Mark Koernke discussed lubricants for firearms and equipment maintenance, including Gibbs Brand lubricant and military-grade lubricate products, with extended commentary on their historical use on naval vessels. He provided detailed advice on ammunition storage in ammo cans, including maintenance, labeling, and proper handling. Koernke covered ammunition availability from Atlantic Firearms (Polish AKs) and other suppliers, emphasized ammunition prioritization strategies, and discussed the broader supply chain issues affecting ammunition and manufactured goods. The episode concluded with a separate segment by Machine Gun Randy on medical marijuana cultivation, indoor and outdoor growing techniques, pest management, and commentary on tobacco industry practices and marijuana legalization.
If you get any blunt objects together, alright? If you get corners, bash them in the head. That seems to work out. Keep together, stay sharp, and follow me. It's part of our constitution. You know, the right to bear arms is because that's the last form of defense against tyranny, not to hunt. protect yourself from the police. Anybody that wants to disarm me can drop dead. Anybody that wants to make me unarmed and helpless. People that want to literally create the proven places where more innocents are killed called gun-free zones. We're going to beat you. We're going to vote you out of office or suck on my machine gun. I had a dream the other night that, well, I didn't understand. A figure walked in through the mist with a flintlock in his hand. His clothes were torn and dirty as he stood there by my bed. He took off his three-cornered hat. And speaking low to me, he said, we've fought a revolution to secure our liberty. We wrote the Constitution as a shield from tyranny. For future generations, this legacy we gave. In this, the land of the free and home of the brave. The freedoms we secured for you, we hope you always keep. The tyrant flavored 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 the land that you believe you own, you pay a yearly rent. Although you have no voice in saying how the money's spent. Your children must attend a school that doesn't educate. and your Christian values can't be taught according to the state. You read about the current news in a regulated press and you pay a tax you do not owe to please the IRS. Your money is no longer made of silver nor of gold. You trade your wealth for paper so your life can be controlled. You pay for crimes that make our nation turn from God and shame. You've taken Satan's number and you've traded in your name. You've given government control to those who do you harm so they could burn down churches and seize the 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. readers 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 to keep the torch of freedom bright. As Iowoki vanished in the midst 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? Is this still the land? And you will come back alive. Good. Evening ladies and gentlemen, this is the evening intelligence report. I'm Mark Kirky. One day closer to victory for all of our brothers and sisters both on and behind the lines in occupied territories Southwest Northeast East. Ladies and gentlemen you were listening to us on LibertyTreeRadio.4mg.com Liberty Tree Radio on satellite. We're also on AM and FM micro stations CB base stations and UltraNet, Hallmark, and Golden Spike Technologies east and west of the Mississippi along with Alaska. Good afternoon to all of our friends. Oh and evening to all of our friends out there in Lower 49 including the great state of Jefferson along with CONUS. The outline two states territories and the clock. Needless to say you guys we out there on the left coast are three hours behind us. Still afternoon out there. Yeah heading over into although that's right over the Hawaiian Islands it's even earlier. I'll say hi to you guys out there. I know we do have a number of listeners in Hawaii. We got to get you off the islands and back over here on the continent. That's just enemy held territory waiting to be occupied by the Soviets the rest of the way. But, now do what you can. If you're making money, make the money you can, but pile it up, get it off the island, and get back over to the continent. And it is 7.06 PM Eastern Standard Time. It is the 4th of March. It is Thursday. And Thursday almost over as a matter of fact. It is the 13th year of open Fabian Socialist and Soviet Socialist Occupation of America with a K 2021. Old Earth Calendar 2021 Battle for the Republic. Dance of Swords, congratulations. Footwork, shield and the sword or blade. You might be using the battle axe, hacking and chopping rules, but whatever it is, hey, stick with it. Master the trade, get on with victory. And we are, of course, here Thursday. A couple things. Again, one more time, because we have different periods. People here listen at different times. Gibbs, I mentioned Gibbs yesterday. The site is up. We checked that during the two-hour block. www.gibbsbrand. Now, the Gibbs brand is all in uppercase. So it's lowercase 666, oh I'm sorry, www.gibsbrand.com. And they do offer in the both the spray slash aerosol can and they do offer in just liquid form. So you can use it whichever format you choose and there's a couple other options and as you'll notice they kind of use for the motif both automotive and armaments and other things. Somebody had asked me before about using this with fishing gear and it won't be a problem. It's actually great for working with micro equipment like that where you want to keep little pieces of metal from being stuck together too much, so to speak. You know, remember there's wood moisture and the China Sport stuff doesn't really... Yeah, it's not as chromed up or stainless up as it should be. Typically it's like this, a mild chrome, barely blowing on the metal. So, yeah, it's really good to have this stuff in there where it permeates any of the working parts. Although I would use it very sparingly for obvious reasons because you don't want any cross-contaminate anymore. You want to watch what it is that gets on your fishing line, the common sense. But if you do maintenance on your fishing reels, the way you do maintenance on your weapon, you're going to follow instructions, pay attention, and do the right thing. Where little joints are, where little pivot points are, that's where you apply the lubricant. Now, you can also, again, take a cotton swab, put some of this gibs on it, and you wipe all of the ribs, bars, the retainer, like on the open-face flies, that kind of thing. The open-face rod, you know, reels, forgive me, not rods. And, yeah, it also is not a bad thing to actually touch up all of the islets if you're using the metal islets on your fishing poles, and most of them are. Remember, it's just another way to add a little more protection to keep all that stuff from oxidizing into oblivion, okay? And that's Gibbs, G-I-B-B-S. And the page is www.GibsBrand.com. G-I-B-B-S. Brand. Hey, Mark. Whoa, go ahead, Collie. And Starzak, you had mentioned luber plate as an item that was military for the weapons and stuff. The first time and only time I had ever heard of luber plate before, you mentioned it. It used to come in little metal tubes and my dad used to use it for the deep sea fishing reels that we had. Oh, that makes sense. We lived down the east coast and we used to do fishing out there. It used to squeeze out. Is that the same item? Because it, if I remember, it was like oily and it was white. That's what we were talking about. There's different, yeah, it's still the same solution, but if they made it in the projectable form, in other words, more like it's kind of It's not tacky like the base lubar plate, which is more in a grease form like Vaseline. The stuff that you were probably a little more liquefied. There are different ways that they stabilized it, but remember that's what I was talking about with colorization. It was based on, again, representing the polymer bases. They wanted to be able to identify the different lubricants, and the color code that came up with the military was red. But not for only a certain period of time. If you get any of the pots, and some of you guys that are listening have a bunch of M14s, they used to come in these little 144-count pots. They're a gross. And they were in plain cardboard boxes that were square, like a chintzy cigar box. and they were nested, they had their own little dividers like you would for any of the little cans or bottles back in the day, but they were only this diameter of the hole that is drilled into the channel for your cleaning kit, all the other stuff in the back here, your rifle, your buttstock. And lubricate, now that's a good point. Now, how many people have seen the pictures of the Yorktown where they went deep diving on it? Have you seen those? I know you've seen those probably, everybody has. Didn't something jump out at you when you saw those? Did you notice how the gun service areas didn't even have barnacles on them? Anybody? Go look at it. If you don't know what I'm talking about, maybe you just saw them and go, wow, that's really cool. The one thing that jumped out at me when I saw every one of those videos with, and this is on American ships, you'll notice if you see the Bismarck or the others, and they went down, the Bismarck went down a little earlier by totally a short