preparation production, it was going on all over the country for support in England, or selling other stuff and setting our machinery up. Everybody had more money to work with. Well, guess what? People were snicking ammo whenever they could. And by the time they were done, when everybody's hearing that, wow, you know, England's under siege, and they, you know, the Japs just ran over Singapore, and, man, they rolled through Southeast Asia, and they were already in China, and then they're going into other parts of the Pacific, you know, where they could before they started Pearl Harbor. Everybody's like, well, you know, we're going to war. Oh, that's crazy. There's no way that could happen. That's the other idiot sticks. and they want to give it all to everybody gives their media lip service to will cookbook will put it no it had not everybody did those going on in new york betrayed to by the way the main mistake about that one so anyway I think, Mark, that everybody should go out there and clean the shells off of all these chamber inserts for weapons and ammo you don't have because you may have come across a weapon or piece of ammo that will work in your weapon or weapon vice versa that will work with your ammo if you have inserts. So we should clean the shells off for that stuff. well you know as a matter of fact uh... you've got a remote remind me of the thank you for finding this over at sportsman the guide that was one uh... mr co that another and i believe gun parts corp has a few of these on the shelf still too but they have all of these other chamber inserts for like thirty two twenty two whatever and uh... that more like i said earlier those thirty two rounds back when the thing first started with a major wave took place when everything first started disappeared months ago a bunch of thirty two showed up and that really would have been a bad investment if you had a thirty caliber rifle because they make 30 caliber 3030 inserts, 3030 chamber inserts that have for 32 ACP. They also make them for 30 carbine and for a while there and even still there's a few places that have military carbine ammo available. So your 30-06 or your 308 or your 3030 could be operating with 30 carbine. Now, it'd be manually operated, but guess what? Better than that pipe with the butcher knife, gut duct tape at the end of it, and better than, you know, harsh language and throwing a rock. In fact, it's far better than that, and in some cases, to be quite honest, you know, because somebody asked me before, why would you want that 32? Oh, real easy. It shoots like a dream, by the way, if you've never used those. The 32 and the 30-06, first of all, is remarkably quiet, considering that the 32 is usually a barking dog when you're using it in a pistol. Now, if you take any kind of directional quieting device, even with standard thirty two all a c p ball ammo or a lot of the for the longest time most of it was lead or remember that you're gonna run into a lot of surplus or old old product inventory remington and it's led it's lead bullet but you load that up into that out six and you put uh... well here's the thing just put a uh... cup type grenade launcher on another one of the bigger one would help And what happens is you're going to have a little bit of an expansion there, and most of the noise is going to be directed forward and towards who you're shooting at, and specifically who you're shooting at. It works kind of like the psionics reducer, not a suppressor, like on the Car-15. The Car-15 did not have a silencer on the end of it, that not the regular model. The regular Car-15 was made by psionics, and it was a sound reducing directional flash hider. If you don't think so, look at the design on the inside. It didn't have the baffles, it had striations. But what it did, because of that short ass barrel on the Kar-15, it reduced flash, which was a big problem when you want to be shot at in the jungle, right? Hey, look, I'm over here, bop, bop, bop, bop, look at all that unburned powder. Directed it and compressed it, and then still allowed it to venturi out with the slits. So you had that star shell effect from the front, you didn't have a big clock. But the other thing that it did is it reduced sound. Now the same thing would work with these little 32 ACP units. You're still putting a decent bullet down range for a century removal using a grand or a Springfield or an Enfield or for that matter a 700 or Model 70. uh... in thirty out six savage gun thirty out six you would be making for a lot less noise and put it into the back of somebody's head and others aim in for the back base of the skull put a bullet there that thirty two a c p does a really good job of shouldn't somebody's like that a cartridge of rubber band you stick it in there you put your current place and pull the trigger and you know or instead with an insert like this you actually do yes have a separate them chamber if you look at the way they're built like with the thirty twos when you insert them you have certain amount of barrel before it jumps to the just as it normally would uh... rifle barrel by all you the next caller yeah good color to put their place Hey Mark, this is John from Kentucky. Those multi-caliber adapters, the name of the company is MC Sports. Police Bullet Company, 800 West Foot Anchorage, Alaska, 995171. Excellent. Go ahead and give it all out. I'll tell you what, go slow, give it all out twice again. I'm going to, first of all, I'm going to read out what they listed here. Oh, go ahead, please. 22 long-rifle, 222. 22 mag in 222. 30 carbine, 30-06. 30 carbine, 30-30. 32 ACP, 30-06. 32 ACP, 30-30. 22LR, 223. 22 mag, 223, 30 carbine, 308, 3 carbine, 300, win mag, 32 acp, 308, 32 acp, 300, win mag. I'm going to give you, you ready? MSPOES slash A company West 33 road Anchorage Alaska 99511. Once again, through M.A. Sports slash Ace Bullock Company, 0-0-W-30 Anchorage, Alaska, 9-9-5-1-7. Now, they do have a phone number, 9-0-7-4-9-1-3. Email. r e l r e d at a k dot net over excellent thank you i know that i have to we might have an interesting experience with the shipping uh... but you again but you can check that out him a call to give you a spot of an estimate on that real quick okay i have but i have the thirty carbine in the thirty-odd six and It's just a single shot, but it's quiet. It's a nice, oh, varmint thing. I have the 308 for the 30-06 to get out. You have to have a group to get it out. But adapters, blue steel, $20, stainless, $28. Okay? And one of the things that I do with these, example, I mentioned 1903 Springfield, the Grand, we even people want to carry the cleaner with clean care she can get smaller you know clean care for the thirty caliber kids at work for the both the rifles any of those right in the military but what i'd like to do is take those grease them up uh... put them inside their own little ziplock industrial bag or you put them in the cigar tubes and put them in the buttstock karen with a rifle that that way when you do need at that point or guys you're not gonna fire a lot but it's the idea that i could still put a bullet on somebody because i've got something else laying around a lot of rum may run into it or i carry spares i carry a small lot of this because like we said i may not use this for mani for a person to person fighting but i can use this for removal or game getting i don't want to get uh... for instance a bunny with a thirty-odd six do i but i may want a bunny and thirty two is an awfully nice way to go to pop and rabbit dies and you get all the performance out of the rifle as far as your sights, how to make the weapon work, and it's easily understood. So you can have a box of 32 ACP in a kit with those and box it up on your backpack if you want. You can carry, like I said, carry it with the rifle. It depends on the weapon you've got. Some weapons you don't have the option. So, again, you have to come up with another solution. But you'd certainly want some of the ammo with the chamber insert. That way it's always together. Just nothing to think about there. Jump in their car. This company advertises in Backwoodsman's magazine. Backwoodsman's magazine. That's where I found the article. They're in there almost every month. That's all I've got to add, so I'll back out and let somebody else. Thank you. It helps a great deal. Anybody out there? Great magazine. Everybody should get it. everybody if you have any of the weapons that they offer a conversion or you need to buy them here's the other thing to remember if you have that we can copy it right but if we don't have it we got to try to make we got to figure out a major work but if somebody else is already got all the plumbing are you have an example if you give it to somebody who is uh... you know competent especially with cnc machinery right now and if you were pressed and you needed to make a bunch of them were one of the many ordinance project that everybody should be considering then making these and building them in reasonable quantity so that everybody that has a uh... two-by-fifty one NATO rifle has at least one of these as part of their standard prep for the whole of the unit it preferably support the company is making them but a down the road again will be all honor the honor the manufacturer for now but we get into war, it's not going to make a difference. Wherever the hell you are is where you're going to build it. And that... Well, somebody may have some junk barrels in a bucket and you don't have any ammunition for that junk barrel and the barrel is pretty ratty, but the insert can be cleaned up enough to put an insert in, so that might be another way to get another pea shooter on the wall there. Or something that could be a... Or a barrel with an insert. Yeah, a security gun. uh... remember just something that's pointed uh... set up you a lock it back you pull a string and it goes boom and it covers an area that you can have more than one of them or you can have them pointed different directions creating the illusion that you have more than one person or again creating stumble ups you know creating you know basically trip trip movie traps think of all the for which you can use something like that and the idea to make it quite a bit more than one of the thing I got one other thing as a side note and it was just the fact that I know it's Weapons Wednesday, but everybody should get probably one of these electrical meter testers that has the clamp on it because they don't have to do an EMP just tell the people that that's an EMP. and the electricity is out. How would they know, unless they pull the meter or put a lock and a tester around the cable coming in? So they could be bullshitting a lot of people about the power outages and stuff. So instead of having a company come in and say, hey, EMP by China, they could just say it's a weather thing and turn off certain areas just to give you hardships. Well, what you're talking about is, again, if everybody hasn't thought about it, remember, guys, those smart meters were put in for a reason. And from afar they hit a switch and no Tiki, no Washi. Think about it. That's the... They shoved that down everybody's throat. Yeah, quite, I'm sorry. Yeah. Yeah, I'm just thinking that there may be a lot of this power outages and stuff. A lot of places might also be just them turning off neighborhoods. They don't... people they don't like trying to starve them out and freeze them out and testing and... I just think that you should have a meter to be able to test the clamp around your incoming line before the smart meter and see if there's any power in that. And if it is, then you pull that stupid smart meter off and you put some rubber gloves on and put some blades to hop that over. What gets me about this whole thing, guys, they're counting on the idea that the population doesn't know anything about the power grid and how it works, and it's true. uh... one of the things uh... i remind everyone the patriot movement most of our people run the lion's share of what is generating power out there and because of that will a lot of us have had a chance to visit all of these institutions the actual mechanical locations and everything is interconnected So, one of the things I've got a problem with is there, and part of what is the problem, I think, is there was an intentional, from foreign, the Israelis pushed this through their Shyster operations out west, the new west, the Chinese are tied into this getting hydroelectric shut down. Anybody remember this? We've got to get rid of all the dams! I was talking about this yesterday, and it goes out to, they wanted to get rid of all of this existing stand by it mechanical infrastructure that we very quickly could turn around without a whole lot of special you know it'd be at out it doesn't have to be building the the hoover dam to make power okay and they know that but if you have the biggest thing is having the water blockage so you have the water drop If you have that drop, most of the older style lumber mills or whatever, they didn't build a special sluice way that was concrete cast. The dam was there and was established and different mechanical operations fed their wheels off of the drop, the water wave that was coming off of the dam itself. They might sluice it and move it for direction, but that drop, that buildup of reservoir and then of course the natural two, three, four, five feet of drop ten feet of drop twenty feet of drop you know gravity sucks people that's a lot of energy and we don't have to make the cups out of wood or metal anymore we just cut some five-gallon buckets along a bias right in the water spin it right around if you do enough searching like around michigan here and of course i could take it a five like i said five places really close almost all the infrastructure especially later on which originally was would was all angle iron and said welded construction I mean even the wheels itself, the paddle wheels, which were quite efficient and held up even for decades, decades and decades, after they were no longer used, everything was allowed to rust up and seize up. So physically the technology is quite durable. Now if you maintain it, it's even more durable. But the fact is that we're talking these large turbines, large complexes. Remember, the big push by the pigs that are the globalists and the eco-freaks was to destroy, oh wait a minute, look what we have. This failure in our infrastructure, hydroelectric is the most efficient of all of our power sources, period. Gravity sucks. All you need is weight dropping. And for the green complaint about it, what possible way does it pollute anything? right that's what you all of the power sources we have which of course then they see it they got everybody in the cold like it dot down where i in texas and like lubbock texas they use everything that they have the comes out of the trash uh... air no cardboard you can't it's hard to get a cardboard box from a place although they will grudgingly give you one but the reason is that the city uh... and the county's by up all the berkham buster bowl anything. If it's burnable, it's going over to the power station. They can run gas, they can run diesel. This is what is basically invested in a multi-fuel, multi-combustible furnace system. Now back when I was really, really young, and actually this goes back to World War II, all of these institutions, schools, high schools, junior high schools, school buildings in Michigan were multi-fuel capable of both heating and power. Most of them produced a certain amount of electrical power and had their own generators in school. All the older high schools and junior high schools in this area of Washington, like in Washtenaw County, all had the ability to eliminate waste going to the dump. They burned everything that they produced in the way of junk. They used gas. They could use coal, whatever you had available. They were multi-fuel, heat, and energy sites. this was in the schools and then the the power plant for the same way if they were free-standing power plants will be equal freaks of course with which in reality was the uh... the shysters that are manipulating our economy convinced everybody that we had to shut down all those evil bad terrible well but we start building up a landfills and filling them up so the oil boys who ran the landfills the jewish mob that runs the trash companies all they made money and or first at which is what the whole idea was one part of the kosher mafia you know, squeezing the ass of the other part of the kosher mafia and, you know, patting their pocket. But hydro... Well, they have to... The government's trying to tell everybody that they go to the green stuff, the solar and the wind, then they tell you it's global warming as you're freezing your propellers off, and the... These solar panels are icing up, so that doesn't work. Then they're spraying the air with chemtrails to get rid of any solar you can get and then they're going to kill off the oil which more parts are made by oil from the panels in the windmills are made out of oil. The petroleum products have to be harvested in the first place, right? You have to have the petroleum products to make the polymers that they need in order for them to cast, even the higher end one, no matter what you're doing is going up and down the scale of the cracking plant to create the polymer that you want for that particular project. Then you may have an extension process because you incorporate other fibers and stuff, but they come from what? all that right they come from the petroleum industry to so the by an odd but i don't think anything on top of that let's not forget about it we gotta keep emphasizing that if it has the in after it gasoline kerosene nap fully right guys before you can get all that other stuff that that wind generator runs off to be seen the oil leaks when they take place on those generators guys on those wind generators. Do you know how many gallons of a petroleum product have refined, highly refined, have to be part of that operational process? Well, in order to get those oils, you have to do something with those eans. You can't, and it's like I said, if you, like everything else, first you stupefy everybody in this country. We used to know about the petroleum industry. We used to be taught, I can pull books off the shelf. I don't throw books away. I've got books from when I was in grade school, and I could show you where they used to teach everybody about all the different industries. I guarantee that these idiot sticks we have in the public fool system right now don't have a clue about a single stinking process, but they'll rave about, well, all evil it is. Well, how does it work? Well, I don't know, and I don't need to! Then you're an idiot. Then you can be pretty well told anything and be a... You've got your head so far up your ass, couldn't pull it out with a crowbar if your life depended on it, but you like the smell of your own feces. So you'll probably sit there as that human butt donut for the rest of your life. But personally, I don't want you dragging me down, so this is another reason that we need to go to war. You're not gonna, this is not gonna be fixed. There is nothing on the horizon that's gonna fix any of this, people. Until we shoot their ass outta here, and we put a bullet in their hind end and get back to American management the way it's supposed to be. We're not gonna be, we're not, they're not gonna stop betraying us and fiddle farting with us. One of the jokes, like I said yesterday, remember all these ass hats, the lames doing the, oh, you're from the 20th century. This is the 21st century. Well, yep, it sure is. Look at this cluster screw we're looking at right now. Yep, it's the 21st century, alright. What a bunch of dumbasses. I'm not impressed. You know what? Yeah, what gets me about this? Think about this when you were all growing up. Did we have rolling blackouts? What would've, wow, we had like a surfy of electrical energy, and that's with all the cluster screw crap going on back when we were younger. Because I remember there being brownouts in New York City back when I was a kid, but they were brownouts. They were just reduced power. Right, but that was there. That was New York City in the middle of summer. Keyword is kind of like when we say, you know, your enemy doesn't like you. Keyword, New York. Yeah, it's also New York City in the middle of summer when it's 98 degrees and there's no wind because of all the buildings. Right, let's go graft and corruption. Probably a lot more steam back there too. Right, and there again, no matter what, see here's the thing about all of these processes. Well even nuclear is steam, of course. And no matter what, you have to take whatever you have in the way of a calorie-producing product. you have to translate it and it has to, in order for it to be usable, you still end up using basically the same foundational processes no matter what calories you produce, I don't care if it's nuclear, coal, diesel, fuel, electric or whatever. You still have to translate it to mechanical energy and half of that is typically still done with steam, if not more than half. In fact, that's the one thing I did like. Anybody ever think about this? It is kind of funny. How many people have watched all... I know sci-fi, I'm going to qualify myself again. I know it's science fiction. How many people have watched all the new Star Trek movies that they really cluster screwed on? Because they have a good thing going, because they had a great cast. but they they cluster screwed it is a typically the case with the prima dollars and they did the jewish slash you know pedal in breeders that they have there that you know fumble everything however which you pay attention when they're on board the ship that anybody ask uh... you know with as a one of them were one thing where they get transported in the all-air transporting from a long distance and they end up inside water conduits in a spaceship Anybody remember that? Now, if you don't know anything about those, by the way, that was part of what they were using as a real location, those water tubes, not how much of it they modified for CG. But if you recall, in Germany, there was an entire hydro and energy producing complex that they did everything