Mark Koernke discussed equipment weatherization and moisture protection for electronics, reviewing the Axion 8-power monocular with LED light system as a tactical tool. He covered practical preparedness topics including Ziploc bag storage methods, battery management, ammunition organization, and the importance of durable goods in an anticipated economic collapse. Koernke addressed post-war property distribution, veteran compensation, and the dangers of repeating historical mistakes like the Continental currency fraud. He warned about communist-style shortages already occurring in America, discussed copper and silver as alternative currency, and analyzed recent government building closures (FBI, HUD, Capitol, White House) as potential precursors to a major false-flag event, comparing them to the Nashville bombing and 9/11.
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 Innocence are killed called gun-free zones. We're gonna do out of office or sucking my machine politicians Okay, just get any blunt objects together, alright? If you get corners, bash them in the head, that seems to work out. Keep together, stay sharp, and follow me. 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 a tax you do not owe to please the IRS. Your money is no longer made of silver nor of gold. You trade your wealth for paper so your life can be controlled. You pay for crimes that make our nation turn from God and shame. You've taken some, 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. 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 torch of freedom burning bright. As I awoke he'd vanished in the mist from whence he came. His words were true. We are not free, but we have ourselves to blame. For even now as tyrants trampled each god-given right, we only watch him tremble, too afraid to stand and fight. If he stood by your bedside in a dream while you were asleep and wondered what remains of the freedoms he'd fought to keep, what would be your answer if he called out from the grave, is this still the land of the free? Good afternoon ladies and gentlemen, this is the first hour of the afternoon and intelligence report I've heard. One day closer to victory for all of our brothers and sisters. In occupied territories, southwest, north, northeast, and east. Ladies and gentlemen, you are listening to us. LibertyTreeRadio.4mg.com Liberty Tree Radio on the satellite and we are on AM and FM microstations, CB base stations, and Ultra-Neth Hallmark and Golden Spike Technologies east and west of the Mississippi along with Alaska. Good afternoon to all of our friends out there in Lower Florida and including the great cities there along with CONUS, the outlying two-state territories, at the clock. 5.06 PM Eastern Standard Time. It is, oh my, it's Tuesday. Communications Tuesday, it is the 15th. We are halfway through the month, I believe. I could be wrong, it's not getting a microphone. I'm pretty sure it might. And that means halfway through the first true month of summer. Ah, don't worry, we've got another half to go. It's been again right along because all the heat everybody's gonna get warm. But today, actually it's been cool here. 73, 74 degrees here in the bottom of the state of Michigan and beautiful breeze. Perfect day to get out there and work and get stuff done. So that's exactly what we did. And for all of you out there again, 13th year of open Fabian socialists and in your face, we're all goose stepping. Soviet Socialist Occupation of America with a K 2021 Older Calendar 2021 Battle for the Republic The Dance of Swords and it is Communications Tuesday. A couple things to think about real quick and most people don't realize this very early but you know remember well you do know it because if you've had enough trinkets and toys that have been electronic water and electronics just don't go together you know Oh, that's dead. Oh, that was dead too. Oh no, look how it's going in the swimming pool. Oh, thank goodness I wasn't 110 or 220. Everybody in the pool will be dead. Yeah, but you pull it back out real fast. And if you're lucky, it's true. If you do pull it out fast, remember water follows the path of least resistance and air does create resistance. So if you do have an inner chamber of some kind, it is true. Grab it, get it out of the water. Shake it, but try to shake it. Don't just shake it around. Think about how it fell and how the water would bleed back out. Try not to shake the water into where the sensitive stuff is. And again, it's common sense. There's a couple things you can do. Number one, let's try not to get stuff that's electronic in the water. Most common mistake made. And this includes rain, snow, or just plain humidity and moisture. In Vietnam, you see I'm wrapping a lot of stuff up in plastic or in Visoquine or in any number of different solutions. Vinyl plastic was real common in Vietnam. It got very easily filled up better than a lot of the plastics we actually have today for the environment. Also, the minals, any of the plastics, you've got to remember something, have to have a certain amount of infrared protection infused with them. Or the sun does its job, its organic goes back to the soil faster. Now certain polymers are better for defending against that. And one of the final minals works really well for a period of time. But it's a little tougher to work with. Typically, the neck brain is thicker, heavier. But the advantage of that with military operations is it does not feed out of that. It's not that hugely, you know, taken in a bracing medium. It just flexs apart. We've talked about that for years on the air here. And what's fascinating about this is again, the vinyl, you see this with magazine bags, you see this with gun bags. But if you're a radio operator, sorry guys, I have been outside and I had a little tick that just decided it wanted my blood, so I had to kill it. There. It's just like half of the parasites in government. You have to kill them. Here we go. They're blood suckers. They won't be...they won't kill them. They just keep sucking blood. But anyway, radio operators, a lot of radio equipment will have the same kind of vinyl bags or specialized bags for pretty much everything, but half the time it never got to the men where it was supposed to or... It was burdensome in some cases, but, and, and, and most important, especially in a really telling environment, winter environment, more weight, more bog down, more difficult to move, less distance, you know, you don't do too well. Real hot, humid environment, guess what, same thing. So everybody tried to shave weight off wherever they could. So there was a balancing act. especially with the electronics, it was pretty well found that you had to suffer with doing certain things even though it meant carrying that little extra weight because it saved the equipment from simply becoming dysfunctional in the environment. Now, before I go any further, understand the issue of moisture and environmental breakdown is something that government underused to, I don't know if they're anymore. I don't know if the brain's got geese anymore. I think they're about as dumb as a stinking box of rocks, and the estimate are pretty well, fuck everything up. Hockey puck everything up. But it used to be we had a very, very rigid regimen for extreme hot weather and extreme cold weather testing of equipment. And this was designed to ensure that with the weatherization or with the pattern and design that was laid down for a particular piece of equipment, that it would be recognized in such a way that it could handle the environments that it was going to be working in and these environments could be quite extensive and quite extreme, okay? From the cold Arctic Sub-Zero environment of the tundra all the way to the middle of the tropical rainforest of Vietnam and everywhere in between. You might recall at the testing center, if you're military, you might recall hearing about it one time or another, was down at in the Panama Canal. That was the tropical rainforest test site. Anchorage, Alaska, but there were two other locations in Alaska that were even more remote, that were designed for extreme winter testing conditions under worst conditions. So they actually had to make sure they also hit the winter, because there are some nicer weather conditions in Alaska. Not that they're all that much better, but they wanted the extremes always remember that so this is where all these carriers and special you know envelopes came from they actually First they thought up the idea then they had to take them out and use them and the problem is they had to be in durable material Which means I guess it pointed out the vinyls while they were great packaging Unfortunately, it was like carrying an extra purse and then another extra purse and then another sleeve purse and By the time you were done, you could carry an extra five pounds of vinyl covering up all of the equipment. I'm not saying it looked like a purse. It looked quite clear, milky vinyl. You've seen some of these mag pouch, or, forgive me, magazine covers, with the lead wraparound. I would point out that the lead's worth a fortune now that's on those, and nobody seems to think about that. The vinyl wrapper is nice, but that's pure lead the government put on there, dudes. Did you realize that? Anybody think about it? And one time they used Ken. You know what Ken's gone to per pound? Oh, it's like, dudes, that's all money sitting there. But anyway, the problem was the extra weight. If you have five pounds of weatherization equipment that's separate from the idea that, remember, my PRC 89010, or my 25, or my 77, were all designed with weatherization and anti-moisture seals. So it was supposed to hold up, but they found that because of, again, the extremes of the tropical rainforest of most areas of Vietnam and the rainy season, which is why Vietnam was so critical, why we were fighting the war there, R-I-C-E, rice, ignore all the other garbage, two things, alcohol, aluminum, and R-I-C-E. Every place else in the world in the Pacific and in the Asian Rim only has one rice crop Vietnam 3. Why? Rainy season. Unlike everybody else. Seriously. So anyway, that rainy season meant that you needed a little extra protection. The balancing act was to figure out what critical parts would probably compromise your radio gear and if you'll notice, you see a lot of this, you see the Breadbag wrap for the ANPRC or any of the handsets for any of the radios. Okay, if it's an ANPRC 125 on a vehicle or if it was an ANPRC of any kind, you'll notice that they wrapped up the headsets. Why? Well, because they was flexed all the time and when they flexed, they were in hot weather. The hot weather meant it was hot and wet. Guess what? What happens when you warm up plastic? It's malleable and what unfortunately you're pulling on a piece of cord You have a circular surface in a circular hole through a plastic handset. So what happens is when you're pulling on it It's 110 degrees, you know in the shade and or just 104 degrees. We've got cooler today The big thing is that remember as you pull, the plastic is going to give and the moisture follows the path of least resistance. Now it doesn't mean which way you go. You can go on the headset one way, it would go on the radio on the other. So they figured out that certain parts, pieces and assemblies, the smaller ones especially, key points where your mic and your speaker were located. Needed a little extra cover. That's why you see that being the most common. They made a vinyl cover for that. It was actually clear, milky. It was actually also formed to the headset. You ever see one in a picture? Neither. I mean, I had two in a kit that I saw and I thought, wow, where the hell did these come from? This is years ago. This was back when I was, I think I was out at Fort Lost and was in Missouri and I had the, I was working as the RO that day. And I'm looking at this stuff and it's like, hmm, this is really neat. There's all kinds of stuff in this kit for this PRC-77 that I've never seen before. And it's because it was after, you know, it was the end of Vietnam, after Vietnam, and all this stuff had been piled up and it was out there. They just finally decided to get around and maybe we better use it up. So the stuff was made, but again, was it as useful as some of the other improvised solutions? Again, plastic wrap and rubber bands. as opposed to a heavier and girthier piece of equipment that may actually hinder the operation of the equipment. And really in the long run, probably with wear and care, was just as perishable as the bread bag. Okay, as to whatever bag or wrapper you pulled off of some other piece of equipment you probably unpacked. Well, in any situation you figure out where to get the goodies you need, if you're going to improvise, adapt