April 25, 2022
Evening Show
4h 8m
Complete
Radio Episode
2022
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Summary
Mark Koernke discussed the new 6.8 SIG military cartridge project, criticizing its bi-metal case design as overly complicated and prone to failure, advocating instead for simpler brass-cased alternatives. He covered militia training activities, AR platform rifle development, ammunition manufacturing, and extensively analyzed the southern border crisis through caller reports detailing cartel violence, human smuggling operations, and gang activity that mainstream media ignores.
- 6.8 cartridge
- sig sauer
- ar-10
- ar-15
- ammunition manufacturing
- border security
- human smuggling
- cartel violence
- militia training
- second amendment
- federal government betrayal
- ukraine aid
- preparedness
- thermal camouflage
- bear creek arsenal
Transcript
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He walked in through the mist with a flintlock in his. 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, 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 trade it in your name. You've given government control to those who do you harm so they could burn down churches and seize the family farm and keep our country deep in debt. Put men of God in jail. Harash your fellow countrymen while corrupted courts prevail. Your public servants don't uphold the solemn oaths they've sworn. And your daughters visit doctors so their children won't be born. Your leaders send artillery and guns to foreign shores and send your sons to slaughter fighting other people's wars. Can you regain the freedoms for which we fought and died? Or don't you have the courage or the faith to stand with pride? And are there no more values for which you'll fight to save? Or do you wish your children to live in fear and be a slave? O sons of the Republic, arise, take a stand, defend the Constitution, the Supreme Law of the land, preserve our great Republic and each God given right, and pray to God to keep the torch of freedom burning bright. As Iowoke 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 to dream while you were asleep and wondered what remains of the freedoms he fought to keep What would be your answer if he called out from the grave? Is this still the land of the three the drum? I hear the drums good afternoon ladies and gentlemen. This is the First hour of the afternoon intelligence reports have our current key One day closer to victory for all of our brothers and sisters both on and behind the lines in occupied territories Northwest West Southeast and Ladies and gentlemen, you were listening to us www.libertytreeradio.4mg.com LibertyTreeRadio.org and we are on satellite. We'll see hi to all of our merchant marine operators across the whole of the globe and including the Maru group which are doing a phenomenal job of also transmitting into the Chinese island groups of ships that are docked which is kind of cool. We've got quite a network going on here now. And so we appreciate the work that's being done there. We're also on a myriad of communications technologies, both inside and outside these United States. Good afternoon, evening and morning to all. And it is Monday, it's Monday afternoon, it's 5.05, oh 5.06 p.m. Eastern Standard Time. It is the 25th of April, and if I'm wrong slightly in the microphone, only five days left, 30 days, have September, April, June, and November. So guess what? This is a short month, not by much, just today. Anyway, it is the 14th year of open obvious and pissing in your face. Fabian Socialist and Soviet Socialist Occupation of America with a K, 2022, older the calendar. 2022 battle for the Republic. The dance of sorts. Let the dance continue. And then it's Monday. It's been a pretty busy day today. Got a few little things done. Didn't get as much done as I'd like, but they got certain things sorted out. The big thing is we kind of accumulate wealth on the weekend. Man, I ran into some really interesting things. Not so much tools. Well, yeah, I guess tools, but in the tactical toolbox, not so much in the mechanical toolbox for, you know, vehicle and equipment support. That we have. We're rich. We are a wash in, which is what I need more of. I want to be more a wash than I already am. These are things that you wear out. Drill presses. Cut-off tools, files, you name it. Go right down. Chuck's fixtures, blades. Made a hell of a deal on cut-off wheels, cut-off blades here the other day. I want to say thank you first of all, remind everybody again, we have several listeners who have donated extensively in that respect to the effort. I want to say thank you. I've not forgotten you at all. For others out there, again, we do have the 24th Regimental Combat Team Colonial Marine Militia, 1st and 2nd Squadron. They were very busy this weekend and as a matter of fact we're in a meetup with elements of the Alabama Colonial Marine Militia detachments in the West but no it's not, it's the eastern half of the state. Congratulations you guys did a pretty good job. Some of the videos are pretty cool and we appreciate the idea that We're seeing better cooperation with both Colonial Marine and other state militia units in preparation for what's coming. The big thing here again was inter-cooperation and communications, but also learning to deploy technology and utilizing all of the tools of camouflage and deception, which is especially critical. How to know how to hold down fast and disappear into the foliage, so to speak. Used to be, just as a heads up there, I guys might remember this, we used to have all kinds of interesting competitions way back in the day. I'm sure everybody just stands there and waits to be shot now. That's what it looks like, I mean, anyway. How many of you remember when you were, if you were a tank crew, you had everything netted up ready to go, and the idea was you did the rollout, and how quickly could you camouflage a 52 ton or a 70 ton armored vehicle, depending on what you were driving? There was in Europe with the European US Army forces, they had a couple of really cool competitions. Some of them disappeared. One was deployment of a 50 caliber BMG on M2. That's a mobility item. The other one was how to again camouflage and conceal to include thermal signature reduction. The big deal back in the day, how many of you might remember this if you're tread heads, most of you don't know, but thermal was an issue before most people were officially talking about it because, needless to say, spy satellites were looking for thermal signatures. One of the biggest innovations in the M48 and M60 upgraded battle tanks was a thermal reduction panel. deck that went on the back of the M60 and was also an upgrade for the M48 battle tanks. And by the way, we had the M48 A5, which had the full laser rangefinder, the upgraded fire control system, tracking and motion, 105 gun. Don't forget that, they upgraded. And the tank could hold its own. Actually, it was a pretty decent little vehicle. The 48 was pretty old, you know, bug worked out. and the M60 was right there with it. So both those tanks would serve, they'll serve very well today. Without any problems whatsoever, but there was an entire competition process for trying to get everything hooked up and in place within a matter of so many seconds. Now, of course, the average was about a minute and I think it was a minute and 14, a minute and 16 seconds to completely camouflage, you know, overlap and lay in camouflage a main battle tank. It's kind of cool. You're driving along, you have to debark, you know, you have to obviously unhatch, you know, break out, you know, material, roll everything out. One of the most common things you first did was actually take the main gun and you dropped it either low left or low right over