in lexan piping. So you could see everything operating. You can see the inside of the mechanical operation, you know, the physical water transfer, the whole nine yards. And it's big enough you can crawl around in. So I believe that that's where they got most of the CG from, because they could actually use a real life real experience. And most of what it was that they were using was either A, that complex, to be the nuclear power on board that starship, by the way. Well, think about it. No matter what, and yeah, it's in space. It's like, well, they're in space. What the hell is that doing there? Well, it still comes down to it with a nuclear reactor. And that reactor, even if it was even with with, you know, fusion instead of fission, you still have cooling issues. And there's a whole process with regard to retention of calories, which you have to pull from your from the blast chamber, whatever you're using for your fire point to create the arc of energy produces the calories, agitates the other molecular structures of whatever you're using to create and commute the energy into the physical world. Okay. So, here again, not most of what people are telling you, like, oh, it's old-fashioned, you don't even know anything about it. Let me give you a little hint about something that you really, if you're looking for a job and you're really looking for a long-term job, which is very well protected by the industry people that are in it, steam-fitting is actually a big money industry, even right now. And you can pretty well go anywhere you want if you really are into steam. Now, this is another reason I've argued years ago about steam cars. Taking the working knowledge we have and driving it over there. I know that's separate from talking about the hydro and all the other stuff we were just talking about, but it's not. Because all of the things that we're looking at here are based on the idea that they're trying to corral us to make us limited in motion. The real purpose behind all of this is to drive you into their camps. city prison camps their detention camps all of the other garbage at these globalist herds they have to destroy the idea of american independence which is caught on it is contagious to the rest of the world it's bad for a cycle you know sociopathic neurotic of power freaks but you're seeing as an intentional macro attack to try and convince us all the way to surrender all of that we all that we've been doing where more dynamic we have we we we we don't think we really need to make sure that we don't let the path that you do get everything corralled into a single system or certain systems and again they're negating those that we don't have operationally not just function but function well and do function efficiently if we're allowed to operate them properly theater waging war against us right now and this is war part of concern all that's why Since the fake election, guys, there's only one solution from Poynterill 99% of the net shoot their ass. Because you're never going to get... I have something for that. Yeah. I'm sorry, go ahead, caller, please. There's at JNGsales.com, JGsales.com. They have 7.62x39 and 500s and 1000 packs. and they're $4.99 for the or $5.29 for the $1,059 for the $500. Excellent. For a 7.62 by $39? Yep, and I sent you an email yesterday about it. Thank you. And again, that's at JGSales.com, guys. Anybody, this is 7.62 is still the most affordable round to run right now. And here's the quantities. Here's the quantities. They have 51,000 or 51 of the thousands and they have 36 of the 500s. Excellent. I'm looking right here to see what they have left. And again 762 by 39 Russian. You know what, looks like they got some 545 and I'll have to go through that too. for everybody out there that's JG sales dot com JG sales dot com they've got uh... to level they also have brown bear don't to be confused with gummy bear or a huggy bear okay and that they do have the wolf a couple of options yeah they've got also real weight they're gonna walk white on that fourteen thousand fourteen of the thousands uh... probably around five hundred so prices unobtainium yeah Well, a dollar a round. But again, that's the problem. We know where that... Well, actually, no. The preview part is almost $2 a round. 500 round can for $979. That's almost $2 a round. Actually, I think it's cheaper for the battle packs. You notice that? Two and a round battle packs. Yeah, that is a little cheaper. Do the math on that one and see which one might make more sense to buy, guys. Hey, let's put it in perspective. A gallon of gas, $2.50. That's two and a half rounds. We figured five rounds, two gallons of gas. Five rounds is three, four, five dead for the price of a gallon of gas. Yep. We'll have to put it in perspective. Well, of course, where we are here, gas is at what? 245 right now. 245, 249 right around there. It's been rolling up and down. but again ammunition what's happening is no matter what with the with everything you're seeing here part of what they're doing is they are they're going to get blame the pedal but let's be honest they've cracked out a whole lot of digits they sent the digits out by the country to money well money launder them and steal america's digits for somebody else jewish mob got a big chunk of it the jewish mob in china got a big chunk of it and the rest of you got pissed off Well, that's going to be reflected in progressive devaluation of the currency. The best thing you can do to protect your whatever valuation you do have is whatever you can sooner before the value of the currency drops into the toilet that much farther. True with food, true with ammo, true with parts, true with machinery, true with tools, whatever you're going to do, if you buy it now, you have it in hand mechanically, you control it, not somebody else. just like all the rest of all by the way control weird six oh three guys were going to break for a minute we gotta be pressed quite a way with the rest were networks and everybody out there remember again that j g sales dot com j g sales dot com go through to see what they do have uh... them sixty by thirty nine still the most affordable of the budget we should be hearing the music any moment now course that could be pulled her own fight whatever the We've got one hour Republic. Deaths of New World Order. We shall prevail ladies and gentlemen, the Empire is on the run. And we're on the march to day and night. Guys, we're going to take a break here. That's got coffee. It's still daylight outside. Oh my god! Oh that's right, the world is still turning. It'll carry on without us. But we're going to try to stick around as long as we can to piss off our enemies, right? In fact, I want to see all of you live to be 100 years old. I want to be a Sam Woodimore. I still got a grow up to be Sam. He went to war at 80. He owned a whole bunch of people that day, and he tried to kill him. And then he lived to be 98. That should be your golden life across the board, people. Fight your enemy by living as long as you can. And by the grace of God, you'll get there. We'll be back in a few minutes. I think you're walking through the mist with a flintlock in his hand. His clothes were torn and dirty as he stood there by my bed. He took off his three cornered hat. Speaking low to me, he said, we've fought a revolution to cure 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 always keep. Tyrants labored endlessly while your parents were asleep. Your freedom's gone, your courage lost. You're no more than a slave. In this, the land of the free, the brave. You buy permits to travel and permits to own a gun. Permits to start a business or to build a place for one. On land that you believe you own, you pay a yearly rent. Although you have no voice in saying how the money's spent. Your children must attend a school that doesn't educate. And your Christian values can'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 sh- number. You trade it 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 will be born. Your leaders send artillery and guns to foreign shores and send your sons to slaughter fighting other people's wars. Can you regain the freedoms for which we fought and died? Or don't you have the courage or the faith to stand with pride? And are there no more values for what you'll fight to save? Or do you wish your children the fear to 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. We are not free, but we have ourselves to blame. For even now as Tyrant trampled, 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. training and you will come back alive good afternoon what do you know what this is the second hour of the afternoon intelligence report i'm our quirky one day closer to victory for all the brothers and sisters are behind the lines and occupied territories north northwest or east south ladies and gentlemen you're listening to us on liberty to re-radio dot for him g dot com Liberty Tree radio and satellite AM&FM micro stations, AM&FM conventional stations, CB Bay stations, and Ultra Net Hallmark and Golden Spike technologies. East and west of the Mississippi along with Alaska. Good afternoon to all of our friends out there on Lower 49 including the great state of Jefferson along with CONUS, the Outline Two States Territories, and the clock. This is Weapons Wednesday. It is the 17th of February. It is the 13th year of Open Phoebe and the Socialist and the Soviet Socialists. the list occupation of america with a cape in your face and rub it there we be all over you yeah yeah with the black bodies in the yamaka where's do it part of that will be at what we had a good looking at it anyway it is the twenty twenty one year uh... battle for the republic dance of sorts twenty twenty one the old earth calendar dot capital and we are uh... i will remind everybody again before the further weapons wednesday thank you for bring over over to j g sales they have six point five by fifty five swedish m fourteen blank this is for the swedish mouser it will work in the ludgeman all wooden projectile blank which means that will put a wooden bullet downrange look at that both gotta go somewhere And it will cut paper. So it is a great training round and familiarization round for live fire and it is dangerous. It is just because it says blank, that is a wooden bullet, keyword, bullet, wooden bullet, okay? Wooden projectile. However, the price is the thing. 4,800 rounds for $199.20. You do the math, what does that come to? Man, this is like buying Chinese ammunition back in the day. uh... where this came from was from sam co all your to go for the sam co member of the two brothers got a little bit of magic took a very valuable useful company for them they should have just not they got the argument they did bought when they transition from one generation took place to the other they got a little bit matching so the company ended up uh... yeah well just kind of went under as we know And in the process, the inventory took a period of time for everything to be liquidated because of the court battle. And a bunch of stuff went to JG Sales, including this ammunition. They have millions of rounds. I talked to them about this. In fact, you can make a little better deal. The subdivision, the way that they broke this down, this is a 4,800-round case block. There is actually a little larger block. They just figured this was the most manageable. used if you want we're willing to have it shipped they have a packaging system always set up if you leave it the original packaging system uh... complete you get a little better price and you get even more ammunition soldiers little heads up there but as it is it's all you know hundred ninety nine dollars and twenty cents i don't know how they come up with that but do you know if you do the math on that one four thousand eight hundred rounds what about come up to it uh... four-cent four point one five cents a round there you go and again what could you do that well you pull that would both you dump the powder and save it off to the side do not use it for reloading what we're going to do but then you can't read you could throw ties don't necessarily have to resize the whole case not be where i will remind you got a good primer in there so you don't pop the primer to protect probably anyway i'm pretty sure and uh... instead make sure you pull that d primer pan out of your diet that and you could do a while either a half resize three-quarter resize or ideally i would just do a shoulder throat resizing uh... do a case trim to make sure that i got you know when he access awful in reality census of the wooden bullet configuration of their probably won't be any any problem and the camel or the bullet should rest right with the lip of the case So, in reality, you could load new powder, you could put whatever 6.5 bullet is the cheapest bullet to keep the price down, and you could put together a whole lot of 6.5 Swedish ammunition for a very reasonable price. Now, another thing, and again, there are a few cartridges that this might work with, something we were talking about in the last hour. You're talking four cents around for a primed case. what other cases are pretty close to 6.5 by 55 Swede that slash Swedish Mauser that would be transmutable with your dies so that you could stretch and resize, you know, recut in ream and end up with a whole bunch of brass maybe for one of the newer 6.5 rounds out there. I would have to compare notes with the Creedmoor, for instance. Now I would remind you this is a Mauser base, so basically the base diameter is comparable to 8mm Mauser, .308, .30-06. All the Mausers are basically in the same base dimension. The case length, of course, varies. And the shoulder and approach with regard to the angle of the shoulder can vary. But remember that most of your better dies, in fact any of your modern dies, can resize quite efficiently. If it was going to be resizing this and I was going to do a lot of significant distortion with the brass because of what I was going to modify it to, I would buy or go out of my way to find carbide dyes. In fact, if I had even ordered them, I'd order them specifically. Yes, I'd spend some money on that. It's worth it anyway. The carbide dyes, and there are a few other specialized metals out there now in dyes, even beyond the carbide dyes, everybody knows and loves. uh... if you're into reloading uh... that are another option but the car by guys are cb s francis will make you whatever die you want uh... in carbide uh... sure they'll still do it but how far backlog their god might be you know again you're probably better off research inventory but example is some of these other six point five rifles that are available like the six point five dutch Compare the case, look to see what resizing would need to be done, and it might be adaptable. There's a lot of 6.5, well, we'll give you an example, there's a good one right there. The 6.5 Dutch that's not rimmed, there's both Dutch, 6.5 Dutch rimmed, and there's 6.5 Dutch rimless, which is standard rifle case that you'd be familiar with. The rimmed round obviously was the earlier round in the transition. The rimless slash standard case round is the Norman was actually in the Swedish Maurer, not Swedish, forgive me, the Dutch Mausers, and the Dutch straight pull guns were sent out to the colonials. They came back and they were selling those rifles for $15 to $19 apiece. I think I have about six or seven of them stuck away somewhere. uh... but back in the day we actually got some surplus animal and again it came from the uh... colonial imports that came back uh... to the runner evolution companies and uh... holland for instance and then they turned around sold it it's interesting when those rifles came out is about the same time that the air can dutch uh... kit rifle kits came into play in the uh... six point five uh... dutch rifle otherwise projectiles would be the same and depending on the year they actually did a uh... but chambering they did produce a number of six point five by fifty five swedish rather than the dutch proprietary round so you never know what you're going to run into that the only thing there's not a fat blind with any of these malters specially with the lowland the countries or the northern scandinavian countries and what i mean by lowlands is denmark finland uh... In addition to that, you probably, well, the bottom end of Sweden, obviously. But though that particular group of countries right there, and I guess you could kind of tag Belgium into that, I think they're a god. But they all have this really, because they weren't very big militaries, there's a lot of unique stuff that they did, most of it to save money because they weren't a big military. The Swedes, as I've told you many times though, now they're a different bird. They do for themselves and they spend, you know, top dollar on themselves and their quality is quite high. So again, this would be a solution. The 6.5x55 Swedish M14 blank, it's in the 6.5 variants. When you go over to rifle ammunition for JG sales, you'll see where it says 6.5 variants, right under 50 BMG. go check that out see what they have to what i'm talking about and if you have a six point five uh... Swedish mauzer all help by this you could be shooting all day fact i would just shoot the wood bullet be quite honest for most your your familiarization shooting are you do a thousand inch range twenty five yard range you set up your paper and you use the wooden bullet for basic for live fire familiarization for any of your new shooters i've said this many many many times on the air In fact, the price has gone up a little bit. Last time we looked, I think it was 179, and now it's 199. So they've come up a little bit, but I think I can live with that $20 difference. So it is a solution, not just lamenting about the problems. Ah, the ammo is so expensive. Yes, it is. We will agree with that. Oh, by the way, they are completely out of stock of 545 by 39. So Uncle Mark was wrong there. I thought they'd gotten some in, but they did not. so the seven sixty by thirty nine is still one of the first best choices and if you find an s k s or an a k for a good price and whatever it is a poacher boat what you can afford budget wise it behooves you to either get an a k or an s k s or get an and air fifteen upper and seven sixty by thirty nine and build accordingly so that is a priority if you're short ammunition but also again to keep the inventories high Now here's the other thing, somebody else is asking me, what about 7mm Mauser? Because there's a lot of 7mm out there. Now that's the 6.5mm Swedish, you could probably build that up. There has been some 7mm PPU ammo that came in, and if you did buy it you were wise. If you waited on that, I don't know how much of it will be available anytime soon because of the way things are. but again building up taking that 6.5 Swedish case and opening it up you gotta be careful but there should be enough good brass to begin with. You should be able to open it up to 7mm Mauser, 7mm projectiles and yeah you might be able to step it up to the 7mm Mauser, there's tons of those out there, tons of them. The biggest problem is even 40 years ago there was little or no surplus for 7mm Mauser. and in fact the company i mentioned earlier sam co was the number one source for any kind of all my god that they're selling that uh... you know they have some about american seven millimeter once while the crop up to get a batch of it was sellout but if you ever got any of the reflect how the hell did they get away with knowing that because it's what was available and they look horrible but it did shoot okay look horrible but it wasn't you know i greener oxidizer just was stained not pretty usually the box is a broken down being stored wherever they were in south america and uh... they just put them in in ammo cans or bucket mostly buckets and you can't contain from the cardboard where the cardboard rusted and got wet next to the brass but it just stained it didn't didn't borrow it or didn't didn't score it glad color to prepare ice jump and talking once again have you ever seen a two nine millimeter two-piece In other words, the base of the case. rest of the case is steel have you ever seen anything like that that do you have a five-metal we mentioned the there were some of that stuff that showed up last year and where that originally was the research on that what we did at the united states to again frankford arsenal to research on do on uh... duplex metal cases but it was one of those things where it cost more than it would be done but it's not valuable for you know the country if you can do it though a one-piece case now the german's perfected all that and in fact they made uh... steel-based uh... polymer body blank rounds but they also made some live rounds uh... they also want with the experiment with ceramic too and there were some ceramic stuff that showed up in the sixty-five sixty nine i want to take a few seven sixty eight sixty nine they uh... used it they researched it and make it was one of those things to test and in the event of war Now, they aren't going to necessarily use it right away, but the idea was, okay, if we're so short materials and we can't even get enough steel, what else can we do? And so they perfected these duplex cases. Now, in addition, they also came up with lighter projectiles, a number of different. At that time, when they were doing this, the duplex, the big thing for all these countries was also to do duplex and triplex bullets. What they did is went with a little slightly larger compilations of stacked comical projectiles. And for a little while there, we had the stuff from the DOD that was like this in .50 caliber and in .308. The idea behind this is that when it got pushed down range, somehow and i don't know how the mechanics of this work but what would it what would do is it would push all three of the projectiles downrange they were lighter so it was about a hundred thirty five or hundred forty grains as opposed to one fifty or one fifty five and when they left the barrel they would separate mildly but they would separate kind of like uh... the stages of a rocket and they would proceed downrange as conical high angle high pitch conical dart projectiles that were stacked like