and overcome. Rubber bands, that's pretty obvious. Actually the most common rubber bands is to really pay attention. You'll notice that the rubber bands are tactical in most of the images you see for Vietnam, the headsets and the equipment I'm talking about where they had to wrap stuff. The rubber bands are made from bicycle inner tubes. It scavenged bicycle inner tubes and natives ran on bicycles and if there was, you know, they'd grab a bicycle inner tube, chop it up in whatever sizes they needed. Half the rubber bands went to holding down gear equipment and junk like the radio equipment or like that handset cover. On the other hand, others were slid up on the eight suspenders. I don't know if anybody even thinks to do. And that created a lock down or tie down you didn't have otherwise. Go ahead, caller, who do we have? Hey, it's Wilford, Florida again. What's up? Well, we're getting we're being comfortable today. It's 73 degrees here. So I can't complain Oh, I know we're nicer than before it is right now. Oh over here It just started freakin storm and you can barely walk outside without that wind gust hitting you in the face But I'm at work and I'm inside so I don't care but uh, how it keeps customers away like get more done Yeah, my question was going to be uh, you said yesterday you were gonna test out that uh, I Oh, the Axion 8 power spotlight, oh my god, it is one of those super looms. It will blind you. I tried it out quite extensively, actually I was happy with it. It does everything it's supposed to do. The only thing is the positives. Okay, number one. Mechanically, it's sound. The Axion rigs apparently are just built well enough that they do what they're supposed to. They're always simple. Control is easy. There's very little of none. The only movable parts on it are the switch that's in the back, which is again, rubberized and weatherized for outdoor use. It does have a minor adjustment for range with regard to the rear lens adjustment. Beyond that, it's bigger than just palm size. It's a little bigger. I think, let's see, about the size of a Pepto-Bismol box maybe. It's not as wide, but it's a little oblong, obviously. Like I said, flashlight with a scope up above. Eight power. I hit a couple of deer last night, actually tagged two or three deer with it that I found in the tree line. I was able to make out and distinguish quite easily with the illuminator, good color for night, which I was also rather fascinated by. The lenses, I don't know what they're made of, but the optics are clear, so I could actually make out fine detail. at 100 yards, anywhere from 80 to 100 yards at night, I was looking at, for instance, I could tell leaf patterns. I could tell if I was looking at a maple or if I was looking at an elderberry tree or a pine tree, for that matter. Not that that's hard, but it's just the idea that sometimes you get fuzzy at range. It's like, well, it's a tree. I know that. But the better quality than that could make out wood grain if there was any kind of weathering. I noticed that with the, again, with the illumination creating enough shadowing and such. So, overall, it works great. The only thing, it still would be cool for a tactical, it could be applied, and I would, but the front rings, I don't know why they did this, but it just looked cool. The front rings on the light and the lens are silver. They're chrome, okay? Now, they're not a big white-like bumper on a Buick. But there's something that I probably would take a black magic marker and like a Sharpie and just color them if I was going to carry in the field. Now if I was just using it for security around the property, I wouldn't care. And the, I didn't try service life on the batteries. I don't know what the duration is yet, but I ran it on and off when I went outside more than I'd say four or five hours. I was outside, come back in, ran it some more, turned it back on. Right after the program, I went out with it. And because we just started to get there, we really didn't do a whole lot of good there. But I wanted to test the optics themselves. Daylight, good collection. Nighttime, good collection. So it is a useful tool. And again, I think we'll be offering it. I'm just going to do a little more playing with it tonight. And probably we're going to offer it for about $25. as a promotional for the network. And again, this is a great way because you're getting a good product. If you go look for the Axion 8 Power with light system. I want to say J8 or whatever, or JM8. I think that's the designation, but I'd have to double check. The units are running a lot more than that. Like I said, we're going to be able to give you a pretty good price for as long as they last. When they're gone, there won't be any more. But for all practical purposes, basically what this is, is one of the daylights at night type of rifle, LED flashlights mounted together with a monocular. That's the best way to describe it. Because the intensity is good, it would easily blind anybody or at least create disruption. At the very least, they're going to know that there's something out there looking for them just as hard as they're looking back if everybody's turning on their flashlights. If you know what I mean. During the hot-hot phase, you know, what, what, what, oh, we're going to show you how cool and badass we are. Oh, we got flashlights. Hey, hold on. Let me turn mine on. There you go. We got one back. Here's Acha. So as far as for area security, like right now, It's an excellent tool. To be quite honest, like I said, I went through the tree line and found two deer bedding down for the night. And they were obviously kind of stunned because they didn't really expect that because I really pester the deer because they helped me to know where things are when they start to move around. I like them to settle around. They're like organic, like dogs, but they're another organic detection system. anything that's woggling through the area, it'd be pretty easy to, you know, in and of themselves they'll move. And if they do, it's something that's, you know, genuinely a physical threat. It's not something where they're being spooked. So if they're spooked, it's by people. And or coyotes, and either way I'll kill them. I mean, I'm filling the coyotes. And let me know the other suit. So, anyway, we are looking at a good product so far. I'm happy with it. I'm going to keep a number back before I do anything else because I didn't really keep back any of the red, blue, green except for a few. And I probably should have held on to more. On the other hand, the ones that did go out all went to you guys, so you better be happy with them. And with regard to the scopes, I see those as being, again, a viable, useful tool in the inventory. One of the things to do is keep that light near the kitchen sink or by the back door and have it ready with a few other tools. And you could have somebody scanning while you're scanning with a weapon. And the flashlight you can use as an illuminator target identifier. Something to think about. That way the person, again, flash and then the boom comes from somewhere else. Oops, which is kind of cool. So that's one of the many ways it can be applied, but it definitely would be a present day security tool and area of control monitoring technology. Do you think it would be a good tool to use as like a squad leader for like intelligence gathering? Well, you could use it for a team leader or something you'd be carrying in the pocket. The only thing now, oh, that's another thing. It doesn't come with any kind of pouch. And the first thing I'd be looking for, in fact, I'm looking right now to see what Molly pouch. I've got quite a few different ones today, so I know what the sizes are. I'm trying to find a pouch that's going to fit. There are about five or six electronics pouches. that are padded and armored and I think, well I'm pretty sure the Coyote Brown one that I'm thinking of, it's a single chamber pouch. I think the single slip right into it. So if it does, I actually would be tempted to grab a bunch of those, because I know where to get them, and you know, I mean, you actually tell everybody, but if we have them, if you want them, then add a certain amount for the pouch, but it would be worth it. The pouch that probably will fit it is Coyote Brown. I haven't seen it in any other color. It was made for the second war, second phase of the war here, the beat up the five-year-old blind kid because we want to steal more oil from Syria for the Israelis. It's one of those things where we want it armored if we can, if you're going to carry it. Like I said, if you're going to carry it, the only thing I would do is come up with a, like I said, just either you could paint it, that would be a first option. I would use like a flat modeling paint, or I would take Sharpie and either use green or use black and just darken the front circles of both the light and the optical collector point itself, the front of the scope. The unit itself, though, seems to be rugged enough. Again, the most important thing, kiss. They kept it very, very simple. There ain't no bells and whistles on this thing. There's a collector lens. There is your optical response end where you adjust the lens, and then you've got your flashlight. That's it. Now, one thing I was hoping it might have would be like a 1.25-20 make-female fixture on the bottom that it would be neat to even use as a tiny little spotting scope. And the first thing I would have done with it is, the first thing I'd do was something like this. And you could still do this. You could make a little, like there's a couple of different wrap around boot type things that are cheap, cheap, cheap. They're Chinese sport average, but some are made out of metal, some are made out of plastic. But I could make it so that I could actually wrap that around and have a 1,250 base and screw in one of these little flexible tripods. And it would work for something like that. I mean, that's not what it was meant for. That's not what they planned on doing. And they felt it wasn't worth the money. So it doesn't have that feature for the moment. But I'm looking at it, I can see real quick how I could take and make a U-cut for the top, a U-cut for the bottom, and use little elastic stretch bands. And that would hold it. And then on the lower piece is where you mount the 1.25 female. And then you can screw in a little like flexible, I mean flexible, you've got these different types of little tripods. I've collected hundreds of them. Everybody buys them and then they don't use them made up in the yard sale. What's really neat is the legs are actually articulated so you can line the thing up no matter what the terrain is down below and pretty well square it up horizontally. So it would be cool, it would be useful, yes. It would be classic. Monocular optics typical for either like the small binocular or monocular that a fire team leader or a Squad leader would carry and ideally what you want is the whole team to have one If everybody can see farther everybody, you know can be part of the warning system You know if you see what I mean, but especially forgetting with the details in at Intermediate to short range is sufficient for that. Hang on. Yeah, it could be used it could be used for that purpose. Go ahead Unrelated, this is something kind of just kind of interesting or funny I was thinking about. When the war ends, how likely could you see a whole bunch of either individuals or small unit militias... Hold on, I got somebody. That worked, sorry. I'll be back. Well, again, real quick, what we're talking about is an axion. 