time, but they've all been underwater about the same time. Interestingly enough, it's a testimony to some of the badass lubricants that the military came up with and the lubricate was part of the maintenance system for those 40mm quad guns and those twin 40s that you see. Except, they're down in the ocean and everything else around them has got like either a build up of small barnacles or, you know, little sea growths growing off it. But if you'll pay attention, look where all the lubricant parts are where you see the recoil points. You'll notice there's nothing. growing on them. And not only that, they're not rusted. Now, you ask yourself, wow, how does that work? That means that whatever the hell they used, I know what they used, but because there's a couple other naval jelly lubricants that were used on the quad guns. My dad was on a quad gun. And I always, when I see stuff underwater, it's always fascinating for all of you, I'm sure it is. Look at the Titanic. There was stuff growing all over the place. Or it's all rusted to hell. I mean, when they came along with the little fans on the little submarine, they were kicking stuff, you know, iron oxide off of the stalactites and the hangars that were all over the place. Well, what's interesting, if you look at the Yorktown, you look at the wreckage of several of the other American ships that they've gone to, You'll notice it on those quad guns and it's pretty consistent on the 20 millimeter guns also if they're still attached. You see all these like a little barnacle growth going off one piece of wood and then you'll notice it but the rest of the gun where all the working, where all the trailing parts are where everything had to move, there's not anything growing on them but what really jumped out at me is there's no rust on them. Now let's remember again, that's salt water. That's not fresh water. And it's amazing to me. So I know what part of it was. Lubricate was used as part of the process, the maintenance process, but they had two or three other naval lubricants that were from the industrial end again, but they were made for naval use. And they worked, if nothing else, somebody needs to do a full, I've never done a biopsy on this, because it'd be fascinating to find out what were they using, because whatever the hell they're using, I would be using right now. It lasted 70 plus years underwater. Underwater in salt water. Yeah, think about that. The first time I saw that, it's like, wow, it's not what's there, it's what's missing. So go take a look. You'll see that I'm talking about this in really beautiful videos and all kinds of stills. And of course, we always have that one that's iconic, because you don't have a picture, like I said, there'll be just one growth coming off of one part, and it's a big long, you know, red thing or an orange thing, and it's really pretty, and you know, you know, living things on the weapons of war, blah, blah, blah, blah, blah. But otherwise, it's the stuff that's not growing that really makes me fascinated, and the stuff that also didn't rust. Now, there's all kinds of other parts of that ship that did, because you've got a comparative study. Look at the guns, look at the hull. Look at the hatches, look at the access ways. Now another interesting thing about that, whatever we had, if you look at the hinges on the doors on many of those service ships, they didn't go like they did on the Titanic or the Bismarck or the Yamato. I don't think they've been to the Yamato. Oh yeah, I think they have. They've been to the Yamato. It's the Musashi they haven't found yet. But anyway, this case in point, these lubricants, some of them are very unique. They're probably so good that that's why they made them disappear. Because if you think about it, if that would work, okay, let me put it this way. You guys are talking about cashing firearms, right? What would be a real good lubricant that you know works for 70 years underwater? So which means if you lubricate a weapon and mummify it and put it in a tube, if it would last 70 years, unrusted in salt water, how long would that mummified weapon, that pistol or rifle or shotgun last, just in an airtight tube? Oh wow. That's what fascinates me, because I want that. I'd love to know exactly which formulas and what were used with each combination weapon because it's not just one system. Remember I mentioned this before. You have paste lubricants and you got to remember too that that gun was above the surface obviously but it was in ocean spray all the time. Now think about that. Now even some of the parts still oxidize. Certainly the wood, there's not much you can do about the wood. I've mentioned this many times in saltwater. There's a couple of different worm borers. It doesn't make any difference what the wood is saturated with. They love that wood product when it gets below the waves. So that is almost always one of the things that's gone. A best example of that is if you look at some of the diving that they've done in the Atlantic. How many remember the picture of the crate of Thompson, M1 Thompson's? In fact, one of them is a crate of, I think, their Model 1928 Thompson's, and they're still sitting in the metal racks, and the frame is there, and the steel parts are there, but all of the wood parts are, you know, gone. But they're complete otherwise. And if, because they're deep, they haven't completely oxidized yet, so obviously they had a storage grease on them. but they're oxidizing. They're not as good a condition as those 40 millimeter guns which originally were out in the open and above the waves and then went below the waves and have been resting there for so long. So they're comparative studies. It's fascinating. Anyway, it's also, hey guys, that's the stuff I want. Gibbs is really good, but it's an indoor product. We talk about Gibbs. Luber plate on the other hand, I don't know what's out there. Now there's another thing that, that's another, yeah, see, brain box, brain pan. I'm over in the lumber yard, over by the trim board now. One of the other considerations is that luber plate that you were using that was white might have had a lead additive. Ooh, you know what? I hadn't thought about that. Because in the industry, I mentioned this many times, I have quite a few cans. I've got quite a few one, you know, like quarter pint cans of liquid lead, white paste lead, guys, for, and it was used for lubricant for certain fixtures, and it was also used for certain types of grinding. If you want to do cutting, And so you might have some of this. If you ever see it, grab it, put it away off to the side. Can you make it disappear? Oh my God, it's lead, it's a contaminant. Ah, shut up. But most important is it's priceless because there are so many different industrial applications and we would only use a very fine amount. But what's interesting, remember, lead was a very common and very dominant lubricant And like you were just saying back in the day, especially again with the fish line, fishing reels and such, what's nice about that is when it's bonded with a petroleum paste, it does a really good job of sticking in, getting into the skeletal structure of the metal, getting into the crystalline structure of the metal. and it stays there. And that lead, unless it supercharges or heats, it's not going to sloth off and it's co-bonded with the petroleum product that's used to create the tackiness. And so the stuff is all emulsified. I don't know what the procedure is for that. It's part of again, Cracking Plant 502. And I'm only basic understanding about probably Cracking Plant 201. So as far as higher end lubricants that were relatively sophisticated, Another thing to remember is even luber plate when we talk about you know the value of a of a you know barrel of oil okay understand that where they make their money is on the stuff we're talking about gasoline kerosene naphthalene all that stuff that they pull off the top end of the barrel that's all trash you pay a big chunk of money for you don't pay much when you consider but guys that is nothing but profit for the oil companies What they're what they're working towards and why they need to get all those eens off of that barrel of oil is for the kinds of lubricants that we're talking about To get to those points with the higher refined now like with the let's say Gibbs I don't know if it's I think it does have some It does have some metallics in it. I just don't know which which But no matter what again most of it is a pol product it has to be But an example is this is a very high penetrant, very fine, fine product. With the higher end EANS, you're looking first of all at getting rid of all the combustibles that create booms. Gasoline, again, kerosene. Kerosene is a lower burner, but these are all things you can't work with when you're trying to crack into all of the lubricants which are a more stable product. And then, remember, in a barrel of oil, for instance, this is part of what you need to be knowing about. We used to teach people this in school. I got the tail end of it, and I had to work on the rest myself, but... What you have is a sliding scale on that barrel of oil where you can pull a certain amount of product by going up and down the scale and crack so much of it for one product and so much for another or logic would be that for however many barrels of oil you've got there, you're going to crack it into the