June 2, 2021
Evening Show
2h 2m
Complete
Radio Episode
2021
▶ Audio Player
Summary
Mark Koernke discussed ammunition inventory at firearms retailers, analyzed organizational challenges within militia groups like Oath Keepers and Three Percenters, and addressed January 6th prosecutions and plea negotiations with indicted oath keepers. He emphasized the importance of operational security, exit strategies, and proper planning for civil unrest. The second hour focused extensively on weapons, ammunition, and tactical doctrine including grenade usage, improvised ordnance manufacturing, historical examples from World War I and II, and deception warfare tactics.
- oath keepers
- january 6
- ammunition
- militia
- grenades
- tactical operations
- doj prosecutions
- preparedness
- weapons
- operational security
- mortar
- rpg-7
- deception warfare
- bundy ranch
- 40 millimeter
Transcript
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Constitution, you know the right to bear arms is because that's the last form of defense against tyranny Not to hunt to 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 are killed called gun-free zones. We're gonna beat you out of office or suck on my machine. Yes, I was not again. No, I must be trouble politicians Look, okay, just get any blunt objects together, alright? If you get corners, bash them in the head, that seems to work out. Kick together, stay sharp, and follow me. 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 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 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 taken some 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 brought. 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 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 I awoke he'd vanished in the mist from whence he came. His words were true. We are not free, but we have ourselves to blame. For even now as tyrants trampled each god-given rite, we only watch him tremble, too afraid to stand and fight. If he stood by your bedside to 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? Ladies and gentlemen, this is the first hour of the afternoon intelligence report I mark Quirky. One day closer to victory for all of our brothers and sisters both on and behind the lines in occupied territories, southwest, east, northeast, and south. Ladies and gentlemen, you are listening to us on... Liberty Tree Radio dot 4 mg dot com Liberty Tree Radio on satellite and we are on AM&FM microstations, CEB base stations, and UltraNet, Hallmark, and Golden Spike technologies east and west of the Mississippi along with Alaska. And it is a beautiful weapons Wednesday today, of course it's a short week, so it's Wednesday already, yes? Well, second day of the broadcast week at holiday on Monday. It is the second of June. Oh wow, already the second of June, alright, yay! Well, it's gonna be kicking down our way real fast. It is the 13th year of open Fabian Socialist and Soviet Socialist Occupation of America with a 2021 older calendar. 2021 Battle for the Republic, Dance of Swords. And this is 507 p.m. Eastern Standard Time, by the way, just benchmarked the day and the time, of course. Rainy and gray across Michigan today, as for those of you who are in the state, you know that. a soaker rain, cool, actually cold. So the plants are really happy. They're standing right up right now. And actually, the garden has done very, very well. We've had cooler weather. We haven't really had these super hot days. Good sunshine today. Good rain shine. So it's weapons Wednesday. A couple of things. Atlantic firearms has a bunch of ammunition. Of course, it mentioned before, 7.62 at 30. They may actually be out already. We don't know for sure yet more about that. Unfortunately, it has a tendency to be evacuated very quickly. A little more expensive this time. The 7.62x39 Yugoslavian server club dammel, but it is there. And the server clubs are worth a chunk of change. 1980s or early 90s. server clips by the query, which by the way I have four I think, five creates of SPS server clips by themselves, Chinese made, in ammo kits. The Chinese were shipping everything in ammo kits. We have 50 caliber links. It's just the links, M2 50 caliber links in ammo, in the Hampton cans. You see the ammo. We have, as I mentioned, the stripper clips. You open up the can, and inside was an impact solid layer, layer after layer, very nice, neatly nested like sardines, through thousands of stripper clips. Also, they did bullets the same way, 9 millimeter projectiles in the parabellum spec rather than for the macros. And they did a quantity of 762. projectile standard AK ammunition, 123 grain, cap it. So if you run into a can that's really happy and it looks like that classic regular 7.62x39 hand can, it must be that just regular ammunition. Well, not necessarily so. And that's why the can's like double weight and extra heavy. It's copper jacket, lead, ball projectiles. That's why. And they are out there, and they're still wandering around a little, so they pop up on the horizon, or the periscope freezes from the depths. So somebody sells a few of them, the cases. Anyway, analytic also has AKs prices are up and down. I'm not even going to worry about trying to quote any of that, because A, just because they have a picture, it doesn't mean that they have it in stock. Always remember that. There's a picture, oh, they got the H I1 and it's only $640 and it's sold out. Oh, wow. Okay. So you're going to have to go through page by page, item by item, and see what they have available and then pick out what you need from there. Of course, classic firearms, same thing. But classic is what's good about keeping up to speed with regard to their Ammunition inventory, same with weapons, so I'm not too worried about them, but some companies, until you actually touch the, with the cursor, the particular item, bring the actual individual page up for the item itself and then find out, hey, it's not there. Many of the companies are obviously like that. It's, it's, it's coming in, and I'm looking for something, I want it in, it's not there. So not a surprise but get over it and just you're gonna have to last through what's out there and Mark has gone. Wait, there we go. Can you hear me now? Call our line, you should be able to hear me but the regular callers were... Yeah, it looks like we lost Mark for a second there. He was mobile. So maybe he just got into a spot that has a bad connection. We should get him back pretty quick. In the meantime, I'm gonna drop over here and... I'll give you some bumper music if I can. I've got my little ArmaLite loaded. I was stopped by a soldier, he said you are swine He hit me with his rifle and he kicked me in the groin I begged and I pleaded, all my manners were blind But all the time I'm thinking of me, little Arville, I've had a sound in the mall site, it's where I long to be Lying in the dark with a provo company Caught me down, he left, and another one on me right And I kept around, he knitted for me, little arm of life Well, this brave R.U.C. man, came marching up our street Six hundred free soldiers, he had lined up at his feet Come out ya cardi-penions, come on out and fight. He's tried to only joke and then when he heard the arbalight, on his down in the pilates, where I long to see. Lying in the dark with some noble company, a casket on me left and another one on me right, a cup of rum in it for the little arbalight. Well the army came to visit me Was in the early hours With Tarathans and Saladins And ferris armor jars To stop the hot new corner Before they give them all a fright With the armor piercing full of salt The little armor like Panasonic The new largest frill off The sea lion in the dark With noble companies Arnie Wright was on unison for the generals Sorry about that, little technology differences and distance so Virgin Mobile. So we're good there and anyway. A couple things real quick with regard to AR-1545 ACP weapons. There's a couple of different magazine systems that are out there. I had a lot of questions. Actually, another, it popped up again today. Somebody I just happened to see asking about grease-cut mags. And one of the reasons is that yes, a number of the guns use the earlier Grease Gun Mag because it was the most common magazine out there for the longest time in 45 ACP. Used to be a dollar to two dollars apiece guys for decades. And because of this, it was the go-to magazine. The US government made God knows how many of them. And they are a good magazine, but they do They're stiff. They do require a typically a thumb assist slash a loader. On the grease gun itself, they actually had a loading tool that was part of the, you know, built right into the gun. Some of the aftermarket 45 ACP carbines that were made in the 60s, 70s and 80s, especially before the open bolt semi-auto ban. Most of you don't probably remember that, but several of the guns, the guys were smart because they did standardize on either the Sten for 9mm or the Greaseden mag 45 ACP and because of that they also built onto the stock or into the pistol grip. There's a couple different ways you can do it. a magazine assist, you know, tap so that you can push down the next round, insert the next one coming in, and just push it in the rest of the way and repeat the process over and over and over again. There are a number of different techniques for incorporating these into the weapon. All of them work. And it makes it a lot easier because, trust me, that grease gun and the stun gun are pretty stiff propositions when you're trying to load 32 rounds in 9mm or the grease gun, what? 30 rounds, 20, 28, everybody usually did about 28 to be safe. There were shorter mags, they were actually more collectible. They were an experiment and as is the case, any time the government experiments, when they get rid of this surplus versus cheaper than, you know, fly poop, and then eventually becomes, what's that term? And once it becomes classic, the price becomes stellar. Okay. The grease-fed mags are still not that outrageously priced. You can run into them for about $6 to $8 a piece because there still are so many now. A lot of them will not be in the foil or the foil paper anymore like you used to see. Well, they might still be running. You might run into them. Typically, they're now the next wave imports coming in from South America or from one of the Euro countries. Amazingly enough, there were a lot of grease gun magazines in Yugoslavia. And it's interesting, that didn't really come out as a notable item until the time of the just before the fall of the wall, but then afterwards when you have Yugoslavian breakup. And it turns out that there were a ton of grease gun knockoff weapons or type weapons that were produced by the Ugo's, apparently as a way to take advantage of the American surplus inventory parts market. And the magazine was the reason. A couple of Yugoslavian Civil War guns that were built in the fall after the fall of the wall actually could be converted from 7.62 by 25 to 9 millimeter Parabellum to 45 ACP with a couple of simple changes and guess what? Either a peppyish mag was used for the one change, 9 millimeter was sten, and grease gun mags, 4 to 45 ACP variants. And this was a very standard package that apparently several different companies that were in Yugoslavia came up with or mimicked from each other and cranked out quite successfully and sold locally and also got a little market into the Arab states, which is interesting, just south of them of course. The, again, the one thing about the grease gun mags is they are robust, they are heavy, don't be surprised. They're heavy, they're very, very durable, and they actually last a lifetime. There's not really much you can do to hurt them. The only issue is keep them clean and every once in a while lubricate everything to make