the fender, depending on where you pulled off the road, how you pulled off, say, parallel or deep into the overhead cover you might have available. And the idea is that In many cases, you might be in control of that road or that's where you want it to be and you're going to fire and shoot and scoot. But your first position, what you literally did was stop. crew debarks except for the driver. And between the loader and the gunner, they very quickly and the commander typically pitched in. You deployed the your tarpulence slash, it was kind of a nylon strided nylon material. Had to be light because you didn't, it gets to be pretty damn heavy when you got a whole bunch of camouflage netting. Now the new upgraded camouflage netting was also the big thing which had Also, not just a thermal reduction material, but also an anti-ground surveillance radar screen built into it. So when you rolled it out and somebody was using those 17 kilos were down the road to be the Russian counterpart, they were pinging the battlefield. They were looking for big, fun objects that ping back. You do know that there's ground surveillance radar out there, right? Of course, ground surveillance radar operators are being hunted, so here's the problem, it really sounds cool. Yeah, we're going to use ground surveillance radar, we're going to track you down, and we're going to get a ping, and that, bah bah bah bah bah bah bah bah bah bah bah bah bah bah bah bah bah. And so for that reason, the logic was during the Cold War, for instance, the ground surveillance radar operators had a life expectancy of about 11 minutes. If they turned their equipment on, everybody was hunting for them. This is one of the things I was told you about when you have all this cool technology and both sides have the same technology, it's equal opportunity, dying time. And, well, I got this really cool stuff, I can turn it on and boom, yeah, you did. So anyway. You roll the net out and everything's down and then you might depending on what year you had my favorite is the Cambrella Don't forget you had the commander's cupolo Cambrella. That's actually what they called it a Cambrella I've told you this before you can actually up until a little while ago. You can get the Cambrella's from Anyway, just bringing this up, these competitions were designed to improve performance in the field. It seems that everybody has lost the art of, well, I guess they're lazy, I don't know. Have you seen anybody that looks like they're making an effort to actually conceal themselves? It's like they're all in a video game and their logic is there's gonna be some kind of stinking reset button. The quality has gone way down with regard to operator performance in a whole bunch of different areas. But our part is because it was work. You know, my God, man, that's a lot of work. It's like, yeah, well, your life's worth something. Well, you know, a little man, it's just a lot of work. Oh, rolling up the camouflage, not rolling the camouflage. That is a lot of work. Well, yes, that's true. So anyway, that's one of the things we're working on is using the same techniques for thermal reduction and we're using also the same technology, by the way it's very crude and rude but it worked really well, for radar breakdown and deception, for nullifying the radar surveillance frequencies. And it's a very simple, there's a bunch of simple things tied in there. In fact, let me give you a little hint. You want to try this. Go, if you want to look, go look at a regular US military camo net and what are the features of it? The traditional ones during the Cold War, late Cold War. Okay, they were earlier Cold War were hemp. And that's why satellites were looking for, oh wait a minute, no, that's why the dope industry took the spy satellite technology we use for hunting for burlap camouflage nets, which were natural material. Well, because it was hemp, they used that to hunt for all you guys who were planting hemp in the back 40. The technology that came up was originally supposedly to hunt main battle tanks and equipment camouflaged by hemp, camouflaged most commonly used by the Russians, not so much by us. But then when we kind of ran out of business there, well, we can use that to hunt all these guys, you know, that are planting marriage oana. And so they flipped the technology sideways to make more bucks off it. The rest is history, as they say. So anyway, the guys did a great job and congratulations to the men who participated this weekend. Also, everybody else was busy at all the other training sites now. A couple of the things real quick over at Bear Creek Arsenal dot com. Bear Creek Arsenal dot com. Bear Creek Arsenal dot com. They have a couple of real deals including a complete rifle deal. You might want to go take a look at. It's an M4 knockoff. Well, it's not an M4. Forgive me. M4 length barrel. But it's one of the more modernized designs. Obviously with all the key rails and all the fun stuff. But it's cheap for a complete rifle. Now you can, as I've told you before, piece a gun like this together. And you're ready to go. It's just a matter of again, what's on sale for this moment? You guys have all took advantage of those 7.62x39 uppers. Did you notice how they all lept up, jumped up in price everywhere? Anybody catch that? If you bought any of those last week when I told you to, you're sitting there smiling right now because $214 for a 16 inch upper in 762 by 39. You're double plus good kids. You guys hit the button at the right time. I don't know what happened. Somebody probably wrote some other stupid article in a magazine or on the internet somewhere. And all of a sudden it's the next best thing to slice white bread and the rest is history. Now I will point out that there is there are is are and is There are some 18 inch air air 15 uppers that are in 762 by 39 I'd like to see one in a 20 or 22 inch barrel. I'm sure somebody probably made one. Maybe even Bear Creek. Okay But whatever you got, you're doing great. And again, it covers another caliber, another chambering, which is a good thing. If you're short money, start buying uppers, buy an AR and buy uppers. Why? Because you'll cover all the other calibers will probably have for the fight as things progress, okay? Now, another thing real quick. I started talking about a 6.8 project and everybody got interested. We have four manufacturers. who will assuredly let me know, and these are bigger manufacturers, guys. I might have mentioned one of them. But the 6.8 barrel, maybe not the whole system right away, but a 6.8 AR-10 barrel may be available very, very, very soon. It's not really a big deal. As long as they know what the correct specs are for the chain bring, guys, Looking at it this way, it does have more velocity, but basically it's a cross between, it's between 760 by 51 NATO and 243 Winchester. So they're already making 243 AR-10 uppers, so this is not a big deal. The chambering's not a big deal. I think the biggest concern is that They came up with this BS binary, you know, bi-metal binary case, which apparently is steel base and brass front. Well, that's a fast, awkward, stupid way to go, to be quite honest. This means that the ammunition is gonna be outrageously priced no matter what they do. And that tells you that we're into the bribalot scam that a lot of these asshats have been into before. Boy, we saw those dummies coming. Yeah, no, we got to buy it too. The 6.8 bimetal case is the first thing that we need to write out. In other words, make it, it works. To be quite honest, let's put it this way. If we're pushing over 3,000 feet per second with that rifle, and I want everybody to start seriously looking at this because we're gonna have the gun before the government does. We're gonna have a gun that will perform with a 6.8 