8-power monocular with a ultra-bright sunlight, cutting all the sun pattern, whatever. There's a couple different names for them out there. Lower illumination light, which by the way is square. Again, optimal at about 100 yards, it is still effectively illuminating without any problem. And it's still, in fact, obviously they calibrate this thing with a lens that's obviously, that is focusing the light. At each range out to about 100 yards, you don't have any blackout or fuzz or side area where you lose image. The illumination is sufficient out to what is basically your probable contact range for observing and then choosing shoot, no shoot. Or if you're using the light, which again, as I would point out, it's a white light. And white light's for me on the battlefield or something that it's not my first choice. But! If everybody is lighting everything up, and by the way, we're going to be popping flares, and yes, we are going to have oblique lighting, and yes, we do have, you know, illuminator LEDs, but we don't mount them to anything that we carry. We actually just, you know, leak station them, like offset trip lighting, you know, or trip flares. That's the way to use them. We've done this with, as I've mentioned many times, taking generation zero infrared night vision, not starlight, infrared night vision. The original units are out there. I'd mount them on M14s when I'd take their illuminator off. What we do is we mount it on a six foot piece of mop handle or a dowel. We have the wire run down to the battery pack farther down out of the way so it minimizes the silhouette. And you raise the illuminator over a ridge, over a berm where you've got good earth cover between you and the ability to move after you've illuminated. What you do is the rifleman comes up, he's set, he gives a signal, you illuminate from the right first, and a target of opportunity observed, you fire. That shuts down, you drop back below the edge of the area of fire and the second light elimination piece to the left is given the cue, you come up at a different location and signal, they hit the light source on the left, totally different location and you fire again. It's ideal for night vision harassment fire. Go ahead, call our dip in there. Sorry about that, I'm at work. How likely could you see it at the end of the war with either individuals, small units, militia, or maybe some soldiers who joined us later on at the end of the war, becoming mercenaries and going into these countries that have their own civil wars after our starts, and becoming mercenaries and helping out? Well, it sounds to me like being mercenaries, but they might become, what's that term everybody always loves to use? Well, they can help out as freedom fighters to assist in the process of routing out the rest of the globalists when the time comes. Well, I would point out, I mentioned the CSA, Covenant, the Sword, and the Arm of the Lord, which was out of Arkansas and Missouri, okay, back in the day. They did exactly what the Black Power Movement did, which is what Uncle Sam hated because you weren't supposed to figure it out. You got in all of the welfare and all of the unemployment and every time you were unemployed you just hid them for everything. But they used it to collectively purchase land, property of all kinds, building materials, weapons, aircrafts. They had a twin otter and they would fly during the resistance period with Guatemala and Honduras against all the Sandinistas in El Salvador. Well, the CSA used to fly sortays with their unit down to Central America and they went out and fought in the war. How many of you knew that? to take a 18 man stick and drop down into the area of operation. And they also would take supply and support for the resistance, the Contras and other groups so that they had more boots or clothing or whatever else they were short. And they were always short boots, they never had enough boots. And they were always short socks. But they would then go on combat patrols and specific aggressor patrols into El Salvador with the guerrillas and then come back out after a certain period of time. They'd leave all their equipment behind for the troops that was not critical. They had more back home. And then they would load up and they would skedaddle back to their home base. And that's all within your lifetime if you guys are, you know, been around since the 80s. So, very successful, needless to say, the communists in the government regime, especially the Bushites, did not like the fact that people self-motivated and highly understanding of the nature of the globalist, like the Fabian and Soviet socialists, well, how dare you use the system on them? How dare you? How dare you? They were not in violation of any laws, they were progressively targeted by the Fed because, well, after all, it was horrible, evil, and terrible that they actually were, rather than buying Mercedes-Benz and custom vans and snorting coke and doing up drugs, they were turning their government dollars that they were given into tangible resources and investing in the future. You can't have that. Yeah. See that? I know most of the backstories too. All of these scammers, what if we do it? How about if we get all you can't do that? You will. You will. You will weapon? You can't do that? You will weapon? Yeah. Whitey, Cracker, Take the Bic, whatever. But that's something that after the war, again traditionally, most countries, unless it's somebody who's been really, really, really friendly, and we aren't going to have anybody in the globalist mechanism that's going to be really, really friendly. In fact, we probably want to make sure they're, how do we put that? Destabilized, the way they thought they were going to destabilize us. We're going to be hunting them just as hard as they think they're hunting us right now. So yeah, it's inevitable individuals mostly it'd be like groups There are people who are going to want to finish what they started. I know that's going to happen and It doesn't mean that the new American government isn't going to that'll be us Isn't going to be motivated to proceed with the process, but we still will have to organize everything's gonna have to be sorted out here We don't have a strong base going overseas won't do us any good So, again, the idea is that the deportations, I fully believe that we should do exactly what the Founders did. At the end of the American War for Independence, a demarcation date for the secession of hostilities took place. Finally, I mean the real one, after not the Demi ceasefire while they were negotiating. We're talking about the final acknowledgement that the end of the war was there. A gate was set as the kickoff point, just like so many have kickoff points, for the process of deportation. Everybody that was a Tory, anybody who was a known combatant, was given 90 days, and others who were sympathizers in one form or another were profiteers, were given 90 days to leave the United States, otherwise they were fair game. So there was a secession of the feud. And by the way, you got to remember that was very alive back then. You don't hear that word anymore. We're not talking funny ha ha ha shoot at me all at the trees feud. We're talking these were blood feuds. And so it was understood that under the agreement from the government and from the individual states, both from the central colonial government, now American government, and the states, that a 90-day window of secession of hostilities and of tranquility would take place. And they were booted out of their respective towns, villages, and either they went to Canada, they went to the Caribbean, they went back to, quote-unquote, the mother country, or other British holdings. and we deported one-fifth of the population of these United States at the end of the American War for Independence. We will be doing the same this time around aggressively. And it has to be a short timetable. This is not going to be dragged out. We're not going to give them any time to dig in and hide. They are going, their ass is either going down the road or if they want to stick around it's like, it's their fair game. This this whole thing is finished. We are going to have to clean the place out We're going to have to get things done, right all these characters are mountain on the television. Remember who they all are Every one of these characters and how they want to do, you know camps or they're gonna grab you know other party opposition party members or whatever blah blah blah blah blah, remember who they are Now I'm sure a lot of them will jump on an LL airliner and their ass will be over in Tel Aviv so fast and make your head swim but There's a whole bunch of them that are going to figure they can kind of roll sideways and just start their garbage all over again. And that is not going to happen. Period. So again, know your communities, know your areas of operation, understand what it is needs to be done there. With regard to sort paying out, remember the big thing is the excesses that we have right now that we're blessed with will not necessarily be available later on, so you're going to have to be more effective and efficient at husbanding your resources to project strength. This is the thing about what we're living in, this fantasy we're living in right now with regard to lack of understanding of economy and intelligent process, this can't last. This is a shipwreck, like I said, the shipwreck where Most of the fools are running around and don't have a clue or even a shred of an idea of how things work. And the assumption is that if we just run around in circles, it's rearranging deck chairs on the Titanic. If we do a really good job of rearranging the deck chairs, we won't notice the water that's biting at our ankles because it's freezing. And of course knees now. Oh and then waist height. And oh by the way the band is still playing near my god to thee. There are fireworks in the sky every so many seconds. The guy's launching a flare and the siren is going away and it just went off and the boiler blew. Oh man but they're giving free drinks out at the bar. Yeah, we don't want to be part of that. So, a couple of other things real quick on that note. When we're at the end of the war, something is not going to happen, okay? It's kind of like if you caught it, it's yours, right? Does everybody understand that one? This whole idea that we're going to, you know, somebody's going to come along and, well, you can't have that EPC or you can't have that. No, that's not how that works. American soldiers notoriously, all soldiers in the battlefield, if you carry away an enemy's weapon, it's the skin of the leopard, the belt of my enemy, it's yours. Well, why? Well, you see that big pivot out of my arm here? That's what I paid for to get this thing. I had a few chunks taken out of me. But I still got close enough that I got rid of all of them and I kept all their goodies and their goodies are my goodies now. They're not your goodies. Now we're going to use them mutually but at the end of the war everybody's going to have a lot of goodies and there ain't no BS about somebody going to be taking them away. That's nothing I want to start establishing right now. More's better and you want to get motivated? Well start rounding up more. But when the time comes and it's all over, yeah, there's stuff that's going to be part of the regimented mechanisms that are out there. But if you're capturing enemy equipment, that enemy equipment, depending upon which state you are, you get to claim it. I might be willing to trade it for something else. Well, you could buy it. What do you have? Yeah. But you can't have it. Yeah, you can't just have it. Well, we got like 16 BTR 80s. But we only have five of the BTR 70s. I don't know. I think the polls brought those over. It was left over from something else. And you know what? I understand you guys have BTR 80s. I'll trade you, how about three BTR 80s for the five BTR 70s we've got. And that way we'll have all the same vehicle on our side here, I mean our group. And then you guys can have all those, which match the stuff that you have with your group. And eventually, we'll sort things out like that. You're not going to want to have, like, artillery or heavy weapons of any kind. You want to try and start centering so that all the available spare parts and all of the ammunition and all the links or just whatever you've got in the way of support systems, your maintenance equipment, Try to put it together. That's how intelligent governments do things. Ours is kind of, that kind of does this, but not really well because we're integrated into the waste program. You know, waste is the center of their name. Hey Mark, but go ahead. Hey, speaking of property at the end of the war. How are we going to, I guess you could say, distribute all of the property? The first thing that comes to mind is houses and land of all of the people who died that have no descendants. How is that going to be distributed? Well, that's something that was done at the end of the war. There's a combination of things here. And typically it was by public auction. There's another consideration here. Number one, loss of life is going to be extensive. So, one of the other things to take as a consideration is award in time of war for those who served, you know, the 40 acres and a mule, you know, idea. The option on that is to have, but you have to have a, you need a math formula for equity because, you know, each person, if you have a hundred people sign up and they contract for a service. And at the end of that time, they're all supposed to be given equity in terms of reward. Then you have to have a balancing system there because some don't want to farm. Some do want, well, they all take land. But the idea is that some will want to be in a city. Some people like cities. I don't have really a problem with a city. I just don't like the idea that my neighbor is right there and I don't need to see my neighbor in the bathroom. I didn't want to look