sure because they are just standard. Well, they're carbon steel. They're American steel. Now there are some, I should remind everybody, there were even with the plethora of grease gun mags available from the donor destruction, earlier it was the War Department. There are some aftermarket companies that needles to say wanted to take advantage of a few things and one of them is that there are some stainless steel grease gun mags floating around. They're not made for the US government. They were made in the 70s, part of the stainless steel fad slash trend, which came about, which is a good thing because stainless is a great material to work with. It's hard to work with for the company, but great product is in putting it on the shelf because survivability is very high. You know, we're about rust. Anyway, if you do one of those, they're like chicken's teeth, hang on to them. If you see them at a yard sale, even if you don't have the gun. If you see any true stainless steel grease gun mags, they're probably made out of Florida. There were two companies that built them that I can recall right off the top of my head. Florida for obvious reasons. Back in the 70s, pirate guns, guys. Oh, parlors of the Caribbean. No, actually, you know, prevent pirate prevention. A lot of people were arming up boats more heavily because yes, piracy was coming back in the style or at least getting some notoriety. So there's a couple of companies that were knocking off stainless everything for accoutrements. They even made stainless steel M1 car beams 15 round magazines at a time when you could buy M1 15 round magazines for, well, 15 cents to, you know, half a dollar. And yet, there was a market because that stainless held up really, really, really well in the salt environment. Not uncommon for people to grab a Mini-14, do two or three of those stainless steel with a bunch of 20 round stainless steel mags, a Moseberg stainless steel pump, and maybe two of those put on board, and a handful of stainless steel 45s or stainless steel model 65s or 66s and revolvers. Why? All stainless steel, minimal maintenance, less likely to be an oxidation issue. And everybody really wanted to count on purchasing those. And because of it, there was a visible market and the carbine, lots of carbines out there. You'd have stainless, but remember, you know, these are your carbon steel magazines and those stainless steel carbines. And so, you know, pop, pop, boom, boom. It was a very popular solution. Remember, decades ago, carbine ammunition was about a nickel around. If not, if not less. And if you're overseas, depending on where you were off the coast or wherever, bargain basement, cheaper still. Hey Mark. So it was one of those things that it made sense, okay, at the time. Real quick, those 45 ACP ARs are still floating around out there and there's a lot of options. They're still made, but I don't see anybody with anything in any inventory right now. Go ahead and call or jump in there. Hey, just slightly off the topic question. We were talking about Oathkeepers a while ago and it made me think that there's a couple of other groups that I've never heard you talk about and some of them are a little bigger. What's your thoughts on the light bulbs? I'm sorry, on the who? Oh, we lost you for some reason. I'm here. I'm here. The Light Footers, like the ones that have Idaho, you know, the Light Foot militias. Oh, they're just, to me, it's just another institution. They've been out there. They recruited heavily. Everybody still tries to do the, they were not really militia like those other militia and under the logic somehow that the bad guys are going to like you more than they do, say, the other guys. And that never quite has worked out. The institutions themselves, like typically all these different organizations, have usually some stated political goal. I mean, you've got three percenters, too. We haven't really talked much about them. They're just out there. I mean, they've been... It's a parallel mechanism. Each one, Oath Keepers, The light foot militia, which by the way, I don't know, there was some kind of, you know, falling out between different elements for whatever reason. As we discussed that, remember, several times over the last, you know, couple years, it happens. Mostly because they're not prepared for the growth that is inevitable if you become popular. And they're not ready to deal with the necessary infrastructure for an expanded command when you have many, many, many different organizational units. And it's because most people still think small unit tactical, but continue to grow to large formation strategic, especially when you're multi-state. You're no longer a small unit operation. You have small unit operators and small units. But your institution has now grown to the size of what would be conventional army forces, conventional forces in terms of breadth and width. And the mistake is not having the ability to adapt the infrastructure and manpower to accommodate the needs of such an organization. It's a typical fumbling. I've had conversations on this with a lot of different people over the years. Some people kind of listen, others not so much, and you can see the end result. So it's consistent, repeat over and over again, repeat. Mostly because people think small unit. And in fact, even when they do realize that they've got the numbers, they don't seem to wrap their brains around it. And it's something that needs to change. But again, what will change it is battlefield necessity. In the early stages, we were going to see some, you know, two things, problems, no matter how we look at it, simply because people are going to have to learn, and part of that will be through the school of hard knocks. In other words, we could, you know, learn from the mistakes of others, you won't live long enough to make them all yourself. But for some reason, people really want to beat their head against the wall. So, oh, that's got to hurt. Oh, don't do that. Like, dad, tell me you don't touch the stove, you know. Everybody has to try touching the stove once. Now, unfortunately, it's non-electric wheel, 220 with a short. Instead, it's just, it's hot. If dad was trying to tell you, don't touch the stove and there's a short, he just, he didn't get to the breaker fast enough, then the 220 is a much more embarrassing situation. When you're going to go back, I'm gonna get you. As opposed to just burning your fingertips. Go ahead. Go ahead, we got you, fellas. What we got, concerning oath keepers? Let me go back to, there was something that was posted on Discord here and I just pulled it up. This was posted May 30th, 11.53 AM on the Intel part of Discord. Does that make sense? Okay, go ahead. Yeah, can you hear me? I gotcha. Okay, does that make sense? Okay. Well, I understand what you're saying. What was it that was posted? Okay, what is posted is, it says on YouTube a WUSA9 and it states here, capital riot plea talks have begun with 12 indicted oath keepers. The Department of Justice has begun plea talks with at least some of the 12 oath keepers. charged with conspiring to disrupt the joint sessions of Congress on January 6th, according to new documents filed in court this week. In a motion Thursday requesting a 60-day continuance, DOJ said it has only recently begun reaching out to the defendant. And I saw this a day or so ago, but I've not clicked on it to watch or to listen as to any content. Once again, referring to these quote, unquote oath keepers. Well, it sounds like it's an extension of the nonsense or surrounding the 6th, right? Correct. 6th of January, whatever. Yeah. Well, again, that's something we've warned... I'm sorry, go ahead. No, I said correct. Okay. I don't know what to say about it. Just the fact is something we warned everybody about is to have a plan before you went in, remember? Rule number one. What did I say if we were going to any event like this? Don't take your cell phones. How many times did I say that? I even said earlier, okay, I'm not going to be able to stop you from going, but if you do go, don't take your cell phones. Why did I say not to take the cell phone? Anybody remember? For those reasons. For obvious reasons. They're admitting what we already told everybody. For how many years has Uncle Mark talked about this on the air? In fact, this is what pisses me off about things. It's like, well, I think people think this way. Well, when they had all the black flash mobs and five or six hundred black people were getting together and beating the shit out of a whole bunch of women and kids and families and stuff, the cops never went after them. Well, of course not, because it's right in line with what the feds and the cops wanted. So we had this, that doesn't change anything. Historically, as we know, The feds hate the Patriot movement. They hate America. They are foreigners. They're not American. The DOJ has been occupied by the same lodge buddy and the Amaco where's the synagogue crew, okay? And anything that has to do with anybody out there doing anything Patriot or anything, you have to be a step ahead of whatever else is going on. So if you're going to go there, here's the thing. Track phones are cheap. You need a phone? Use a track phone. Be creative in some way, at least by God. And when you're done, as you leave, as I pointed out, if you go into something like that, use the track phone, and then if you see a street person, give them a free phone. Why? Because Fred the street guy will keep using that phone until the batteries burn out, until the battery dies. Maybe they'll plug it in, maybe they won't. But you know what happens? You've given them faulty intelligence and you've diverted whatever it is they were using in the way of their very sophisticated computer, EIN tracking technology, which of course they're using to no avail because it's useless. The other thing is have an exit strategy. Remember what we said? Guys, it's a long way to get into Washington, not just the driving there. I'm talking about once you get there. Has anybody ever been to Washington? It's kind of like going to a football game. Sometimes you're lucky and you get to park close, but is that any advantage when it comes to getting away? Well, I got to my car first, and then I got out of the road, and then I'm in a traffic jam, and then I'm not going anywhere. So, all of these aspects of, you know, goes into, goes out to first of all with regards to participation and paying attention to your environment, who's who in the zoo, most all of that was ignored by a lot of people who were explaining, hey, you know, let's just do this really cool and treat it like a battlefield environment rather than a tailgate picnic, which is how everybody treats this stuff until they get bit in the ass, okay? And then all of a sudden it's, oh my God, they missed me all the way after me, all the pets. First of all, the feds were going to try and harass or single people out no matter what, even if that hadn't happened, even if the walking into the Capitol building, because it wasn't extorting, basically everybody just surged into the Capitol building and kind of, you know, en masse walked through and said, wow, look at the pictures. Oh, look, there's a statuary. Oh, that's really cool. Unlike leftists, when they come through, they bomb the government rest area, they burn things, they shred everything. That would be the other side. Who then don't get charged for it, by the way? So the fact that we've got these guys that were picked off down the road, a couple things to remember, as I did point out too, because we have the coronavirus, there's actually no reason for anybody to have their face exposed. And of course the argument in the past, I will point this out, when we've gone to public events, guys, if you wear a balaclava, the feds or the cops, you can't wear it in public. What