standard military configuration before the regime gets one out there, before SIG gets one out there. That's what's gonna happen. That's the goal, okay, right now. And with that being the case, What we also want to do is again, there are little nuances that always happen with stupid case ideas like this. Since we know what the dimensions are, there's going to be only other consideration and this sounds weird, but it is really critical, is the follower configuration. Whether or not the pitch for the bed for the follower is correct. We may have to make a new follower that I would say is probably the case, but as I pointed out, We already have a number of different magazines and internals that work with a number of different cartridges in the AR-10 platform. What is really cool about this, and this I'm serious, piss on SIG, I don't want a SIG, I don't want a SIG rifle, I don't want the government model. It's a piece of crap to begin with, I'll guarantee it. They wouldn't be buying it if it weren't crap, okay? Just understand that right now. The only thing that they're buying for the US government are our feces rifles. Okay, that's their plan. Outrageously priced, gonna be too finicky. There's gimmick parts on it that are gonna be a problem. Here's the thing that buy metal that dual stage case is gonna be a problem right from the get go. And I know what's gonna happen. It's going to be adhesion failures. But they're not going to tell you about it. Well, why do we know that? Well, here's how it works. The whole idea of every time that a research project on the bi-middle idea came out, Frankfurt Arsenal already looked at this extensively over 60 years ago. Frankfurt Arsenal looked this up Frankfurt Arsenal. Go check out Frankfurt Arsenal. It's a government. It was the government research Arsenal. For hell, almost, well, up until the 60s, every proving ground overlapped with it. But Frankfurt, going all the way back to the 1800s, was in reality our basic design arsenal, Frankfurt Arsenal. You know, so keep emphasizing it, because you got to know these things. Frankfurt developed anything, everything and anything. in small arms calibers, if they thought of it, they tried it. Not only did they try it, but they actually had the machinery and the budget to be able to actually try and use it and break it. In other words, what does it do and what doesn't it do? How well does it work or doesn't it work at all? So what's interesting about this is the first thing that's gonna be happening is because it's sick and because we're getting screwed by a foreign contractor, they're setting us up for a fall on this one. The two component dissimilar metal configured case is grossly overpriced, ridiculously overpriced, stupid overpriced. Okay? It's the other words, you're bollocksing up the plumbing purely for the sake of doing something stupid and different. Period. If they proceed with this idea, it is purely for the sake of making something grossly or complicated while not improving the performance of anything. Why? Because the first time you have a significant malfunction, and what do you think the malfunction is going to be with a two-piece case? What do you think? Okay, boop, boop, boop, boop, boop, boop, boop. B-B-B-B-B-B-B-B-B-B-B-B-B-B-B-B-B-B-B-B-B-B-B-B-B-B-B-B-B-B-B-B-B-B-B-B-B-B-B-B-B-B-B-B-B-B-B-B-B-B-B-B-B-B-B-B-B-B-B-B-B-B-B-B-B-B-B-B-B-B-B-B-B-B-B-B-B-B-B-B-B-B-B-B-B-B-B-B-B-B-B-B-B-B-B-B-B-B-B-B-B-B-B-B-B-B-B-B-B-B-B-B- But I'm gonna tell you that, don't worry, your new belt, your all magazine-fed, belt-fed piece of crap, Sig, isn't gonna run away like a traditional machine gun. You wanna know why? because after the fourth or fifth round ripped the case off the back, the brass is molten or semi malleable, I should say malleable, won't be semi. It's gonna pack about four, five, six, seven rounds one after another. The cases will literally be piled up or skewed up inside. You'll get three, four, five more rounds on a hot barrel. And then the poor bastard is dead. Not only is he dead, but it's gonna be the end of the gun. Okay, have you ever had to deal with a pained m60? I'll raise my hand I've seen more than a few of them How about brownings not so many because we were smart with the brownings how many mag 58s to? Now, what do I mean by that with a runaway gun or if the kid doesn't have a controllable trigger finger? Well, at the end of that belt, well not even at the end, probably about 125 rounds into a 200-round can, all of a sudden the gun just goes on its own. And you really, if you're panicking and just trying to control it, you may not think about twisting the belt the way you should. So what happens is by the time you get to the end of the magazine, the end of the can, the front of your bolt is cherry molten metal. And what it does is it slams into the fascia of the barrel to the point where it splays out like a blunderbuss. And then it starts to cool because it's chattering and it's running on, it runs on ammo and it smacks right into the end of that barrel. And I'll tell you what, once that starts to cool, which is almost instantly, you won't separate those two parts, but doesn't make any difference anyway. The bolt has been destroyed, the extractor is destroyed. you probably destroyed the trunnion. You definitely have fragged the barrel, but that was supposed to be replaceable. Okay, but the rest of these parts, they're not replaceable easy. Well, they are, but you've destroyed half of the operating system of the gun. Okay, now the one thing I will say is this, you won't get a chance necessarily to do that with a bi-metal case. What will happen is at some point you get a little too hot or you start cooking too fast because after all it is a hot chamber You are going higher cup pressures, right? What's gonna happen? I can picture this like it's yes, but it just right there in front of me Hook and there's gonna be funk I said pH funk because what you're gonna feel is that that bolt slam forward on what is a depleted chamber and what's happened is the ass into those cases got ripped out for one faster I can say this. Two or three or four cases got ripped out. First one got ripped out, the bullet went down through the tube, the brass opened up because it was hot. The second round came in, squeezed right in and probably squeezed some of that brass into the barrel. And then the next round went off. And that one ripped one that when the extractor tried to do his job, it ripped the whole ass into that metal case off. And the third one went in, maybe the fourth or fifth one, because it's just a matter of time before there's more material than there is. space available, okay? And that's when she fails. Now we're gonna hear about, let's see, which is worse? Maybe if we're lucky, it just jams and gets you killed. Maybe it'll malfunction and that last one or two cases might rupture. Of course, you already are rupturing, you're getting back pressure. But what's going to happen is you're going to get expansion pressure that's going to be progressively greater to the rear because there's no relief to the front. So at some point you're going to get a nice, probably a score, it'll be a battle scar. It'll look like you're in like, you know, the Germans say, yeah, you know, the Germans get the scars on each side of the cheek. You will have one right about me, a face-ratt, and the face will be protected if it was next to the gun, but all of that other cheap stuff, and maybe eyeball, and maybe a forehead, you're gonna have big gimbal gunkins in it, yeah? You're gonna wish the gun, or the pain will be horrible, and you won't be able to see probably out of that eye no more. Cuz you were saber-dirling for the gun that should have been pocked up, because it would begin with, never should have been there. Anyway, so I guess, well, what