higher range of say a precision cutting oil and that's going to be the priority for the dominant share of what you can process to a particular refined level. There's a scale. Think about like, you know, whatever, whatever you choose, it's like dialing on a radio. Within a certain bandwidth of processing, you get these products. If you choose to slide up here, you're not going to get the other products that are on the selector switch. You're only going to get what we dial up. But you make $50, $60 a quart or $100 a quart on that material. Now how many quarts are there in a gallon? Now granted when you're cracking oil, remember that your volumes are going to go down. You're not going to get 40 gallons worth of whatever because out of that 40 gallons you first had to pull however much volume there was of the eams that are combustible. Then, once you get into process level, like what, three, then you have all of these other products that are part of the selector switch. And then you have a little bit of waste or a little bit of what maybe, let's look at it like maybe the cream, which is the stuff where you're looking at two, $300 for a pint of the product. And remember, that's where, like I've said for years, that's where they make their money. Let me ask you something. Go talk to an air mechanic. Aviation lubricants, some of them they don't even touch. The device or the instrument, the material, the fixture is actually fully sealed and you don't introduce or change anything within that fixture. And the material that's in there, well ask yourself this, what's the average RPM for the engine under your hood that's running down the road right now, maybe while you're going home from work? Are you doing about 2300 RPM? What do you think the revolutions per minute is for a jet engine? Just think about that. Now what do you think the calorie, what do you think kind of burn you're looking at? What is the calorie buildup, the caloric buildup with the different working parts? And again, remember they're titanium, they can handle it, okay, but you see, each of these applications, in order to get there, you had to have the lubricants to catch up with that really cool technology you built. Now granted some of these, for instance, well we've talked about paste lubricants, many of them, that's why you have to have startup time, start out in a more viscous form and then as they heat up and they know the parts going to heat up, they have a run time to supercharge everything so that they're at running temperatures. Not only are they at running temperatures but now the viscosity of the material is where it's supposed to be so that it will uniformly coat and lubricate the component. So there again, good point. Now you bring that up because you see that could be, you know what, I've never looked at that, but it could be that they because again, lead was a very, it's still out there. Just don't, they don't talk about it because there's some places they just can't take the application away. Let me give you another example of what all you could relate to. Did any of you guys have cars that ran on leaded gas? Well, guys, what was the purpose of the leaded gas? What did the lead do in your gasoline? Lubricated the top end, the valve stems. No way! No, we couldn't be using Glen Brady any useful purpose like that, could we? It was supposed to help document values. Well, it does a couple different things, but what he brought up first is the priority. The most important thing is a lubricant. In fact, when they were originally, when fuel was originally leaded, okay? How much lead do you think they put in there for gallon? Okay, hold on, I'm gonna, hold on, stop, I can tell you right now. Listen. I tell you. You stop. Okay. Keep going, keep going, keep going, keep going. Traditionally, traditionally, they didn't lead it at the refinery, did they? Originally, when they leaded fuel, gasoline, it came as white gas from the plant. The old fuel drivers used to have a cigar box which was a mixed box and inside it you had sugar cube sized little packets of powdered lead, oxidized lead and highly refined lead. And on the top of the box when you opened it up you stick the tank, pull the stick out. When you calculate how much fuel you're going to drop from the truck You took however many cubes were on the chart, you dropped the powdered cubes in, and when you dumped the fuel, you did the lead mix. That's how originally fuel was leaded. It wasn't coming from the cracking plant. It became a convenience because this was something less to burden the drivers because what happened, as we recall, remember with the EPA coming into play, they had to minimize the handling of the fuel because of environmental protection issues with the handlers of both the lead, because that was an issue separate unto itself, and they didn't want the operators to have any more cross-contamination than was absolutely necessary. while pumping the fuel. And they wanted the fuel system sealed so that they wouldn't have vaporization going into the environment. So they had a bleed off fuel system that pulls and shoves the vapor back into the tank. Originally, the oil, all the een products like that came as raw een products from the cracking plant. And so white gas basically is what you were getting or unleaded fuel, which is what you were buying later and they were charging us more for. Even though they were doing less to the fuel, they were charging us more for the fuel, which is what happened later. So there are a number of reasons. Yes, it will improve performance, but only because what's happening is in the process of atomization of the material while it's working through the system, it's drawn not just through the intakes and through the combustion chamber, but it actually permeates the whole system and it's kind of like a miasmic process of transfer of the lubricant. So whatever is excess is pulled as it would normally as everything is back in through the venturi's and all of the other bleed points and it gets sucked right back into the engine and reused yet again. It's actually a self-consuming process with the original and kind of it's kind of like a Istanbul with self-cleaning rifles. Everything has more than one purpose. Everything serves more than one purpose. In fact, that's one of the advantages is where, wow, I get this benefit and I get this benefit. And then why we built it, we made it work and we found out, wow, hot darn, there's four other things we got out of this deal. But again, the point is that lead has been out there and been successfully used. It's just been pulled from the environment where you can mostly publicly see it. Example, as we talked about with paint, lead in paint, all the other fun stuff. We're gonna go to break, bottom of the hour. And for everybody out there, guys, Liberty Tree Radio and Roomba's Awards. on Liberty Tree Radio, Al Stewart, and from the album Rumors of War, title track Rumors of War, and part of a big scheme of things, as we can see right now. Hey, pretty much all the words of that song apply to where you are right now. Isn't that fascinating? They're stirring the pot. Shake in the bush, boss. Shake in the bush. So, anyway, callers, anybody jump in there, anybody else? It's got to be, we're back from break. We have another 25 minutes left of the hour here. Let me- Hey, Matt, I've got a spike from Atlantic Firearms today. Oh, go ahead. We've got Polish AKs in. Rain them. Hurry to make them. Get them all you can. 1100 Atlantic Firearms. Polish AKs. Right, but are they Polish AKs? I'm just wondering if they said they were radim arms. Yes, yes they were. And $1,129 is the price of a little right click, Bob. Well, you're supposed to say only when you do that. Not me. Here's the question. I got my AC for the same price as a 20 inch barrel. Yeah. Well, here's the question. Is that a century Polish AK or does it say century or is it a Polish if it's actually a Polish gun it is top of the line. It's a Polish radon. Yeah, if that's the case and it's one of their product guns between the Bulgarian or Polish mags and that rifle you've got pretty well as good as you could get today for an AK. And you've got to remember, Poles are arming up. They've got two different production issues going on. But Poland has been building up militias and supporting private militias quite extensively. If you haven't seen any of this, go look it up. And what's interesting is that's why the Polish stuff dropped off. Remember how I mentioned, guys, buy this Polish gear while you can? Well, guess what? They aren't giving away anymore. Why? Because they're building militias right now. And if you look at some of those videos, you'll recognize all the equipment I pointed at that was over here for a little bit and dried up. I got a handful of them. I think I got 12 of the tactical armor that had the full-throat armor, it had the shoulder armor, it was in that brown range that looks like the older style Vietnam reversible side, the brown side of the standard US helmet cover, forgive me. And the thing is that that's completely self-contained. All the pouches, grenade pockets, everything's on board. Well, if you watch some of these videos where they're organizing the Polish militia right now, guess what? You'll see them starting to issue out. Now, the other interesting thing about this is, remember, the Poles have had 7.62x39, 5.45, and because of this