they want to do is they want to be able to see your face. You can't wear that in public and guys don't say a word and they just stare at them. They can't raise a hand. They can't stop you from wearing what you're wearing. But it is fascinating that, you know, again for the last 12 months, you know, and more, wearing a balaclava or a full face mask with a reflective shield, you know, there's nothing they could say about it. So why not use it if you're choosing to go to something like this? Why not use it deny the enemy everything and anything in the way of information that you can When you do go home or if you go back from an event and by the way, let me point something out about this Does anybody remember what happened after the Bundy Ranch? How many people did they go after after you guys won? That was a victory no less Can I am I talking everybody's memory on this? They they went after and charged a whole bunch of people for standing up to the feds in that little Arroyo, you know, under the expressway and Went went off and grabbed them here and grabbed them there and we warned everybody even then and nobody listened then that guys be prepared, they're vindictive, they're gonna come out if you're going to make a stand under the assumption you will probably have to fight and shoot and fight your way out of something, and you're willing to do it, you're now in the warrior mode. In other words, you've chosen the battlefield that you're willing to fight. Well, you better be ready to fight down the road because your enemy's coming back. They're gonna come and bother you somewhere else. So all of you together need to be prepared to back each other up. And that's where the shortcomings and the failings are of many of these, what I would call corporate institutions. Oathkeeper is probably the best example. Great for, you know, having, making public displays, but terrible for actually getting together to deal with tactical issues because you've decided what it was. Supposedly you're ready to fight. Well now you're going to have to because your enemy will lie. They will fabricate. They will make crap up. We have seen this for decades. This is nothing new. This is not like this is something where, oh wow, I've never seen this before. No, anybody who has been in the Patriot effort could walk you through it step by step, piece by piece, and tell you what it is you need to be ready for. Which is why you're going to have not just your stand off at the Bundy Ranch, but you're going to have those little, it's basically like sub-infections where you're going to have other situations where you're going to have to step up. Stare them down and if they want to start a war over trying to take one of your men or take any of your people you shoot their damn ass Yeah, yeah in the in the oath keepers the oath keepers were there and they turned around the left didn't they? Well, the oath keepers found a reason Lee the idea was the drone attack remember and I don't want to well I will here's the sign up I know people were looking for people were looking for an exit strategy And what better exit strategy than, we're going to drone attack the Bundy Ranch, or if we're going to drone attack, any of you ever watch videos, when they always brag, the government brags, about murdering people from stealth drone attacks? You know, they do it all the time. They show you these cars going down the road and they don't even know that they're going to be murdered and boom, they blow the car up. Or they blow a bunch of cars up or they shoot a bunch of people in the field. They love showing you shooting a bunch of people in the field, right? Like the one with the tractor in Iraq. Remember that one? The guys were standing around the tractor and they just fire their ass up and they're just in chunks and pieces. Wow, isn't that cool? So you're accepting the idea. You're saying there's going to be a turn attack any minute. Well, I don't think jumping in your car and running down through the desert being a big hot thermal signature at night is gonna save your ass, number one. Number two is that they all went to a hotel. I don't think the hotel, as I said the night this happened, I don't think the hotel has any magic special force field. And if supposedly they're willing to kill or deadify you in any location, then that's why we had to get out of there and then get down the road and go the way down the road. Well then, I don't think the hotel's going to be any protection. I don't think the magic force field is on at the hotel either. So the logic there, what didn't fit? Common sense. So in reality, what it was was an exit strategy for being able to take the mechanism or institution out. Oh, we got a lot of background noise, guys. We got something going on with something open. There we go. Thank you. And this is true whenever a prior proper planning prevents piss poor performance. Example, as I said before, and this now has been a while, it's a ways in the tail lights, okay? The Bundy Ranch seat had all kinds of pluses and minuses. The big advantage, the macro advantage is that everybody did stand up. That's a good thing. It could have been, again, failure to create a cooperative environment at the location where the forces came together was a mistake in all parties. There's no one person responsible. Now on the other hand, I will point out anybody who is trying to create constant conflict is probably working for the other side. If somebody's just stirring the pot nonstop, Fred said something about you over here, then they go over there. Bob said something about you over there, Fred. Oh, Fred, Bob hates you. Oh, Bob, Fred hates you. Okay, if you've got some numb nuts going around doing that, either A, an idiot, or B, he is definitely working for the other side. You need to identify that kind of situation to begin with, and then you start by isolating that person, those people, and giving them a task. In fact, agreeing as part of that, and what I mentioned yesterday, I've talked about many times here, you have to put together a war council. You have to take multiple individual commands. You need to come up with at least a good overview of how you're going to divide up activity on the site. I personally believe that the pizza pie system is the best way to go. Everybody says they got their really best version of whatever, sliced white bread or, it's white on rice, man, I got the plan. Well, I'll tell you what, here's what we're going to do. We're going to divide the whole area up into pizza slices. And each of you is going to manage your pizza slice based on your better than sliced white bread plan. And you're here, you're here, you're here, you're here. Each group has to get themselves motivated and organized. But they're peripheral. Your core assembly is made up of what are your most, let's just say, reliable, long-term, been there since the beginning personnel. that know that if any of the elements that are there fail because, well, it's not a two-hour movie or a five-part miniseries. It's real life and it's really dull. Siege operations or defense operations and any kind of field deployment is very dull. It is very monotonous. And then all of a sudden, there are peaks and fits of excitement. Well, this isn't a movie. We get non-stop action for two hours if I get to watch a movie. And I don't need to have to worry about where I'm going to crap because I'm worried about water contamination. And I shouldn't have to worry about not peeing anywhere I want to because, OK, well, the whole area is going to sound like you smell like a latrine after a good, you know, 10 days, even less than that, actually. It takes about three. If everybody doesn't have discipline across the board, The other thing is, knowing where everybody is means that nobody else is going to be able to infiltrate or exfiltrate at their discretion. Usually people who try to maintain confusion are also assisting from the inside to try and make sure that there is infiltration or infiltration without friendly contact or mock friendly contact by aggressor forces. Again, disruption and ineffective organization ensures that there is a less likely cohesive defense in the event that there is an attack. That's not an accident. And if it is being done and they're supposedly ignorant of this idea, then obviously they're not the people you really want in charge either, are they? Prior proper planning prevents PISP-4 performance. So there are a lot of considerations and overlapping issues that were not settled or at least where lessons could have been learned but weren't. But one of them, just as with after going to Washington, is in the event you're betrayed by Trump, which by the way Trump was supposed to go down there with the guys down to the Capitol building and he wasn't anywhere to be found. In fact, it's almost like he made the minimal show. Went back, waved, and then headed for the airport and waved from a really long distance away, so to speak, after a while. And now he's in Florida. Wow. Guess we really weren't going to do all that much about the fake election, you know, the fake election anyway, right? We call it the fake election. You know, fake election or fake election, okay? As it is, if you are going to participate, you have to have both the long, you know, again, if you have a plan for the action, if you're coming together and you're already together where you came from, Ohio, Michigan, New York, Arkansas, it doesn't make any difference. Remember that one way or another, and this is where my biggest problem is, is, you know, they always talk about how the cops are, you know, we're going to support you this, support you that. How many local cops participated in rounding up and attacking the people that went to Washington on the 6th? That's why that blue Lives Matter flag to me is nothing but a piece of toilet paper to use to wipe your arse with. Why? Because in a heartbeat, soon as the commies are in charge, it's amazing how many of those cops are now following all those orders. They refer Trump to Trump's gun. Okay, now who's in charge? Oh, the pedal sniffer and meat puppet. Oh, queers a $3 bill. All right. Yeah, they'll follow any orders they get from them when the feds show up. So know who's doing the zoo with regard to your local activities also to make sure that you don't know. Well, don't be surprised when all of a sudden things get serious and you find that they were giving your lip service. See the cops are coach. You got a bunch of characters, state police, county and local, who are coached on what to say because they figure you're naive. You understand that? Oh yeah, I love your bud. Tell me all about your organization. Yeah, let me listen. Yeah, and I'm taking those. Yeah, you're a little schmuck. Yeah, they don't have any clue. We were just keeping an eye on them. And of course that's exactly what a lot of the turds do. A lot of these characters, like I said, bald-headed, no neck shoe-sized IQ, roided up turds that have every intention to follow in any order, any pedo, any queer gives them when the time comes. That's not all of them. And if you're listening right now, and you're a peace officer, you know who you are. You know I'm not talking about you. You shouldn't be in this fence. But on the other hand, if you're lying to you, if the other people around you don't like the idea that we just described what it is, that is a real problem with the rank and file and the command and all these agencies. Not every one of them, trust me on that, there is a division in these organizations. But right now, what they're doing is going out, picking off these people, and there's some basic rules. Number one, you don't make any deals with these people. There aren't any deals they're going to keep. And if you don't understand, again, with all of the precedents that have been set in the past with