the hell, it's the younger generation and the purple-haired ones probably need to be behind that gun. It'll be kind of cool to get rid of some of the, you know, kind of thin the herd out there, I guess. But I'm sorry, this just, you know, I'm not sorry. What am I talking about? I am not sorry. I am, I, this is all garbage. You see stuff like this, we're going to spend a god-awful amount of money on a foreign gun manufacturer, and they're never going to tell you about the casualties. You don't want to know why let me give an example Here for all you guys hold up. We got a somebody who's having a problem with their mic Or they're not muted say mark or do we have a caller call or jump in there? Who do we have? Yeah, that's text mix. Yeah I'm just gonna say that whenever you have I don't care what it is What if you have to dissimilar materials and you have a coil joint? It's just a matter of time. Something's gonna come apart You know, that's just nature. And you know, the thing about this, what the specs they're trying to get and the velocities they're trying to get out of this new cartridge, you know, it's a, what is it, a 277 caliber or a 6.8? Well, that's a 270. And if you would take the same grain weight, which is what they're going to use, 130 grain bullet. And if you compare it to a 270, you can get the same velocities. And if you're trying to penetrate armor with velocity instead of some sort of tungsten or armor-piercing steel, the 243 will do a good job on any steel plate armor. It's fast enough. Right. Yeah. All of these, okay, here's the thing. It's the answer to a question that was not asked. How can I bollocks up the machine? But one of the things- But all those old rounds are stale. You can't use those. They're old. Well, but here's the thing, as much as anything. Any of you guys who ever been machine gun operators, you know what I'm talking about. Why is it you have to have a soft trigger finger on a belt-fed gun? Because what happens is, and I just described it, guys, there is nothing in this design that is going to be efficient about shedding calories. It's not just the velocity and the cup pressure, it's the eye and the pressure, it's the chamber pressure, okay? All the different components. There's a progressive, you remember spike, and again, while you're extracting, there's all kinds of things going on which we already talked about. But real quick on this, guys, the moment you pull the trigger, you're building calories up in the gun. Now the brass is what's gonna, is not gonna fail. It's gonna do what brass does. It doesn't take much to heat it up. Now here's the solution. I marked my word on this one. The first gimmick solution is gonna be to make an all steel case. You do understand that, right? You know, Tech-Mex, you see that coming? I see that coming. Why? Because it's one metal, it's one material. Now, the advantage of the steel would be that you could still sustain the whole design. But the disadvantage is your design is kind of choppy slash punky anyway. To do with what you're doing here, it's not really a good plan. But what will happen is the same issue that the Russians had with their steel case ammunition. You better be planning for extractor, okay, extractor failure or rim failure, it'll be as long as you, if you don't maintain standards on that steel, number one. The Russians accepted this, okay, they understood this. The system was pretty much reliable because of the Coke bottle nature, or forgive me, the high taper and angle of the case, no matter which one they have. the AK-74 round, the AK-47 round, or the Nagant round, okay? The 545, the 762 by 39, and the 762 by 54 are. Go take a look at those rounds. They don't sit nice on their side. Why? Well, the positive angle of the case delivers, means that when there is an energy thrust to the rear, which is happening by the way, naturally, to a degree because of the nature of the case expansion, you know, it's a retro rocket. When you fire a bullet, remember equal opportunities here, you know, equal opportunity force and energy. One goes one way, something's going to try to go the other. The extractor enhances what is already a positive thrust to the rear with a taper so that even if you steal brass or copper wash steel or even bi-metal cases, the receiver is so forgiving. The design nature is so forgiving that you'll probably get an extraction every time, which is what makes those guns so reliable. But that's not what we're talking about here. We're making a relatively straight case. And on top of it being a straight case, we've separated, we've created a bonding line. And I'm sure we got very sophisticated. We might even have some kind of pleading where it's like take your hands, flip one upside down. You ever done this like an isometric exercise where you do the chest exercise? Think about the brass linking to the steel that way and being extruded somehow that way. What a waste of time and resources. What a phenomenal waste on what is a perishable item. The biggest thing when you read, and I'm serious about this guys, I've done a lot of design study. I was really, I'm always fascinated with design. Okay, I always have been. That's one of the things I just get into this stuff. But right off the bat, this is something that Frankfurt Arsenal pointed out years ago. They said, hey, we can build anything. If you, and I'll let you think about this, you know how big a 30 caliber bullet is, right? I've pointed this out many times. Imagine if you had somebody come up here and say, I wanna make a high explosive 30 caliber bullet. What? I wanna make a bullet that when it goes down range, it will detonate at a particular range and will detonate on impact. Okay, like how well we want to do. I just wanted to blow up like just think about like a scale down artillery shell. Guys, they literally did. They took an air defense 90 millimeter round and basically took the 30 caliber bullet. I think they used the jacket that they used for the standard tracer, incendiary and AP, okay, which is a longer, deeper bullet as I've said many times. What they did is they literally micro machined all of the technology and put it in a 30 caliber round. and then made a bunch of them and showed that they could do it. And they said, well, yeah, we can do it, but what's the use of it? You know, after they even said when they started- They said it's like, well, are we just spending, this is like just spending money for the sake of, let's see if we can do it. Now for clandestine operations, I'm sure for some kind of assassination or murder, somebody at whatever distance, yeah, it'd be a wonderful, fascinating utility item. But there are so many other alternate solutions where you can have a thousand of them, a hundred thousand of them, or half a million of them, for what it costs for the quantity that they put together to show that they could do it. And these things had little micro gears, centrifugal force, defusing systems, like effectively the defusing system on these little 30 caliber bullets was the same defusing system, the D safety that you have on a 40 millimeter. It's a centrifugal D link. It spins so many times and rotates the unit back to the point where the safety disengages so you have free contact when it makes impact. It'll detonate. See a 40 millimeter grenade, US 40 millimeter grenades, a close point blank range. Guys, you're just shooting somebody with a big 40 millimeter slug. Now it was a Russian grenade. Oh man, the moment it goes out the tube, it's ready to boom. But we decided we might want to be able safer than that because it's just it's embarrassing when you have a self-fragging grenadier in your unit, right? That's why they put that safety in there. Well, they actually built that into a... You look at the size of a 30 caliber