there in the first place, but they put the house so close, the neighbor's bathroom is there, but my kitchen wouldn't go here. I didn't really want that. But some people like the community and proximity and all of that. So there has to be a math formula that's going to have to be set down by committee, and it's going to have to be worked out so that there's a balancing act in that respect. If a person receives certain properties, they may not be of the same value as, say, that 40 acres in the mule we just talked about. There has to be a balancing act there. The one thing we, by God, will not allow, and you all got to get this in your heads right now, is we are not going to screw the fighters of the next war for independence. That's what they did to the guys that came out of the eight years' worth of blood, guts, and bloody footprints in the snow. The Continental is what was paid to a lot of people by the Scheister Bankers that were on the edge of our operation. And remember, it was those speculators that were giving a wink and a nod that, hey, there's something around the corner. You couldn't get a nickel for a Continental at the end of the war. The troops have been paid in Continental's and bit the bullet and stayed the course for six, eight years. Some of them stuck through the whole war. So they had a bag full of continentals, or they had a box full of continentals where they'd taken the money home and given it to the wife. At the end of the war, they were supposed to be a $1 exchange item, and they were worth one nickel. Less than a nickel in many cases, about between 3 and 4 cents. Well, they wouldn't see come off of that. And the government pucked all of these men who bled for these BS-ers. So, what happened all of a sudden, the speculators, oh, he got involved, they quietly passed or got the Continental Congress to agree to a new adjustment in payment. And they went out and they started telling all these guys, hey, we'll give you $0.08 on the dollar or $0.10 on the dollar for your Continentals. And a lot of guys, they were just happy to move them. And within a few weeks or months, depending on when they released, when they sold the, sold the Continentals, the government announced they were going to give one on one for the new currency. And all those speculators pucked all of those veterans and all those veterans had a very bad taste in their mouth from that point forward, since most all of them who actually had Continentals had been there since the beginning, since, you know, Valley of the Valley Forge era. Not everybody was at Valley Forge, but everybody had a similar experience to Valley Forge at one point or another through the war, in many cases two or three times over. And those are the people they screwed. Now by God, that happens again. We drag out the bastards, we hang our ass from the government buildings. The new ones. Now everybody hear that? Everybody better start talking about this. If you don't know history, you're going to get screwed by it again. But here's how it works. First of all, we are going to have an equitable payment system. We are going to have to come up with a way to compensate people. And we are going to settle it in such a way that we do not abandon those who, of course, bled so that others might benefit. Now, my attitude is a lot of them that are not bleeding should have been bleeding. What I mean by that is everybody's ass should be out there taking the risk and the ones I trust the least are the ones who aren't out there taking the risk. A man, a common sense man who is a warrior is the most likely person you would want to have managing something. Not the stinking parasite behind the scenes so far away he has never heard the din of battle, let alone the echo of a cannon round. That's the thing we all better remember and this time around we're not letting this happen Because that's how they start the whole doubt the down-the-hill road, you know back sliding back towards the wreckage. We're in now That will be we're gonna put the kibosh to that one. We're gonna stomp the guts out of that one and First in line are the people who again? Bloody footprints in the snow when you look at all of the real history of the American war for independence And then you look at what happened to the veteran at the end That it's like there should have been this is why Shays Rebellion people go what we put out Shays Rebellion There was a lot more to Shays Rebellion than booze It was the idea that one way or another these people these are the people who were the veterans who had fought who had suffered and Okay, so they finally got up by their own bootstraps and the same dams Asshats that had screwed them with the Continentals were now screwing them this way with their business They try to put a warm fuzzy on that one and that's bullshit too. So forgive me. That's that's garbage. Okay I Look at the timeline with regard to what you know after the war what happened Jay's Rebellion was logical But the problem is too many people were well Everybody was tired after eight years of war and the parasites can count on that eight years of conflict is a lot of a lot of time with a lot of a lot of Adrenaline rush and a lot of a lot of hurt A lot of energy spent and if people could find a way to you know, you know after having it been in the big the big band game All right, Lee. Looks like we lost mark. I'm trying to get him back right now guys. So hold on just a little bit while I Throw in some bumper music are almost to the top and through the music in there. Yeah There we go, we got you back. Yeah, I can just go to break if you want dad while we reconnect everything Well, was it a hiccup of the network end? It was a hiccup on your end apparently, but I kind of geared for the entire break if you want me to. Well, let's okay. Let's do this. Yeah, I'll close we can take a longer break for a bit But yeah, you see when you drill the right tube all of a sudden that there's a switch hit for some reason It's not me and it wasn't an end. What does that tell you? See, when you start thinking and talking about the deeper subjects that are necessary for you to not only survive the moment, but for you to build better in the future, remember your enemy expects you to be a shallow hell. They expect you to not think any more than to the end of your nose and barely to the third meal out. You all understand that? So that's why we need to work harder to get the job done right. So let's go ahead, we're gonna go to break here. For everybody out there, guys, God bless our republics. Death to the New World Order. We shall prevail, ladies and gentlemen. The Empire is on the rung. And we are on the march both day and night. Doo-dah! Kick him to the slats, beat him down hard, and remember when you fight, this song says it all right here. Remember, guys, we're holding the ground, then we're taking the ground. And we're gonna be free, and we're still gonna have to fight to stay free. We'll be back right here at Liberty Tree Radio. It is Communications Tuesday. The right to bear arms is because that's the last form of defense against tyranny, not to hunt. protect yourself from the police. Anybody that wants to disarm me can drop dead. Anybody that wants to make me unarmed and helpless. People that want to literally create the proven places where more innocents are killed called gun-free zones. We're going to beat you. We're going to vote you out of office or suck on my machine gun. Politicians. Get any blunt objects together, alright? If you get corners, bash them in the head. That seems to work out. Keep together, stay sharp, and follow me. 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 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. The tyrants labored endlessly while your parents were asleep. Your freedom's gone, your courage lost, you're no more than a slave. In this the land of the free, the brave. You buy permits to travel and permits to own a gun. Permits to start a business or to build a place for one. On land that you believe you own, you pay a yearly rent. Although you have no voice in saying how the money's spent. Your children must attend a school that doesn't educate and your Christian values can't be taught According to the state you read about the current news in a regulated press and you pay a tax you do not owe to please the IRS Your money is no longer made of silver nor of gold you trade your wealth for paper so your life can be controlled You pay for crimes that make our nation turn from God and shame number You've traded in your name. You've given government control to those who do you harm so they could burn down churches and seize the family farm and keep our country deep in debt. Put men of God in jail. Harash your fellow countrymen while corrupted courts prevail. Your public servants don't uphold the solemn oaths they've sworn. And your daughters visit doctors so their children will be... Your leaders send artillery and guns to foreign shores and send your sons to slaughter fighting other people's wars. Can you regain the freedoms for which we fought and died? Or don't you have the courage or the faith to stand with pride? And are there no more values for which you'll fight to save? 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 Keep the torch of freedom burning bright as I awoke he'd vanished in the mist from whence he came His words were true. We are not free, but we have ourselves to blame For even now as tyrants trample each God given right. We only watch and tremble too afraid to stand and fight If he stood by your bedside in a dream while you were asleep and wondered what remains of the freedoms he'd fought to keep, what would be your answer if he called out from the grave? Is this still the land of the free? Take your first element Lieutenant and advance it towards the sound of those drums. Second combat team will support you. Indirect fire will be coming from the second light artillery detachment and we will proceed forward. Advance to the enemy. Good afternoon, ladies and gentlemen. This is the second hour of the afternoon intelligence for port time, our quarantine. 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 central. Ladies and gentlemen, you are listening to us on LibertyTreeRadio.4mg.com, LibertyTree Radio on satellite and again, we'll say hi to our friends across the whole of the Pacific and I don't know where you're all listening. I do know the ships are listening to us which is really cool and apparently it's going word-of-mouth from point A to point B to C, D, E, F, G. But it's satellite, whatever kind of downlink you've got. I want to say hi. Also, AM&FM microstations, AM&FM conventional stations, and CB base stations, along with UltraNet, Hallmark, and Golden Spike Technologies east and west of the Mississippi, along with Alaska. And good afternoon to all of our friends out there in Lower 49, including the great city Jeffs, along with CONUS, the outline two-stage territories in the clock, 6.07 PM Eastern Standard Time. It's Communications Tuesday. It is the 15th of June. The benchmark for halfway through the month. It is the 13th year of open Sabian socialists. Oh, they are the wicked ones. And Soviet socialists. Occupation of America with a K. Time to hunt the bastards. 