regard to the fact that these people are not consistently prosecuting, no consistency in the prosecutorial process, there are all kinds of fail points that they figure if they can get a plea bargain from an idiot who has no intestinal fortitude, then they can pretty well get away whatever they want. I would point something out about this though. In every case, in every case, in every case that we've had for decades where a handful of people have been grabbed, the ones who were foolish and stupid enough to make a deal sent themselves to jail, the ones who fought it, I mean, they also had to do the one and a half to two years worth of being held without bond Of course, you're not going to get that back. You do eventually sue them and you win that back too. And of course, they pay through the nose. But the only people who go to jail, typically with all these actions, are the ones who plea bargain. The ones who don't plea bargain win. But you don't hear about that. You're not going to hear any follow up on that. And that's the basic rule across the board. It's like, nope, no, let's just go to trial. No, let's just go to trial. Every case before Hootari, it was in the latest group were no different from all the others we've seen where it is it's also a small group of people by comparison. When I hear a piss will ease go, oh my god, it's 10 guys from all the keepers were gone. Really? What do you think it's going to be like? Are you talking about a shooting war? Yeah, yeah. We could be in a shooting war. And do you realize, you know, KIA's and WIA's, you know, how many people, you know, 10 people in an hour a day, I mean, per day easily in any given area of operation is the norm, not the exception. And yet here we have in these skirmish points, which are quite small, by comparison to the vast numbers of you that are out there, and they are vast, that it's not belittling it, but it's the idea you're looking at six, eight people. They always want about six to eight, and not much more than that. Maybe 10 at the most, because it can only fit so many pictures onto a screen when they want to flash up for propaganda. And the smaller the picture, the harder it is to do the propaganda where you pick a photo that's not complimentary or you pick a mug shot that's not complimentary. And then you refuel that every once in a while. Now you never do follow up on what ends up happening, as we've said, but they use that for the same package propaganda mechanism over and over again. Now, not trying to make you feel bad, but I am trying to make you think. If you're willing to go into a shooting war, how many people do you think, what kind of casualties do you think you're going to experience over the period of a week's worth of contact, a month's worth of contact, a year's worth of contacts, five, six, or seven years' worth of open warfare on American soil? 10 KIA's or WIA's in a given action is quite minimal. It's quite minuscule. There's no illusion on my part about that. And again, when you look at this, be like, oh my god, five guys, oh my god, and they got 10 guys, oh my god, okay, just slap that, I'm sorry. B slap that fool the slap on their yap under almost in fact, you're turtling right now Yeah, you know remember like the one kid said like yeah, yeah, I gotta use the toilet. Well, you okay? You can't you wait. No, I'm turtling in other words. It's almost pooping without quite almost pooping So the idea is with their with their spine almost dropping out their bun hole turn around and slap on they don't slap their you know the sense back into it Seriously, oh, they're they're they're almost ready to turn their spine is turtling out their bun hole It's almost they're gonna hear a meat xylophone any minute when in reality If everybody turned dug their heels in again guys and but by the way, you know, what's that term? There's always terms are always like you hold the line That ain't football Okay, that's not football. You know, I always knows I love how again. They always do the football BS You know the term hold the line came from I mean, it really goes back to the depths of time. It had nothing to do with Panty Waze football. You ever seen, there's an image, I actually share it quite a bit. It's a picture from the Lowland Wars of one of the Dutch units. And it's really, really well done. It's not a Rembrandt, it's, you know, again, the artist is a modern artist, but it's an excellent representation of pikers, musketeers, dragoons, In fact, in line formation in part of a box and there's dead horses up front, there's fellow comrades that are laying on the ground, some are bleeding and holding wounds, others are dead or in a doornail, some of the enemy are laying all about. And some of the guys got an eye poked out that are standing there ready to fight, some of, most of their kits intact, some of them the equipment's broken, one's reaching down for a replacement sword off a corpse. That's holding the line That's what holding the line means not the panty waste bullshit football garbage Holding the line close the ranks you ever hear that term. What do you think closed ranks mean? It's not just when you're in formation and you were standing in parade guys We're talking closing the ranks means the fallen have hit the ground and you need to tighten up because you got to put more firepower back down range and you got to cover each other's shoulder hold the line. So that's the difference between the, like I said, the tailgate party version of whatever's going on with some people's minds and those of us who I think have a pretty good grasp on the very grim, bad situation that we're going to experience, but let's put it this way. We let them keep going the way they are. They're in the red terror right now. They figured they're trying to disarm you. Why do you think they want to disarm you? Because they want to kill you. The only reason they want to disarm you always remember that go ahead call or jump in there Since we're on the topic of grim realities. Here's a question I've been thinking about What should be the different responses you take when it looks like and this is when the war is going on When it looks like you or possibly your teammates look like they're gonna get overrun and captured Repeat you're fading off again towards the end. I don't know why Just finish what you just go. I'm here. I'm here. Yeah, just do it. I'm here. There we go. I said, you know, on the topic of grim realities, what should be considered the different, you know, approaches to take if it looks like you or your teammates look like they're going to get overrun and captured, like you could get ambushed or fight to the end. It's the only option you've got. But also, again, just my attitude is Mr. Grenade is your friend or better still, if you got a switch and a bigger bomb. You know, by, we're all going together. I mean, as far as, if the enemy's overrunning a position, you fight right up until the end. That is the first rule. There is no stopping. You keep fighting. Even if you're mortally wounded, you have so much left in you, your attitude should be we fight until we fall, until we're finished. We're absolutely finished. And as far as otherwise being taken, that's every person's got their limit on that as far as whether or not or their personal decision. You may not get a choice. One of the biggest problems you've got is, and you see, there are depictions that are quite accurate. You know, getting hit with something that, you know, blunt force trauma from just the shockwave of an explosion. If you've ever been anywhere near the epicenter of a gas explosion, just as an example, or if you've been anywhere near anything where something is detonated, you don't really have any control at that point. So that's one of the tough parts about being in a situation like that. But overall, first rule, we fight until we fall. That's just all right. Well, in fact you keep waiting. You don't say in fact you you have no option. Go ahead. Well Mike like what if you know, let's say you managed to get out of a ambush But not everyone did and you come back and you're trying to see where your buddies are and you see some of them has been captured Well, your first goal is to maintain contact keep up the fight if you if you're you're probably okay Remember first rule about an ambush you're not going to do that The basic rule is either A, and this is a personal SOP policy with the unit, two techniques that are most popular. One is breakthrough and then exfiltrate out. You're never looking, you're not looking back. You're going to go to your first rally point. The second is, and an ambush, is breakthrough to the line of contact with the enemy. turn left and turn right and run defilite down the ambush line. And in that point, with that particular point in mind, the idea is to be exceptionally aggressive and the idea is to break the spine of the ambusher. But you're not returning, you're not coming, even if you are either going to fight or fall. In that situation, you're either dead or alive. It's like I said before. When we travel, we carry a 75 round or a 50 round drum in each gun. If you're traveling, you're not expecting ambush, but we always are. So you fire up that first 50 or 75 rounds either because you're down in your hurt, but you're still capable, or you follow through on the SOP, standard operating procedure for the unit. Those who are in the kill zone who can't leave it need to sustain massive fire. So you throw everything down right just one of those times where you use it or lose it. For the people who are able to break towards, remember you don't try to run. If it's a prepared ambush, you're just going into the next kill zone. If you try to move up or down the road, that's part of the L ambush that typically is established. So you're running right down the line of fire. Your first best choice is point towards the primary line of fire. dump all of your rounds, in other words, select fire or just keep pulling the trigger until the mag's empty, drop the mag or the drum, reinsert another and just sustain firepower. Between those who may still be able to deliver or contribute and you who are breaking through, you're either going to then break through and evac. In a way, it's kind of like an every man for himself thing, but it's just the SOP is to ensure that some element of the fighting force is preserved. If you don't think you can do. You won't be able to probably want your priest in movies they do that but in reality in the exfiltration phase You're all being hunted and you will be hunted for many many miles maybe This is why rally points are always designated by the team leader and they are dominant rally points that can easily be seen or at least be used for land navigation. A beacon or radio tower, water tower, something that's very dominant that has some form of especially at night. benchmark, your telltale that can be seen even in the dark. That's why, again, like I said, radio towers and water towers, the new windmills that are out there are great for that. But you don't get to turn around and come back. You may move with the people that you've got, but if you're in a column, remember, here's the other problem too, if you're tactically dispersed, remember, oh, worth that, tell you what, worth a break here. We got to take a break. If you're tactically dispersed, guys, you're 10 yards apart to begin with. Now that means if you have 100 people, you do math, how far apart, how spread out are you? If the dominant part of your force is in that kill zone, you're going to have to break contact and you're going to lose a percentage right off the bat because it may be a prepared ambush. If it's an HD ambush, a much higher probability of not only being able to break contact out of the kill zone, but actually turn the tide. However, if your policy is exfiltrated out, then