bullet, you think about what was going on inside that and what it cost. It was like a watch mechanism. It was so stinkin' expensive, everybody involved with it said, yeah, this is interesting, but it serves no practical purpose. It's me eating our time up, but okay, we'll build it, cool, that's what we do. But here's the thing, they didn't make one version, guys, they made eight or nine. It's argued there were two or three of the projects started when they did this that they backed off on, and each one was a variation. How many different ways can we make it? It was done during World War II. Just adds up. So how complicated do you need it? Well, you need billions of rounds because you're fighting a war, but somebody's going to make, you know, this thing would make it impractical to build. That's basically what they're setting us up for with a lot of the crap that they're doing right now because it's foreign companies and interests and bought and paid for horrors in uniform that are setting us up for our people to get hurt badly or fail. Now for anybody who thinks I don't know. Go ahead, color. Yeah, Mark. I've seen a supposed to be drawing of the 6.8 to 77 round. And it is, well, it looks like it has a steel lure that envelops the bottom of the brass keys, probably to help hold in that ridiculously high pressure. Right. That's what it does. I've seen that before, but yes. In fact, if you want to see an earlier variation on this, go look at the Herschel German 6'2 by 51 NATO blank rounds. Anybody remember these or the plastic bullet rounds? They're really not blank. They're actually, they did make a blank. They do make a blank that does nothing but pop. But you might recall they look like milk jug plastic. The bases though are low end pot metal steel. And so the same idea that you see here in that, well, we can get away with this. Now, there are variations on this that would make sense if you bring down the cost, but they're not bringing down the cost. They're increasing the cost, increasing the complication in the process, dictating they will take more time and more resources with a diverse number of different supply chains to get the job done. as opposed to one process, everybody duplicate it. You can crank it out anywhere, even if you had a rat seller and one guy with a handful of machines, he could only do one cartridge at a time, at least he could keep making it. That is not the case with this. We're being set up. This is another example of this is treason in motion is what it comes down to as far as I'm concerned Hold on one more thing real quick for people who don't understand this How many of you guys if you're a tanker you're sitting next to everybody tell them about the commander killer Well the government hold on here government wouldn't buy guns who would kill its own people Really? I mentioned the m48 the m60 Well, there's more than one gun that was called the commander killer Why was it called the commander killer? Well, it wasn't a suicide weapon. You didn't have to, you know, the guys didn't jump out in front of the barrel and pull the trigger by reaching their hand inside the commander's cupolo. No. It was one of those things where the gun did a good job of taking out all by itself, even if he did try to shoot someone in the process. Okay, caller, jump in there, please. I was wondering, I know the Army doesn't generally reload anything. Army, Navy, Air Force, Marines, blah, blah. Is there a potential that this is being used as a denial of reloading for us? Do they come slightly unhinged? Is there some special procedure that you need to re-crimp that isometric grip on the thing? Right. Well, it would have to be- We could just make it out of brass, right? Right. And just use our own loads. We don't have to use their 200,000 cup pressure, cup loads, and then we can drop it down enough. Right. What you would do is just like we said before, think about it this way. Guys, when you get a reloading book, okay, you have a certain load. You'll have what is the middle. They always show you what the middle point of loading is, and then they show where you can go grain by grain or half grain or quarter grain up the scale. and how you can go downscale. Now, it will give you all of your information on chamber pressure variance. So this math can all be done very, very quickly. If it isn't already available, and basically, as we've said, the 270 route looks like it has comparable performance. But I will say this, the 270 is a longer route, almost as long as the 30 out of six. So why they aren't going with just, okay, now I'm going to add some other math here. Back in 1954-55, everybody yaps about what gave us the M14. But the British had a 7mm assault. I've mentioned this many times. They didn't call it 7mm assault though. All over the Belgians did. Because the Belgians made the case, the Brits were the ones who wanted it. They were going to put it in a bullpup, which they did. And they tried to promote it for NATO standard. I've had thousands of the rounds. They're worth a fortune. I sold them for a fortune. I sold them for a big chunk of money. I got over 3,000 rounds of the stuff and another 9,000 overall from one man who bought the stuff as 7mm bowser. Now, how I got it. We got a chance to test it. Ballistics-wise, it's superior to standard 7mm bowser. It's shorter. And in fact, I guarantee if you look at what they're trying to get out of this, they could have gone with the standard seven millimeter assault, the British variant, and gotten comparable performance right there. And I know everybody else is, well, Mark, there's 243 or there's 270. Yeah, but we have a cartridge which was right off the shelf. And by the way, 6.8 millimeter. Okay, I want you to think about remember we always come up with these names. It's not quite seven mill but it's close enough and seven mill would be a step up and probably be better anyway. But fact of the matter is there's something weird about this forever. Certain countries have used seven millimeter Mauser. We have only a handful of cartridges that actually use a seven millimeter dimension bullet. But the 6.8 slash seven millimeter close enough. There's nothing about this that in any way shape or form is a true enhancement. It is true that just what you said as far as it breaking down. That's gonna happen anyway. That case if you fire automatic weapons, something we've talked about before. When you buy government surplus brass guys, when we used to buy tons of M14 brass, you'd always get the M60 gunner's brass mixed in. Well, the M60 gun, if a weapon is fired full auto, even an M14 slash on select fire, as you roll out more rounds, you heat the chamber and the brass adheres, but also thermalizes and it stretches slightly. In an automatic weapon like the M60 or the MAG 58 or any variant on that, The more rounds you fire, the longer the cases get during extraction because there's so much heat built up. You would think that this shouldn't be the case. But what happens is the case actually actively charges, taking, collecting the calories that are coming off that steel receiver and that steel chamber. And what happens is as it's coming out, it literally is pulled longer. You will see in standard machine gun brass, the body, not the shoulder, not the throat, the body of the case can be stretched up to a quarter of an inch. Now it may be as low as 1 16th to an eighth, but here's the thing. You can't make that up in trim because it's the body of the case that is expanded. It's stretched out. We always talk about taffy cases. Okay. Now the more automatic fire you do off the same gun, this is where you get into the failure issue. At a certain point, if you're lucky, if you were lucky, you would just shear the case or something would flatten and it might save the gun for