2021 Old Earth Calendar. I'm a talktor, not a brick nation. I just fixed that hoarder out of a plaque. Extra money would be nice and I did a good job with that stucco patter on the outside. Kind of matched the bubbles after that. And 2021, Battle for the Republic, with Dance of Swords. Congratulations, you're in it. Real quick, here's the thing I wanted to get through with regard to packaging and radio equipment of the first hour. The miracle of the Ziploc bag. My God, it is the number one piece of technology. The little simple things that are just so phenomenal. Ziploc bags come in all sizes, and they come in all kinds of thicknesses, girths. What's cool is I have a source, a couple sources where I can pick up a regular array of Ziploc bags, including the more industrial models. Everything goes into them. Even before this, I just have to go to the Dollar Tree or whichever dollar store or Distress Merchandise Store had them for the best price. Either the Industrial or just the regular Ziploc bags like you have for the house. Everything goes in them. All electronics, itemized individually, go into their own Ziploc bags. This is priceless for future operations in the field if you have to pull something out the only thing that's going to get any moisture out of your eyes It's a cold wet day. It's blowing you open up your utility bag There are certain numbers spare parts in there You don't open one big bag and all of a sudden the rain comes in and all your goodies got a little bit of moisture We already told you electronic and moisture or anything in moisture don't really work very well Except cement which we're not trying to mix right now So the fact of the matter is that the Ziploc bag is an excellent tool, especially since you have like little sandwich bags, you have small parts bags. You always save the Ziploc bags when you get stuff from all these different places you're buying things from. Turn right around and if so long as you're going to carry all the extra little goodies for that piece of equipment, put them into the original Ziploc bags or subdivide them with the other Ziploc bags you saved. and make up a utility kit. Example, we're talking about the Axion 8-Power light and monocular combination. Well, if I get a pouch, if I can get one that has a little side pouch, I'd be even happier because I'd be carrying spare batteries, more equipment, you know, more, you know, all the things that are useful, like a little lens cleaning kit, that would be the first thing I'd be looking for in the long haul. and a commercial one, a real one, not something cheap. I want to make sure that I can keep those lenses functional. And so I need to take care of them. But if I have any other small items like that, let me give you the best example. If you go to colmans.com or Sportsman's Guide or any one of the other regular surplus stores that does tactical gear, major surplus, there is a sage green radio bag. Now you'll notice the one part of the bag is relatively long. And by the way, these are a Mali pouch, which is interesting, but they're in sage slash OD green. They're either an Air Force, I believe they refer the air traffic control slash ground support, airmen on the ground with the victim of the talk with an army unit. I've seen a similar pouch, I haven't seen it in years, I wish I could get it. But the neat thing about this is it's padded, remember we talked about that. It has a big pouch, but it has a side pouch, a parasite pouch on the side. Perfect for a lot of other work. Maybe you have that monocular you want to slide in and then you want a tripod with it. Let's say you have something like that. Not a bad arrangement. Or let's say you do have that piece of night vision. It goes in the side pouch and then you still have that tripod. And now you can take that night vision and stabilize it and leave it in a position like an LPOP to observe an area of activity and it's, you know, ready to roll. So there's all kinds of stuff you can do with these. So there's other pouches out there, and that's what I'm going to be looking for with that Axion. But any of your other equipment, you should be thinking the same way. Armor, whatever you can. Computer bags are out there. They're fantastic. There's even computer, laptop backpacks out there. I just got three or four. And I was looking at the price tag on these things. The one bag's $229. And it's, I'm sorry, for me it's like, that's way too much. But on the other hand, it is really well done. It's a formed material shell, plus it's armored on the inside, plus everything is obviously, you know, finished and appropriately looks cool. Comes with backpack straps, the one here. There's stuff like that out there floating all over the place. So that's something to take into consideration if you want to, you know, put together a special tech kit. And the fact that it has backpack straps as a side bar, it has a carry handle and you can use it like a poor man's combat padded briefcase. But anything that goes in that pouch, anything that goes in that, that's all Ziploc bag. Everything. You know what, an example, and probably enough of you have been around with me for a while, when we do ammunition. If I can find stripper clips for the ammo, and I don't care what it is, you guys have already seen, I've done, I don't know how many rounds, 9mm on the old Bergman stripper clips. Now the stripper clips are now worth a fortune. It's kind of cool, it's like putting treasure away. But the stripper clips for the Broomhandle Mauser used to be the ammunition came with them, 9mm and you know, the 30 Mauser. Well, I took those when they were you know people were getting rid of they didn't want them They were chucking them out at the range eight from away than the else well I put every round nine millimeter on stripper clips Then we put them into the sandwich and later on the snack size Ziploc bags are perfect then they go in the ammo can That way there if you reach in the ammo can you pull one handful of Ziploc bag ammunition out of there When the rain was coming down from above and you just had to get into that can when you shut it When you open it up next, you're not going to have green brass, kind of tingy, yellowy, limey green copper, you know, the bullets, and rust all around the inside of the can. Now you might have some rust on the inside of the can. You ever seen a can that's been used on a range where they got it wet inside? And it looks great on the outside. This is why I tell all of you, always open every ammo can when you go to the gun show or when you go to buy them. Looks perfect. Oh, that's the prettiest one and you start to try and open it up and it's just one open man You even get the clip undone the clock undone You can't get the hinge to work. So you work at anything man. This is so new It's stiff and you open it up. It looks like a tailpipe On the inside why because they had it on the range they were probably you know Qualifying or whatever they were doing that day The can was open. When they were done, they shut it. It was in Fort Bend, Georgia. It was the middle of summertime. And each one of those little cans became little tropical rainforest planets in reverse, inverse. And the rest is history, as they say. Well, guess what? If all the ammo's in a Ziploc bag, it's least likely that that's going to go downhill as quick if you've got it separated. I do this with 7.62x39 when we could get the SKS stripper clips. three, 10 rounds, triple clips, and the heavier industrial bag. And then those three go into a standard Chinese chest pouch, the 10 pocket, the ones that will fit three. Some only fit two, but those aren't, I don't see very many of those. But you fit three in there, you put the ammo in the Ziploc bag, sealed in the pouch, then snap it down. When you open up a 20 millimeter can, it's gonna be, if it's 7.62 by 39 marked, if you're with us, It's going to be already in a Chinese chest pouch used as a bandelier. And those can be shrugged over the shoulder, put on, worn, whatever you want to do, or just dragged along for the ride. But a person can stand there and you reach into the can and here's your pouch, go. Here's your pouch, go. Here's your pouch, go. Here's your pouch, go. Same is true of the AK mags, although they're again also bagged. They're not loaded, but they're bagged and every one of them is bagged. And if they've been greased, I don't clean the grease off. Believe them just the way they are, put them in the bag and the other guys who already put them into tactical storage did the job for us. They're already lubricated so I don't have to worry about any break down there. Anything and everything in electronics should be the same way. Your headsets, any of your small components, your replacement parts. And here's the thing, even if government still has, when you get like an old military radio, if you got it brand new in the box, even though it's still in its foil package, I still put them in Ziploc bags. They're a brown sealed vacuum foil bag that's designed to last forever, and they really will. They last indefinitely. I've seen those things sit outside for 10, 20 years. rip open the package and it's like a brand new part on the inside. And I mean exposed to the weather like piles of stuff. Everything from O-rings to resistors to electronic components for aircraft, you name it. Sitting out where the box is rotted away but the packages that the parts are in looks just like it came from the factory which tells me it's like I don't know what caustic materials they used but by God they're all durable. Because you know usually that's just it so all the stuff has been banned The reason I banned at the US is because what America made America great is all your stuff was durable and would last beyond anybody's imagination Now you spit on a piece of cardboard if it's China crap and you can watch it disintegrate you think like you're playing alien, you know, you spit on the box and It starts to run away. It starts to bubble and you know, like fall away. Maybe not that bad, but pretty close you get it wet same thing So anyway, the other thing about Ziploc bags is again reusable. That's a nice thing. You don't throw them away until they're really, really fragged. And even then, remember, Mr. Rubber Band, if you need a piece of plastic to go over into the muzzle of the gun, Mr. Rubber Band, and that last little piece of plastic bag that's already broken, you just take the other one half of that Ziploc bag, roll it over the end, take the rubber band, put it in place, there you go. You just weatherize the gun. Not a big deal. But you know what? Kind of handy. Everything where we can keep moisture from doing its job because it's oxygen. And with oxygen comes oxidation. Everything is trying to go back to the soil. Always remember that. Even us. Of course, there weren't us standing here that's kind of moist right now. Anyway, other things. Or with regard to signal communication, batteries, batteries, and more batteries. But by the way, start using your batteries. If you've been piling up other batteries, remember you've got a front to rear. Make sure that the oldest are front and the newest are to the rear. Make a point to start to use some of them. You've got the equipment. You need to play with it anyway. You need to practice, practice, practice. Make sure that you don't let the stuff go to waste. It's not a big deal if something does break down. I would point out we're buying everything as an insurance policy. You give money for car insurance for something you use, you'll get punished for using, and so most people don't use it, do they? So the government puts a gun to your head, tells you you have to have car insurance so they will murder you. There are gun agents on the road who will murder you or execute you as needed if you decide to get mouthy with them especially. Don't get mouthy with the enforcers. But if you recall, they're going to ask for that insurance for the insurance companies because the insurance companies want your money. And so they've got a guy with a gun working for a private entity that makes sure you shell out to them every month or every six months or every year. You know, it's called strong arming. Well anyway, did you get anything for it last year? No, it was a period of I thought I had my car. Right? Who runs the insurance companies, eh? That's right. I'm telling you. And they make sure the guy says... The guys with the guns bring collect that money from the guy I am for all of them the chosen Well, the thing is here again That's why when you buy all this other stuff, it's like, okay Don't worry about if something does go bad For the time that you had it it was serving its purpose and at least you got something physical out of the deal You get nothing for your car insurance. You get nothing for your house insurance. I In fact, it's purely a fickle scan to begin with. I'll give you an example something years ago, all state insurance. My dad lived into his 90s, but way before that, in fact, back in the 80s, my dad had been driving for decades, never had a car accident. Never had a car accident, drove millions of miles, drove all over this country as a matter of fact. And in fact, once he retired, he was going and tracking down all the family members everybody just missed and couldn't find or didn't know about because of the K-O-E-R-N-K-E, the family is a lot more expensive than everybody thought. Never had a car accident, never had a ticket. Okay, didn't have a ticket never gonna take it for speeding driving all over the planet literally from one end of the country the other when all the way up to colonial states You know back and forth and but all over all the time went out of Florida went up the top of Michigan went out west to Washington Right all of a sudden one day in the mail he gets a letter all state insurance. He was dropping his coverage Because he's an at-risk driver Because he was just too good so having done Having done everything right and not had an accident, no speeding tickets, no having to replace the car, you know, for whatever reason. Oh no, didn't make any difference. Out of the blue, he gets this letter that all state insurance, that's always a joke, you know, you put the two hands together and they show you were in good hands with all state. And I think you guys, if you notice, I've said that you're in good