there's no looking back. And people that are next to you, you move with. But as far as trying to round up the whole group, it just isn't possible. the heads up on that one that's typically the ambush is the one that most people are worried about and by the way, ambush is the most common tool used in the advanced areas of the feedback, the four edge of the battle area anyway, I'll tell you what, we're gonna go, we're gonna be back got Burch the republic, that's the new world order, we shall prevail the emperors on the run, where are the march? and go grab a cup of coffee or use the bathroom constitution you know, the right to bear arms is because that's the last form of defense against tyranny, not the hunt protect yourself and 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. Politicians. Check together, alright? If you get coolness, stay sharp and follow me. I dreamed 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 cure our liberty. We wrote the Constitution as a shield from tyranny. For future generations, this legacy we gave. In this, the land of free and home of 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 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. This number you 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 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 which you'll fight to save? Or do you wish your children to live in fear and be a slave? Both sons of the Republic arise, take a stand, defend the Constitution, the Supreme Law of the land, preserve our great Republic in each God-given right, and pray to God to keep the torch of freedom burning bright. As I awoke, he vanished in the mist for whence he came. His words were true. We are not free, but we have ourselves to blame. For even now as tyrants trample each God given right we only watch in tremble too afraid to stand and fight If he stood by your bedside to dream while you were asleep and wondered what remains of the freedoms he thought to keep What would be your answer if he called out from the grave? Is this dill the land of the free? and good afternoon ladies and gentlemen this is the second hour of the afternoon intelligence report of our party one day closer to victory for all of our brothers and sisters both on behind the lines knocked back territories southwest south and east ladies and gentlemen you're listening to us on the liberty tree radio dot for and that the g dot com We're also on satellite and we are on AM and FM microstations, CB base stations, and Ultra, NET, Hallmark, and Golden Spike technologies east and west of the Mississippi along with Alaska. And it is, oh, weapons Wednesday. It is, oh my goodness, it is the 2nd of June. The communists have been in power for six months. And nobody has done anything about it. The petal, the sniffer meat puppet and the back alley bar hold the scuff knee pads run by Obama. Still sitting in power. Yeah, any minute Hillary's gonna be arrested too. Any minute now, yeah just, this is it. Remember those emails? This is it. How many of you got those? This is it. Hillary's gonna be arrested. Well that was like four and a half years ago now. And it went on nonstop for four and a half years. I'm sure any minute now the pedos, you know, sniffer meat puppet and the back of the bar harvest company pads can be gone. Yes. Yes. Right. And I'm a Chinese jet pilot named Lao Zi. Anyway, it is, of course, 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. Now before we're going farther, it's Weapons Wednesday. I'm going to remind you, at the very least, I know a lot of you maybe can't afford a drum or a big, big drum for any of your weapons because you spent all your money on the rifle you could afford. Ammunition is through the roof. That's not accidental. That's to punish you so you don't have all the other accoutrements. That minimizes you. That's not an accident. That's planned, okay? Well, let's say you have a preponderance of money still, and you've got your basic magazine load. You should have about 23 mags, 30 round, 20 round, whatever fits it. That's an AR-10 FNFAL HK91 M14. Then it should be 23, 20 round slab mags. Don't worry about 30 rounders. Go with a 20 round standard. It's what they were built. It was built for the gun. It's what they used steadily by the millions and millions and millions, and it works. with the light rifles like the AR Mini 14 and AK 30 round stick mags, so there are 20s and there are 40s. You can go up and down the dial on those by the way. But whatever you do, at least 23 mags for each of the guns that you have. You will use both those in your combat load and your dump bandolier slash dump bags that you're going to chuck as they're emptied if you want to lighten your load. However, try to get a drum or a large stick magazine for your blocks. for your 45, for your SIG, for your Steyr. I don't care what it is. Get one. And in addition to that, also again, a drum or at least a 40 round mag for, you know, gazosia standard really, AKA 47. 40 rounders are made for the RPK. They gave them to the squad gunners. If they gave them to the squad gunners, they had to work. Always remember that if it's a 40 mm, if it's a 40, 40 mm, if it's a 40 round AK mag, it was originally allocated along with a limited number of drums to the RPK squad gunner in the Russian military or the Warsaw Pact. Those 40 round stick mags work just fine and that gives you more bullets that go down range before you have to change mags. So at least have one of those. You don't think they have 100 of them. Just one or two or how many you can afford because if you lose one you want to replace it. The drums, you can get 50 round drums for all the 308 rifles, 7.62x51 NATO. You can get 50s and 75s for .223 slash 5.56 and for 7.62x39 and in addition that for the AK but the SKS. And they even make drums for the 545 by 39 AK-74s and yes, the Mini-14 and others. Wherever you can get one drum at least, buy it. Are you going to use it nonstop? Well, in a way, yes you are, because what we do, our policy, and I want you to think about this, as I mentioned, your infantry. Now you might be mechanized to a degree, but you're always going to, let's assume we're going to lose the mule. The horse is going to die. You're going to end up on foot, your infantry. Whenever we travel, since we have the ability to have big boom toys that have magazines, then when you're traveling, the drum goes in the gun or the 40 round stick mag goes in the gun and preferably the most reliable large capacity magazine in your pistol. And the reason for this is they're drop magazines or drop drums. You understand what that means. If you're traveling, okay, then there's traveling, overwatch, and then there's overwatch. You have traveling, If you're traveling, you're moving with speed, but you're still tactical, obviously. You may be traveling, but in Overwatch, where one formation moves and the other formation moves beyond it, but you're still moving at good time. You're making your, but you're closer to this. or are suspecting that contact is far more probable and then of course there's the overwatch phase where you're in contact and now you're in fire maneuver to try and engage the enemy effectively and bring all your fires to bear, all your weapons to bear. When you're traveling everybody is a grenadier, everybody is a grenadier, everybody is a grenadier. You have to understand, you have to establish an SOP. If, if, if Every man in a formation has two grenades or if one grenade is designated right off the bat, if you make contact and you're in an ambush, you fire up your first, your first mag, drum or big stick mag, you drop it. You don't try to save it. You drop it. If you make contact, you fire until it's empty and you drop it and ignore it. You forget it. You might remember where it is. Hopefully you do. If you win, you can come back and get it. If you lose, you don't care. You see how that works? On the other hand, if your SOP is that you're firing and you're breaking contact, as we talked about at the end of the last hour, if your job is to break through the aggressor line and then move away from the aggressor, you'll be chased. Some of you will, some of you won't, depending on what numbers they have, how much damage you've done, how much confusion exists. You will, when you break contact and you move through the line, if the objective is to go back to the first rally point that was designated, then you're going to break through and you're going to move on. And that drum is a big stick magazine to stay where it lays. It's wherever you drop it, that's where it will be for eternity until somebody stumbles on it or finds it in the road where you dropped it, whatever. It's just that simple. But when I mentioned being a Grenadier, imagine if 50 men all throw a grenade at once. If you have a standard policy for that, if you, and this can be with launchable rifle grenade, this can be with 40 millimeter grenade launchers, this can be with, and of course RPGs, everybody just wants to squander an RPG, but ah, what the hell? If you're an ambush, piss on it. You might be dead next to them the next second anyway. So why not? Turn the tube and fire. Pick a place you don't like the most, put a round down range, and then try to exfiltrate out. Remember, you're supposed to have a personal sidearm, not just the RPG, so switch over to your personal firearm and start dumping more rounds down range. But everybody with a grenade, chuck one towards the bad guys. In fact, there's a typical policy, little tricks they don't want you to know about breaking. There's a couple different techniques that were used to break ambushes, and one of them is two grenades per man. What? Well you got a rifle, of course I do. But two grenades per man, why? Can you imagine, have you ever been in a grenade range? Have you ever watched one grenade go off? You know when 100 men or 80 men or 70 men, maybe some of your men are dead, some are wounded, they're delirious, don't even know what the hell they're doing anymore. But where we're standing, if 70 men out of 100 threw a grenade, do you know what that's like down range? That's like a mini Russian barrage. like a mini Russian rocket barrage. And they don't want you to think about this, but this is a technique that was used in the Special Forces units. In fact, some of the units were in Cambodia. They had a policy of two grenades and two complete sticks of ammunition advance. In other words, dump, you know, dump a magazine, throw a grenade, dump a magazine, throw a grenade. If you do that times 200 or 300 men on offensive action, or breaking contact or whoever's in direct contact with an ambush, they fire like that. The others hold their fire until they envelop them or again, following whatever the SOP, Standard Operating Procedure is, they collapse on the ambush point and engage and become aggressive. Then it's still two grenades, two full stick mags. That's a horrific amount of firepower, but the grenades are shock tools. And remember, typically you're talking American grenades. One thing to remember about firepower, the average American grenade you were trained with, either the Mark II, the lemon, or the baseball, doesn't make any difference. Those are what are called defensive grenades. Do you know the difference? A defensive grenade has a larger burst radius. In fact, you've had grenades, you know, when they propagandize you with new names and titles, you can be baffled with bullshit all day. It's a flashbang! Oh, you mean it's an offensive grenade? What? Well, no, it's a flashbang grenade. No, it's an offensive grenade. All offensive grenades have smaller burst radiuses. And by the way, go back to the Storm Altalong. They go back to the trench sweepers of World War I, where they threw potato mashers in front of them. And then the assault troops would storm troopers, would search forward in