further damage. In other words, the cases can fail in different ways depending upon how many rounds you fired through it. But mostly what you're gonna get is a runaway gun initially. And then the option, quick reminder, if you've never been on a belt fed gun, if you start to have a runaway, what you're supposed to do is reach over, grab the belt, twist it. You create a jam. Everybody understand that? Always remember that. If you're an assisted gunner on something and then you're like, stop firing, I can't. Then immediately, you don't think twice, you gotta save the gun. So what you do is you twist the belt. Now don't get your paw stuck in there and have it dragged into the gun. Cuz trust me, the machines are always more powerful than you. So this is where you have to be thinking in advance and I highly recommend that if you're an assistant gunner, you should be wearing gloves. And preferably I mentioned this many times, armored gloves. They're just so priceless for especially this kind of situation. What you want to do, remember your assistant gunner anyway, you're going to be providing cover fire if the threat occurs, or you're making sure the next bag or the next bundle or the next can or the next whatever you're using is there for the operator. And your job is, depending on how your team works, he pops the dust cover. You lay the round, you make sure that the bag or the can is situated where it's supposed to or locked or affixed. And he does what he's supposed to do cuz he's the man behind the gun. And you make sure everything keeps working and you're looking for the next bag or can or whatever. Depending on how big or how small the bundle is that you're using with that gun cuz there's quite variance depending on the weapon system. So the second part of my question about whether it was a possibility that it's a denial of reloading for us. Even if it is, they have made a mistake because by putting that steel end on there, they have enabled us to go around with a big magnet and pick all that brass up off the ground in the big, deep, tall grass. And then we could just tuck the metal off and melt that brass down and make our own. I would do is like I've said many times I would consider that ammunition to be defunct but if I but depending upon well let me give me an example what I could do with the steel if I were making okay now I'm gonna get it rid of the weapon system here let's do it this way so okay separate from what we're thinking about you have to route what you have in the way of material how many of you have fired a 40 millimeter grenade launcher I don't care if it's an M79, an M203, either one, and there are other newer models, and there's also XM variants between if you were in Vietnam. There were three different M203 type gun launchers that were sent out to the troops. They were XMs, including the XM203 before it became the M203. All of them work the same. Basically, it's a big single-shot blooper, okay? Now, traditionally we made those cases out of metal. However, some ingenious major, oh, he got fired. Just like the guy who did the Sergeant York ammunition and cut the budget by a third. He was conscientious in trying to save you taxpayers. Guys, you've probably seen this. And if you remember when UN ammo was selling stuff publicly, they're not now. They had 40 millimeter fiberglass training rounds. Now these aren't dummies. This is a fiberglass hull. But understand what the guy did. There was a combination of a major who was with Ordnance and another guy who was with Aberdeen Proving Ground. And basically remember that grenade launchers are low pressure high velocity. Okay, you ever hear that sound? Duck. Okay, you hear that? You better start looking around, but you better be first taking cover, then look around. Little bit, but keep your head covered because something's coming in. Now, The thing about it is the original metal, but the fiberglass, here's what they did. They came up with a mold. They get a spun, striated fiber material. And what they did is they left a big socket where the primer would normally be. And they had this little standoff burn primer pocket on the inside of this fiberglass case. What they did is they took Regis Reject. Okay, like when you do brass and you're cranking out brass, kachunka, kachunka, there the itemizer identifies junk. They threw that off to the side. 45 ACP, 308 and 30-odd six, eight millimeter mouths, zero and seven are all about the same. We didn't make seven or eight, but we did make 30-odd six. We did make 308 and obviously 45 ACP. So what the guy did, they figured out that we'll make the channel the length of a 45 ACP reject case. And they just put a standard primer in that and inserted it, shoved it into that little channel, put a different propellant inside, although it's basically the same propellant they altered the charge. And they went with what we call a paint marker route using a dust. Basically, it's a big chunk of steel with a plastic egg shell and with sharp edges on the inside. And there's a whole bunch of yellow marker dust. And if you've ever fired this when it goes down range, all that happens, there's no explosion. When it does, it goes down range. The inner dead weight simulates the weight of the projectile under normal conditions, reaches and achieves the same range. But it ruptures on the inside and spreads dust so you can see what you hit. And it's in bright fluorescent orange so you can't miss it, okay? So the fact is that they built this case for 1 40th what it called, no, no correction, correction. Just the case was about 1 18th of what it cost for the metal case. So in other words, you can put 18 of these poly cases out, these fibrous cases. They're not plastic. Don't think of them as plastic. These are a striated, highly resilient material. In fact, they could be reloaded multiple times. Well, they fired the major. He actually got reprimanded for coming under budget with the new training round, just like the guy with the Sergeant York, who was another major, who got fired for coming up with a training round for the Sergeant York that was also the AP round. So it saved the taxpayer money and we had more bullets that could go down range, it would be useful. He had to be fired. He had to be fired. He was, I'm not joking about these. So anyway. One of the things I would do is take those steel bases, we would collect them, we'd still de-prime them. We wouldn't throw out the primers. We'd shuck the brass, that would go into brass inventory just like you said for meltdown. But the steel could be used as an insert for a similar kind of round, might even come up with a new round that would basically take advantage of a preponderance of already well manufactured components. And poo, end up with something similar to a 40 millimeter launcher. could be any number of different, could be whatever dimension. Hey Mark, dependent upon available resources, okay? So just a way to think is, if it's already manufactured, don't do anything more than you have to, to get it to the next reuse purpose, reuse project, okay? Minimize, always think minimize, every step costs time. Go ahead call or jump in there. Yes, number four here. I got some latest PM on the new 6.5 They're talking about having to do a new MOS for that because they're gonna have a wash maker jeweler for the parts for that rifle uh... come in and do all the mike parts and stuff. The other thing is the bullet, can they do an insert? If we capture that weapon, can we do an insert to do a different caliber? Maybe that would be a way around that. Oh, the way to do it would actually, now that's not a bad idea. Now what could be done is... example would be to go to the same caliber but create a shorter reform case using any number of different cases even 762 by 51 NATO. I think the