NATO garbage where they're sadly foolish enough to get into that fiasco, they have 2.23. So, what's interesting is they are issuing out the old inventory of weapons, which is why you'll recognize many of the weapons too immediately. And whether or not they've made a new production run of 7.62x39 guns, I don't know if they need to, but that would be a good overlap, because they are cranking out stuff left and right to gear up for what they see coming. And, interesting, you'll see on the web gear, the clothing, the equipment, the groin armor, all of it's there. The armored underpants, the Polish ones, they're only available for what, about a month? Everybody bought them up and they were gone. They never came back and I talked to the importer. He said, you, you ain't getting no more. Because I've dealt with that company for 40 years. And what they got is all they got. So, again, The rifles are active. Poland does not make junk. If it's actually made by the Poles, and if it was a kit, where you don't think it's a century with the receiver and putting it together, but if it's Polish, I would rate that as top of the line. I would say that parallel that with a Velme. And Poland is no country to sneeze at when it comes to manufacturing even after the Cold War, even during the Cold War. The Cold War, they just chugged along. with all the problems they had, but they kept their skill levels at a premium as far as being able to get manufacturing out there. Poland made competitive armor and competitive weapon systems against other countries in the Warsaw Pact, including Russia. You'll see a whole family of Polish armored vehicles still out there hanging around in the third world countries or even In the Middle East that they were built to compete against the BTR 60 BTR 70 and you know, etc BMP So that would be this it's average price now. I hate to say it Well, it's middle price. It's middle price for what is a good decent grade of weapon now If anybody's had got one and they can say otherwise and they're dissatisfied with their Polish AK. Let us know But everybody that I know has picked up any of the rest of the equipment, we remember we had that really good deal on Polish mags here, oh what, about a year and a half, two years ago? And there ain't none of those around no more, not for the price we were getting them. Another thing here real quick, on that note is keep an eye on Atlantic. Now, they have been getting 7.62x39 in stripper clips, and they've had three pulses of it so far. If you're looking at a video about the latest stuff we got, you're probably too late. But I would still keep an eye on Atlantic and go spot check them because when they get it in, they've been doing about 450,000 to 500,000 rounds at a time and they sell out a day or two. Usually it's about a day. So if you're looking for SKS ammo in stripper clips, European production, the best you're going to get, Then that's the place to watch right now. Everybody's got their niche. Everybody has something they got a connection for. That apparently is what they have a connection to from whatever import, you know, wherever they're coming from overseas. Most of it has, well, what is it, I think Bulgarian and they've had Polish. So whichever hits, I'd be happy with either one, especially since it's in stripper clips. And we have tons and tons and tons of SKS's out there. So you're not going to lose a penny. And yet now I'm going to shift directions again. Thank goodness the Lumberyard is bouncing around. Another thing, guys, if you bought 556 ammo in those saw cans, and I know a lot of you did, please don't get rid of those. They usually come in their own little hanger. I know some of you haven't even done anything with them yet. Here's how you need to use your ammunition. Those saw cans are going to be priceless when we take those saws from the warm dead corpses of our enemy. Now rather than having to scavenge links, which I will still do, I'm going to grab every link I find laying on the ground and I see it laying there and I got time to pick my nose. I got time to pick up those links. But the fact is that if it's already loaded up, guys, that's the last ammo you use. Right now if you've got box, 20 round boxes ammo, you got loose bags ammo, use the loose bags first. Keep the boxes for number two. Use the saw ammo last. and preferably by the time you were using that first few thousand rounds you had, you probably captured a saw gun and you're gonna go, oh, I got some cans for those, I got some hangers. And they're priceless. Example, the latest stuff that we just checked on, actually stuff I forgot about, all AP with, you know, green tip with, which is, you know, tiny toy, AP. with a tracer and standard saw links ready to go. We don't want to burn that up. We don't want to delink it if we can help, but that's just making it work where you don't need to. So like I said, prioritize. If you bought any of that bag stuff, use the bag stuff first, the loose stuff, that'll get that re-inventored. All of it should be in cans right now. Everything you got, try to get it into cans. We just ran into this looking at Harbor Freight, tractor supply. They just had a bunch of sales on them here just a little while ago, but unfortunately everybody took it seriously. The steel cans are pretty much gone in our area, and so are most of the plastic ones from Harbor Freight. But they are a good carrier system, and they are a way to keep track of things. The big thing to remember, what I do is, for instance, all of the 5.56, 9 milliliter, I don't care what it is. If I've got that loose ammunition and I got it in the can, it's going into the Ziploc bags, count it out, and do whatever bag you want, take your pick, whatever you think will be manageable. You can do the snack bags from the Dollar Tree and put 30 rounds in almost 30 rounds. You've got to watch that one. But depending on which bag it is, you can stack in there carefully and get a magazine worth in a pouch, which is kind of a good thing. Because you don't have to pull 100 rounds out and then only use, say, enough to fill one mag and you've opened everything up. Any time you can make it so that you just, you open what you need, that's going to keep everything else weatherized under any bad condition you're ready that you might run into and you'll probably experience. and it's gonna be a real issue. I can't emphasize enough, you know how many ammo cans by the palette I have bought? I learned this a long time ago. You go to the gun show, let's do this. You go to the gun show when I was younger, man, that's a great looking, oh, that's a beautiful can. The paint isn't dinged, it looks fantastic. It's a used can, but man, that's the prettiest can in the pile. And I didn't open it up. And I grabbed three or four cans. I got lucky. Because the prettiest one on the outside it had a beautiful paint job But unfortunately wherever it had been opened it had been raining and when I opened that rust bucket on the inside It looked like the bottom end of a muffler from Michigan after five years on the car Okay, and there was no fixing it. I mean I was the only thing I do with a can like that I won't throw it away, but you get you hose it out to get all the chunks out, tap on it with a little rubber hammer to knock them or the rust off, get the brush out, scrape the thing off with the paintbrush, the wire brush, and then just goop the whole inside with paint just to cover it up and use it for a toolbox. Use it for a rough toolbox. That's it. So you always want to check the inside of the cans if you're going out and buying used. Some of the ones that aren't as pretty on the outside look a hell of a lot better than the other ones on the inside. That's a basic rule. But the thing is that what you're buying at the store is the one good thing. They're virgin, unissued cans. They were something that was produced by whoever made them. China, India, some of them even are from England if you've been paying attention. And they're consistently running a little or under or above on sale about $7. We got some for $6.50 today. I've been watching for these, but every place I went was mostly sold out. They said, oh yeah, we had shelves full, all wall was full. Everybody came in and cleaned them all out. So whatever you find, a sportsman's guide, I'm not saying they're all gone or anything, but really anytime there's a deal, everybody's taken advantage of it. If you're going to use stuff though, you don't need to worry too much about sportsman's guide or the other places, because they know to check their product. They don't want you to return anything. But if you are buying at a yard and you're going, well, they all look really great, you always open each can and you look inside and pay attention. The other thing there, always watch for the rubber seal on the can because if they close too easy, the chances are that grommet, that big rectangular grommet's been pulled out. It happens. It's just, you never know. I mean, come on, it's surplus, guys. And it's not only that, it's perishable surplus. This is stuff that was supposed to be chucked, and they did. Okay. Another- I've got some caries marked on my back porch that have been out there for about six or seven years. There's something in them, they're heavy as hell. I can't get them open. I'm low at this point to pry them open with a crowbar, but I'm almost at that point. A flat board, a