the path of the grenade. Why could they do that? Well, when you think grenade, you probably think that thing was about a 30-yard in diameter burst radius. And in reality, with an offensive grenade, it only has a few feet or no more than six or seven feet radius of fragmentation of any kind. And it's going to be sporadic by comparison by the nature of the type of grenade used. Depending on what era you are in. So the advantage of the, hold on, the advantage of the offensive grenade was that you could move towards it without the probability of being injured by your own ordinance. Ah, but the American grenade, and most people don't realize this, the American, reliably manufactured grenade, like the Garand, was one of the most significant changes on the battlefield. In fact, there are three tools that everybody needs to remember. the M1 Garand, the American Grenade, and the E-Tool. If you understand the value of those three, the innovative changes that those three weapons made and how they influenced a hundred years worth of warfare. then you'll understand better tactical combat operations. An American grenade, the reliability of the ordnance that we produced surpassed everybody else on the planet. The reliable performance and development of those grenades was also a significant change factor in ground warfare, even though grenades have been around for virtually hundreds of years. Go ahead, caller, jump in there. Hey, Will from Florida here. Speaking of grenades, towards the beginning of this conflict and towards the middle of it, are the majority of our grenades going to be surplus grenades manufactured or are the majority of them going to be like homemade pipe bomb variants? Not so much. Well, think about pipe bombs sound nice, but remember they're not as reliable as you might think. I like, well first of all answer the base question. It's going to be a mix because you're going to capture a certain amount of ordinance. You're also going to have third party plots trying to sell your ordinance. We've talked about that before. But most likely it's going to be close local ordinance manufacturing that deals with indirect tactical munitions, in other words mortar and grenade and even a variation on the 40 millimeter grenade concept. The big thing here again is they're not that sophisticated in terms of how to make them but it's a matter of quality control which is really like I was saying earlier by you know just a moment ago about US grenade. What changed the performance of grenades was the high level of quality in production and consistency in performance that the US grenade offered. Doesn't mean other countries didn't make grenades. And most all of their grenades worked, but to varying degrees. Now, one of the wars, you know, you notice that there's a big push towards telling you all about World War I, right? If you notice that, all the movies about World War I, That's a hundred years ago by the way guys you do realize that I've talked about this before You do realize that World War one was a hundred years ago They're making a bunch of movies about World War one because they figured you're all stupid so you won't have a clue about how things really went And they always love showing you these sanitized versions where everybody's wearing all the latest, you know, or the British, you know, standard uniform and the, you know, the German, the Teuscha, you know, uniform. And, you know, the trenches are always the same trenches and they're also dirty, but they're not so dirty. And they're not really Star Wars lived in, so to speak. Have you noticed that? Another thing they don't show you, do you understand that more mortars, mortars? were made in the trenches than were made in the arsenals. You do know that for every factory grenade that came forward to the trenches in World War One, 10 to 20 were made right there in the trenches by the troops. When we talk about mortars, they made batteries of homemade mortars, field-produced mortars, that were used as sub-barrage guns when they went over the top. Have you seen any movie show you that? Well, of course not, because if you wait until 100 years later, all the guys that knew what was going on are dead, then the last thing you want is for anybody to know that it wasn't this corporate package battlefield, but rather mostly it was an improvised brawl. And anything and everything that was available in a way of real reach, you know, at arm's reach inventory, Was converted into something else. How do you think they made mortars in the field? What do you think was the most common tool that they could use to make mortars in the field? In fact, they were classic. They were colstrom type motors me clean others A lot of artillery shells laying around right guys You know how cool an artillery shell can be converted over into a mortar tube Stumpy mortar and they would do six packs and eight packs and 10 packs and 20 packs of artillery shells that were braced with wood and some were electronically fired, in other words you hit a switch and they go boom! Others, you lit a fuse. Okay, are we ready to go over the top side? That's right, it's 15 seconds, 14 seconds, light the fuse, light the fuse, and they light the fuse and the gang fuse will be lit and then you hear the And then the whistle goes off and as everybody goes over the top, you weren't waiting for your own artillery, the big guns, to support you because the bastards weren't necessarily pointed in the right place. And you weren't going to get any more artillery than was allocated. So what would happen is, about the time that the literally left tenant would blow the whistle, or the officer would open, would build the whistle, or your doughboy would blow, you know, lieutenant would blow the whistle, you know, the other butter bar. When that happened, all of a sudden, boom, boom, boom, boom, boom, boom, boom, boom, boom, boom, boom, boom, boom, boom, boom, boom, boom, boom, boom, boom, boom, boom, boom, boom, boom, boom, boom, boom, boom, boom, boom, boom, boom, boom, boom, boom, boom, boom, boom, boom, boom, boom, boom, boom, boom, boom, boom, boom, boom, boom, boom, boom, boom, boom, boom, boom, boom, boom, boom, boom, boom, boom, boom, boom, boom, boom, boom, boom, boom, boom, boom, boom, boom, boom, boom, boom, boom, boom, boom, boom, boom, boom, boom, boom, boom, boom, boom, boom, boom, boom, boom, boom, boom, boom, boom, boom, boom, boom, boom, boom, boom, boom, boom, boom, boom, boom, boom, boom And going downrange would be a whole bunch of 105 and the 75 homemade out of tomato cans or from scavenged shells that they found laying around that hadn't gone off and that they sculpted out and then recharged. And while you're jumping over the top, you've got anywhere from 40, 50 to 100 to 200 short range mortar bombs going out to the enemy trench. Anybody show that to you in a movie? Of course not. You have the ideas. How could they do that? When you did go into the field, if you were the French, then guess what? Guys, we've talked about this many times. The French had a ration system just like anybody else and today Chef Juger is going to make tomato rignon. And of course we are going to add some of the rat because the beef did not show up. So we are going to have the rat with the tomato and we are going to cook. And when we are done we are saving all of the cans. And all the cans are saved up and all about 10 minutes later Jacques shows up with a whole bunch of crates. What are those crates? They came from the factory and they were grenade kits. And what you did is you see those tomato cans? You wiped them out. You could take the label off if you wanted. It didn't make any difference. And what they would do is then they would build in the trenches up front right there where they're getting ready to go before they charge or anything. In fact, it was something to keep you busy. and they would make tomato can grenades. And just as many tomato can, in fact many times more tomato can grenades were thrown by the troops than were sent by the factory. That's front line World War I combat in the trenches. Nonstop 1914, 1918 and through the whole of the war they did that and even more. So again, improvise, adapt, and overcome. Now government, like the French government, and they weren't the only ones, anybody ever watch Gallipoli? By the way, that guy, everybody loves him, the Patriot, Mel Gibson. Anybody ever watch Gallipoli? How many of you watched the movie? That's one that is real. I'll tell you that that's one that's really cool because what's really neat Did you pay attention if you ever watched the movie Gallipoli where they're building grenades right there in the trenches just like I described? What well they've got empty shell casings and They're putting a charge in the middle of cans while Gibson's talking. He's talking to somebody else is all bunch of guys sitting there And if you pay attention, they're scooping up the empty shell casings and they're putting them inside the can around the charge and then they're putting the lids and the fuse on the can. They're making grenades right there in the field. You may have watched that movie and it may have slid right by you. You didn't realize what the hell you were looking at, right? How many of you watched the movie Gallipoli with Mel Gibson? A very young Mel Gibson, by the way. Good night, mate. So, take the time and go back and watch that again. And when you do, you go, if you didn't see it, and you go, well, I don't remember that. Well, now that you got a reason to go watch Gallipoli, I always give you homework assignments, guys. Okay? The other thing is, remember, granted, your technology, well, by the way, we're talking about mortar rounds. Mortar rounds can be sophisticated or as unsophisticated as you choose. Let me also point out we talked about 40 millimeter. How many of you guys are have been grenadiers? How many of you have fired an M203? Which all of you should have anybody if you form a military you had to have fired the 203 now Maybe they cut that out in more recent years or they've paired it down But you used to least get to fire a couple of rounds for a basic familiarization Okay, a 40 millimeter boom and you know boom boom boom boom right 300 yards out. Here we can do a 300. Yeah, I have plenty of times. So anyway, here's the thing. If you fired a 40 millimeter grenade round, you were at the range, you probably had a paint round, right? Let me ask you something. What was the casing for the paint round, the shell that the paint round was in? What was it made of? Was it made of metal? No, no, it wasn't well you might have been if you're if you're early Vietnam or middle Vietnam Yes But later on towards the end of the war and during the during the post Vietnam period they were trying to save money And so they came up with a really neat Well forgive me caller go ahead Plastic there you go. It was basically it was a spun plastic It was a phenolic. It was it's a very simple hole you can go to the gun shows usually somebody has either the casings by themselves or they're selling a shot spent case with a recovered paint round that's stuck in it. Now the paint round is not explosive. The paint rounds are slugs. What they have is an octagon slug of steel cast iron on the inside. They also then have a dry powder marker material that is wrapped around that octagon piece of material. And there is an eggshell spring on the inside, depending on the year. Some were just originally just an eggshell body, this heavy plastic. That's that blue plastic that makes up the training round designated color. But it's a live training round in that when you load it into the 40 millimeter and you put it to your shoulder and boom. It goes down range and it does everything it's supposed to exactly to the same spec as a standard 40 millimeter HE. Okay? What's interesting about that round is I want