witness is gonna work out like I said there's two ways you're gonna go with this. They're gonna get a bunch of people quietly killed or severely injured and they're not gonna admit it. What they'll do is like they did with the commander killer. First, they'll try to figure out how to make it work and with just the existing parts and it won't. Next, what they'll do is shut up and make a new variant A3 or A2 case, and that will be a steel case. They will then have adhesion problems because the steel case and the steel chamber issues with an American straight case like that, dictates that you're going to have chamberlock every once in a while. At least it won't be case failure. But what it does mean is that you would have an increase in the damage to the extractor and the ejector. So you'll increase your parts consumption. I guess Sigel love that because they'll be selling all kinds of parts. Well, they'll probably get us to pay for the parts and maybe even make them. They won't even make the spare parts, but who knows? So anyway, the next thing is that they'll decide to, and this will be the A3 model, drop the pressure, drop down a few hundred feet per second, bring down the cup pressure slash, or the chamber pressure, and in the process go to a standard brass case. But don't worry, we'll spend billions of dollars, oh, they'll spend millions of dollars to try and make it work. Maybe the do caseless ammo like they did with that 22 ammo that did well back Was it daisy? Well, HK did that to HK has tried several times. Yeah, the case was Emma would be the perfect anti peasant slash Anti colonial idea. That was why they really liked it. You had nothing to do with You know the idea that it was a more efficient solution because the biggest problem with caseless ammunition trying to make it totally consumable, but what's the problem? Well, I mean, think, the outer element of the case has to be of a crusty or it has to be rigid enough that it can be fed. But it also has to be viscous enough or porous enough that when the round fires, it literally is consumed completely. And the problem with that was residue. And how quickly does it take for carbonized residue to build up, or worse still, you might get something you didn't expect, which is to get a viscous result. In other words, it consumes most, but in rapid fire, you have a certain amount of material that liquefies or re-solidifies as almost like a glue, which I could see being probably one of the... I think I've edited it, built up pretty fast. Right, it has to. The only thing you can do with that is to come up with kind of like the FN FAL, but you have to do it with a chamber and I don't know how you can do it because then you're making more working parts that which defeats your purpose behind trying to come up with a cheaper weapon and a more useful, you know, lighter weapon is they like the FN FAL is works in a drawer self-cleaning gun. more so than the average pair. That's why it was so reliable and still is, is it's built on flat stock and the way it was designed, it's self-scraping. We've talked about this many times. Most of your weapons, even the AK, work the same way. Most every gun does, but sometimes some guns, you know, you know, defecate where they eat, like the Air 15. Most of these guns though, there's a certain amount of bleed off with the carbon line coming off of the gas point where it ports left and right or it goes off the top of the weapon, you know, in front of you. And so it's lost, part of that's lost, so it doesn't build up to the rear. But whatever does get back, especially with automatic fire around the chamber, if you use a flat surface bolt, you know, if you design a flat surface bolt, What happens is it actually has, there are two things to do with the receiver. You create depressions, which are perpendicular to the operating line of the bolt. It moves front to back, so your, your, your, Your striations would be left and right, but your magazine well is part of that. So what happens is that when the bolt comes back it scrapes everything and anything in the way of detritus, sand, dirt, debris, whatever, and it drops down through the trigger and it drops down through the magazine well. Now that's not always great because obviously your ammunition is down there, but it's amazing how much crud just goes on beyond the ammo. Gravity sucks. And so it's a self-cleaning system, which is why the FNFL could run on so many more rounds, uh, sustain fire before it started to see any carbon build-up issues. Well, maybe you'll have to keep your ammo in a freezer up on the front line, you know, pull it out cold so your stuff doesn't get too hot or all the good stuff. 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 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 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 harass your fellow countrymen while corrupted courts prevailed your public servants don't uphold the solemn oaths they've sworn and your daughters visit doctors so their children won't be born Your leaders send artillery and guns to foreign shores and send your sons to slaughter fighting other people's wars. Can you regain the freedoms for which we fought and died? Or don't you have the courage or the faith to stand with pride? And are there no more values for which you'll fight to save? Or do you wish your children to live in fear and be a slave? 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 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 in tremble too afraid to stand and fight If he stood by your bedside to dream while you were asleep and wondered what remains of the freedoms he'd fought to keep What would be your answer if he called out from the grave? Because I had no ammunition or magazines none of your creating had no ammunition of magazines and Hell, they wouldn't even give a rifle. Glass bottle and gasoline. That ain't good. Don't be a Ukrainian. Buy more ammo. Buy more bags. Today! Anyway, good afternoon, ladies and gentlemen. This is the second hour of the afternoon. Intelligence report, Ivar Kornke. One day closer to victory for all of our brothers and sisters, both on... and behind the lines in occupied territories southeast, south, southwest, and west. Ladies and gentlemen, you are listening to us on www.libertytreeradio.4mg.com. Libertytreeradio.org. We're also on satellite. Good afternoon, evening, and morning to all of our friends out there in the Merchant Marine. We're on A veritable plethora, a cornucopia of communications technologies, both inside and outside the United States. It is Monday, it is the 25th of April. It is the 14th year of open Fabian, socialist and Soviet socialist occupation of America with the K 2022 old earth calendar, 2022 battle for the republic, the dance of sword. And real quick on the whole idea with the ammunition issue, the 6.8 Any number of other already figured out, you know, developments available off the shelf historically, maybe some have copyright still who would care. I mean, the money the government spits out. Paying for another designed case as opposed to the nonsense of a grossly over complicated cartridge case that defeats the purpose behind building sufficient quantity. This is the way to retard our product, the ammunition that we need being provided to the troops. You see the thing that happened with Ukraine and that was conventional ammo. What do you think these Jackass Paid for horrors for China that we have in the Pentagon, you know like Miley Cyrus He already told you he's gonna tell the Chinese when we're coming and get all your moms and dads and brothers and sisters killed in combat cuz he loves them Chinese You know Ching Li's a whole lot more. He loves you. He's gonna teach you all lesson He's gonna he's in a five-star. Whoa, no four-star. Tell me