flat paddle crowbar is probably what you want to use. You know, I like a used nail bar, you know, a little flat nail bar. Yeah, I understand. I have my son on one handle and me on the other. We're both leaning back and it wouldn't come open. Well, you know, that's the thing. The stuff, it'll take a set and needless to say, thank you for bringing that up. Yes. Oh, see? When you talk about things, well, you can do that. But one of the other half of the problem is, or the other half of the problem that may exist. is remember those are metal on metal hinges. So, and remember guys, the lid comes off so that you can mount it on, you know, what you have is you cover it for weather, but if you're on a mount, on a gun, remember the can is the holder, you take the lid off and slide it off and, you know, you got just the bucket. Whenever possible, yes, you need to do that. You need to pull the lid off, lubricate the little shaft, take a Q-tip, You can use Vaseline, but it doesn't have to be anything very fancy. But what you want to do is lubricate, get a Q-tip into those channels and lubricate the channel internally. Don't count on the idea that if you put goop on the post, it's going to go through and lay where it's supposed to. Do proper maintenance on them. That's something that's a good point because they remember they're used. They have been sitting somewhere. And now what they're doing now, for those of you who aren't familiar, if you go over here, do this. go over to ironplanet.com, go over to Military Surplus, usually I think the icon is the hubby, okay? When you go there, go look for ammo cans. They do really good photo essays of what's available. You will notice that the way they're storing the cans now is that they're taking the lids off and they're stacking the cans open and they are putting the lids either on the top or they're stacking them on the sides and they're binding them together. They're using steel binder cable. You know, flat binder cable. And so they're open to the weather. Well, if you'll notice, they're not putting them inside. Down in Texas, they're out in the breeze and you can see exactly what you're getting and where they're coming from. They got the dust of Texas all over them. With that being the case, remember, that means that that little post isn't in there to seal up that channel. So you would behoove you if you're getting them like that. And again, you got to assume, like we just said, that's how they're storing them. The guy that gets them usually puts them together, and that's how he's marketing them. So you want to take the lid off and lubricate in those little channels and also do the post the same way. And Vaseline will probably be enough, but if you want to use a light lubricant of some kind, or automotive grease would be fine. You're just going to take a Q-tip and swab inside each one of those, just like you're doing a gun barrel. And you'll see what I'm talking about when you take the lid, open it up, you can just tap it sideways after you get the lid completely opened up, tap her sideways and it'll slide right off. And that'll settle that problem real quick. Because it's that hinge that's locking up. It's typically not the spring carrier on the other side that holds the dog that locks it down. But if you want to, go ahead and grease that one also because it wouldn't hurt. Because that's even potter metal than the hinge on the other end. Remember, it is a perishable disposable item. Even though it's well made, it is still a perishable disposable item. So they minimize. I've even considered the fact that it might be the hinge. I just thought that the top surface of the bucket was stuck into the gasket. It just formed itself in there. Which does not go too. Yeah, what you can do is take, use some, now you can use penetrant oil on that hinge because it's not going to get inside, but just wipe it down when you don't lay it around. But you might want to try that and then tap it with a brass mallet or with a ball peen. It what any hammer will do. Just give us some context. I don't know if it's done. I didn't do what Mark Quunky says and label the outside of it. So I don't know if it has tools or drill bits or ammo inside of it. Oh, that's what I found. Oh, that's where the fissionable devices went, right? I wonder where those two fissionable devices went that we picked up. Yeah, you know. Well, and again, that's the other thing. I've been spending a lot of time doing that, which I, again, we've talked about this. Label the top, label the sides. Do one front area that's going to typically, how you store a can typically is your hanger, forgive me, your dog side is out. And that way when you're handling stuff, if it's on the ready racks, you can actually pop it open and confirm what's inside without pulling it off the rack. So what you do is you should have a label on that side underneath the dog on the narrow flat surface there. If you've got raised letters, you'll find a couple different ways the old cans are set up. Some of them have a cartridge, have a stamped silhouette of a cartridge identifying what's in the can. Because originally, remember, those 30 caliber cans carried more than ammunition. They carried other munitions. And the same with the 50-cal. So what they used to do is stamp a cartridge for the ones that came from the cartridge plant. So at night, if your eyes were closed and you were pulling stuff off the truck, guys, remember, they thought about the idea that you're in darkness. You could feel the bottom of the can and ID the cartridge and know, yeah, that's 30-caliber ammo. On the other hand, they put the ordinance marker or they put a dot system in place, kind of like Braille. for other ordnance which could be for instance blasting caps They didn't do grenades now while they did some grenades in the 30 cal cans But they were that was very rare by comparison the bigger can the 50 caliber was typically what they used for the grenade bodies But that's one of many ways that we transported go ahead Yeah about that ammo can have to get it open and I'd suggest well like Mark said, spraying the hinge area with finisher or WD-40 or something, let us sit for a while, or even break free, which would work usually with quite well on end engines. After you get it open to lubricate that gasket, do the same thing we do when we put oil filters on an engine. Rub it down with a fan coat of used engine oil. That's got carbon in it from the from running it and it usually works very well to prevent Resticking that's right. We put a new filter on yeah, it's a company I'm gonna be hit in mind with a little PB blaster in the morning and see what it does very good try that they used oil on the Gasket Your fingertip just run on a light, real light coat and it will usually work quite well to prevent waste. Very good. Yeah, real quick to close up on the labeling. Remember front, top and side and as long as you're doing maintenance, well, we just talked about what you do in the way of maintenance to the ammo can especially for long-term use. Again, a very, very light light. In other words, you put it on your finger and you rub that on the gasket just to give it enough so that it will permeate it. You don't want any excess. And again, that's another part of the maintenance that's done so that we reuse what is normally a one-time chuckable object for the Department of Defense. Like we said, we're the recyclers. We're the people that reuse, reuse, reuse. So that's where, again, it's a simple system, a simple idea, but it's something people don't think about. Now we planted the seed and it's in your lumber yard, just like it's in our lumber yard, and you'll find it over in the trim section, back in the corner with three layers of dust later on, which is always what happens. Anyway, let's see, I've got enough time. Well, we've got a few minutes. Okay, last but not least, with regard to pistols, something we were talking about yesterday, There is some nagot ammunition out there for you guys about those 69 95 nagots when they first came in which is only a couple years ago They are the ammunition is still out there. I believe classic firearms got it back in Yesterday now if they have any they go look it should still be there But I know they got it back in not as cheap as it was but it's also Fiocchi Ammunition The other thing is somebody's been asking me about UNAML. Okay guys, if you go to UNAML, read what he says. I think he still has it on the posting. He's not doing regular sales anymore. Even close down the store. I'm pretty sure that's what it says. He closed down the store. He's only doing jobber work now. Remember what I told you at a certain point. Some of these guys, it's just not worth their time. First of all, they gotta have product to sell. The other thing is, if you have to do less work, You know, it's really nice to make the same profit. Guess what? It's easier to sell a pallet one time than it is to sell 40 cases to 40 different people, right? So his volume is so great that it makes more sense because he can sell a pallet ammo with one telephone call and somebody comes in the pickup truck or the truck comes and ships it across the country and it's gone. That means you got more time in the day to do whatever you want to play your life. And that's what I warned everybody about. What's going to happen here more and more from a couple different directions is you're