hands and you have put the hands together and then you slide them apart like you're dropping somebody with all state. That's why for the rest of his life you would never deal with all state insurance And you know what he lived a lot longer. I mean you gotta think about it's only a few years ago. He passed away guys and that was about 1983 84 That was a lot of business they lost I mean seriously and he had more than a few cars and you know a couple of the things that he really really you know They do why you would ensure so you know of course my attitude. I was pissed on him anyway But there's an example, so when you're buying batteries or whatever else, here's the thing, manage them as best you can. But if something goes wrong, don't fret because perishables like that are part of what you're paying for your insurance. If anything happens in any particular window, you are especially, I mean, let's say that they all of a sudden declare tomorrow they're going to grab everybody's bank account. They're already yapping about that, by the way, if you haven't been paying attention. So if they grab everybody's digits and tell you they're going to go to the government card, we'll be shooting your ass in the next day. I mean, I wouldn't hesitate. It would be like within 24 hours or less, my targets are already applied. Fact of the matter is that we'd be going to war. However, the thing is, now you better husband everything that you have, so you better get really stinking good at it. Because what you got is all you got. And like I've been talking about for the last couple of, you know, well, kind of years, decades here. But for the last couple of years, I've been reemphasizing anything man-made, no matter what it is, is irreplaceable when the industry machine stops. Cardboard. Everybody thinks, I'm just going to grab a newspaper, there's a pile of newspapers, and I'm going to use it to make this or to stuff that. Well, who's going to be buying newspapers? Where are you going to get those newspapers from? When you see in movies, there's newspapers rolling down the street with the wind blowing. They're like the tumbleweed of the city, right? You can only get newspapers now. Nobody buys them anymore. Well, they do, but there's somebody getting them. But whoever does, it's the idea that everybody would be looking kind of like what happened with toilet paper. Everybody's looking for the same commodities all of a sudden. Everybody cardboard is the same way. Cardboard, in fact, it's going to be worse because all this stuff is foreign made to such a great degree. that whatever product is in country, well the same foreigners are manipulating that, but it is only about five or ten percent of what would be needed for just normal operation. We already had a demonstration with toilet paper. If you're not still buying toilet paper, shame on you. Now right now, we've already taught you that we're in the communist system. when they want to, all of a sudden there simply won't be any. Oh yeah, and there's people hoarding and there's other people that are profiteering. That's the communist system. That's not just the American imperialist system, but the capitalist and, oh, BS. You're living in a communist state right now. If you don't know any calm people who live in a communist state, you better go talk to the ones that you know did. People stood in line. What have I said a million times? You know what, a friend, the one Russian I was a defector that I worked with, he goes, yes, you are walking down the street. All of a sudden you see people getting in line. He goes, what is, what would you do? He asked us. We're standing sitting here, he goes, what would you do? And he goes, well, I don't know, what is it? No, you don't ask that question. You go jump in line. Why? Because whatever it is that's there, they have it. That's why people are getting in line. So you get in line and nobody knows why they're getting in line either because everybody in a communist state figures this out. If you see a line, get in it if it's short because you'll probably get what's in there. So he said like in the last time he did this, he was before he defected and he defected during the May Day training exercises under fire by the way. But what's cute is this is weeks months before they were in my what was it he was in the Ukraine and They were walking down the street and there was this line just started and so they ran over and they got in the line and there was like maybe a hundred people in front of them and they started getting you know, they come in one door and you go off the other side of the block because you go through and there's just like a like a cattle shoot and they get in there and it was toothbrushes and Well, how many can I get? Well, you couldn't get three. If I give you an extra ruble or two, can I get four or five? No, you can only get three. But there might be two spares here if there's some paper that shows up right there right now. In other words, the black market was right in front of you. So he bought five. Did he need five toothbrushes? No. In fact, he didn't really even need a toothbrush. Remember, he was with the government. They actually were giving them really crabby toothbrushes, but at least he had one. So he took the five toothbrushes. And immediately he goes to Morris, Vlad, Schmitzelberg, whoever it is, and he goes, I have five extra toothbrushes. What are they worth? Now you could convert the toothbrushes into booze, vodka. You can convert it into food. Oh, by the way, when I say meat, he always laughs. This is a gentleman who worked in the army where they could probably get what they wanted most of the time. Friday was the big meat day in the Russian army, but also in Russia in general, and he goes, meat. He goes, let me explain something. He goes, you know how you have pork and you have, you boil, you cook a pork in the oven, like a, how do you call it, ham? He goes, you know how you have the stuff in the pan and you're like, what we would do is when you were done and somebody would take the ham out, you then pour this into molds and the chips of chunks of meat with the fat. and the skin and everything, that was your meat ration. And you got two pounds of that. They would cut off a slug of lard, pig, you know, chippy meaty with maybe a bone in it. And that was your meat ration. He would laugh when they would talk about the meat ration. So you would go to Vlad, Boris, or whoever, Mufu, black marketer, and you'd take your five toothbrushes and you could convert it into getting a can of spam. or getting a can of the military rations you were supposed to get, that somebody slid under the table to the black marketer. See how that works? And by the way, if you were unlucky, you stood in line for however many hours while they chugged the line down to where you were, and they might shut the door in your face or two or three people in front of you, and that's it. But wait, I was here the whole time. Oh, I'm being triggered. This is it. Oh, yes. Well, that would do any good. You can wind and piss them off at the door until hell freezes over. They don't care. I can do it. My privilege. No. My privilege. Yeah. So anyway, it didn't mean it was what it was. Toilet paper, whatever you get in line for. One day, what our one friend said it was bricks. He got bricks. He got eight bricks. They were giving out bricks that day. He didn't know what it was. He was over on the edge of the industrial section. They were handing out bricks. If you wanted to build a room onto a house, that was funny because that was the number that they allocated. They were like Lego block bricks, is what they look like. In this case, the ones you get from the government were the size of, say, a kitchen sink. a two tank kitchen sink. The ones they were handing out when he got in line were bricks, like the ones you have, like used to have in the 1800s, like a red clay brick. So first you had to carry them somewhere and then you had to figure out what the hell you were going to do with them. But you didn't get rid of them. Because you got eight bricks today. Congratulations, Boris. We have eight bricks. I got some too. Oh, we have 16 bricks. No, they went out when I was there. I only got six bricks. Oh, so we have, we have 12 bricks. What can we do with 12 bricks? Well, it's more 12 bricks than we had yesterday. Isn't this not wonderful? Communism is glorious. I love communism. He's wonderful. Oh, look at all the good things we get. We have five toothbrushes. We traded that for vodka. Very small bottle though. And I think you ordered it down, the bastard. Otherwise, look, we have 12 bricks. I put them in the corner where the neighbors can see when they come in, right next to the door. You see the bricks? We have them. That's exactly what it's going to be like. It already is like that to a degree right now. How many shortages do you have that are showing up in what is supposed to be? Land of the sea and the home of the slave. $40 a sheet for OSB here in Michigan. Play ball 40. $40.81 a sheet for chip board. People are calling it plywood, guys. That's not plywood. That's what we're thinking. Yes, it's chip board. However, what's really cool is I calculated this because I was scavenging stuff from all the construction sites. I think I got probably about $500 worth of pieces that make up several 8.5 by 11 sheets right now. Look, I have them. I should put them out by the road so my neighbors can see my wealth. Look, he has plywood. No, it's a chipboard. Yes, but look, he has chipboard. Do you know that he's $40 for a 4x8 sheet? You realize he looks like he has maybe a whole stack there. It is fortune. We must kill him and take his plywood. It's chipboard. Take his plywood now. Kill him. He asked Shitboard, I deserve! Because that's the next thing that's coming. You do understand that, right? You have crappy. Yeah. But you have crappy and I deserve it. But, okay, it's crappy. You didn't want it. Now you want to eat now. That's how these ass cats are gonna be. Yeah, yeah. Why would I? How dare you have that plywood? And a two by four, too. Yeah, three by four, two by fours. I'll dare you! You couldn't tell my deep and marked about this. What I tell my people? When you look at something and you're deciding whether you really want to spend the money on it or not, think about whether you'd be able to make it yourself. Right. And most everything nowadays, people don't have the skill to make themselves. So, I mean, some of us do, but they don't. Probably. Pony up the cash and stuff behind steak, they'll buy chicken. Well, the thing is, example is, I was at Lowe's and that's where they have, you know, outside Lowe's, you know, right by coming in the lumber side. They have these stacks of OSB 7-8, or not 7-8, god I wish they would have gotten it. Yeah, you think. 7-16, right? Half inch is $8 more. Think about that. So 1-16 thicker and it's costing me how much more? But anyway, the 7-16 4x8 sheet of Chippy board is $40.81. And I pointed aside and said, now look over here, look right across where they have the support for the overhang. There's a 20 foot pile of rebar and it's half inch rebar. Let me ask you something. Okay, that's $8 for 20 foot, $8 and I think 41 cents for eight foot of processed steel. But that is scrap chip made with a minimal compression process not like the inventor intended and They're charging you $40.81. What do you think took more to actually accomplish? This is the branches and the knots and stuff that is just left over from the production of real lumber. Yeah, yeah, remember that would join out. Michigan is where it was invented. I forget the guy's name. I want to say McCormick or McKillick. Anyway, the guy... McCoolick. McCoolick. Anyway, the gentleman, he was about 30 some years old and he had a lumber, he had a company up in near Lewiston, Michigan, north of Lewiston, Michigan, way back in the 70s. and early 70s. As a matter of fact, late 60s, early 70s, he wanted to make jobs for Michigan. So what he did is he figured out how to make chipboard. Now the one that he made first is the stuff that most of you used as underlayment on the floor. Usually it's like 5'8 or 7'8 thickness. And it's got that very fine grit to it. Well, that's the normal sawdust that we would have in the mills. And they'd have mountains of it all through the area where we live. I used to go, we used to go and buy rough cut from the mill. And he went around and collected all of that for free, because they didn't want it. It was just piling up. They'd have pyramids of sawdust four stories tall. So he went out and got that all for free, set up a factory, and he did a compression board. And that was the first one he did. And then he did the rough chip board, which now everybody calls OSB. And both of those were the invention right