street cones one on top of the other. Well the idea behind this is when they got to the other ramp they separated enough that it was like a three round burst on your butt. Only it was you know, separate figure how many grains per each one had to be what it was 140 grains. then you're looking at what, 16, oh, 50, 40 some grains per, 47, 46 grains. So it was like getting hit with a triple burst from an M16, but it was a 30 caliber conical dart projectile. Well they did this with the ceramic cases to reduce cup pressure. and to reduce resistance in separation because they used a plastic base cut off like a cap on the base so that there wasn't that much adhesion. It was like literally, it wouldn't flip out, but it was designed to be greasy. And it worked. It just, by the time you're done, think about what I just described. Was it cheaper? Well, the reason I'm talking about this is there's a company close that's making those. called T-E-C-H. T-E-C-H ammunition. Making it 9 millimeter, 115 grain, velocity 1200 foot, energy 3680. Is it tech.com? What's the webpage for it? I just have a box of the ammunition and it just says T-E-C-H. well a few years ago what probably the company remember a few years ago we talked about that they had again it's an interesting idea of the world mostly anybody ever did this what the polymer for the upper part of the case because that is cheaper okay and the next logical thing that they are in where they got this problem sure is remember the big push was for it's not my self-consuming rifle cases Yeah, that instead of using a regular polymer like we're familiar with but more like a phenolic actually powder charge and So it would be nested the bullet would be nested in that and when it fired the just the small case base It was ejected from the operating system. Yes that lower part you see on the case Well, they're making this and it's about 20 miles Maybe 30 miles north of me and How much are they asking a box right now? uh... i don't know but i've got some feeling quite well i don't know how to have a problem for four hundred dollars reasonable yeah i'm sure work it just again well at the past was right for me but i've never seen anything like that here split case well the big advantage would be that you have uh... i mean it's kind of like an insert to over top of what is a of a more sophisticated mill mill the base but it's still the the advantage of i guess you could use high-speed production cnc for the entire of structure as opposed to a strike stamping system because i thought about it is a two-piece module but you'll be could be aluminum steel polymer whatever uh... a straight case would be more efficient then trying to do it that case but i know that they've made rifle cases like that too because i've seen a much of what the one of uh... well but with last weekend and the but it was a seven fifty by fifty one they don't but you will get there so that they're saying this is a law enforcement a copper hb emission features a lead free bullet and is going to pull it open up on impact the target dispensing all the energy to the truck. Okay, well, yeah, plus that, then they've gone with a specialized truck. All of it's CNC. Well, it's not all. One of it would be a tube cutter. Think about it. What would the machinery be needed? You've got a CNC machine that, and it might do, it might have two or three different step machines to do this, or they're doing it all in one unit. But think about it. If you're only doing the base, you have to, what you do is you have to have a step. I clearly have to see this to understand what they did. The tube machine, the tube mill, is just going to crank out so many of these little tubes all the exact same length over and over and over and make buckets and buckets of them. And basically guys, think about it, the tubing material that you see used for, or basically the body of a crossbow bolt or an arrow shaft. Think about that kind of material. Now you've got that, you're cranking those out, only instead of a big long 26 inch tube, you just make, you know, whatever the length is of the difference so that it's a 9mm case. But the foundational piece has a ledge that the tube is going to be inserted and pressed into. Everything else is just, you know, drill and, you know, cut and drill. Because there's just, you know, you've got a... a two-step drill or fixture that is going to cut primer pocket and it's going to cut the channel at the same time. Okay, and if I could see the, yeah, it would be, the big advantage is it would not require as much in the way of sophisticated technology to build. The cost might go up slightly in low production, but it would come down, like anything else, it would come down dramatically with mass product. Well, i'll talk to this individual and uh... if i get more information about how it made this looks like a sleeve that's cramped and pushed down on the aluminum and internally squirt squeezed out right the only thing is the during exactly what you were doing with the can or if you're doing a a compression can or fit for the case with a can or or the camera bullet basically just took it and do it in a reverse order with regard to how you keep that tube on the fixture that you've produced with the CNC machine. Now where they got the idea for this, like I said, if you go look at, you can look it up, you can find it on the internet. If you're looking, you can find videos probably on YouTube. uh... the german started doing this back at the they start the research program in the fifties but it came to full fruition in the nineteen sixties with plastic munitions the uh... they used a basically was like milk milk crate type uh... polymers would look like a tech color milky white but they get also in blue of the cap based though the concept the base is right there in front of you all they did is the instead of uh... going with the polymer you go with the metal And, as long as you've got everything, all the compression factors worked out, you're not going to have separation normally, that I know of. And it might happen down the road, but it'd be a great way to crank out a whole lot of ammo when they think that they're going to stop us otherwise. Because otherwise, what you have is a compression extrusion process. with a you have a press a multi-head press we have we can do 50 caliber and 30 out six here we have the heads that came off of several machines that were post-World War, from World War II, when the time came they wanted to dispose of those and so we made sure they were disposed of. And it's a multi-station turret that you can fit to several different machines and make the individual case from a slug each time you drive down. Every one of the stations is doing another part of the finished process towards a finalized case. But if you do it this way, you're talking three different steps and what would be CNC lays, well the one is going to be tubes, that's going to be tube and cut off. The other would be CNC with a stock feeder, kind of like a screw machine. Okay, I've never seen a how they I was screwed I was screw machine or a bearing machine and how it works Your stock is coming in it could be 41 40 41 30 whatever you've got And if you're still gonna be probably tempering it for if it's ball bearings But it comes in one way and it just cranks out and cranks out cranks out buckets and it takes me longer to describe it than it does for each action And making a base like that would make sense now the big thing is straight case would make more sense economically Let's say that I was doing a your be a consideration is if i was doing it a rifle for the future i wouldn't even go with a tapered case of anything i would go with a straight case basically the way they constructed this just take it out to be like uh... twice the length or not even twice one-and-a-half or twice the length of a nine millimeter per melon and then i would go with a sable and go with a of the table itself could even be uh... a part of a bill could be an incorporated projectile but it's it actually doesn't just disintegrate it goes down range and doesn't really separate from the bullet but it would create and uh... above saw effect as it hits on the project i would still be penetrating and the reason you need that is because either flesh or armor and that we know we're running into armor we want a solid center bullet but that buzz saw outer sheet would be devastating could be made so cheap and easy it's ridiculous yeah there's a good It's an innovative idea and we're at the point where it probably is more economical to buy the machinery that way to make something than it would be to go with the traditional case production because that machinery and technology is much more service, maintenance intense. Okay, think about tooling for what you're talking about would be much cheaper. Okay. Yeah, so it's a good, it's not, I'm sure it works. Okay, first of all, with the liability issue in the United States, although it doesn't mean that people haven't humbled and screwed in the past, but it's something that was already perfected by the foreign armies or foreign manufacturers, and they've taken all the ideas and applied them, which is cool. So it was a good pickup. Okay. Thank you. No, they need to bring it up because hopefully I've given somebody else an idea too. Because you could go bigger cases, guys. It doesn't have to be 9mm. You could go a 45 or 50 caliber straight case. And it would be like the Devastator. And you could crank out as many as are needed. Remember, if it comes at you like a freight train and it's got 500 grains of projectile, still a freight train. You're thudded. That's all there is to it. and I like that idea so just a heads up on that if by the way for anybody wonder what I'm talking about okay think about this fifty caliber pistol rounds look at some of the bigger fifty caliber longer ones okay heads up on that anyway thank you sir um let's do this we are actually started late one other thing I wanted to touch on its weapons Wednesday I know but Let me go over and see if we still have this. Oh, by the way, definitely for everybody out there, saves me time. Why should I repeat what the man has already done? Go over to Guns N' Gadgets. Go back through the last, you know, four or five episodes if you're not up to speed. If you haven't watched it in a while, go to Guns N' Gadgets on YouTube. go back to the last three or four videos catch up if you haven't been there the uh... uh... one-piece of legislation hb five seven one seven with the order tax-draft to death on the amo and and guns uh... not a surprise none of this is is anything that uh... is new in fact all of these lies that you're hearing where they all got together and they don't have a good agenda for getting the guns that they're lying That's a lie. They're lying, they've been lying, and they're still lying. Yeah, we all got together, and we all talk, but we don't really have any agenda. You guys all need to go to sleep, and that way when we spring it on you, you'll all be caught flat-footed. Did you know that? Oh, ho, ho, ho, ho, ho. That's what they think they're doing, okay? Number one, they already had the agenda plugged in before they got there. In order for the legislation to show up the way it has, it was already cranked out before December, actually before probably even the fall. Guys, you know, you got to ask yourself where to deal with this. There's a whole process to how they fabricate these pieces of legislation. We've walked everybody through this for decades. You realize that this garbage all had to be in motion administratively for them to get all of the like the GPO to get what they need done because there's a whole process to making this garbage available. so you would be reality you could say that while trump was in office they were already of the already have been in motion everybody on the republican rat side there was a motion because they monitor the administrative request there's nothing that's a surprise it's all public information Okay, what I mean by administrative request. Well, when you go to the GPO and you're the government and the other part of the government wants to know, hey, what's going on with the GPO? They have to disclose all public and, you know, contract activities with the different departments inside the federal government. It's that simple. So nobody should be caught flat-footed and in fact they aren't they're lying they in fact are already in motion with the plan all that you're seeing here I heard you call her all over the all of what you're seeing here is in the handgun control incorporated 1993 with the addendum for 1994 gun confiscation agenda period the taxes the fees every all this this is those characters that went in to meet with Biden with the meat puppet and whoever's really running him when they were there, all they did was gave a wink and a nod, rubbed each other's hind end, probably brought a little girl in or a little boy in and pedaled them in front of everybody and made sure they got full video. And then they came out, wiping their bodies sweat off and laughing about how all we don't have anything, but we feel better with Joe now. We do it, now we understand. It's all BS. They are in motion. They are the enemy, the FBI, the Batfaggots, elements of the Pentagon, and needless to say, the Communists that are running them all are working on the plan right now. Go ahead, caller, jump in there. Hey, this is Carl in Virginia, and here in my state, our state legislature is talking about banning home builds and 80% receivers. And speaking of 80% receivers at Brownells, they have a sale on the Glock 80% frames. They're going for 135, so you can build a Glock 19 or a Glock 17 for 135 for the frame, and that comes with the jig and the drill bits, all that that you need. Then you just need to get all the parts. Also, if you use the, there's a promo code T-A-G, so tag. and that gets you another $15 off. So definitely worth the name. T-AG. T-AG. T-AG. T-AG. T-AG. T-AG. T-AG. T-AG. T-AG. T-AG. T-AG. T-AG. T-AG. T-AG. T-AG. T-AG. T-AG. T-AG. T-AG. T-AG. T-AG. T-AG. T-AG. T-AG. T-AG. T-AG. T-AG. T-AG. T-AG. T-AG. T-AG. T-AG. T-AG. T-AG. T-AG. T-AG. T-AG. T-AG. T-AG. T-AG. T-AG. T-AG. T-AG. T-AG. T-AG. T-AG. T-AG. T-AG. T-AG. T-AG. T-AG. T-AG. T Yeah, you almost have to search, you know, piecemeal here and there if you go through all the different companies because while they may have one or two, they might have like the lower frame kit. They don't necessarily have slides and then the other places have slides, but they don't necessarily have barrels. But if you do cherry pick, you can piecemeal one together right now still for a reasonable price, considering that it's a liberty gun to begin with. So just what everybody needs to be focusing on and acquiring as they can. don't forget the air is still out there the eighty percent a hours uh... one of our friends just put a whole bunch of the polymer operas together and the people by the way had no problem at all uh... contrary to the propaganda or not you can't use those because they're really difficult to work knowledge of common sense little quick hint here drop back all of your initial torque work with your torque wrench if you're using the polymer operas which are a little more enforced They have the inserts. They're running about $20 a piece if you buy a quantity of them. The first rule, something we learned a long time ago, when you're doing the step-by-step barrel fitting, drop back all of your torque ratings by 10%. When you do the first torque on the barrel, stop. Lower than the original spec you'll see for the standard aluminum receivers. because you're still doing the same thing you're recoursing those threads and facing them so that they're made into each other when you back it off and you do it again you still only do ten percent of what your normal load and weight would be all your your what your car crunch would normally register for putting a regular aluminum receiver together you do that you're not going to have any problem with polymers all a lot of copper bottom with anything for that matter. Remember, prior piper planting prevents piss-poor performance. Now, they'll hold up because of how their load-bearing points are connected, so that's not a problem. But when you're putting things together, some materials require different handling. Right? Always remember that. There are different materials, even in metals, works the same way. One setting doesn't fit all. So keep that in mind. Thank you for bringing it up because that's something I did want to talk about too. The again with the ARs not just the the glocks. The glocks are a good choice simply because there's just tons of mags. Guys, like I said, if I was going to build a Sten gun nowadays, I would build it with a replaceable or a couple of different replacement, you know, magazine well couplings. The whole unit comes off. If you disassemble the Sten, if you're not familiar with it, you can, you know, the whole magazine well pivots. So what you do is you pop that off. and you would insert another one you could use Glock mags I don't know what would be the next choice I mean what is the second most common staggered magazine out there available with high capacity but right now Glock Glock and Glock and then Glock and in the 15 round mag they go but about but about but about but about about about about about empty is better than harsh language and throw a rock But the important thing is that you do have 33 round stick mags for the Glock. You've got drums for the Glock. And if you were to build a Sten type weapon, but you make it with the Glock type magazine well taper and it fits the Glock mags, you've got Glock mags all day. Now, just that simple. Sten mags used to be cheap, but they're not the way they used to be. And a couple times I bought out everything Sarco had. six seven eight thousand magazines at a time that we bought them out we clean them out but i think that deals like you know you buy one hundred there are ninety five cents well but i thought all of them all all give your better price forty five that really okay what they want yeah and we did go again that's one of the things where it now it'd be the clock mags and again remember with a lot of dot mags uh... or for a like car being if you're not going to be open select fire you know i want to but you have it most people don't know how to use it but making a summer automatic are making it some automatic initially restricted like car being those clock make still make the most sense for a plumbers you know nightmare type of new rifle using the the extent got as the basis for it for everybody out there if you don't know the fans did have both a you know they had to select fire you could go site single shot which the reason i was required for the british is because well they were short ammo and better to go bang bang and then bang rather than pop pop pop empty very hit with all three of those rounds hopefully that kind of well spray and pray and so just a again solutions not just complaining about the problems uh... with that i was uh... That note too, there is, I notice everybody's asking me, have you seen the new 9mm Romanian rifles that are out there? Yeah, it's interesting. Unfortunately, they are made by Century, or they're brought in through Century as the conduit. And apparently Century is the one that is in control of the process, which is a warning, Danger Will Robinson, Danger. However, if you go over to Atlantic, if you want to see these, if you go over to Atlantic, Firearms, let's see if I can get up here, come on. Of course, when I want to do something for me, there we go. Let's see if we can get www.atlantic, I haven't been there today, so they might even have some ammunition. I would point out that, at atlanticfirearms.com, atlanticfirearms.com, atlanticfirearms.com. And if you get a chance, get over there and check them out. Well, that's rather interesting. the quarter pages acting about that again they've been so busy now if they have uh... if they have the right for stock which so far they have they do not have ammunition i do know that somebody has built a little bit of a nine millimeter yeah they were good but when you get there it all they don't so if you're looking at uh... picking it up you are going to have to go somewhere else for ammunition but one of the things about this particular little rifle is that again for what it is It's an AK, so the crossover is really great. There are some videos on the rifle itself. Interestingly enough, it is a complete fixture insert that is locked in place by the regular magazine well. This is something that's been done with AKs before, but they cut off the tabs so that you can't accidentally hit that and drop your whole magazine assembly. You drop your magazine fixture, which includes your magazine well. the one of the things that you go for so this is typical for century they cut off that tab but they didn't grind anything they didn't clean it up it's got a sharp edge somebody was a little guy was lamenting about it got a sharp edge on it will of course it's century arms what your point well anyway not a surprise and uh... if you get a chance to take a look at them they are there are actually a big video i think you did the video uh... for atlantic I'm pretty sure that they did a video. Yes, they did. Hold on here, I think I found it. They did a video of the rifle, so if you'd rather Uncle Mark try to explain you on the air, if you'd take a look at it, there's been a couple of decent videos done. And they may have it in stock, they may not. But if they do, if you want to check it out, somebody was asking, well, would it work? Sure, it's a good idea. But right now, if it's expensive, well, let's think about this. If it's as expensive to buy the rifle in 9mm as it is to buy the rifle in 7.62x39, you know that the ammunition for 9mm is more expensive right now, isn't it? So it makes more sense to buy the AK47 round rifle than it does to buy the 9mm rifle. Right? Yeah! It's a neat idea. If you have a pile of 9mm already, it's not probably a bad way to go. comment. Go ahead, caller. Jump in there. Yeah, this is Fluffy. I just have the thought that if it's based on the AK platform, it wouldn't matter how hot the 9mm