also pulling your hair out trying to, you know, paddle upstream on a rapids with regard to supply. And so we're going to see other companies, in fact there's a couple others I found out have gone, you know, and shut down for the same reason. Because realistically what little product they have isn't worth them staying open for. And if you have a connection, great. If you don't have a connection or enough connections, then this is what happens in the supply chain. Everybody assumes, so everybody just loves being there to do business. Yeah, as long as you can do business, okay? Now this is true with a lot of other things that are starting to come up on the horizon with regard to manufactured goods, because China is feeling its oats right now. We've got a commie in Washington that'll, you know, they're joined at the hip. And remember, they've been waging war by undercutting prices on everything. Well, now they're at the other half of the game. Not only do you not have more money to spend, but they can charge more for what only they make. And if you start looking at different products, you're going to find out, wow, even Mexico, where everybody figured, wow, it's coming from Mexico because of the NAFTA and GATT. Well, it was coming from Mexico, but the Chinese who ran the Mexican plant that you thought was being run by Ford, Well, Ford or GM or Chrysler dumped it, handed it over to the Chinese. The Chinese don't want the Mexicans competing with the Chinese labor force, and they really don't benefit because it also keeps it close enough America might be able to snag that machinery back up. So guess what they're starting to do in these other two countries next to us? Same thing they did to the United States. Well, but wait, we've got this big partner show. Shoot. So again, we've got to be thinking ahead. Small manufacturing is the key. That's how we started this country. And again, a million small factories is better than a handful of big factories you drop bombs on real quick. Okay, a million little factories can make critical widgets. They don't need to make every widget. They don't need to make critical widgets. And that's all you'll be doing. But you'll continue to make them. So this is where all of you can pitch in and help with this. A drill press. Everybody buy a little cheapy drill press. Go to Facebook Marketplace. Hate the bastards, but guess what? Facebook Marketplace is useful. So piss on the rest of Facebook. Just be there for Facebook Marketplace. Craig's list. Your local advertising stuff in estate sales all the time. I have built whole machine shops up from scratch with the estate sales guys. I mean, all over the place. We're getting ready to do two more. I've got everything built up to do it. I've got to get this stuff moved. Not doing us any good. Piled up. So anyway, for everybody out there, guys, stay frosty, stay focused. I'm sure Hillary Clinton was arrested sometime today, right? Hillary! Hillary, she's... No doubt. She's still out there. God bless the republic. Yes, that's a new world order. Empires. and we're on the right to go away and life. and to the Republic for which it stands, one Nation under God, visible, and justice for all. Now we'll come back to Liberty and justice for all through the show. Right now, I'm Machine Gun Randy. I come to you through LibertyTreeRadio.bornng.com, IndianaFreedomTalkRadio.com. And this is the medical marijuana hour and you can call us at 712-432-0900. Activation code is 957-464-pound. A star six will be muted. Again, those numbers are 712-432-0900. zero nine hundred. Activation code is nine five seven four six four pound a star six will activate you. So again if you'd like to call about some good or bad things about marijuana you can do that at seven one two four three two zero nine hundred. Activation code must nine five seven 6 4 pound a star 6 will be mute you. Oh, I've been talking looking around checking things out and Everybody has taken and they're about clipping down their mother plants making clones out of Getting as many clones as they can out of every plant that they've got and they are going to Get next year's harvest ready now, you know, you got to start in early March late February especially if you're going from seed but to make clones you got to have the temperature up a bit or they won't take and Right now it's the right time to do it for this year's crap That way you won't be putting out seedlings about four inches tall. You'll be putting out some nice plants that you started in January or February or March. And you might be putting out four-foot plants out there that's all ready to start, but they're just going to be beginning. And once you get them plants in here in Michigan, basic rule of thumb, they got plenty of time to grow. I don't put them in the ground until after the first of June. And make sure all the frost is out of the ground. And we're not going to run into any overnight temperatures, 32 below. But yeah, you get them in the ground in early June. You got plenty of time, you know, 120 days. Gotta put you up. Mine was ready last year in, oh no, September I could have pulled them. I should have pulled them, but I went for the best. I went for the distance. And I came to realize that if you've got a hankering to pull it, go pull it. Don't wait. Go get it. Because most of the time it brings in some kind of a karma. If you don't take it now, when you come back to my old again, it's gone. That's the way it is. There's thieves out there and they're too lazy to put their own damn plants in the ground. Which by the way, folks, I forgot to say it again. This is programmed as it is not appropriate for children under 18. It is prime time and... The baby should be in bed or at least playing video someplace besides listening to me talk about marijuana so You got your plants in the ground in June so the work is just beginning because The first when you put them out you water them down real good and fertilizer, you know put the nutrition out there the next day you go out and you water them real good. And that evening, you water them real good. You're not going to water the plants too much. When you start putting the water to them like that, you want to put a handful of pulverized limestone around the plant that keeps the soil all balanced at 6.5. And that's the perfect, the perfect pH balance for growing marijuana is between five and 6.5. So once you achieve that and you're spreading your ironstone out, then the next day you feed. And then the next day you water morning and night. Then the next day, evening preferred, because you don't want to bake your chemicals with the sun. It'll burn your plants out. So it's best to feed at night. And every other day you feed. Every other day you water twice. And first time you grow. You're anxious, you're sitting there, every day you go out, you might even take a ruler and take him. Measure your plant to see if it's grown a quarter inch overnight or not. But after you get used to it, your first part of it is done by early July, then you start putting your budding agents on so that they will bud, and that's what it's all about. You take your vegetating stump away, and you give them one third of that and you give the budding agent three quarters of it. And you'll go out there one day and you say, wow, things are happening. And then it'll go on through like that until you really start seeing the buds. And that is... Last August, first September, you'll really start seeing the buds forming. And by the end of September, they should be nice, full, and every day you want to pull them. And then you got to pull them out and treat them. You got to cure them right. You take and you clip them. from the buds and hang them upside down. No, I don't take mine off the plant until they're dry and you can break them off the plant. You don't have to cut them off the plant. And that's when you can trim them too. You just rub your hands across this and it trims it. And they really start coming around real crisp and that's the time to Trim them down, bag them up, and get rid of them. Sell them. Of course, the government don't want nobody to make no money with marijuana other than what you have invested up in. So, yeah, let them dry on the flaps, trim the buds by squeezing them off, and they'll work just as good that way for... making butters and oils and stuff, but it's going to be really good at that time of the year. I mean, the fake shops are open. Right now they got to work with their indoor growers to get their weed, but come growing site season, each of your plants will have about two, three pounds of that trim that they use for making butter and My family's taken to that they can't wait to come up with another recipe to try and It is a delicious time of year when you reach into a Reach into a basket that has buds in it that you've grown and now you get to enjoy them all winter long. You got to watch out when you're growing indoors because you can come in sometimes and be shocked when your crops are gone because you didn't take care of the spider mites. There's ways to deal with them. The best way to deal with them is to get an electric fogger and fog a couple times a month. The whole house. eliminates your spider mites. When you're growing outdoors, spider mites won't even get on your plants. They're out eating all that other stuff they like. They don't like marijuana, but when you're locked up