here in Michigan, in Mount Merrinsie County is where the first plant was that built those, that made that. And then everybody else copied it, or he sold the process, whatever he did. So it's one of those things where the quality of the product then Well, again, like I just mentioned earlier about caustic toxins and polymers, when originally it was made, the stuff was pretty damn durable. In fact, if you could compare it, you'd have to find an older building, the original material had more of a plastine sheen to it because it was under pressure and it was injected with stabilizers. Well, it's just like a womanized board. They change the formula on that if you don't know that. They do the same thing with chipboard. That's why chipboard was without any kind of weather. In the past it was never great, but it would hold up at least to a degree. Most of the chipboard being made right now, they've minimized the compression. They've minimized the materials. If it's not Chinese, it's done to Chinese standards, just like the cardboard. And if any moisture hits it and spits on it, you're in trouble. It's just that simple. So it's good enough for, as long as you don't consider it tangible or as long as it's not going to be put at risk, it could be used but it's not preferred. It shouldn't be preferred. If you're looking for the long haul, either solid board or plywood. If you're looking, if you, you know, again, it depends on where it is in the structure, what you're doing, whether you like a lot of things. Obviously, I know you probably have a house that's got it for roofing. I will not use that for roofing. I've seen that, that's rule. I've seen that stuff fluff up in high humidity. Just kind of like... Yes. Yeah. It scales like... Yeah, that means it's not sealed completely. And what that is, is when they did the compression process, they used to have an injection process that would permeate the wood, so it'd petrify it, the chip. And that's why this stuff was so real popular. In fact, it was like, man, this stuff is pretty resilient. Well, guess what? Like everything else, they pumped it out after the product's been out there, because the bean counter's took over. And the eco-freaks want your building to fall apart. They want your man-made stuff to die. And so you have to start thinking about, you know, if you're going to apply it, where can you do it in such a way that it's best protected? So that's just the basic rule. And you can't allow it to be compromised. If it gets compromised, it's got to go. It's just that simple. There's no way to repair or fix what it is once it is compromised. That's the sad part about it. Anyway, that's a sidebar, but the thing is, again, like everything else, we're already in the communist system, guys. The Chinese have enough control that right now machinery, appliances, All the durable goods are being affected by a foreign enemy power that everybody was warned about for decades. And that foreign enemy power is now stretching its manipulative muscles exactly as anybody with a brain warned would happen when they pushed this nasty and gat crap from the beginning. Way before, yeah, way before, because everybody knew better. Anybody with a brain knew better. The stupid people went along with it. Oh, this is going to be great. Well, yeah, in the short term, what did I say in the other hour? They figure you're a shallow hell. You're not going to think beyond the end of your nose. Now, if you do it like reverse, it's like, when I build anything, whenever I can, I build it like a brick doggos. If I grossly over-engineer everything, and I'm getting worse at that, I'm doing even far heavier than I did when I was younger as far as how I build things, OK, if I do it. In fact, it's my policy now. I'm getting older. I am not going to, number one, I need more bullet screening and I also need not to have to do it again. So, not ever. And I only want somebody else to do it again. If they understand, I'll try to explain to them, hey, don't touch this. If you leave it the way it is, it'll probably be good for another hundred years. Just, you know, pay attention. Here's what we did. Now, you might have to do some trim work or fix up. If you do that to maintain the core, it'll run forever. It'll be there forever. That's how everybody needs to be thinking. The same is true with pretty much all the other processes you need to start. If you're going to rebuild it, beef it up. If you're going to make it girthier, make it so that you don't have to fix that thing or work on that thing. Or even if it's an older piece of machinery or like, even something as simple as a two wheel dolly. Paint the living shit out of it. Okay, clean it up. Paint it to death. I mean, after all, it's not exactly going to be an ornament. But you know give it all kinds of coverage make sure it's got something really resilient for whatever wheel base you've got Grease the hell out of everything to make sure it can't rust easily where the working parts are and how many working parts are on a two-wheel dollar you figure it out Okay, and you're done, but guess what it's going to be with you in there when you need it And then find another one by the way when somebody's tossing out another one go grab that one too get theirs theirs needs you need that one too ah That's how you should be looking at all of this technology. So anyway, a couple of other things too, as we mentioned with food, Dollar Tree is still a better choice. I just saw an order given to me, or an order, an offering for MREs. And it's like, look, we've got the municipal MREs, and it's like $47 a case, and we only got one pallet. But we got some, yay! And it's like, well, that's neat, but for what the price of one of those meals are, guys, you can go to dollar, for that price, you can go to Dollar Tree, and if you just go into the canned goods and into the pouches that are there, which are rhetoric, military-type pouches, you can put together some darn good meal packs, and you'll get more food for less money. Or, let's see, you only think about it this way. More food for the same money. That's the most important thing. Go ahead call her, jump in there. Me again. Hey, two quick questions. One, how much material support, when the war kicks off, or maybe even slightly before, you know, if they're trustworthy, you know, could a small upcoming unit expect from other nearby local units that are more well established? And if you're trying to put some money into some kind of reserve fund, you know, basically as a basically savings but not as bills. Do you still think that change is a good idea or would you invest more of it in silver or? Well, we're number one, everybody should be standing in the scrap of copper wire they can and then smelting it as quickly as they can to start building up physical mechanical wealth. Copper is one that's easy to do and there's all kinds of stuff and everybody's throwing stuff out by the curb and they're they busted stuff up. Grab the copper wire, grab anything that's got copper in it and save that. And then smelt it. It's a fun project anyway. It's something to learn. Silver, obviously, and as far as coin goes, there's still silver junk coin out there, but I don't know if the spot is not accurate and availability is a roller coaster. However, you still should have a certain amount of the present currency on hand and again small denominations and change and right now I would sort it out. It's something you have to do while you're watching TV or you can do it at the kitchen table kind of like playing a game is round up all the pennies you can get and pick out the copper pennies and roll them up and just put them on the shelf. They're going to do nothing but appreciate and value and they're always worth the weight of the copper. Hey Mark, we're about to round the copper round. Absolutely. If you want to do rounds, again, I can't stress enough, Craig still has some available and Craig would be willing to do copper rounds if everybody showed an interest again. But you should put copper rounds on the shelf and you should also put silver rounds on the shelf. Obviously gold would be nice, but it's an opinion for most people. I had a guy that was doing a couple of months ago, he was doing one ounce copper rounds and he bought 500 of them, they were a buck apiece. Right, and actually that is a good price because remember as Craig pointed out, and a lot of the guys I've talked to, you know that when they make these generic copper rounds, you know the companies buy those back and re-strike those. I was wondering about that. So one of the reasons why they crank out so many of these unique, like odd coins, they're not commemorative to anything. Well, it's a way to make a one ounce copper round or a one ounce silver round. But what's interesting is many of the companies, they make, if you'll notice, kind of a chunky coin. And the reason they do that is because they can throw the round back into the system, into the machine, and re-strike it to whatever maybe custom order they have. But I thought it was rather, that's a cool way to do things. The big thing is it is a one ounce piece of copper, and it's something that you can do without processing. But people are shoddy about copper right now because the scrap system has changed. And if you go to YouTube, there's a lot of people that are processing the metal from the whatever items they're collecting. And copper is one that is pretty easy to smelt. So in addition to having copper rounds, you could actually make copper ingots or copper coin on your own. That would be kind of cool. That would be kind of fun. And there's a couple different ways that you can make, at the very least, relatively consistent Again, slugs or bars or whatever. They're going to be off a little bit unless you get better at casting. But even there, there's always a variance. So what you do is you weigh it and then you stamp it for the weight. That's what a smart person would do. And that way, when somebody's looking at a piece of copper, a piece of silver, or a piece of gold, well, they're going to look at the weight because you've got it stamped there. But then they're going to throw it on a scale if they're smart, which everybody smart will. and then you're going to figure out what the valuation is. You're going to know the value of that instrument that you're going to trade it. The big thing is here, you're all going to re-understand money. That's another element here that's going to force people to be adults again. You're going to have to actually understand exchanges and you're not going to be infantile. You're going to have to be forced to be adults again. Because right now it's frivolous. I mean to the point where waste is ingrained into everybody's brain. And the farther we get from the last depression, the more arrogant this is. You have people that are just arrogantly being stupid about wasting things. It's just to almost show like, well look, I could throw this away. Meanwhile, they don't own their house and they've got a debt up to their high and down. They've got money on two cars, two bank notes on two cars. And they got two mortgages, and if anything happens to the economy at all, they're the ones who disappear in the middle of the night and they leave the house with all the family albums inside and they're embarrassed and they scurry away in the car they still owe money on. And the house is taken by the bank, five weeks later the cars are taken by the bank. I say bent nails. I'm sorry, repeat callers? I say my bent nails. Yes. Oh, yeah. Oh, again, I can't stress enough. Well, I rate that. Okay, you know how that works too. If it's a bent nail, it goes to the reusable nail bucket. If it's a rusty bent nail and it's already fallen apart, it goes over in the frag bucket slash the scrap metal bucket. And if you go into a shop that I run right now, any of them that I wear, I am, there's a bucket. If there's a scrap, if it's just frag, It's either such a small piece that it's bent and torn in such a way you can't use it or it's rust. But if it's anything else, it's going to be used for either, you know, it's going to be, I'll try to use it for its original purpose. I reuse nails. I grew up with that. If I wanted to build something, my dad wouldn't buy, you know, when I was little, wouldn't buy any nails. But when we were tearing stuff apart, when we were tearing what was called the huddy house apart, I could sit off to the side, well, that's it, kneel off to the side with a hammer, and any nails I could re-bend, well, they were ancient, most of those, I could use those for whatever I wanted to build. So, and again, that was, nope, not gonna spend any money on that, nails cost money. But you know what, bend those nails back there, you can use them. And you know what, I got real good at