is. You could use any of that check or whoever produced it. Oh, absolutely. Yeah, hot sub-gun ammo. or you could even if you were loading uh... one of the guys where i've got to remember what you have to happen used to be able to get buckets from spear five-gallon pails and it was nine millimeter bob projectiles but they were mixed because you know they take whatever's in the pot that you know is they're not quite finished with and they don't put into these pails and you have to sort it out if you feel ambitious but what one of the guys did for a gun like this that it's supposed to be a pattern on the new water you want a little more of a cone of destruction uh... he just didn't even sort the bullets out he went with a standard middle grade powder charge and everything worked and he also dialed it up a bit so it was hot and that what it was and again if you make a round high if you make a standard load and go to the upper end of the scale and make it hot understand guys you're going to start to get eccentricity in terms of performance of the projectile even if they're all uniform Now the advantage of that, not a disadvantage, the advantage is if you're firing multiple rounds. is that it does create more of a code of destruction remember the two ways to do this with machine guns leader go with a hot charge or use lop out the tolerances and this means that one of the one of the bullets go down range because it is supposed to be an automatic weapon you have a call of destruction instead of a fully automatic sniper rifle where you have fifteen bullets or three bullets or five bullets all hit the exact same spot you know seven hundred yards down range You don't want that when you're using something for a certain mission. Well with a 9mm of course it's supposed to be kind of like a close quarter gun, but in this case these are... Well here it is right here. This is a washer. Oh it's already sold out by the way. Oh sorry about that. Yeah I just got to it and I finally went to the page. They do have it listed so you can look at it and they do have a video of this gun. uh... you can do help explain it but uh... you could because of the nature of the action any of the hot nine mills yes would work in this cup and what do you will affect it operate better because this is a a full sixteen inch barrel this is not a shorty pistol this is a basically just picture a washer can in seven six two by thirty nine but with a magazine insertion device that is factory made that allows you to use Glock magazines in 9mm in an AK-47. And what you end up with is not a bad combination for what it is. If when ammunition was more sensible with 9mm when you could buy three rounds of 9mm for the price of one AK, this would make sense. But at this point in time where you're paying a dollar around for 9mm but you're paying 45 cents around for AK-47 ammo, it doesn't make sense to go this way although the the rifle already pulled out because there were about seven hundred dollars apiece which is not bad you're taking your chances and throwing your dice when you know what you're buying from both people century not not atlantic century okay but it's a but most of them seem to be good fit finish this time around everybody got hold of those they work there's only a few stupid things they cut off the magazine release on the regular part of the rifle and they didn't polish it up which is one of the first things you would do if you had the gun because it's a sharp jaggedy piece of metal and your fingers are right there but other than that it's a sound idea where the world of ammunition made sense and right now for instance you can get a century C39 V2 milled AK-47 side rail blah blah blah blah blah 7.62x39 for the same price for seven hundred dollars so right now even though i like the idea and it's exactly what we were just talking about you're gonna make like a standard if you're making a nine millimeter you build it using the glock mag well everybody else seems to like that idea whoever bought it probably has glocks who would make sense to me yeah i just think about it you got a pile of glock nine millimeter mags and maybe got older ones you're not excited about or maybe got some that are yeah i don't carry those well guess what you roll it over towards that light rifle and you got a decent little carbine unfortunately it cost you twice as much to pull the trigger on that nine now as it does to pull the trigger on that to have a picture by thirty nine sold there's where the the the budgetary crunch issues are it makes more sense you get more bang for the buck to do the seven six two by thirty nine they do have oh god it's another century yet you at least are looking at mid pricing for the century comes they're out there uh... what i mean by that is you know six hundred and eighty seven hundred dollars that used to be considered high for the year middle and rifles make is they would be century but now those are century guns for that price uh... there are a number of other a k options that are hovering around eight nine hundred dollars and right now if you were looking for a one-stop shop and you want to get a rifle and you want to get a bunch of amal that still makes the most sense at this time Go ahead, you know, bite the bullet, so to speak, as we always say, bite the bullet, buy one of these AK-47s, your choice of what makes most sense, 7.62x39, and then buy the hell out of the ammo while you can, because it's cheaper than anything else. It really hasn't gone up that much from where it was a year ago. I'm not, I wouldn't really, you're not getting hurt or bit as much. I think that's an important thing to understand. And you still have a selection of 7.62x39. that you go look like a gg sales are there were five flavors of ball ammunition there now granted there was a variation in price but they had it so if you go from one location to the next you can find probably what you need now i will get somebody to several market atlantic had uh... a camel yes they have had it they keep going out and one of the things they do have a good yet connection uh... for all u.s. chaos operators they've got you go m sixty seven amo military case of eleven of one thousand one hundred twenty rounds seven sixty by thirty nine it's it's in the stripper clips okay and it's seven hundred eighty five dollars if they have it in stock yet now half of what that's the effort sold out again they just had another video they did i don't think they're going to bother doing anymore videos they do a video we got a fall we got a half a million rounds and and two hours later it's all gone but if you keep an eye on them they will probably get more of this and they've left it posted and it is the first first item posted so if you were looking for more stripper clip ammo because you got a bunch of ks's yes i recommend buying that ammunition and even if you're paying a little bit more per round what you're paying for those stripper clips and the amylous combat pack from the factory ready to go So it's done. In other words, and I wouldn't open it up right now either, by the way. You already know what's in there, okay? Another thing, we're all at the top here. If you have Red Army standard tens, or if you have the Russian or Chinese or Romanian ammo, and it's in the tens, don't open that up. If you're going to load some other magazines up, if you're going to load mags up, go buy some of this loose wolf or the loose palamo or the huggy bear, gold bear, brownie bear, gummy bear, I don't care, whichever the bear is, load that because it's in cardboard boxes and it's coming to you in a little block of cardboard and paper. You want that stuff out of those cardboard boxes and into ammo cans ASAP. But if you're going to be loading mags, that's what you load up. the stuff that in the terms could go anywhere you could take that out and put that in a bar even with a bad roof okay uh... stuff the rifle from the tubes take the cams drop them off and stick them somewhere and for a period of time you'd have a cash that really can't be hurt now nothing lasts forever both hands of the get soaked in water eventually oxidizer do whatever get over you know that that's why you don't want to do it do a good job storing it won't be that much of a problem but it's from the factory that way preserve those those that's kind of like a pecking order for how you use things the stuff in the cardboard boxes ain't gonna last okay it's gonna question yeah who often has that 1100 run on Sherpa clips they well they they did have it and they keep they keep letting out so they've got a source for it it's atlanticfirearms.com at the land to go right there but the only thing i think they have right now they really have is they do have some fifty cal and it looks like they have some uh... uh... they still have that mackerel barnell mackerel but expensive by comparison all the personal ammunition yet they still have the mackerel so they got the mackerel ammunition and they have the uh... I think the 50 caliber BMG, which is in length, which is still a good price, very good price, but I don't see that they have much of anything else in stock that they haven't eaten up right away. But keep an eye on because that's where that stripper clip ammo is coming in. Everybody's got a source, and everybody usually has a good connection to somebody. And in this case, that's a good deal. I recommend it for you guys coming in if you're new and you do have, maybe you got dad, test chaos, maybe dad bought you a bunch of test chaos years ago. Don't get rid of that rifle, it's too late to get it. Hang on to that rifle, round up the stripper clips, know how they work it well, keep it the way it is, however you got it, learn to make it work. It's that simple. Now you want to buy more weapons. Maybe you should look at those A-case, because there ain't no A-S-cases around that I can see. And then if you are, well, then you have to make that judgment call on if you think you want to go roll under the century guns. It's a roll of the dice. God bless our Republic. We will do world order. We shall prevail. Ladies and gentlemen, the Empire is on the run. Worn of March, let me get out of the way. Craig from Forbidden Knowledge coming up next. Don't you touch that dial. We are live LCR and then we will be back at 8 o'clock for the evening. Intelliport. God bless. Bye bye. To Forbidden Knowledge, this is... I'm sorry, and 28th of February, last three days of February in Indianapolis, Indiana. Now, again, that is if they don't change things. Now, the last time we did a show there was in between peaks of the pandemic and there was a mask requirement. Everybody had to wear a mask in the building. So just so you know. If you're going to any of these, you will probably have to be wearing a mask. I get emails back and forth now because of the weather that's going on. We've got a cancellation from Mississippi. I've got a show, I can't remember the city, I've got a show in Mississippi canceled because of the weather. And of course, we've got the problems in Texas right now and all over the country almost. We're gonna be talking about that coming up here. We talk about the energy grid, future of electricity, electric cars, Grid losses, pollution, death student electricity, producing with all sorts of it. I have a bunch of things brought up here and hopefully my internet doesn't keep losing. I already lost one page. Anyway, and to answer a question from last week's show, we got a discussion with a caller about welders. The machine I had to answer the question, if you want to be looking up, the answer to the question is about the welder that I had that was battery operated, and by batteries I mean car batteries. I believe that I did looking online and I believe this is the one. I don't have any more. I lost virtually everything I ever owned in a divorce. Called the Ready Welder, that's two words spelled just how you would think, Ready Welder. It's battery operated, meaning you hook up to a car. The basic component of the welder, besides the cables, is basically just a wire, school feed system that you run by a drill, and probably a battery operated drill, the cordless. So basically it's a wire feed system, and a MIG welder, and it feeds the wire and you weld it. And looking at their specs here for their device. So mid welder can be powered by batteries or by AC current and connected to a welding machine and has a school gun. The ready welder welds very thin metals using a 12 volt battery thicker and basically what they're saying here is, we're very thick metals with 36 volts DC which would be three batteries wired in series yielding from 45 amps up to 350 amps of power. So you adjust your voltage depending on what type of metals you're welding based on how many batteries you wire in series. If you don't know what that means, wiring battery in series, you'll have to do a little study about electricity. Basically, hooking two batteries end-to-end increases the voltage from 12, and then if you put them end-to-end, that's 24 volts. If you put another one end-to-end, that's 36. You study a little bit about electricity, if you don't understand what I mean. Because you put two 12 volt batteries side by side, as you might in a truck that has dual batteries, that's only 12 volts because they're wired in parallel, not series. So you increase the voltage by changing the amount of batteries wired in series. It can weld steel, stainless steel, aluminum, or any weldable metal or alloy. Use a spool gun as a standalone welder. It welds with or without a gas tank, meaning or as a flux core electrode and wire. I remember when I was welding stainless with it, I was using a tank. I don't remember what gas you're supposed to use. I think there's a couple of choices. But you can also, without gas, you can use flux core electrode wire. So anyway, that's the basic thing with that called the ready welder. I have no business with this company other than I own one at one time. Right? Click that one out of there, get that out of the way. All right, I want to talk about, because of what's going on, big news all over the country, mainly in Texas, what's going on in Texas. Now, I contacted Ed here a few hours ago wondering if he was even beyond the air, because I was assuming that maybe he was having power outages or whatever, but if I recall, I guess I won't even mention, probably a lot of you already know, I think I know a lot about Ed Zett and I think he's in an area where Texas is an isolated grid from the rest of the country essentially. And the area that Ed's in is actually even more isolated within Texas, so that's probably the reason he probably has power. Because there is part of Texas that actually has their own little mini grid. and they apparently are riding through the storm. Hey Craig, there we go. Can you hear me? Yes, I can. Okay, here's part of what's messed us up here in Texas as I understand it Places like Houston Austin Dallas Fort Worth. They are part of this new grid I can't remember what the heck it's called, but Oklahoma and a couple of surrounding states are involved with this thing, too They can produce the power that we need they've acknowledged this but we're only allocated so many mega Volts or watts or however the hell that works for this time of season and because we have exceeded it they're doing rolling blackouts. It's scheduled rolling blackouts but it's not that they couldn't produce the power it's that they're not going to because they don't want to go over budget. How often is measurement afraid of going over budget? So essentially Texas gives electricity from Oklahoma and some other surrounding states, is that what you're saying? No, we're hooked up to this other grid. Texas is a power producing state. In fact, we are one of the biggest oil producers in the world, according to our representatives down here. But thanks to what Biden did with his executive order, fired a bunch of people, screwed that up. But anyway, no, like Lubbock where I am, they have their own independent power station. They're not a part of this grid yet, but in a couple of months they will be. So we're not being effective because we're not falling under the management of this company that is doing this management that's doing the rolling blackouts. We lost power briefly the other day for about 30 minutes. Yeah, it's not bad. You know, I'm from Michigan, so this weather doesn't really bother me. We're already stoked here, so we had that going and all that other fun stuff. Go ahead. Where I am in Michigan right now, we haven't had a single power outage since it started, so we've been fortunate for whatever reason. And we've got the cold weather here, and just like most of the other, the rest of the country has the cold weather right now, but it hasn't been extreme. It hasn't been really much below zero here in the last few days, like it could be in Michigan, but it really has only gone down to about zero. I think it got down to minus numbers here one or two nights this year so far as all. So we've been fairly fortunate for Michigan for what we usually get. Texas has their own little... System there as I point out and then your area of Lubbock has their own little mini system where you're not even really hooked up to the big Texas grid as much as You have to be well, Texas had its own independent grid Texas still technically has its own independent grid, but that is not true anymore Which is why places like Dallas, Fort Worth, And Houston, where my mother-in-law is, is without power. And these rocket scientists are telling people to go out and buy generators so they can run their house off of generator power. And as I was trying to point out to my brother-in-law, it's like, okay, you can go out, you can buy a generator, you can set it up. Does the gas station have power? And if the gas station doesn't have power, you're not going to pump any fuel to run your generator. And I'm sure no one has a generator available for similar time. Well, there are a few places, but that's if they're open. I mean, in Houston, they've got a lockdown order because of the weather, and they're telling people to go out and buy generators and to go to these heating centers, but they're also telling you that if you leave your home, they're going to arrest you. We also heard on the news that Texas was because now Mexico is going through major durations of energy because Texas actually supplies natural gas to Mexico and Mexico has almost all entirely, they run on natural gas and they don't really produce any of their own natural gas. So natural gas, we export natural gas, electrical power, which is generated by there's a couple coal plants that are still running in mid Texas just above Austin. I think there's a nuclear plant here but don't ask me where it is because I'm not familiar enough with Texas to know where it is. But we have also these massive wind generator fields which is you know another big source of power and they're claiming that you know the wind power systems weren't you know weatherized which is the same BS that they're claiming in Michigan even though Michigan, you know, you think it would be. And they're shutting down because of ice and everything, so they're not generating nearly as much power as they normally would, which half the time these things aren't spinning anyway unless you get a really good windstorm. And even then, they'll lock it down because they don't want it to produce too much power for their capacitors. Yeah, okay, so I'm going to be talking about... I guess unless somebody interrupts the conversation, we're talking about electricity and the United States and the future of it too. Because I've been studying this sort of topic for almost 50 years. I've had, ever since the first energy crisis in this country, back in 73, I was Young then but I was remembered it and I thought there's got to be a better way and that's one of the reasons I'm building underground this year too I'm building an underground warehouse and and because you essentially don't need to heat it I mean a very very little heat needed and it's it's gonna be a lot more energy efficient than Than anything else, but I knew there had to be better way. So I got into electric cars I'm going for electric cars and no, I don't mean hybrids, I mean all electric, and long before anybody knew what the hell a Tesla was, so no this was back in the, I think my first electric car was in the 90s. I think I, and I had four of them. And the electric cars that I had were all from the 70s. So the electric cars aren't anything new. In fact, electric cars have been around for about 100 years. You go back and look online, you find the baker as an electric car. I think Jay Leno has one, he's got a video on YouTube where he took it out with somebody and showing the baker of electric car. It was actually marketed towards women. Didn't even really have a steering wheel, had a lever that you steer it with, kind of like a joystick. And it was marketed towards women because cars in those days, 100 years ago, were very difficult to start by hand-cranking them and they're noisy and dirty. And so the electric car was actually promoted back 100 years ago to women. And one brand was called the Baker. There was more than one. The Baker is one you can look up easily. Anyway, electric car is not anything new. Electric car has been around for as long as the infernal combustion engine I like to call it. So I've been very interested in electric cars. I only have one electric car still in my possession. The other three are missing in the divorce. I don't have any idea what happened to them. I had a Vanguard, a city car made by Vanguard, a company called Vanguard. Out of Florida, I believe it was, a man named Bob Beaumont was an executive at Chrysler. And the first energy crisis was found in three. He tried to convince Heiser to make electric cars and they balked at the idea and he was out. And he decided to make his own little company and he called it Vanguard. And they produced something called the City Car. I think they made about 2,200 of them that first year. Then the next year they became the Sebring Vanguard company transition, I don't know, the dealings, business dealings. And then later, about 10 years later, it eventually morphed into something called the Commutacar Company. I had a 73 Sebring, I mean 73 Vanguard, a 74 Sebring Vanguard, and I had a 83, I think it was, Commutacar. And these were all very small cars, and they're electric. They're basically, it's a golf cart. It wasn't much more than a golf cart, to be honest with you. It's five, well, 95 was, it was ABS plastic body. You can see them online if you go on YouTube, you can find people that still have them. I don't know if I'll ever find mine or not. But anyway, the only electric car I have left is actually a Bradley GT2, which is a, it's a kit car. It's a Volkswagen body, but it's a kit car, fiberglass body. Looks like a fancy sport car, but it's electric. And they didn't make that in electric, by the way. This was a gasoline conversion where they took off the gasoline engine and it was custom built, somebody. converted into electric. I didn't do it. But anyway, the city cars and the van guards and the speed ring van guards and the clear cars, those are all based on 48 volt systems. And those were six volt golf cart batteries wired in series to get 48 volts. And then the The Bradley I have is actually a 72 volt carbon vehicle and that's also based on golf cart batteries. Golf cart batteries is basically, it's a little bit bigger than a car battery but it's 6 volts instead of 12. And they cost a little bit more at the cost of probably these days. probably close to $200 for battery and then you have a whole bunch of them to get 48 volts wired in series. Anyway, electric cars, I've always been in favor and always been an advocate for electric cars. But there are disadvantages, there are advantages and I'm going to go over some of that because of course GM recently announced that it was going to be going to all electric by the year 2035. I don't know if that seems to be a real thing or not, if that's going to work for them. But that's what they've announced. And in fact, for 2023, they have 20 electric cars lined up for their model year for 2023. 