in a house with nothing but marijuana leaves to feed off of, Then that's what you go to and you're they go into the back corner and you're looking at your plant and it is beautiful Bud's just starting to come out on it. They're already there and You want to see what the backside looks like and you turn it around and it's loaded from the beginning of the stem to the stock of the tree loaded with spider mites and your whole plants are your whole crowd because you didn't take and get an elect. Don't use gas type foggers. You can start a fire with them. So stick with the electric foggers. And yes, bog the whole house down. It clears up in no time and it needs nothing. but it gets rid of spider mites and You can release ladybugs if you want, but keep in mind if you do release ladybugs and you go to sell your Your pot and they're looking at it and they see ladybugs Ladybug dumps. Well, they won't buy it from you because it's been cramp on so you got a attention to other stuff that you can use, meat soil. You can spray your plants down with meat soil. You can wash them with Dawn dish soap, heavy with the soap, and good luck with it. Myself, I spend the extra bucks and get myself a gas-operated bogger. You can't go wrong by him. It keeps the bugs out. So do it your way, but keep in mind that if they go untreated, you are going to come around someday and your whole thing is up. It's all gone. And all you can do is bleach down, clean it all up, get rid of all the dirt, start over from scratch. get the five gallon or the 10 gallon buckets, whatever you want. Five gallons are significant, but some people prefer the big 10 gallon bags. It just takes five gallons more dirt to cover it, and if you're lack of funds, you're not going to have the deal that you was hoping for because you got to grow in a five gallon bucket and you'll be fine. I've grown in three gallon buckets. So that's for indoors. And remember, while you're indoors doing it, don't forget, keep an eye out for the spider mites, catch them early, turn your plants, don't just leave them sitting, make them all turn them and you can keep a better eye on them. Maybe it'll keep them away. I don't know how long it takes them to build all them webs that they got in there. And in them webs, there's thousands of them damn bugs. And you can stop it by fogging. And again, the safe way to do that is to not have an electric fogger. All right. Yeah, get a gas operated fogger. No sparks. So now that we've got our indoor growing and we've got our mites under control, we are burning up electric bills because them bills, they don't, or them mites, they don't run on a little bit of electricity. You can experience up to $500 a month bills while you're growing with them hundred or them thousand-lot bulbs. And that's why it's more expensive to grow, is because of the lights. Now they got them new lights, GPS lights. They're different colors and they got different, what do they call it, different parts of the light go through the plant. And when you're growing them, you use part of them somewhere. And then when you're budding with them, you take and change lights with some in the center and you bring them out and put the other ones up out in there. And that causes them to go into the budding situation. And it's a lot cheaper. Your electric bill will go a dollar a day. you'll grow about six plants with it. And that's not bad because as soon as you're done, you can have other ones going already. And that's what you do indoors. And keep an eye on them spider mites. They are killers. And you get done budding. You dry them all the same as you would before. But you're not going to have as much. On the indoor grow, as you do on the outdoor grow, you know, on the outdoor grow you have eight 10-foot plants. The indoor grow you got about four-foot plants, but they all produce. But the indoor grow has a better result than the end of everything than the outdoor grow does. You control everything. Outdoor grows, you might go three days without sunshine. and that affects your plant in the long run. But in a controlled environment, you got your 12-hour sunlight or your 18-hour sunlight. You got it on a timer. You could have it put in the computer. You only have to mess with it. All you got to do is make sure that the formula bucket's stable and they do real well. There's a guy in California you can find him. What was his name? His website. I can't remember. But he sets up your grow from California. And after he's got it all set up, after you plant your plants, he controls everything from California. Even though you're in Detroit or Houston, he's taking care of your plants without ever seeing them. And they say that his system turns out some real good plants. And it will, especially if you don't know what you're doing, if you don't know what you're doing and you set up with him, he'll have you going in no time. And when it's done, you'll have some of the best marijuana that money can buy. And you're ready to put another six or 12 plants in again. And you can set it up to where you can do it every two weeks. You'll be harvesting again and again. And you got plants that are growing in other rooms that will be ready to go under the light by the time these plants are ready to be harvested. Clean the area up, reach it down, and then put them other plants in there and get it going again. So that's how you do that. Once they got all that, you bag it up and you take it to the tree or wherever you're going to sell it and get rid of it. But remember, you can only make enough. You can only make enough to recover your loss that you get when you grow marijuana. It's not free. It costs money to grow that weed. And nobody can make money off a pot. And they're taxing it, you know, just like every other industry marijuana pays their taxes. But they're treated like a second-class citizen. Because they can't use the bank, they got to carry their product and money with them. It's a burden when you can't use what you're paying taxes for because the government won't take it off of a schedule list that it is under. It's number one with heroin. You know, it's up there with some real good company. But it doesn't have no medical value. And we all know that marijuana's got medical value. I mean, it cures. Look what it's done for me. I've gone through quite a bit. And marijuana's gotten me through it all. And I'm working on this cancer thing. Got liver cancer from the colon and I'm fighting it with B. pollen and thrive, musculins. And maybe chemo, I don't know. I'm trying to figure out if I'm going to get one of them COVID shots or not. I've been told that I really don't want to go through chemotherapy without one. And that Johnson and Johnson one is different than the other one. So I'm thinking Johnson and Johnson maybe. Because that chemo hits your immune system pretty hard. look at it that I'm going to make it and I'm going to go on for another few years. You know Pam, she had it for five years and every time she got rid of it, it was back. Well, she couldn't put smoking in them damn cigarettes and they got her and she knew it and she knew there was nothing that she could do about it because our government let them have it. They let themselves and Sell that stuff and that's for the next half hour. Right now it's time for grass lean and light up because if you're right, legal or not. We can't because we've got a government that says that you can't. 200 and some of the members in congressmen and the cabinet and the president. and if they don't come together it's no and you can't have it. No matter how many of us want it, if they say no, it's no. And to help them say no, they got lobbyists that comes in and gives them junk vacations. They gives them $3,500 checks. by a mink stole for their wife with nobody knowing it. All for them to keep marijuana off of the streets. They don't want it used for anything because it would destroy a lot of industries. We know this. It has 53 or 57,000 uses and that would mean everything that you can think of would be made from marijuana. Your kitchen cabinets, your flooring, your pipes or your plumbing. And it would all be cheaper, better, and dog gun it, it would be fun. But, you know, Johnson & Johnson, they don't want marijuana legalized. Not until they can get their mitts on it and figure out a way that they can take and make as much money as they can. They've already got stocks in it along with all the other pharmaceutical companies and when it comes down to it, they're going to be the ones probably that will be getting our marijuana processed by. And while they're doing that, they're also assisting the tobacco industry. You almost thought I forgot about them, didn't you? Not a chance. We're coming up on Pam and Mai's, oh, post-50th anniversary, we would have made it too, but that's coming up, so we're going to enjoy that and remember things. And when it comes up to it, our anniversary was the 11th of this month. And my things are getting easier, you know. I got my cancer I'm dealing with, so I don't have to worry about Pam because the cancer already killed her, you know. That came from her cigarettes. And I think mine came from secondhand smoke. I didn't smoke, I didn't drink, I didn't get around no asbestos and I did have hepatitis C. And when I got away from hepatitis C, I had biopsy done and stuff and everything was good. And now here four years later, I've got liver