you to go look at it for a reason. It's a plastic case. Now it's spun. That's actually very unique. Like I said, it's a unique polymer that they use. But that's for the sake of, again, adding safety. Remember we told you before, I've mentioned this many times, Usually, your safety parameter is, whatever the operating specs are, you usually always tell the operator that the performance is at that peak level. But in reality, you've engineered about a 25% safety factor to allow for stupid. Okay? And or bad day at the factory because you got to remember people do stupid things in the factory. It's Friday and they're worried about going out of date. I got only a hundred more of these to do those bastards. Oh, well, I hate these people I work for. You know what? I could do this faster if I calibrate this back and drop the machine up. Now run the machine faster. We don't worry about quality control. And I get it done. All right. I got piece work. Okay. So they allow for the fact that somebody might want to go on a date and Friday and the powder charge may be a little higher than expected. So there's already that calculated in. Boo-boos happen. But if you look at that case, you'll notice something. Is that a regular primer that's in the base of that case? Guys, anybody remember? If you look close, what the hell? It looks like a rifle case stuck into the plastic. And it's the primers lined up, but it's a big pan primer, a rifle primer, and it's a rifle or a pistol case, like a .45 case. You're right, it is. What they did, as in many government projects, is they actually took reject brass, you know, during the brass process at Gojo House Made. And government used to do this with a lot of other projects you just don't hear about. They would take the reject brass. They would cut it down when they molded the 40mm shell. It actually has an indent that is a specific depth of part of what is a, well basically the depth of a .45 ACP case. You can either use a .45 ACP case with a large pistol primer or you can use a cut down 7.6 Q by 51 NATO or .30-06 case with a standard rifle primer. Now you can squib that, then what they do is actually that activating it. There's a mild, not concussive squib burn like flash powder that is used to enhance the channel that has the charge. And the base charge is a lighter version, although it has to be calculated to throw the weight of the paint round. to the same arc and to line up with the sites and the performance of the standard HE round. All that's been done. The math and the physics are all figured out. But the fact of the matter is that they're showing you that, let's see, 40 millimeters low pressure high velocity And not only were we able to use plastic, but they did use plastic, but they also used throwaway scrap parts, and they built a 40 millimeter launching shell that can dump a full-size, 40 millimeter type grenade or a heavily impacted HE grenade down range. Now, if you figure out how to fuse that, and the way you do that is you actually have a fusible filament in the base of your homemade grenade round, What happens is when the flash and the charge shove the thing down the tube and the flash makes contact with the manganese filament that's used for the base, it starts the ball rolling its birds. As it leaves the tube, it's actually activating the charge. And basically, either you're going to make it or it's going to be pretty darn close when you know what your limits are with regard to the burn time on that fuse. And it's either point of impact, there's a couple tricks there, 22 rounds make really great detonators, and a nail, or a BB, that actually works really well, BB and a finished nail. And you can either impact or it'll blow up on its own after it reaches a certain distance. Now the reason I like that combination is the same thing that the RPG does on a larger scale. No matter what, if you fire a homemade grenade round downrange, is similar to the 40 millimeter but with different specs because you can build it to whatever specs you have depending on material available. When it goes down range no matter what it detonates contributing to the confusion of the battlefield. That's why they built the RPG the way that they did. The RPG-7, not the RPG-2, the RPG-7. The RPG-7 detonates no matter what when it goes down the trail of the Ark, when it first is launched by Recoilless. And then when the rocket motor kicks in and you have the second arc of contact, remember that you're, look at your gradient sights on an RPG-7, you don't understand what I'm talking about. Past that second burn, when that burn kicks in and the rocket does what it's supposed to do, understand that there's a fuse already activated and no matter what, that RPG should go off. Again, the reliability of Russian Ordnance is pretty high with rockets. And what that guarantees is that if a round is fired downrange during an assault, even if the gunner is off, if it doesn't make a contact and concussively activate the charge and impacts or something, it doesn't make any difference. If the rocket goes downrange, at a given point in time, it's going to move. So when you have two RPG crewmen, per squad and each man is launching a rocket every so many like 30 seconds or every minute if they're being supported with a guy that's the coolie behind them with more rockets. Then the idea is that no matter what, those rockets are all creating confusions, they're detonating, they're creating more of a thin, they create more fear. And so as part of the cascading umbrella of firepower that's advancing forward in that type of assault, They are doing their job no matter what they're not Impacting or running to the end of their trail and then laying in the mud you ever reach to recover the 3.5 inch bazooka round I have You know why? Because in a lot of the ranges when the reach 3.5 it go down range or any of these others like it and even recoilless rounds They don't have a capping fuse like the RPG 7 And so the rocket will go down range and the old ranges, especially guys out in the impact areas, moss grows everywhere and it's sand. And literally the rocket is traveling horizontal to the ground. It tails out and then scuds in without impacting with the fuse cap. And the round will just be laying there. Hundreds of them. Well, dozens of them. If ordnance has done their job, they've gotten rid of them every once in a while. But if you know how not so efficient the Army is, when they had live laws training rounds, you could recover hundreds and hundreds of them. Hundreds. And they're fully functional. Just a heads up there. Things to remember about old military facilities. And why you also don't go patty-pawn out through the impact area? Because those things are just laying there, collecting must. rust and well moss. Boom! Oh I guess you found that one. Not a good thing. So anyway, with regard to home-made's, grenade and grenade is easy. Mortar, not that complicated. In fact, let me recommend something. Go look at the very simple two inch, three and three inch Stokes mortar design. And then, and of course you're not going to do this right now, but if you're thinking ahead, making a simple Stokes type conventional breech-loading mortar is a lot easier than you might think. In fact, go take a look at when he built what he built. What year did Stokes come up with his first model mortar? And by the way, he was in the market of selling mortars. I mean, that's what he wanted to do was sell this product. So he came up with a whole bunch of different ideas. Some are very, very, very much alive today. Just a heads up there. Anyway, other solutions are things that taking into consideration is propellant. And there's a number of solutions there that are easy, not the least of which is Mr. Propane is your friend. There's a launching tool. Cool. Think about that one. Go ahead, call her. Jump in there. Shelby from Oklahoma City. Mark what you're talking about with the grenade launcher. I posted a video in discord and it was from the Syrian conflict and there's a video of them shotgun with a Basically like a beer can launcher. Yep. Pipe bombs on the end and they would like a few launch it and If you think about it, you could probably use a single shot shotgun because obviously the king the metal welded on the end and they're just using a regular More than likely. It doesn't explain how much powder or anything they use, but they're just showing the example of what they're using. Typically they do... Oh, I'm sorry. Go ahead. One more comment, and I'll drop off here. You're talking about the RPG. For most people, they don't realize there's actually a plow off the tip of the RPG. If you watch a lot of the Ukrainian conflict videos, You'll see them remove that plastic cap. And there's even a couple of videos with a guy. If you're watching, he forgets to remove the cap and launches the stuff. Sometimes it will, but nine times out of ten it will not. You've got to remember to remove that cap when you're not way beforehand because it will get negative. I'm going to mute back up, Mark. Right. Let's just remind somebody about Russian ordnance, okay? We have all kinds of safety features. They have safety devices that prevent it from going off. But the safety devices are once you take the safety device off don't fumble screw with it because it will kill you Okay, if the logic is that you're supposed to be paying attention With American ordinance, let's under make every help everybody understand something The Russian grenade launcher the moment you put around in the tube in fact like you said if you're if you're not paying attention you drop it you lose But when you are firing it, it's active from the moment. You pay attention to what you're shooting at because if there's something 10 feet in front of you, that's going to activate the grenade. The 40 millimeter U.S. grenade, like I've said, sophisticated ordnance guys, has to spin so many RPM in order for it to set back the safety inside the grenade. This is why when you build a homemade rifle grenade launcher for the 40 millimeter, if you were to build one at home and go down the road for the war, you have to have a rifled barrel for the 40 millimeter. Because, in fact, if you look at a 40 millimeter round, that's why it has that little double ring around the shell because that's what locks into the lands and grooves. rotates the round. And by the way also please you got to get the proper spin. You also have to have the proper direction for landing through to get the spin going in the right direction or it will do nothing. If that spin doesn't take place, the shell will not, it's a big slug, it will not detonate when the time comes. So thank you for bringing up safety features. Know either what the limitations are of the built-in safety features that are part of the ordinance, or understand that there are safety devices that need to be disengaged and taken from the device in order for it to work. The Russian videos, like you said, guys, go watch any of the real personal footage. The propaganda stuff that's canned, throw that out the window. The Western Ukrainian stuff is run by the Israelis, and it's just plastic as Hollywood, okay? What you want to watch is the stuff done by the militia units from the eastern half because it's all raw footage. And when you see them operate a grenade launcher like the chain fed gun, you want to watch that because there are just as many of their guns out there as there are our version. So you're probably going to see one in the up and coming war. The RPG-7, you're going to see them everywhere in one form or another. And the advantage is that they use all of the different rounds made for the RPG-7. There isn't just one. There are several different warheads that have been made available over the years. And some of these are pure HE. They're actually designed for, or they're different