20 different electric vehicles to choose from. And Ford's also talking about the F-150. I'm not sure if they've done that yet or if they're still in production or still working on that. But Ford announced the F-150, and that's the most popular, is going to be actually going to be the electric version available. You don't have to be scared of electric cars for a lot of reasons. Especially if you are a two-car family. If you're a two-car family, you could very immediately go to an electric vehicle right now. I mean, essentially, because you could always use your infernal combustion engine to go distances if you're worried about, you know, you're traveling several states, and then, yeah, you're going to need more range than you have an electric car. So the fossil fuel cars are still going to be demand until they get better. Now the Tesla is remarkable technology. They're just way too expensive for most of us, Tesla, but they electric car and then some. They really, he did a good job making that electric car, but it's just super expensive. I mean the base price of the Tesla I think is in the neighborhood of $50,000 to $60,000 for a base price Tesla, but the performance is actually remarkable. A lot of people thought, well, when you think golf carts, you think slow. And that's just a matter of the right gearing, the right design, because golf carts are meant to be going slow. They're not meant to be going 60, 70 miles an hour down the road. So they're meant to be going slow. So a lot of people get the idea electric cars are slow. They have a whole lot of torque. I would kind of freak people out when at a stoplight, people pull up to me, you know, waiting in red light. Maybe chuckling or making comments or something and then the light turns green and I just hit that accelerator and boom I'm going silently without making any noise. I just boom it leaves them Just sitting there It was always a thrill to do that to the people who were black because we've got car was a goofy look and the the actual The sea brings in the vanguard and the computer cars. They were actually pretty goofy looking Yeah, you could sit in I could literally sit in the seat. There's no back seat. I can sit in the seat of this thing and I could reach out the window and I could touch the back bumper. That's how small these trucks were. They would literally fit in the back of a full-size pickup truck bed, the four-byte pickup truck bed. Well, they're more like five and a half feet if you don't count the wheel wells, but it would actually go inside in the pickup truck bed and I could close the tailgate. Picture the shuttlecraft of the next generation series of one of the shuttlecraft. That's kind of what it looks like, the shape of it, kind of wedge shape. But anyway, look it up online if you're interested. I had a lot of fun with those cars. I still have the Bradley, doesn't have batteries in it right now. It's been in storage for a long time. Haven't had it on the road for close to 20 years, I think. It's been in storage and I still have it. Storage and... Someday I want to get back up because I want to do all electric, all alternative energy at my new place someday. And if I ever get the money together, then I can do that. But anyway, so GM has announced this, a lot of other electric cars, even Jaguar is getting in on it. They announced all electric at some point. I don't know what the goal of the year was. Jaguar, can you imagine Jaguar? Could this be considered a hot sports car? Well, that's just it. Electric cars can outperform internal combustion engines in a lot of different respects in a sports car type of modality. Just like the Tesla is actually very remarkable in the amount of acceleration, the speed it can obtain, although I think they're governed at a certain speed. I don't know what the land record is for an electric car, but it's in the hundreds of miles, hundreds of miles per hour. I think it's surpassed 300 or something. I don't know what the current was, but that was years ago. So it's not really an issue of speed or torque. It's just mostly range and battery limitation. Battery limitation has always been the thing with electric cars. I don't want to get all, to say completely on electric cars, but we're going to be talking about the grid. where we get our electricity from, and so on. So anyway, let's see, where do I start here? Right now, we get our electricity in the United States. Well, let's just say energy first. In other words, not just electricity. Crude oil, natural gas, and electricity. Now, this chart I have here doesn't compare them based on The base is in on kilowatts per hour and barrels. So let me see if I can find a chart that, carbon footprint. Okay, yeah, here we go. Energy, again, the energy, not just, in other words, what you put in your car and all forms of energy we get in the United States. About 70% of it comes from fossil fuels today. About 9% of it comes from nuclear power. 7% from water power, hydroelectricity. 14% they're combining wind, solar, and geothermal all together. 14% for renewable energy combined. So that has surpassed hydroelectric and nuclear power in the US. So fossil fuels still reign supreme in our energy consumption. Again, this is all energy. This is not just electricity. Now, I'm not going to get into discussion of global warming or climate change, whatever you want to call it today, because some people would disagree and whatever. You can argue that all day. But the hard factors of the matter, and I don't, you know, they're right away with this thing that's going on across the country. They mentioned climate change, which they call global warming at first, and it doesn't feel like it's global warming. But anyway, the simple... reality of it that you really can't argue is fossil fuel consumption, mining, production, it creates pollution. We do know it's got limits eventually. I mean, we've stretched the limits greatly here in the last more than a decade with fracking for natural gas especially, but there is a limit. We know that fossil fuels someday It will happen 100 years, 200 years, whatever. We know that there is a limit. Now, we don't think there's a limit with renewable energy, such as the sun and the wind, or water power, unless climate change is so bad that we come from a desert. So there doesn't seem to be a limit with the others, but with fossil fuels, it makes sense, regardless of whether you believe in climate change or not, it makes sense to get fossil fuels phased out and by the wayside. Here's something that came out here a couple weeks ago that actually came to a surprise for the scientists. One in five deaths are caused by fossil fuel emissions. Yeah, more than 8 million people die a year roughly from fossil fuel pollution significantly higher than previous research suggested according to the new research from Harvard University in collaboration with the University of Birmingham University of Leishister and University College London. Research has estimated that exposure to particulate matter from fossil fuel emissions accounted for 18% of global deaths That's a little less than one out of five. So one out of five people have a premature death due to fossil fuel emissions. So regardless of what the argument based upon climate change, it still makes sense to phase out fossil fuels because of the limitations we have with supply. Right now it's fairly abundant and fairly cheap. There's no question of that. But someday that's going to end. Will it be during our lifetime? I don't know. But it's going to end someday. And it's killing us. It's shortening our lifespan. Let's put it that way. Doesn't mean that one out of five of us will possibly die of basically pollution, which it would contribute to an earlier death. Is that the same with solar? Wind? No. Hydroelectric? No. Well, I mean, we can't. Of course, our deaths due to those. And in fact, if you look up online, and here's the thing you can Google if you want, because you're not going to believe me at first, nuclear power is actually the safest of all the electricity generation methods we have. When you look up the statistics, it's amazing that people don't believe that because they think... Fukushima, Chernobyl, Three Mile Island, you know, they think all these things, but well, no one died from Fukushima radiation, nor Three Mile Island. Some did die from Chernobyl, but nobody died from Fukushima or Three Mile Island. So nuclear, even with all the accidents in place, is still the safest we have, even safer than solar and wind, and we talked about this on the show before. Look up something, Google this if you want, you can get some articles and get straight to the point. How deadly is your kilowatt? how deadly is your kilowatt? And you will see that coal, fossil fuels definitely kill the most. Hydroelectric, basically a dam breaks. I mean it's safe unless a dam breaks. But dams, and we have failures, man, have things that fail just like nuclear too. And it goes on down the line. Wind and solar are way down the list, but nuclear is even lower than that. So. The other there's deaths to all of them all of them have a price to pay in the form of safety And nuclear happens to be the safest one anyway But one in five of us may die at earlier death due to fossil fuel emissions, so it makes sense to get rid of fossil fuels regardless All right, we can get rid of that tab. I've got about 10 tabs open here. So what about electricity production? Where does that come from in the US? right now We've actually had a decline in coal in the last 20 years. Coal was supplying us with about 50% of our electricity, but now it's down to under 40%. And natural gas has taken the lead as far as electricity generation, the fuel for electricity generation. Let's see if I can find it. There are... almost 2,000 natural gas powered electricity plants in the US and they have generated 35% of the nation's electricity roughly right now. Whereas coal, there are 400 coal powered electric plants in the United States, they generated about 30% of the nation's electricity. Coal was 50%, but now it's declined greatly. And of course, Trump tried to bring coal back. Which is about the dirtiest of all the electricity generation methods we have so it really didn't make sense for him to be saying that much but yes it it helps to keep jobs and so on but it's an aging technology that's gonna have to go and by the way a lot of people like to argue this with me online because they Start screaming a bunch of nonsense about dangerous nuclear is what about the nuclear waste? Well, no one's died from stored nuclear waste Yes, we don't have a way to bury it yet or properly do it yet in the US anyway, not really. But frankly, all you got to do is wait a decade or two and then all that so-called nuclear waste will be valuable fuel in the next generation of nuclear power plants called molten salt reactors. Those are going to be a lot safer, a lot more efficient and they can take that spent fuel rods that they presently store in either tanks or ponds, usually on the ground or in the ground. just to keep them cool because they're still hot. They still have about 90% of their energy capacity within those rods just sitting there and calling it a nuclear waste. So eventually they won't be able to keep the stuff in stock, so to speak. It will be used and further depleted to where it's utilizing that energy in the next generation nuclear energy power plants if we are allowed to do that because the anti-nuke, the ignorant anti-nukers of the world just keep streaming their nonsense about about how dangerous nuclear power is or how we have to get rid of nuclear power. But that's an ignorant view because they just haven't studied anything. But anyway, because we haven't really had the new technology come along for nuclear in about 50 years because they actually, and this is not just a, when I've talked about thorium and molten salt reactors, this is not something that's New really, it's the next generation, but we haven't been allowed to build them because of the anti-nuke sentiment for the last 50 years. Because 50 years ago, Oak Ridge National Laboratories had such a plant running. It ran for two or three years. As a test, the problem with it was back 50 years ago is you could use it to make nuclear bombs. And that's why basically it was shelved. Now, countries like Iran or other countries that we, we supposedly can't allow to have nuclear bombs, they would be very wise to jump on this technology and develop it. And they could be the leaders in the energy market in the world. Because right now, nobody's really building these plants, although India, Russia, and one other country, are making strides in that direction and it could turn us into a third world country if we don't get on board and start doing this as well. Anyway, you ought to look up at that if you want to research this thorium molten salt reactors. It could do away with our nuclear waste at the same time. Well, it won't do away with it completely. Eventually, there will still be some nuclear waste, but it will be so depleted, it will be a lot easier to store, and it won't be nearly as dangerous as it can be now, because of what rods that are just sitting there have about 90% of their energy capacity still within those rods just sitting there being called nuclear waste. So we'll be able to utilize those. So coal has declined. What about... Okay, nuclear has remained pretty steady. Our nuclear power plants are really aging, and we really needed to be building more of them. And we have some that are coming online, but the nuclear power plants in the United States generate about 20% of the nation's electricity. New nuclear power plants have been flatlined here for a long time, and we're basically running the old ones into the ground. Some of these plants are already 50 years old and we're still running them. So that can be a problem too if it's for safety. So we see states that have the most nuclear power generation, Maryland, South Carolina, Illinois, Pennsylvania, Connecticut, New Hampshire getting their most. And I have this all broken down by state as well. What about hydroelectric? Hydroelectric. The states of Washington, Oregon, Vermont, and Idaho lead the nation in power from electric power plants, getting between 56 and 68% of their electricity from them, from both states. The Montana and South Dakota were the only other states where they were responsible for more than 5% of electricity. Overall, hydroelectric power plants generate nationwide as an average, generate 7% of the nation's electricity. Now that would be, again, the states with the good flowing rivers and mountainous areas. Those are the ones that are going to have the greatest potential for hydroelectric. Oregon, Washington, Vermont, Idaho. And they get a good portion of their power from hydroelectric. And so what else is left? It would be solar and wind. See if I can find information on solar and wind. Right now, solar and wind are very low in the percentages. And the state, let me see if I can do this without, right now, as far as coal goes, and you kind of would expect this, West Virginia leads the country in electricity generated by coal, followed by Wyoming, Kentucky, Missouri, Indiana, strangely, and North Dakota, Utah. So those states are actually generate the most coal electricity. Let me see if I can click this without. destroying what I've got here on my page. Solar, okay, it did go. Solar, right now the state leading the nation is California and solar, but it's still at only about 10%. That's the highest wind. Leading the country would be, I.A., that's Iowa, followed by South Dakota, Kansas, Oklahoma, North Dakota, Minnesota, the center of the country, the Great Plains. Minnesota, Colorado, those states are in the neighborhood of 30% for Iowa. They get their electricity from wind. Let's see, oil, strictly oil. This is kind of a strange, strictly from oil. The state of Hawaii gets a good 70% of their electricity from just oil. But yet it's such a low percentage nationwide. The next one down is Arkansas at about 15 percent. And then it goes down way below 10 percent for the other states. So oil isn't a very big player in the game anymore. Even Texas, let's see where Texas is. Because Ed mentioned the biggest oil producer. Well, it's certainly not in the top 10 as far as utilizing it for energy production, electricity production. I don't even see where I'm going down the list, going down the list. Where is Texas? Where is it? It's got to be somewhere. We've got all 50 states here. Well, it's not anywhere near the top of the list. Put it that way. I don't see where it's at. Oh, wait, there it is. Way down. It's like in the bottom 10 almost. Way down there. Nuclear, I think I mentioned, nuclear, South Carolina gets the most of its energy from, it gets more than 50%. And so as those New Hampshire and Illinois, those get most of their energy from nuclear. Natural gas, Rhode Island leads the country. Of course, probably just one natural gas plant for the whole state, and they get almost 100% of their... electricity from natural gas. Delaware is close behind, another very small state, and then Mississippi, Nevada, Florida, Maine. No, that's not Maine, that's MA, that's Massachusetts. So we still get a lot of electricity from natural gas, and that's the leader now. Let me see where Texas is on that list. Texas is kind of far down there too. Sure looks like it. Hawaii is 0% in Hawaii, natural gas. Texas. Oh, here we go. I didn't realize to do this. Yeah, natural gas in Rhode Island, 96%. I'm having trouble finding Texas. I thought I should have thought that we were talking about Texas, and Texas, of course, is big in the news. Where is Texas? There it is. It's pretty high, actually. Texas natural gas powered plants account for 50% of electricity generation in Texas. And then as we mentioned, they export a whole lot of natural gas also to Mexico and maybe to other surrounding states. Don't know about that. Now, future, let me see, where is my next page? Okay, why aren't we going more towards renewables? Well, you basically can't, at least not now. Here's the issue here. California is aiming to run 50% of renewable energy by 2030. Hawaii has pledged to run 100% renewables by 2045. So there are plans for this. Germany has been trying to increase greatly. They've stopped all their nuclear power. And there's a lot of other countries, of course, trying to aim to get much more of a percentage to renewable energy. Well, here's the problem with renewable energy. And believe me, I have solar panels, both thermal solar and photovoltaic solar. I have wind generators. I understand wind and solar. I'm not against wind and solar. It's just not really feasible or at this point in time even possible to get 100% of our energy from renewables right now. Here's the deal. Yes, you can run your home off 100% solar or wind or micro hydro depending on where you live in the country and what resources you have there where you live. So yes, it is possible. It's just not feasible to do it nationwide yet. You can run your appliances and everything. If you switch your home to run off of Let's say your water heater, your dryer, your oven, your stove, your furnace. If you switch those to run off of other sources such as propane or natural gas, then yes, you can fairly easily buy enough panels, it would be expensive, but buy enough panels and batteries to run your home. off of electricity from the sun or the wind. It's expensive, but it's not impossible or that difficult. If you have the money, it's fairly easy to do, but there's a lot of work you have to do yourself, and there's a lot of maintenance and upkeep, knowledge you'll have to gain from the system. But your appliances that make hot, that do things to make it hot, your furnace, your water heater, your stove, your oven, your electric, your range top, your soap top, Your clothes dryer, all these things that generate heat take a massive amount of electricity that you are not going to do with solar when, unless you have an extremely large system and a huge battery bank, they are not practical to use in your home. If you're going to convert solar, you first have to convert all those heating appliances into some other source of energy because you're not going to make it off of solar unless