cancer. I am battling it with B pollen, shrive mushrooms, It's a variety of six mushrooms. It is pauper-rated down to powder. And I'm thinking chemotherapy. If I go that route, I gotta be thinking about one of them COVID vaccines from J&J. That's a lot easier than that crap that they're shelling from the ones you gotta get two shots. I don't need two shots, I need one shot to do it all. And one that works and they tried this with other viruses and stuff. And it's relatively safe as you can get with a new drug that hasn't been tested for five years or 10 years on people. Like they want to say they got to do with marijuana before they can get that going. But they've been doing it since the 50s. And the tobacco companies have been hired on keeping marijuana off the streets, as is the pharmaceutical companies, the fabrication companies, but it can take care of all of them. That's why they don't want it out there. Meanwhile, we got Prince Albert in a can here, so let's open it up and release him and ask him why. The government lets them sell, Prince Albert or anything else, tobacco type stuff that kills people. You know, them higher up guys, the CEOs and all of them guys and even the guys that are planting the stocks in the ground. to grow up to be a tobacco plant and sold to America. And our government appreciates them because they get about $1.45 taxes from them cigarettes. And I don't know, you know, they really went hard when the wars had been fought. They've been out there really talking hard about how the wars are doing. But they don't do that about tobacco. They just take it as a grain of salt. It doesn't bother some people, I guess, that their wife just died of cancer from their damn cigarettes. What the heck? And now I got liver cancer from her damn second-hand smoke. Pardon me if I do sound a little harsh and rushed, but I'm tired of them picking on me and my family. I'm tired of the government allowing them to sell them damn cigarettes and they smoke around. You know, back when, it wasn't long ago, they didn't tell you that secondhand smoke was bad for you. That came up, I guess, in the 80s. But yeah, yeah, I know this program is not suitable for children. It's suitable for moron idiots. So, them tobacco companies have got to go. You know, I know a lot of people out there, they enjoy cigarettes because if you can't quit smoking cigarettes because you don't want to quit, you're not going to quit. And out of all them chemicals that they put into the tobacco, there's chemicals in there that make you can't quit smoking cigarettes. They got chemicals in there that will make you sick if you don't smoke a cigarette. But they don't have a safety unit on them cigarettes that will keep you from dying of cancer. and killing your husband that don't smoke but tolerate your ass. So yeah, my wife died going on a year ago and now I'm ready to battle the hell out of it. I'm doing marijuana B pollen and mushrooms. How about that for a diet? All of you out there that is interested in it, tobacco kills and marijuana don't. They trace everything back of marijuana, but they cannot trace back marijuana for death. You know, why they would take it all the way to the Garden of Eden. And it's one of them herbs that the Lord gave us, seeding herbs. Well, that's what marijuana is. It's a strange plant. You can grow it to where you get seeds, and when you grow it to get seeds, you get so many seeds. You won't get a joint out of a good size bud. But them seeds will go on and on and on. Look what happened when y'all started back and then when Cain killed Abel and Cain was ran out of the garden of Eden, he took his family with him and he took his supplies and stuff and then them supplies were bags of strains of pot. And he came out with them down in Africa they're saying. That's where they got to go. They got to chase the roots back to Africa to get good pile again. I keep going to that because it hurts to talk about tobacco and nobody pay attention. It's something. It's kind of like a nuclear explosion that we just got a small puff. And everybody's smoking it down and then 65 years later, bang, it hits you. And it is not a fun death and it drags the whole family into it. It's not like riding down the street and getting hit like high or like Samantha did. And it wasn't her time to go and Lord brought her back and she's here with us now and she's got my grandson here. Noah Blue. It's not no blue, but if he blows that saxophone, it'll be no blue maybe And hey one thing for sure he won't be smoking those cigarettes I'm Hoping that by the time he gets up that the tobacco companies are shut down With this program here. I'm trying to get one legal and one Cut down and right now we're talking about cutting down tobacco. It starts in this ground as a shoot and the person that plants that, he's a murderer. He knows that that tobacco is going to kill people and yet he'll grow 20 acres of it and the government lets him and they give him tax breaks possibly. They used to. At one time if you owned your property and you grew marijuana for the United States government, you and your sons would be exempt from going into combat. You could stay home and grow pot. And they made bazette ropes. They made uniforms. They made paint. They made oil and gas. You know when President Bush's plane crashed? All that planes inside was made of hemp. Except for the rubber around the wiring and that. But all the seats, all the carpet, all the uniform, his shoes, everything was made of hemp. Even the gas and the oil they used to run the planes. And then when he comes into the offices, he declares war again on marijuana and marijuana users. Bushes were not friendly people. Neither was Reagan. On past them, at least here in Michigan and other states that have got recreational legal marijuana, you know, like Washington, D.C., Oh, they're wonderful. They have a ball. You walk in the park and you want to get some weed, you call up Craigslist. And 15 minutes that guy's there with smiles and good pot. And he'll sell it to you and he'll let you know, don't smoke in the federal parks. But you can light up in the parks here along that. And we went into the parks and we were smoking. And nobody did anything, nobody didn't bother nobody, as it shouldn't. But now it's getting to where you can't smoke tobacco, you can't smoke tobacco in public areas, and they tolerated in Washington, but again, you shouldn't be doing it in the public areas. And again, this program is not intended for children. So if you got children listening to it, you better get them out of here because who knows what I'm going to say next because the tobacco company just picked me off so much. They killed my wife and they killed a lot of people's spouses, kids, parents, tobacco, the devil's plant, the grow marijuana, God's plant. It did come from the Garden of Eden. There's not a plan around. It came from the Garden of Eden or from the maker of the Garden of Eden. You know, one year my dad, he grew a 36-inch green beam. He worked with it for years and he finally got it. So it takes help. He had talked to people in college about it. And he talked to the agriculture department about it. And when all said and done, he came up with what he started out with. And he was a smoker, but he quit smoking. He quit smoking the same time. I quit smoking two days later. We did it without nothing but willpower and not wanting to smoke. That's a good thing. If you don't want to quit, no matter what you do, you will not quit. But the chemicals that they put in, nobody knows what they are. Even they don't know what they are. Some people that are throwing them in don't know where they are or where they came from. They just know, oh, well, I've got to do this. And then they die five years into the job. the cancer that's going to kill you in 60 years because he's got it concentrated. He's all there with it and you're smoking a little bit at a time but it will kill you in the end. I know I've seen it that's gone through my wife's family like a raging fire. Her father died from cigarette smoking, her uncle died from cigarette smoking. Her older brother died from cigarette smoking. Her next to the oldest brother died from cigarette smoking. Her two sisters died from cigarette smoking. And she died from cigarette smoking. And now I'm fighting this. And I quit smoking in 73. I started smoking about, um... I don't know when I started smoking back in probably 1962. Yeah, I quit cold turkey and that's the way anybody could quit. But if you can't quit cold turkey and you tried the patches and pills, don't forget about giving Acupuncture a try. work on 98% of the people that go to it. They say they got 98% chances of quitting smoking cigarettes. And if it don't work the first visit, you might have to go two or three. So check around and see if you can get the guaranteed and pay $100 and come until you're done. And with that I say, our Father who art in heaven, hallowed be thy name, thy kingdom come, thy will be done on earth as it is in heaven. Give us this daily bread, give us for our trespassing, as we forgive those that trespass against us, deliver us from temptation and deliver us from evil and glory forever and ever, amen. I'm Shingon Randy, I'll be back with you Monday on The Veteran Show and I'll be back here next week with marijuana and tobacco. God bless, adios.
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