eyeballing that too. You get to be a connoisseur in nail bending. Again, how much effort does it take to make a nail? Can you make that in real yourself? Here's something for anybody who hasn't looked up the history, guys. What's the scale system for nails? Penny, Penny, wait. Where did that come from? Britain. Think about that. That's not an accident. Nails were like money. In fact, if you recall, you used to maybe have your grandpa tell you about it, like, well, you know, the shed was pretty well worn out and shot. We took over the farm. And so we burned the barn down for the nails, because it wasn't any good. It was pretty well shot anyway. And so we burned them out. We got all the nails and got all the metal, and then, you know, everything got reused. And I know that happened. It wouldn't burn down a hip roof barn, but you have the old shed barns and stuff like that that were, you know, knit together. They didn't waste any of that. It also saved them time because they needed to clear the property because time is money. So what they do is they burn down the old barn with all the manure buildup and everything else. Usually because barns don't get moved so the ground below it gets pretty Either acidic or you have an ammonia builds up to by the way it permeates the soil So what you do is you burn it down the ammonia gets burned off the line gets burned out You can easily chip up or get rid of the or break apart the foundation if it was if it was stone Of course, I remember limestone shatters and fire So the problem you got like in Michigan here a lot of your stone was lime. So you're gonna lose some of your rock Not all of it, but some of it. And then you take out, or take the rocks that were shattered, and you turn that into rubble to fill, and you lay a new foundation, lay out new cement, because cement was the big thing. People started to use cement more. And when you were done, you had those nails left over to start putting things back together. Yeah, you wouldn't do that now. You got carpenters are so arrogant, they'll drop a pound of nails on the floor and won't bend to pick them up. Hey, Mark. On a work site. You know what? I went through with the shovel and picked every last one of them up. I wonder why. I had things to build and I didn't want to spend the money. Somebody else did. You want to call or jump in there? Hey, you were talking about pennies. The year is 1983 and before to find the copper ones. And if you're going to do that, you want to definitely separate the wheat pennies if people don't know about that. Because the thing is about those pennies, is that there's no question that it's actual copper. Whereas there may be counterfeit copper rounds out there, especially with the price of copper right now, but no one's gonna counterfeit. And I don't think in the history of, you know, since pennies were made, I don't think there's any been any kind of counterfeit pennies. They're gonna counterfeit the silver dollars and of course the gold as well. They'll fill it full of tungsten, especially the bars. but not the pennies. In fact, you can buy Ziploc bags full of pre-1983 copper pennies on eBay still for a decent price. You might find somebody in town that would do that as well. I've got probably three or four coffee cans full of these pennies, so they're good to have. When it does hit the fan, it's a means of exchange, you know? and people should have them. The other caller was asking about silver on whether to buy that or not. You can go on eBay right now and whatever people are selling the silver for, that's the actual price. Okay, so the spot price is 27 and change. They're selling it for about, you know, five, six bucks over spot. If you want a silver eagle, it's gonna be, could be 10 bucks over spot. But that pre-64 silver, you can always find that on eBay. And it's going to be like right now 23, 24 times face. Usually for a roll of quarters, you're going to be paying probably about 215, maybe 220 right now. But the thing is that as this financial system collapses and people start dumping their dollars, worldwide. And they all start flooding back to the United States. That's when you're going to see the prices of everything skyrocket. Another thing I want to add is... Go ahead. Go ahead. Well, real quick, I would point out what you're talking about. I think that's what's happening right now. For instance, the artificial price of wood. There's a fiction, there's no shortage of wood. The problem is the expansion of the digits that we threw out overseas and the other ones that are kicking back on us. And what they're doing is they're trying to hide it by making you believe there is a crisis here, a crisis there, a crisis here, a crisis. No, this is communism. This is what happens when they start plugging in the machine and the shyster bankers do what they've always done. They realize that they did it all at once. If they did it all at once, people would shoot their ass. I think that dude out here is either a brain dead fool or you're fully cognizant of what's going on and there's no in between anymore. And most people out there are so pissed that if they hit the switch the way they've done in the past, they wouldn't survive the first 24 hours. Our people would be fine. Their side would be finished. I was listening to an interview the other day, this ex-banker in tune with a lot of people on the inside, and he was saying one of the reasons that they came up with this, and we always knew they were going to pull something to preempt the collapse of the whole system, is that it wasn't the virus. At first, I thought that, well, they really did manufacture a virus to kill a whole lot of people. which definitely would, as this guy said, cause deflation to counter the inflation. Now we're finding out if not the virus that's going to kill people, it's going to be the vaccine. When you have a billion people die off, that's going to cause an unbelievable amount of deflation, which would counter the inflation, but I still don't think it's going to be enough because there's so many dollars that they have printed. And in 2020 alone, they printed 40% of the total supply that's out there. The real reason I wanted to call in, Mark, is I saw this tweet. It's all over Twitter. If you just go onto Twitter and type in FBI building, board it up. Apparently the FBI headquarters in Washington, D.C., they just either yesterday or today boarded the whole thing up and put a chain around it. There's nobody inside. Oh, really? Yeah. Well, they wanted, now you know that's quote unquote the new FBI building, which everybody that's my age remembers when the new FBI building was put there. And you know they've been pissing and moaning about how they want a new building. Now it may be that there's, there may be the cover for them evacuating the epicenter of whatever they're going to do. Because one of the things I've pointed out is If they're going to do a new, if the government's going to nuke itself or the Israelis are going to nuke us and then point at somebody else, Washington, D.C., if they decide to follow through like they were arguing in the 90s, Washington, D.C. is the old capital. And what happened with 9-11, they did what I argue would do, but to what degree was going to be the variable, they attacked Washington, only the pentagram, and they attacked New York. But if they were to go a heavy real biological or heavy nuke and they frag Washington DC, Chicago is supposed to be the replacement. I know of the other locations. Colorado, Denver, of course, is the other dark spot. But the commerce backup is Chicago, is Chicago. That is, in fact, it's the only other place where the Council on Foreign Relations has a central office. They got plenty of cursory sites all over the place. But if you were guys, if you go down 994 and you pay attention and look on the right side, headed toward you on the lakeside, you might notice there's a big placard on an angle with gold letters. What does it say? So, you know, this, if they're, if they've evacked without notice, And there's nothing in any of the pages right now, say for the FBI administrative office. See, one of the things they'd have to do is for any activity involved with business, and they are a business, they would have to identify a rerouting of activities that would normally be taking place in the, you know, the federal building, the FBI building. So if they've actually done that, they've shut it down, boarded it up completely, and they're somewhere else. That means they've unasked the AO for some other agenda or reason. I have an additional announcement. Go ahead. Housing and urban development is also shut down. So we've got the Capitol Building, the White House, FBI Building, and the HUD Building shut down. So that's four of them that we know of. That's routing away, which means that that's a That is a precursor to a sacrifice play. Let's go back to the argument about what happened in Nashville, that it was an aerial attack. Now let's go back a little farther. Remember there's people who said they tracked aerial ordnance coming in. That's one of the reasons that they shut the whole thing down with no more discussion. Remember the most heavily cambered piece of real estate before most you knew it, cameras, was Washington DC. They've been spying on everybody for decades. As soon as they had video cameras available, guys, they cambered up Washington. But the pentagram was one of the most heavily cambered and monitored up facilities before everybody, and they actually paved the way for all of the camera tech that everybody else now uses, right? Well, remember when they were attacked, we didn't have any footage or anything you were allowed to see. That was a missile attack. Okay, there's no doubt about it. It was a missile attack. It was not a plane attack. It was not a ram attack. Even though ram attack was planned, even though the ram attack synthetic was there to create the target for tracking, something that people we've discussed this many times, it's been a while. The idea is that The Nashville event is right close in the taillights, right behind us. And if you look at the amount of damage and what was done there, this is visions of things to come with the next escalation where you're going to have one faction or another or the external foreign powers like the Israelis. And you know, the Belgium, the Belgians have got more clause because it's an extension of the Jewish mafia, an extension of Israel. Those characters have more claws in the operations on the east coast and inside our military than any other single faction out there right now other than the Israelis. Both of these factions and others may be vying for or will be vying for who's going to take the Golden Ring. And that's what this thing is really all about. Go ahead, jump into the rear voice. Speaking of 9-11, my brother told me that he believed that it was an internal detonation because the rubble went outside the blast radius, which would imply a blow from the interiors. Oh, internal and external, right. The ram attack is purely the diversion. The instill does damage, but it's the idea that no the discussion about the idea that the Israelis said everything up the way they did Yeah in New York. They run it. They own it. They were in again the Reporting a facility reporting the reporting authority all those characters wearing amicals to work should tell you something Anyway, but we gotta go guys go ahead jump in every 40 years now Go ahead. I just can tell you we remember in Washington DC about two months ago. There was smoke coming up out of the ground It just burned everything out underground as well. Well, wherever it is, the big thing... Well, we'll have to talk about this and come back at 8 o'clock. There are a couple of things, remember, that took place four years ago that fall in line with this. And I'll just jog everybody's memory then. Remember that train with the trash truck? Remember where everybody was going, guys? The Republicans, as a group? They were all going somewhere else. Where were they headed? Anyway, go look that up. You go, oh! We're going to look for now though, God bless our republic. Death to the New World Order. We shall prevail ladies and gentlemen, the Empire is on the run. We're on the march day and night. And I should tell you something about business not being as usual, I recommend you all start investing even more food now because you're not going to leave a penny. But if the switch is, those are the commodities that will win or break any resistance that takes place, guys. You need to have it out where the rubber meets your road. You guys be good. God bless. Ed taking over. LTRK area is on and I'll be back at 8 o'clock for you. Ian's out of court. God bless. Bye bye.
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