you're rich. That's the bottom line. Now, so yes, we could put solar panels on rooftops all around the country. We could put wind generators up where it's allowed. Because frankly, if you live in a city, you're not going to be able to put up wind generator more than likely. They need to be tall. They need to be high. They need to be above the train line. And cities right now are not a place for wind generator. They really don't allow them in cities. And I think beyond so many feet is pretty much not allowed in most cities. So wind doesn't work in cities, but on the outskirts of town, sure, certainly. But on big utility scale, the problem with wind and solar especially is the intermittent nature of the type of energy. The sun shines, you have electricity. The wind blows, you have electricity. At night, no electricity and less wind at night. because the wind starts dying down at night. I mean, typically, yes, you can have windy places that are windy all the time, but, and of course you have storms, but typically, wind decreases at nighttime or stops completely, and solar does stop completely at nighttime. Now here's the problem, you're generating a lot of electricity, During the day, but you're not generating any at night now that happens to be coincide with our energy usage Of course, we usually use less energy during at nighttime than we do it every day. So that's helpful but we have the capacity at some point to generate a whole lot more electricity than we can consume during the day and I'm not counting air conditioning here because that's another huge energy hog that you're not going to be able to do with your solar system, by the way, your independent off-the-grid solar system. Air conditioning is another huge energy yard. But the problem is you can't store that energy from the sun or the wind very efficiently or in very enough quantities to do what you want it to do. And you can't transport it extreme distances. For instance, it's dark here in Michigan, but hey, in California, they've still got sunshine. They could be generating electricity and spending it to us, right? Well, not really. Yes, it's possible it's just not practical or feasible because you have losses in energy transmission on the high-tension power lines. Not only losses in the power lines, get a little of this as a figure, this is a number I learned today, this part I didn't know, the efficiency of power plants. Power plants such as coal, natural gas, petroleum, or nuclear work on the same general principle of energy dense, something burned, the release heat which boils water, turns into seams, spins the termite, which generates electricity. It's a thermal dynamic process that has limits. And it actually is due to rising energy entropy. It means that only two-thirds of the energy in the raw materials actually make it into the grid in the form of electricity. In other words, they're only about 65% efficient. So we lose about 22 quadrillion BTUs in the U.S. every year. So you lose about a third of the energy potential right there at the power plant, and then you lose Close to 10% in the transmission across the high-tension lines. Everybody's been near one of those things. You can hear them buzzing and hissing. You're hearing electricity being released wasted. That's what you're hearing. You're hearing electricity is being spaced, going out into the air. And it's heating up the lines. If you ever watch, look at these power plants sometimes. Watch them during times of low energy use and during times of high energy use. They'll be sagging a lot more. They go down many feet. They're heating up, they're expanding. And that's wasted energy. They have more electricity going through there, so they generate heat. And they also won't see icicles form on those things, on actual lines, because they're hot. So you lose it at the power plant, you lose it on the transmission. From place to place so sending it from California and Michigan. It just really doesn't work because you start losing too much Energy isn't really transported that far if you can transport it long distances the higher voltage you step up the greater you can Transmit that electricity, but then you have losses and then you also have losses when you go when you you step that power up or down going to substation or to your home because there were hundreds of thousands of volts on the high tension power lines. Then it stepped down in the hundreds of volts, many hundreds of volts after a transformer, what do you call them, the substations. You know, you've seen these things at the edge of town, they got all their... Weird looking, it's all fenced in, it's usually about an acre too big. That's where it steps down the voltage to a certain amount, where it goes, then it goes on wood poles to other people's houses or underground. And then from there, on the pole, it'll step it down again with another transformer. And each step of the process also loses a certain amount of electricity, usually in the form of heat. Sometimes you see the transformers on the ground, and they're kind of in a box, go up that box and feel it. Hot. wasted energy. So you can't really, going long distances is not practical. Yeah, it's all honey in California. Or in a few hours, California will be, well, a couple hours, California will be dark. Hawaii still can generate, right? Or Saudi Arabia for that matter. But again, it's not practical to send the power going across country like there or across the oceans, underwater cables. It's not efficient. We can't really store electricity. We are addicted to electricity. There's no other way to put it. What's happening today in Texas and a lot of other places in the country proves that we are addicted to electricity. Think about a scenario. If you're being a survival, if you're a lot of the people in this network are, think about this. If it was really cold, I mean, we are talking about super cold. I mean, it's cold. I'm gonna be wrong. But we aren't talking like 20, 30 below. like we had in Michigan a couple of, a couple of years ago. And where this happened, this actually happened in Michigan. One of the, a natural gas station had a fire and they had, they were already stretched to the limit on the grid. Then all of a sudden there was this natural gas problem and they had to start doing the rolling blackout thing and the governor immediately declared an emergency, statewide emergency and trying to tell people you must turn your power down and blah, blah. Well, if that had failed, 100%, Michigan would have been without electricity. Because all the rest of the country at that time was experiencing some kind of polar vortex or whatever, and they were experiencing shortages also. So it's not likely we could just get it from Ohio or Indiana or whatever. Everybody was having problems. But then Michigan was in a state of emergency. What happens when it's 20 below out, And it has been 20 below for several days in a row and your power goes out. Within a half a day, your house will not be livable anymore. In fact, it'll start being freezing in there and it will, I mean, if you don't have supplemental heat like a fireplace or a stove or whatever, that's of course, that's a given that yes, if you have those sources and you have the wood available, then yes, you can do that and you can keep your house warm enough. But then the pipes start freezing. Basically, you're going to want to abandon your house. What you're going to do, you're going to go to your car. You're going to go to your car and you're going to start up. You're going to get it warmed up. You're going to sit there and drive away. And if it starts, at 20 below, if it starts, and then you're sitting there and you're like, oh, we've got a quarter tank of gas. So we better get some gas. And like Ed says, gas stations are either closed or they're all out of gas. And there's either huge lines because everybody else got the same idea, or they're out of gas, or they're just closed because they don't have electricity to pump the gas. So now what do you do? You're in your car and you're running out of gas. What do you do? Oh, I'll just drive down south and go to Florida. Well, no, you need a couple tanks of gas to do that. You're not going to do that either. People will start dying. The warming centers with generators, not natural gas, usually. They could be running off of diesel if the diesel wasn't gelled up at those temperatures. You could have a situation where lots of people could be dying because of no electricity. That's how addicted we are to electricity. Without electricity, this society does not exist as we know it. We're done if we have no electricity. So think about this in your press. If the power goes out right now and stays out for days or weeks, will you survive if this wind in this weather? You can move down south. Where would I move down south to escape the weather? Maybe Texas? Oh, no, that's not working. Florida, Miami, or Mexico. We probably aren't human race probably isn't designed to be living in this type of climate. I mean to be honest with you without supplemental Subvitah heat now back in the days of the Indians when a lot less people and would obviously fires that did the trick today We really probably can't do that. Not everybody not power of the whole country. What else let's see here General Motors announces all electric car lineup by 2023 They're all electric car line. In other words, the models, it will be all electric. Not every, everything won't be electric with General Motors in 2023. But they are claiming by 2035, they plan on going all electric. And of course, Biden did something here last week dealing with electric fleets for the federal government and I don't, didn't pay much attention to whatever. Well, a lot more people are getting on the bandwagon of electric cars now. until battery technology creates a quantum leap. Now, electric cars are a lot better today than they were back in the day when I was driving electric cars. There's no question. But we still are a long ways from being able to store in quantity all the electricity coming from solar and wind and having it stored there overnight to be used or powers at times when it's cloudy, in areas where it's cloudy or not windy, whatever. We don't really have the battery capacity or the technology to make it practical in any way, shape, or form, to store that much electricity, to run the entire grid. We just don't have that capacity. It would literally, with the battery capacity we have now, it would like only last seconds if all of the sources of electricity were stopped and we were trying to re-all our battery power. You literally only have about seconds worth of electricity to run the grid. That's it. That's how bad it is. And the technology for batteries is such a limitation, even with today's electric cars, it's such a limitation that we aren't going to be able to do it with 100% renewables without rolling blackouts in times when you're just going to have to shut down. If you're willing to do that, I'm willing to pay a lot more money too. Now, there are other ways to store energy, let's call it, not electricity. There's also the concept of pumping water up into holding ponds and using that water sort of as a hydroelectric system. Then when you need more electricity, you just release that water into a turbine to produce electricity, just like a hydroelectric dam. In fact, it is a hydroelectric dam. In other words, it's a lake pump artificially. using the power of the sun or the wind or some other alternative source of energy when you have it in abundance and since you can't store it, you have to figure out a way to store it, pump it up and make a man-made lake. That has a lot of huge limitations also, the costs are astronomical and it's not really practical on a huge scale, at least yet you'd have to have a whole lot of them installed all over the country in order for that to work as well. So, there really isn't a good way to do this 100% renewables in today's technology unless we have some kind of quantum leap in battery technology or some other energy storage, some type of capacitor or whatever. Until we have that happen, some kind of quantum leap in technology, you aren't going to see 100% solar without rolling blackouts, without shortages, and times when just nothing. That's what rolling blackouts. Okay, I'm almost done here. I've covered a lot and I could keep going on and on, but my time's just about up. You've been listening to Forbid Knowledge. My name's Craig. You've been listening on the 17th of February. Any other time is going to be a rerun. There is a show for me. A first one I've done in months and that'll be February 26th, 7 and 8th, 26th, 27th, 28th. Last three days of the month in Indianapolis, Indiana. There are other gun shows out there, but you check before you go, especially right now for this weekend because some shows are canceling because of the weather and not having electricity. So check before you go, because there are some. Again, I got an email for one in Mississippi that closed down. So if you're in Mississippi, check that gun show before you go. It might be closed, because one in Mississippi definitely is. I thank everybody for listening. Until next time, go on. A figure walked in through the mist with a flintlock in his hand. His clothes were torn and dirty as he stood there by my bed. He took off his three-cornered hat, and speaking low to me, he said, We've fought a revolution to celebrity. 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 and home of the brave. You buy permits to travel and permits to own a gun. Permits to start a business or to build a place for one. On land that you believe you own, you pay a yearly rent. Although you have no voice in saying how the money'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 secret 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 will be buried. Your leaders send artillery and guns to foreign shores and send your sons to slaughter fighting other people's wars. Can you regain the freedoms for which we fought and died? Or don't you have the courage or the faith to stand with pride? And are there no more values for which you'll fight to save? Or do you wish your children to live in fear and be a slave? Oh, sons of the Republic, arise, take a stand, defend the Constitution, the Supreme Law of the land, preserve our great Republic and each God given right, and pray to God to keep the torture freedom burning bright, as Iowoki vanished in the midst of whence he came. His words were true. We are not free, but we have ourselves to blame. For even now as tyrants trampled 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 free? He was looking for a soul to steal. He was in a bag, because he was way behind and he was willing to make a deal. when he came across this young man sawin' on the fiddle and playin' it hot. And the devil jumped up on a hickory stump and said, boy, let me tell you what. I guess you didn't know it, but I am a fiddle player too. And if you care to take a dare, I'll make a bet with you. Now you play a pretty good fiddle, boy, but give the devil his due. I bet a fiddle of gold against your soul, so I think I better do. The boy said, my name's Johnny, and it might be a sin, but I'll take your bet, and you're gonna regret, because I'm the best as ever been. Johnny you're on and up your bow and play your fiddle hard. Georgia and the Devil use the arts and he'd view it. And he'd pull the bow and sit down in that chair right there and let me show you how it's done. Out his head because he knew that he'd been beat. And he laid that golden fiddle on the ground at Johnny's feet. Johnny said, Devil, just come on back if you ever want to try again. Because I told you once, you son of a gun, I'm the best as ever been. He played. Round the mountain, round the mountain, round the mountain. Ladies and gentlemen, this is the first of the evening intel report I mark Kornke. One day closer to victory for all of our brothers and sisters both on and behind the lines in occupied territories west southeast north and northwest. Ladies and gentlemen who are listening to us on LibertyTreeRadio.4mg.com Liberty Tree Radio on satellite and we are on AM&FM micro stations, CB base stations and UltraNet Hallmark and Golden Spike Technologies east and west of the Mississippi along with Alaska good afternoon and evening to all of our friends out there in Lower 49 including the great state of Jefferson along with the Kona Sea outline two states territories and the clock and of course out west there's three hours behind us so it's still afternoon out there. and it is 8 or 9 p.m. Eastern Standard Time. It's Weapons Wednesday, it is the 17th of February. 13th year of open and obvious and in-your-face Fabian, the socialist and the Soviet. So occupation of America with a K 2021 old earth calendar. 2021 battle for the Republic of Swords. And it has been a very busy weekend. And this last weekend, we actually got a few things accomplished. Didn't know about until midday today, but I want to say thank you to all of our friends working up at Camp Nagy-Hitcham. We got another donation of culverts and material kind of hard in the winter, but then it's not because we got good freeze. They had a bunch of seconds in concrete culverts, and we've gotten these at different times. We need help right now, so for all of our friends that are listening, uh... were with any of the transport groups if you're in the middle michigan or in the uh... bottom of michigan here you've got the of the uh... lowboys we are going to need to bring everybody together i think uh... it's going to be for friday if not it's through the weekend because obviously the shop will be closed the company we're getting these from and uh... they're going to give us a couple their trucks to we need to get everything out because barely have got a government contract coming up so they need to clear the art of all the second which means they're all So guys, you got some work to do, just a heads up, get hold of Mr. Thompson and also get hold of the Gladys. Mr. Thompson or get hold of the Gladys. And they're coordinating. Guys, whatever truck shows up, remember you can load up and then drop off at the facility. There's already a designated area for a depoing for this stuff. Everything's ready to go. So, do we have a caller? Yes, you do. Okay, who do we have? It's a Rick out of Oregon. Hey, what's going on? Well, I just want to sorry I'm sitting that's hitting buttons there. I just kind of want to give an update we know we got hit relatively hard nothing I mean, they don't get it that often here, but They don't have the infrastructure here to Fix it matter of fact. I was just talking to a couple of guys that are trying to do the fix power And there's people that still in the city proper that, yeah, some of them have just gotten their power today, but a lot of them aren't, still don't have it. And they don't have the materials to fix this. I mean, they've cut things so thin, which kind of shows where we're at. You know what? Have you ever read Atlas Shrugged? in high school. I'm not going to say anything. I'm serious. If you ever read, go and read Atlas Shrugged. And when you read it, ask yourself where we are in the book. I'm curious about this. And not just for you, I'm talking about all of our listeners. Movies don't do credit ever. Now there's a series that was done that's Atlas Shrugged. You can find it. Most all the different movie clubs have it. Netflix. whatever taking that netflix is the only one a lot of people want to deal with netflix but i know everybody has it right now and there's three there's uh... there there are three uh... inserts okay three separate movies that make up the book now they're okay uh... and to a degree they got part of the they got most of the spirit in there the book still is a better option but when you read the book and you think about what we're watching right now ask yourself where we are in terms of the you know the collapse under communism and it's exactly that the level of how much grafting corruption how much stuff has been stolen how many lives have been generated how much deception and deceit is going on uh... and by the way there's we're still paying full dollar for everything we're not getting anything but we're being working charged were being packed we're being raped over the coal, you know, raped and raped over the coals in every category. And this is a good example right here. They just don't have the material. You know what? What's funny? When you read the book, you're going to go, well, son of a bugger. Seriously. You know, it was interesting. We, we did lose internet up here. Yeah, I'm big deal. And I, there was a book that I just never finished before and I finally pulled out. It was a American cry havoc. And it's not perfect. He assumed this, it was written before, you know, Trump had got in and he assumed it was Hitler-y. But I mean, besides that, so much of that in that book, you know what, that's exactly what's happening now. And like I said, it's not a perfect fit, but it was, yeah, just kind of You know you realize yep, I'm not alone in understanding this or seeing what what's happening Well, what's interesting is is again, you know, I was mentioning hydroelectric You're doing well, that's why I called by the way. Yeah, you know what's interesting is hydroelectric now They only have typically enough of all spare parts to rebuild one One system, one turbine, one gen pack, one transformer pack, or a series of transformer packs, but it's enough to keep one full turbine completely operational no matter what. And under the logic that it's unlikely unless the dam is literally destroyed by intentional military endeavor. it's unlikely that any of these true industrial hydrodams would be destroyed in in in any circumstance maybe earthquake or extreme my god you know the very first couple of that kind of crap if that happens you know you're going to be living with what you got left and that's it anyway and it would even if they were rebuilding they know they're limited but you know the thing is that that's expected that was industry standard Now, they have depots and materials to decide, but the whole infrastructure and all the other components, oh, it's been bad for decades. Once