types of shape type armor penetrating rounds. But if you watch the videos, these guys are firing everything they got their hands on down range. You want to understand how to get the dashika to work. If you want to understand how to operate a recoilless gun, watch these videos. Because these guys bring everything into operation, and not only that, but reuse and reuse and reuse. Because when they're in a firefight or if they're in a harassment raid, They're using these weapons repeatedly, which means they have to prep the rocket, they have to pull the safeties, they have to pull the wrapper, they have to properly mount the round and lock the round into place. Pay attention to everything they're doing because they're doing it real life. Hey Mark, it's not just a training video. That's real life. So if you want to see them where they screw up, they also do that once in a while, just like was mentioned a minute ago. Go ahead, caller, jump in there. Hey, are there going speaking of historic ordinance? I was wondering are there any historic site that we would use as bases like the best one I can think of for my thing is you know the old colonial like you know concrete fort the Naples fort in St. Augustine would be the one I would think of. We're gonna use those or those two. Well actually they've been used historically or they're remobilized at different times in World War two a lot of the older forts simply because of availability and the fact that yeah, they were reinforced concrete or they were stone. Any of that is better than you're at your butt buried to the wind and then typically upon occupation especially for fixed weapons platforms, crew served weapons, sites like that are useful because they are still fortified. Now to what degree or how effective they're going to be? You know again, you're in the battlefield, anything can happen. During World War II, I think almost every facility that we had was mobilized for coastal defense. There isn't an historical site that wasn't reactivated with the exception of maybe a very, very few that had more of an, you know, or more image than they were physically, you know, like, functionally, physically functional. In other words, historical sites were built after the fact as representations, those weren't used. But many of the gun battery, for instance, gun battery locations on the east coast, especially around most of the anchorages and harbors, they remobilized almost every one of those. In fact, when you're usually doing a travel of like the middle colonial states. you'll find gun emplacement 421. It was used during the colonial war by militia, or militia naval artillery. I've mentioned many times during the war, the militias had many more guns than the continentals. Well, in the war of 1812, they used them again. And during the Civil War, they were used then. Span Am, maybe not so much, but they were still maintained. And then, you know, when World War II came about because of the possibility of invasion, virtually every facility that was out there was pretty much upgraded or temporarily mobilized. And there's a couple of them that are revolutionary work, naval harbor defense sites. They were just gun stations for a handful of guns, maybe two guns. They put a 75 millimeter French gun from World War I in the position. They'd be better than harsh language and throwing rocks. But they upgraded progressively too. As they got more equipment available, they upgraded until they got to the point where they felt that coastal defense was stable and also the threat was reduced. So, the same would be true. The big thing is, remember, there's two things to think about. You might capture a nice facility, but remember, two people know about it. A, the US military, and they probably have a plan to get rid of it if they can. Well, let's not forget that in the big scheme of things, the Russians targeted a whole lot of facilities. It's one of the reasons, you know, years ago we were kind of talking about this. How about this one, guys? You, too, could own a Titan missile complex. Wouldn't it be cool to have your own bunker? You can have it and make it into your own house and limit it to everything. Wow, it's cool. Look at the accommodations. And then, meanwhile, over in Russia, Well, the old K-46 missile system, they keep it running because it's paid for, it was built like a big doghouse, and it is automatically targeting American weapons systems. We did not change this, and so your very nice Titan missile complex bunker is still in the crosshairs from a weapons system that was put into B category reserve back in 1995. Well, remember, we have enemies. And those enemies, they don't waste money. If they have something and it works, they leave it. And if it just happens to maybe be off a little bit with some of what they have on their merbs, well, you might be in the wrong place at the right time, but I get a nice apartment until it becomes, let's say, Green Glass Crater, okay, after the beginning or the outset of the International War. Just something to think about. Those are things you should always remember. It's like sometimes it's better to build new and also build it surreptitiously. That way the bad guys don't know where everything is. But that should be part of the shell game anyway. You'll use existing, you're going to be reactivating, you're also going to be paying attention because the enemy has been doing this already. A lot of the older Cold War nuclear facilities that they abandoned, or I didn't say really abandoned, they let them idle. They waited until all you people are dead that worked on them, or all you people are brain dead and can't remember where you worked on them because you're too old. And they could walk right back in, re-cable, re-fiber optic, redo all the fixtures and fittings where they need to be changed. And the average person doesn't even have a clue that the stuff is there. It's like talking about the salt mines here or the underground complexes. You don't have to have maggot holes with underground cutters everywhere. There's a thousand locations that because they were built in 1954 or 1957 or 1962 or 1970, the population could drive by them every day and don't even have a clue that they're there. So, now those complexes will be useful. How reliable they'd be or how safe they would be. Once again, both sides were constantly spying to try and figure out who's doing the zoo and where are they going to, you know, where they're going to try and hide. So, you got to figure that the other side, Chinese or the Russians or the Israelis betraying us, and they'd be more likely to sell the information of the Russians and the Chinese, have mapped out a lot of the traditional sites. They know where they are. They were already betraying us years ago. It's not like they just recently started betraying us. The Israelis are going to sell us out for as long as if existed. But anyway, as far as utilizing, the big thing would be stripping out and moving, but perhaps, and this is always part of the game, deception. Remember, appear to man it, appear to keep it active, throw up a radio signal that's limited but not stupid. Then you can create a deception target that forces your enemy to either divert resources and manpower, which is a resource, or waste ordinance on something that is irrelevant, which is all part of the dance of swords. Remember, deception warfare is part of your bag of tricks. Understand that it has to be reliable or It has to be realistic enough to create confidence in the mind of the enemy. So artificial ordinance, equipment in place, if you're going to do dummies, the dummies have to be fairly realistic nowadays, guys, because remember, it's not like you're going to have a straw man with a straw head and a straw hand standing there. Nobody's going to be fooled by that one. But with everything that can be done to create a quickness if you do it, you know again properly You put manpower in place the manpower does a bunch of work you move a bunch of junk around Create the idea of the high confidence that the enemy should waste ordinance if they're dropping that ordinance on somebody on a wasted target It's ordinance. They can't drop on you where it's valuable So that's another reason that and everything you do involves deception whenever your in combat operations conceal, and again concealment is especially critical, but even as you do that you also want to provide enticement. And this means that you're constantly, constantly working your ass off. And it's part of again the stuff that people used to be taught, in fact, World War I, World War II, even in Korea, Vietnam, a lot more deceptive than you probably would want to admit. The amount of countermeasures and deception measures that were involved in the Vietnam War, they don't want you to even think about because all of you could apply them. And if you're up against a conventional force and you utilize all the tricks of the trade, the conventional force, all bet in this case the secret police or the regime or the globalist, would be in a world of hurt and they know it. Some of this stuff is you know, it's a much sci-fi movie Yeah, it really is one of the things that the government had and wouldn't be hard for you to build I've done them I've actually done squid boxes and I took the the idea there's a couple different tricks They didn't world war one the same way to create firefights that didn't exist But during Vietnam, they actually had droppable ordinance. If you recall, there was a situation where they tried to actually rescue Take out and rescue a bunch of POWs from the North Vietnamese. Now what they did as part of the deception raids is they had light aircraft, light fighters drop in or medium era naval bombers came in at short range, dropped off parachute ordnance, which by the way a lot of bombs are parachute assisted to put them on target. But in this case, these were dropped in soft. When they hit the ground, they had squibbed slash weapon systems on board to simulate grenade fire, small arms fire, squad automatic machine guns, and it was live. So it would drop a 40 millimeter and then it launched what would sound like an RPG-7. Meanwhile, there were eight cases randomly. It wasn't like it was just a uniform burst. It was random fire like an exchange. So you're controlling an area. You think you've got raiders coming in. All of a sudden, two miles to your north, you've got a firefight going on. You can hear M16 rounds and 7.62x39 going off. you've got a firefight between an ally and North Vietnamese forces. So you now have to take into consideration you're getting audible and visual because you also get to see flashes and explosions that RPG goes off in one direction and explodes. Remember, RPG-7s do this. Well, guess what? It creates high confidence that there is a conflict going on in another part of your area of control. Now you have to decide how you're going to allocate manpower or whether or not you're going to allocate manpower to deal with that possible threat. Meanwhile, remember, electronic countermeasures are creating deception signal technology, sending messages down range, including just interrupting with and or screaming and panicking on your radio grid. Which would happen and can happen easily in a combat situation. Anyway, ideas, be creative. Learn from the mistakes of others. You won't live long enough to make them all yourself. God bless the Republic. Death to the New World Order. We shall prevail, ladies and gentlemen. The Empire is on the wrong. We are on the march both day and night. Hoorah. Again, guys, constantly use your mind. Think of all the dirty tricks and understand that in the battlefield you can apply almost every one of them. God bless y'all. Ed's taking over. Pray for forbidden knowledge. Coming up next, I'm going to get out of the way. God bless y'all. Bye-bye.