they got into the NAFTA and GAP, two things that were the biggest scrip from the get-go, and it was not a scrip, it was planned destruction. Number one is adopting on-time delivery, you know, the Japanese plan. For a small country, that's fine. For a big country, it's a screw, and that's exactly what it's become. on-time delivery isn't not with a big country the other is uh... again naphtha gap because it destroyed the competition the competitive infrastructure that allowed for better quality and a diverse number of manufacturing options so that you're not screwed by being narrowed to one channel which then when it's destroyed you have nothing And that's where we are with most everything that we're doing. And this is why we're at the peak point right now. Either we fix this, shoot their ass out, and get on with real life, or we let the idiots, buffoons, and traitors, well, enemy combatants. Because if they were never with us, they're not traitors. That's the one part of everybody that's a tough time, but, well, they're traitors! Not if they never were with us, they never held allegiance to you in the first place. You know, in other words, tell me. Well, the other thing that I was calling in about was that And what you're talking about is what got me going was that I've heard it in Seattle, I've heard it in parts of California where they're telling people how polluting natural gas is and Seattle wants to eliminate natural gas use within the city. And okay, well, You can say that all you want, but during the winter, you don't have enough electricity to be able to power all these heating units. You just don't. We have rolling blackouts and all this crap. There's not enough power, electrical power, to be able to keep everything warm. They're literally trying to put us all on electricity. Real quick, I'm going to come in here and interrupt the caller just because according to the Texas news agencies that are down here, that's not true. For this type of year, we're only usually allocated X power from the power grid. If you're with this one overwhelming company that's encompassed like Oklahoma, Mississippi, parts of Texas, not all of Texas, Rubik has been fortunate. The reason why we haven't lost power except for an hour is because the Rubik Power Grid is not being managed by this other company that is managing the rest of the state's power grid. They openly admitted to the fact that yes, they could power everybody's homes, but it would take them over budget and they haven't got a budget allocated for going over X amount of megawatt. Not megawatts. Oh, God. I'm doing it again. I can't remember. It's like three, 400 megavolts or whatever the high number. And that we're already 400 over what, yeah, we're already 400 points over what we're allocated. Now it's not that they can't generate more power, it's that the management company won't generate that much more power because they don't think Texans can afford it right now. That's a excuse. And I'll put you on the system in two months. What it comes down to, guys, is a diverse, when you specialize and narrow all of everything into a product, then you have, just like we see with everything we've seen recently here, with excessive consumption, eventually you have exhaustion. No matter what, and what we have had traditionally is a diversified infrastructure, which is a good thing. A diversified, not a not hyper-specialized infrastructure is survivable. A specialized narrow infrastructure is not. It's not even aggressive consumption though. That whole talk there, that's a lie. They're admitting that it's a lie. They can produce the power. I understand what he's saying, but this whole thing with the power grid that's going on, understand they're lying to you. We have neutral power across the board in the US. If they wanted to, they could turn that up and power most of the... eastern seaboard without a problem but i think they're not going to do that and it's a design to get everybody like it that everybody into their into their prison camps because i thought we are going to call it that he's whatever but the bottom line is that we've had that we have the capacity between all the different technologies that we are in our interactive with it's just they're intentionally not managing it they're not going to be communist do this They do this intentionally, not because of a fumble screen. Remember, I've said this a million times. Communism is intentionally designed to use confusion and lying to accomplish their goals, which is what you're saying right now. Rubic Color has a pretty good article up on this, Dad. It's not even mismanagement. It's intentional mismanagement. They're claiming that it's for keeping their books. is why they're letting people die in Houston right now. Right. And for me bringing up my sister-in-law and my brother-in-law, they're in Graham. That part, I probably shouldn't have brought them up as far as what I'm talking about with the natural gas stuff on the coast because It's a separate issue and it's a separate grid. So I did muddy the waters with that. I have to admit that. Well, the natural gas issue number one, again, we've had that technology in place. If we have any kind of capacitance issues with regard to whatever production, we've always had the ability to fall back on a second or a third system. well if you want to screw america and then slave them you do what the correct you're trying to do right now which is to drag everybody who are monolithic system where you have intentional failure which is what we're talking about and or get the well in reality it's manipulation because they will just simply will it off you're not allowed anything else and of course if you don't go step to the common agenda they're they're going to be already told you they're going to shut you off So the reason they can't right now guys is because of diversification. It's another reason we need to kill the bastards. Anybody proposing this need to walk up and blow their brains out. Well it's breaking. It's breaking. There's nothing that's in this other than you've got wicked minds with a very wicked evil agenda. They're power freaks. These narcissistic power freaks need to be dead. because they are killing people. If it's by intent or accident, the end result is you still have KIA's killed in action in a situation where we know that we have the infrastructure and the ability to perform, and for whatever reason, by intent or accident, we have criminal end result. It's criminal action, Deb. I haven't talked to you yet about this, but I've got My other side of my family, you know, Shelly's side of the family, which is part of our extended family, they're down in Houston right now. Okay. Her brother-in-law, not her brother-in-law, my brother-in-law is living with our mom down there. And right now, they're getting a generator because they were told to get a generator. Well, you know what? You don't have gas. If you don't have gas to run the generator, what good is that going to do? Listen to this without power. The gas pumps are without power. You're not going to get fuel. I had to point that out to him. He's like, you're not going to get it. You need to get like a, uh, a propane stove or something where you can go pay cash for a propane tank and get it going. Just make sure you ventilate the house, you know, cause you don't want to get the CO2 and all that other fun joke. The propane's been, uh, they've been, uh, claiming scarcity before the storm hit. Right. It's been crazy. One pound pigs have been, you know, you hunt them right now. We do that in this area here. Well, you see, that's not the end of it. They're also telling people to stay in their homes. Only first responders are supposed to be out on the street, fire department, police department. If we catch you on the street, we're going to arrest you. Oh, but if you don't have heat, we have these heating centers that are set up that can only handle 10% capacity because of the COVID BS. So if you show up to the heating center, you're going to be locked outside and probably freeze to death. Well, we only let 10% of you in to take benefit from the quote-unquote heating center that otherwise could probably handle the whole community. That's the type of BS that's going on in Houston right now. The communication there is pretty well cut off unless you're in the rare position where you actually have power. The way they've got the phone, they've turned us into a third world country, guys. They want to call us a first world country. We do not have a standardized, reliable, public communication systems anymore. We're all on cell phones. Exactly. Some of those cell phones, towers, they have generators, but not all of them. When the power goes out, you lose that. Your cable company is running your telephones now, but they don't have a low passive electrical system running through it So when you lose power on those you lose your telephone. There is no reliable emergency system We don't have reliable power. Thanks to the management of these people We don't have reliable utilities because when the power goes out it we've got water pipes water means bursting in light Again, I'm going to go to Houston because that's where my extended family is. They're having those problems right now. That's what they're seeing. And at the same time, you're told if you try to deal with it yourself, they're going to throw you in jail. But then they're telling you to deal with it yourself. And they're giving you bad advice about getting generators and going out and powering your home that way when there's no gas to put in the generator because you've got the power off at the pumps. It's stupid. The mismanagement of it is like somebody had to retard the keys and nobody is asking any questions like, how come these people are in charge? Sorry. Well, and again, what it comes down to, I've mentioned several times, guys, go read Atlas Shrugged and ask yourself where you are in the movie, but where you are in the book. But here's what gets me is there's no reason for us to be in this situation, except for having to scrape the table clean and getting rid of what we have in our government. that's where our plan getting rid of several of the problems like gates i mean we know we've got the shopping list is if everybody comes the bastard all at once how long would they survive i mean granted most these internationals will run from the country we at the very least we get rid of them if we run out of the country we get rid of them just as well from that point forward they have no inter they have no uh... interference with the country possible their digits mean nothing and that's where our problem is right now Across the board, well, first of all, let's get back to something here. Solutions, not just complain about the problems. This is where diversification is especially critical. There's all kinds of different ideas you can probably pull from, but don't forget that, as we've said, backups to backups to backups, if it isn't coming off the wall, you're going to have to make it yourself. What I mean by that is even coming in through that, what was supposed to be a very sophisticated power grid with a communications grid, uh... eight a number of other wolf the transportation greatest any better but the transportation grid is being interfered with by the police state and by the incompetence uh... i guess one of the things bowl you're not supposed to be on the street what do you mean you can't correct this is an extension of the corona beer virus scam with you know where you all have to lock down only now they're going to the next step where it's like what you work we're going to grab your rescue or do something to if you're on the street this is why they want the guns This is why anybody who proposes trying to take the guns needs to be dragged out, put up against a wall, and executed, or they need to be summarily shot in place if you catch them, you know, randomly. Anybody and everybody involved are all the problems that are being created here as far as creating the problems. They need to be gone from our society. They need to be gone from our lives. This has progressively got worse. I am not getting any younger, and I have seen nothing but catastrophic failure. over and over again so i was joking but i'm not joking all these after that we're saying oh you're from the twentieth century they're going to be twenty-first century yeah let's look at that again what look at the twenty-five century of these dumb ass do we believe that we have there more worried about the color of their purple stinking hair that they are about any kind of reality and of course don't think that the reader copy or whatever of the other sixty three taxes there are and that's more important actually doing the job that that the person model probably was an ad was hired because they were a copy or queer or peto rather than because he actually know how to do the job And even if they do not do the job, if they're being told that they've got two agendas, the public that supposedly they're providing the service, but the behind-the-scenes agenda, which is screw America, then, well, again, end solution, shoot their ass and get rid of them. Because that is where we are. Yeah, we're beyond progressively worse. We're into exponentially worse. Right. Any other thing? We're... Go ahead. I'm sorry. It's leaps and bounds. I'm sorry. It's leaps and bounds. Well, and here's the thing, we have not had a bad winter, guys. You know, I know what's going on. Our snow removal here has not taken place the way it normally would here. We haven't had much snow. But all of a sudden, they're in brain fart. You want to know why? I've told you this a million times on the air. We haven't had any snow down here in the bottom of the state of Michigan. We've had enough to make it look white outside. It's like 50-50 white brown. Now we've got, you know, like a uh... cake deck of of snow we've got six eight inches puffy you can move it with a soft shovel But when it came time for them to come out for almost a day, they did not get up off their dead hind ends and move anything. Why? Because of the other part, well, we got the snow money. They get the money for snow removal every year, no matter what. Well, they got the snow money, but it looked like they weren't going to have to spend it towards what they're supposed to, which is to have drivers, crews, and the trucks ready to go. So you know what happened? They got stupid. And rather than having the equipment ready to go, they had almost all the heads and all the plows and everything sitting on the chocks. If you don't know how that looks, go look at a yard. If you're in Michigan here, go look at a yard during the summer. We'll see what I'm talking about. When you're not using all your snow pushing equipment, you got it right. Grand Home did that, Dad. Grand Home did that when she was in office still as governor. Michigan. She laid off a majority of our snow removal crews because of global warming. We're not going to need them anymore. We're never going to have a winter like we used to ever again. And Michigan roads need to be dirt instead of pavement. Everybody remembers that we covered that out of the air. This is all part of the agenda 21 crap that is now bleeding out from different directions. One of the things that I've pointed out is that we could actually do this ourselves. Unfortunately, we're still getting taxed as if they were doing it. We could do this ourselves. We could actually, we have the throw, everything that we've always talked about on the air here, we have the personal throw weight to deal with every one of these problems. Tactically, not strategically. Tactically, as in local. but instead because we have let all of this crap roll farther and farther down the road and we've allowed more and more irrelevant middlemen to get involved and this is why what I've been saying about communications, where we are right now, the most important thing you can do with communications is get anything that does not require a middleman hooked up. cb dot f r s radio people are going to people understand those uh... reander no more sophisticated than the pb cb is more of a good at that for us but all of those do not require a middleman in all of the other aspect of what we're dealing with what is it the bubble spring our country up a massive number dot one a massive number of middlemen who in most cases first of all don't have our best interest first at heart And that's why we're where we are. Look at it this way. On the one hand, we're not going to give anything to the American people, not that we're giving. You all had got taxed for it. But they're going to take, they took tax digits and did what? They give like $58,000 per individual in Israel. You got $600, okay? uh... you're not going to get anything but the illegal aliens the over many are going to the next wave come across the border get tax-free hand money hand over first checks already pre-cut cash in envelopes the whole nine yards you see the problem here and we let this go on and compile and compile again and what needs to happen anybody who believes in it and please pushing it needs to have their ass deported if they're in the position of a pushing it they need to be gone Go ahead, another voice there, call it, jump in there, whoever it is. Hey Mark, it's John in Colorado. John, go first, go ahead, you're just there, go ahead. Okay, yeah. Yeah, Atlas Road, I think about it every day and you're so right. The second thing is for Ed where you can't get gasoline because the pumps aren't running, and this is for something I've had in my mind for a long time, is the little RV water pumps. They work really great for it. Believe it or not, they work great. I keep one in my truck. I move a lot of diesel and gasoline with it. And they are fire safe, basically. I mean, it's a DC motor, but you're not getting any loose gasoline out around it. So you don't have a problem. You pull a 711, pop that cap, drop your 10 foot worth of stiff garden hose down into it, turn it on and pump it in your gas tank. You can get gas out of those tanks without electricity. Right, but that's the that's the next phase is nobody is getting any gas I mean when we eventually there's nobody gonna run it anyway, and you're gonna be running it for them, but absolutely We do need to have the technology on the shelf because there's gonna be a transition phase here when that is going to be the case whoever is smart enough to have the machinery in hand is who's going to be able to Utilize that you know, whatever it is that's available. That's why we want to put this out for everybody while we can right now Real quick on that note, we had that outage on the East Coast that shut down most everything. We'd never get our pants cut down again, so we bought all these mobile generator units. and we parked them at all these stations around the state in Michigan. Michigan wasn't the only place that did that. Houston has hurricanes and other problems that happen all the time in the area. They have these portable generators too stationed inland. Okay, these generators are enough to power a small community like Chelsea or Dexter. There is no excuse for those units not to be running in the, at least some of the community areas should have power. There should be pockets of power. It shouldn't be completely out, regardless of the BS that they say, because they actually have emergency equipment for this type of situation that is sitting in the yards doing absolutely nothing because nobody will lift a pin to check it out. One parallel that by the way hey Mark they've all got diesel trains going through the city those diesels are electric trains they are electric generators powering the DC motor driving the deep driving the diesel engine and that can be plugged into cities they're all built to take that tap they can park three or four diesels down there and fire a path of Houston yep This is all part of the interstate defense network support technology that was established going all the way back through the 50s. And the fact of the matter is that we have a serfiet of trains right now. We haven't, although who knows if we've stolen, they may have even ripped the rolling stock and sent it to the Chinese, some of it. but we have the we have the hardware fact remember a few years ago we were covering those when they had that hiccup because of the chinese and they were remember when they were stashing cars and engines all over the place because they didn't have anywhere to put them remember there there's pictures that i've got stored here they had like five six hundred uh... rope pieces of rolling stock and about two dozen engines parked in a town that had one had like five sightings side by side by side but they never used it and all of a sudden the community was like cut in half because when they rolled all the stock in they didn't uncouple the cars to allow for the intersections you know the road crossings and people got pissed so they start sharing what was going on well then everybody start looking around and these pieces of equipment were everywhere now since then who knows how much has either been ripped off or stolen uh... well ripped out of the country and take into the chinese because that's most likely you know characters stand up with it Or who knows, maybe the stink and the rat and rat screw Israelis are just as bad. But it's the idea that those engines were in excess, exactly what you're talking about. So they would be another rolling motor pack. Can I make one little comment? It's just off the wall that it crossed my mind. Isn't it amazing that this horrible thing happened to the largest Republican state in the country? No more of a comment over it. Yep. Oh yeah. No, I don't think that's... Well, Texas, you know what I'm... That's another problem we've got. Texas has got a whole lot of California caters that have moved into it, and that's where the problem is. But Dallas Fort Worth has always been screwed at. Right, but it's worse now and again Houston's got faggots, Dallas has got the faggots in charge. Oh god yes. Where are they from? They're all queers of $3 bill of pieces of trash from where? California. Now that's one of the problems we've got here. It's resounding through the whole of the nation. Number one, we should put a fence around that place and keep them in. Some of you guys would need to escape before that happens that are listening. but the bottom line is Denver. Yeah, a whole bunch of them have. Yeah, they've got, well, Denver's in the same boat. In fact, you know what, if you go to, it's like I said, I thought this was rather comical. If you go to, right now, they keep reposting, and I'm looking at it right now, best ways to drive across the country. And it's a little comic map like you see in the back of the cereal box, but what does it show? Oh, let's see, the only city's listed. Not all Americans slash non-communist cities. Well, let's look at the list here. Los Angeles, Seattle, Denver, Chicago, New York, Washington, D.C. That's it! No others are listed. Well, there is a little thing that does show you the St. Louis, you know, arch. But otherwise, well, let's see. Seattle, cesspool, Los Angeles, cesspool, Denver, cesspool, Washington, D.C., cesspool, New York, cesspool, Chicago, cesspool. The only missing are the sub-cesspools. which again unfortunately is Dallas and Houston where the faggots in fact come on you got dikes we got you got the got a male who thinks it's a female a female thinks it's a male in Houston in charge so you got queers of three-dollar bill turds in the middle was supposed to be a conservative state what's wrong with that picture in Michigan oh we're all wait like I said we got we've got they're all lesbians we have the lesbian pack in charge of Michigan right now but the other queers are riding with them Queer males that think they're female are riding with them, but we have nothing. In fact, like I said, I think they're even the one that's the governor. I know there's all kinds of other comments about he, she, it, but I still think that's a Greta Bruce Jenner routine. Hey Mark. It's typical for all the problem points that we have, and it's not an accident that it's all coordinated where we're having these crises that in the past we've always just dealt with it. The level of incompetence is reflective of the 21st century, not the 20th century. In the 20th century, we've had far worse, and we've dealt... We never had the problem to deal with in the first place. Think about that one. You know, example, I guess... I know I heard the other voice here, but hold on. This is something I've always pointed out. You know, Galveston, Texas... Galveston, which is right down where Ed's talking about, down there in the bottom of Texas, was hit with a 19, and I could be off by a year, I think it was 1904, hurricane came in, guys, you could look from one end of Galveston to the other, it was flat as a pancake. If it wasn't off in the channel or off in the off in the Gulf, it was Flinders on the ground. Do you know it took them only one year to completely rebuild? Now we're not talking, you know, like, oh, I just got to patch some windows, or I got to put a roof on something. Guys, we're talking totally flattened, just solid. I mean, the images, it was the, I mean, come on, it's after the Civil War, plenty of photographs. Oh, now, the reason I bring this up is now looking at the modern age in the 21st century, we had Katrina. Two and a half, three years later, with far less destruction, most everything that got hit was still screwed up, just like when the event took place. The difference between the can-do attitude of an American managed system and these jackass sycophants that we have that are fumbling screwing the country up, and FEMA was in the middle of that one. The difference between, you know, everybody goes, well, everybody's so stupid about that. Guys, they didn't even have as much machinery as we have now. In 1904, it was the age of steam, it was the age of electronics, of electric, and they had gas engines and everything, but remember, different world, and it only took them one year, and Galveston was back on the map with buildings. But up until that point, I mean the industrial section, all of the downtown area, the whole blasted complex was flat. So that's the difference between, oh my god, we've never seen anything this bad, or we've seen far worse. But what's amazing is just exactly how people had brains enough to pull themselves up on their own bootstraps, because nobody else was going to do it. Right now, the other problem we've got is everybody's waiting for somebody else to do something. And I don't care if that's for physical, real-world environment situations like everything from the power problem to the farming issue, the food, everything else, and it includes politics. Well, you know, that Trump guy's gonna, he's gonna fix everything, you know that, four years ago. Four D-E chests, man. Four D-E chests, and Hillary will be in jail any minute now. Any minute now. And four D-E chests. Those other guys are gonna do it. Shouldn't we get rid of the problem? No, no, no. There's gonna be this magic pull-it-out-of-your-ass operation that nobody knows anything about, a secret squirrel, but not a first thing to be found, that really actually is part of it. But all of a sudden it's gonna drop out of the sky, magic kit from the sky. And everything's gonna be fine. Well, how do we look? How do we look right now? This is my problem with this. Actually, there's an author, and forgive me, I can't rattle his name off right off the bat. But he made a comment years ago and it was so fitting he goes, you know those other guys? There's always those other guys. This is the excuse everybody uses. Well why don't we just sit on our ass? There'll be those other guys coming along and they're so much better than we are. I read something about them, I heard something about them. I got a rumor, there's a rumor. Those guys are the guys. Well, we're here, why don't we take care of it? No, because there's some guys coming down the road and there are old guys. Well, are those guys showing up? Anybody? Anybody see those guys showing up? You know what's showing up? We got military on the streets in Washington, D.C. with guns. They have checkpoints. The only ones that could possibly be there are people with a leftist-slash-communist mind because the leftist-communist-slash-neo-con-globalist FBI vetted them. And all the rest of what we're seeing here is because of the same clique doing this to our country. I say get rid of them. Let's take care of the math on this. Let's get rid of them because they're not doing us any good. Every aspect of what we're talking about from California to Michigan to Texas to take your pick, it doesn't make any difference. We got the same little pack of turds and it's the same parasite or perverts over and over again and the same tribe with the same kind of name. Bloomberg, Feinstein. mmm or mad mmm bob why is it that those names they are they must be pakistani or something i said they're all the same click it's not an accident with the the the power issue with with no it's not just texas although again you know that this is something where if you look at the the topography of the of the united states we get that many cold all the time and we don't die appear i mean you know seriously i get part of it does help that we are always experiencing it but you know what Guys, that corridor from the, I said this yesterday, the last couple days, just go look at the map. There is a big thing, it's the Great Plains. It really does start up in Canada. And it's a chute, it is a tunnel. With the Mississippi is the natural weather barrier on one side. The Rockies are on the other. And if you look at even the weather maps, which you've been seeing here, yeah, the outside peripheries, we got it too. Got some of it, but it came right down the chute. The way traditionally and normally it would. So there is nothing, any aspect of this, that shouldn't have already been thought through. Example, as they said the other day, okay, weatherization kits for the turbines. Just for the fan systems. whether they all froze up or not. Let's go by the, let's always go by the official story. Who are you going to fire who didn't, they didn't set up or establish the weatherization kits and somebody better lose their job and somebody better be looking all kicking rocks out on the street. Okay. They should be gone. but you're not going to hear anything about that because you have the committee of monkeys thing i told you born about years ago so at the university michigan south business school you have them it's the model for all these committee of monkey crews out there which means that noviete that these assets can fumbles growth left and right just like they're doing and nobody is ever punished nobody is ever held accountable for lack of performance if that power grid is a problem there is a person and a candidate people who had to make the decision here's the thing if they thought the committee of monkeys was going to save them my attitude is this every son of a bitch it's on that committee all needs to be arrested and they all need to be right now locked down and if one of them wants to break and tell you which one it was it was actually the ringleader or the renal the ring knocker the lodge buddy the yamakol you know where from the synagogue that's fine well it's none of us we were just there's 20 of us then 20 of you are going to be arrested well comrade worker you didn't think that was going to happen did you But that's what needs to happen. It's the same with every other aspect of what's been going on here. The only thing that they count on with most of this is, well, hell, they did kill some people here with this garbage. by hook, crook, or in, you know, in tenor accident, they killed some people already that are frozen to death in a situation where we actually are still pretty wealthy country. There's no excuse for this to have happened except that we have socialists, and we have patty waste, and we have piss-woolie queers of three-dollar bill, purple-haired jackasses, who don't know how to do the job, but were given the job because they're purple-haired queer jackasses. not because they knew how to use the job. What have we talked about forever on this program? I know personally hundreds of different events with people I've known here near Commie Ann Arbor. And it's the same routine. They want, well we gotta hire a black person. Why? Because they're black. Okay, well there's plenty of black qualify. Oh no, no, no. We gotta hire this person. We gotta take, send them to school. They don't even know how to type. They're gonna be a computer operator, a manager on top, everything else. But you're gonna hire the black. Who's totally unqualified and by the way has never had a job. And I'm not exaggerating on this. This is stuff we've seen for decades. And what I've seen is my people, I know, and family members have seen this. And again, well, actually we do let the water roll off our back. We just remember that whenever they do that to you, you do it back to them in spades in a roundabout way. You just forget how to do your job from that point forward. I learned to do that with the commies. I've sunk more than a few of them. Lost their jobs for them. How? Waiting for all of them. I don't know how to do. I'm not very bright. Mark's not very bright. I don't know anything. You tell me what to do, I'll do it. But otherwise, I have no initiative. I have become, I can be a Soviet. I'll do it. I'll do it to one of the Soviets that thinks they're going to play the game. That's where our problem is. And Anne Rand's Atlas Shrugged, that's part of what she talks about in there. they're counting on the idea that your country and just you don't step up and fix the crap for them after they broke it and then they turn around and and take it up just take credit for it they did but they in fact they're not going to wear a gun they'll put in your face they will try to get you fired all the while not having a clue how to do what you just did and then the next time it happens you have this situation where somebody is dead Whereas every other time, all of you are expected one way or another, their logic is you will step up and you will take the abuse. Hate all the white people crap. It's right out of Atlas Shrugged. this hate all the white people kill all the white people blah blah blah blah blah so we built all this crap up we did all this stuff the way we're supposed to be done and whenever we've had some jackass you know bad mouthless or whatever you guys let that stuff roll off your back like you know duck and water and you know what where you get what you get is what we have now Again, go read the book, people. It's just, it's, it's, the author's intent is best understood by reading the book. I don't care what it is. J.R. Tolkien, Lord of the Rings. It even covers much in the same subjects here, you know, you know, you know, in a very, you know, from another perspective. The very things we're dealing with now. Here's the thing. We, we, what you, at a certain point, let's say you decide, well, my God, we gotta fix it or we're all gonna die. Well, if you're going to fix it, the first thing you do is you shoot the asshats that cause the problem so that they don't try to tell you that, well, you may have fixed it, but you know, we still have, we're voted in. Really? Now, we've all seen what happened with the fake election, so how does that a qualifier for anything anymore? Let me ask you that. Well, you can't do that because we were elected in. There was a, there's no election. You burned the, you burned the ballot boxes. But that'll that is what they will feel you've seen I mean, this is what's bizarre. I'll be honest. We have never seen such a group of insane people. Let literally are right out of George Orwell's 1984 Fahrenheit 451 brave new world and Atlas shrugged all in one slash read it the communist in their truest open sickening form as they always appear like we've seen right now. how dare you all get pithy and go to washington on the fact after a year's worth of the carby's do it and then on top of that they burn the election on top of that you got a character who's going to get more votes and blah blah blah we know the stories all about you know that but how dare you go to washington and and step up there all of a sudden it's the worst right destruction whatever and you're all all of a sudden you're all uh... wanted we'll buy the state and the enemy of your the enemy of the state and and this is insurrection but the last twelve months of the burning the country was not physically damaging, destroying, beating people down. You know what's funny? I posted a picture here. How many remember the picture of the kid with the red shirt with the MAGA hat that got chased across the whole of the, like what, a block? And he ran into a parking structure and there were a bunch of other knuckle dragging baboonuses in there, black baboonuses, and they were beating the hell out of him. And they filmed that every step of the way. Was there a cop that stepped up to help him? Was there anybody all these leftists? Okay, here's the thing all these people were all old all those commies and all those punks were all together and there was hundreds and hundreds of them Okay, do you know the difference between them say eight months ago? And what's gonna happen next is? And cause it's really already happening. That guy with the red shirt that was chased and the first thing that one spear trucker does grab the hat and the other white characters beating on him and the black guy's beating on him and everybody else joined in cause they were having fun so he runs like hell and it's like he's literally game. If anybody did this with anybody else, black, white, pink or purple, you know, there would be outrage. But this was fun. Well that's you people. And you know what? I told you before, and we see it now, which is why we shoot direct, is now the government joined in with them. So you all went to, with your MAGA hats on, and you went to Washington, D.C., and somebody got a little rowdy. By comparison to what we've seen in this country, it's a thick, sad joke. And you know what? The feds, like I told you, I told you so, I told you so, I told you so. What came out of that deal? Those stinkin' communist, bottom-feeding FBI and all these other feds are chasing after all you people with those red MAGA hats on. And they are chasing you across the country and they got their other buddy commies who've been burning down the country for the last 12 months to join right in and now they're running down the street chasing all you guys down the same way. Hey Mark. Isn't that what's happening? Because that's what's happening. Go ahead call your ship in there please. I know we think Tom is there too. Go ahead. Hey Mark I have a question for you. I have a buddy that pointed out some of Pretty good deal. What look like some training ammo. I don't know if you want to get your opinion on it. .308 plastic case. A German made .308 training ammo. White plastic bullet. Yes. It's got a metal base. I actually was talking about this in the tour of block. It's got a metal base. It has either a milk, carton, white plastic or blue plastic. and it has a rounded projectile for the bullet. Yeah, he found a plug online, let me just send me the link, cheaper than I think maybe what you guys might have found earlier, in round case for $189. Yeah, that's worthwhile. Yeah, it'll cut paper on a thousand inch range, it was a little mess for. You do that for, you can use that for indoor or outdoor training. uh... you do a twenty five yard range that the thousand-inch range and you use a thousand you know thousand-inch range target accordingly to let you know what the what papers have all the different you'll scale and range it to the papers are both target or scale accordingly to simulate all you know one hundred fifty yards one hundred yards you know was it two fifty three fifty and all the way up to seven fifty depending on which paper you have That's good ammunition. It would work fine if you're looking for something so you can train people with a rifle and not burn up your ball ammo for the price. $100 for a thousand rounds? It's $189 per thousand. So, well, still, that's a little under 20 cents for an actual live fire round you can pull the trigger on. Yes, going non-script German milser made from the 90s. Yep, it's good. It works. so yeah it's worth it because we should be able to range fire if you got other people don't know the weapon this is the way you get to understand how things work and again if they do everything right it cuts paper the way it's supposed to it knocks whatever down yet it'll probably even ring steel i mean we don't think you know ponk pongal pong but it'll you'll make a phone because it is a projectile hey mark if you were going to be getting rid of uh... uh... uh... uh... uh... uh... uh... uh... uh... uh... uh... uh... uh... uh... uh... uh... uh... uh... uh... uh... uh... uh... uh... uh... uh... uh... uh... uh... uh... uh... uh... uh... uh... uh... uh... uh... uh... uh... uh... uh... uh... uh... uh... uh... uh... uh... uh... uh... uh... uh... uh... uh... uh... uh... uh... uh... uh... uh... uh... uh... uh... economic reasons and you had to parrot down between one or the other. Would you do it or go with a 26 barrel AR-15 platform chambered in 223 wild or would you go with a bolt action 22-250? And the reason I asked you this is we've done a little experimentation and a 22-250 was penetrating still lawnmower blades at around 100 yards, 80-100 yards for that 26-fans arrow AR even using the green teal 5-5, it's barely dead. At this point in time I wouldn't sell either one, but in fact I'd sell a wheel out of spare tire off a car before I get rid of a rifle right now, seriously. Well, I don't know. But if it was a choice, I mean, here's the thing. 22-250 is an excellent round. It's been around forever, been around since the 50s. There's a lot of ammunition. It used to be so common that federal, in their seasonal sale ammunition production, would do 22-250 as one of the six or seven rounds in their $7 a box ammo. And it made it a very affordable gun to shoot. 22-250, everybody made a rifle, a chain bring, Remington, Winchester, Savage, everybody. So it's a good choice. I'm sorry, go ahead. As you go say, in the ammunition, this person has stocked up, so he's got about an equal amount of ammo. So the ammo availability for him is not really issued. He's got one or two other AR platform rifles. He was just wondering, he was just wondering... Okay, well I wouldn't sell, okay, the one's a 20-inch AR, right? Yeah, one's a... I'd sell the 16-inch AR before I'd sell the 20. If he's got a 16-inch... 20? I'd dump the 16. You say he's got other ARs. I wouldn't do the 20. I'd try to keep the 20-inch and I'd try to keep the 22-250. But if he's got other ARs and they're something other than the 20-inch... The one he was thinking about still was either a 24 or a 26 inch barrel. It's a pretty long... Oh, it's a competition rig. Well, see, that's another... that's better still. See, even with the AR, my attitude is I'm not trying to get too close to anybody. I want to be... every weapon I've got, I want to hit them as far out as I can, and when they get closer, I still got more energy and penetration. But that's a personal flavor choice thing there. The .223 would be still more common. But if he got a good quantity, the bolt gun to me, if that's what he's grown up with and he worked with, ride with that. Okay? That's a tough one. Which one? If you were born grappling, you'd be able to go up the road. Yeah, he's parked. Parked him, Mark. Go ahead, we got one. Before we go, we got another person. Go ahead, jump in there. Real quick, that thing you did yesterday, was that Jason Chom? Yes, that was Cheech and Chonk. All right, find the papers. Cheech and Chonk, sign the papers, old man. Look it up, you'll find the sound right there. Part of our whole little skit, obviously one of our bigger skits that they did years ago. I'll play all of it one day this week. We're gonna get out of the way for now. Anybody else before we go? Was there any other caller waiting? Okay, God bless our Republic. We shop for Vail, ladies and gentlemen. The Empire's on the run. We are in the Marlboro, Pennsylvania.
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