before we don't have any five-star generals. Not right now Yeah, he's a four-star General uniform. He was bragged. He bragged about who's gonna betray America and there's a whole bunch of other pigs that were real excited about him saying he'd betray America and they're all in your government. Okay, so you don't think that that Ukrainian scenario isn't isn't very likely it's the kind of crap they like to pull. So, again, first of all, the interesting thing that was brought up is what about making a variant or some insert to shorten the case maybe and compensate, you know, and change the weapon up a little bit. I think it's most likely we could just make a 6.8 duplicate case. drop the pressure down by a percentage. In other words, what you have to do is once you can get an example of the weapon in whatever form, what you do is you test to success for cyclic operation in lower pressures. And that wouldn't be that hard. In fact, even if you didn't have the existing weapon, we know what the basic physics are of the design. And so what you do is you ratchet back with a conventional case Still, again, performing within reason, but not exceeding or not creating excessive pressure issues with the chamber, which is really a biggest concern. Supposedly, the rest of the action can hold up. The biggest thing is you have to have sufficient gas energy available to operate the system. That's just how it works. It's like a single, it's like looking like a motor, okay, with a single combustion piston. That's really what it is. Except there's something going down range. We lose a part every time we get the piston to chug unlike in a car motor We wouldn't want that to happen or we end up with a rod or a piston head stuck through the Yeah stuck through the hood of the car. It's kind of embarrassing, right? so anyway a couple of things here is that you could do it an insert short in the case and Come up with something else. It would be in these six point eight like a six point eight little put or whatever That would be an option, but it's not your first choice because unless there's some kind of special belting or mag, maybe, you know, I haven't looked at that closely, but I don't see that it has a belted Magnum kind of case step. If it does, that would be bass, awkward, stupid. The more you see some of this stuff, the only reason they're doing it is to be totally alien and to deny to the population because it's part of the UN gun grab agenda. And the dirty horse that we have that are betraying the United States are wrapped all around that. The horse we have in Washington and the horse that we have in the pentagram, setting our ass up for a fall and they know it. But then again, they got jobs somewhere else. They already said they're gonna work for the Chinese or they already are working for the Chinese. So anyway, not our problem. We have to be going around this and we can. We outnumber them. We have just as much of the way of manufacturing across the whole of the country. And making a 6.8 alt would not be difficult, okay? And now hold on before I go any farther colors. On that note, I've pointed this out many times. We have standard 30-ounce 6, the M2 round from World War II. It's actually a de-energized version of the M1903 30-Out 6. Guys, you do understand that if we were an M2, what were the specifications for what would be called the M1 cartridge? Anybody ever think that through? I mean, that's an M2 30-Out 6. Wasn't there an M1 30-Out 6? Do you know that the bullet was heavier? The pressures were higher? with that case with the M1903 standard that we used in World War I. The only reason we have all these variants in the M Browning machine gun, the 1919, is because when we adopted the Grand, we dropped the pressure of the .30-06 and the velocity down to make the gun work within what were considered safe parameters. But here's the thing, we got the beginning of World War II, and we had a pile of standard 1903 Springfield ammo left laying around. You know what we did? They dumped it right into the garands. You know what? The garands operated without failure with that heavier case. They could have used the heavier charge. So we're reversing that. We're into that, okay, we already know that this hyper case is going to work. We need to do what they did when they were looking at the garand. work out an alt load in 6.8 now. We don't want to get caught flat footed the way they're obviously trying to set the government troops up. We don't, we're not worried about it. In fact, they'll have failures we won't. The interesting thing is, we're most likely going to have to be looking at what kind of how significant will the failures be to the guns that do go critical and are they salvageable? I got this funny feeling no matter what it is they won't. My experience with the kind of malfunctions that they'll end up creating is that it will be devastating to the weapon and it probably will be, you know, again, it'll be a parts gun. You might build the scavenged pieces off it, but you will, the primary component of the critical component will fail. Fail is in it will be distorted or damaged to the point where it simply won't be serviceable and there won't be well You could rebarrow maybe but it's not likely because what will happen is typically if there is a barrel Failure or a configured failure like this. It's the forward end of the receiver. That's going to end up being damaged badly Okay, this was the problem with the M60 but automatic weapons in general if they're full auto. It's amazing real quick on this note the M16A1 Stoner's original design and the present design was incredibly forgiving in full auto. Something to think about any guys you ever see the my favorite I used to call it jokingly it's the ten offensive marksman stance. You know, you know the city away when they were fighting for it guys, you remember the one image they try to make it disappear But the guys have a whole pile of man m16 mags loaded 30 rounders loaded up Okay, and the guy's literally slap slapping the mag in he's hitting the forward assist He puts it's like he's doing a pull-up He puts his arms over his head holding the foregrip with one with the left hand holding the pistol grip and he's firing over a wall and it's just As soon as it locks back, he comes down, drops the mag to the ground, inserts the next magazine, pops the bolt forward, puts it over his head, and the guy, I mean that video, I'm, what is it, the one video I counted 17 magazines faster than I can say it. Okay, but the gun kept functioning, so that's a testimony to that design. Not your best first way to do it, but what were they doing? Suppression and diversionary fire. It's not that you necessarily hit anything, but you're making everybody down there worry about the idea that there's a whole bunch of bullets going somewhere. Now, not great for the weapon, but are the conditions acceptable for what they were, again, what condition? What were the end? What was going on? Performance-wise, it obviously held up, okay? But that wasn't with a specialized round. And again, other automatic weapons in similar sustained fire would have other problems and issues. And amazingly enough, the M16A1 did not have a problem demonstrated by the action of those riflemen. Or at least those two seem, but there's more than two. In one case you have like six, seven guys, they're firing over a hill over a hill, firing over a wall, it's a back alley or a side wall into a court. And they are just going to town. They can't see what they're shooting at because they can't, they're not looking at it. They're just literally dropping the weapon horizontally up over their head, just over the top of that wall and and as quick as those 30 rounds are gone, 30 rounds going right inside. So it's not that that can't be done. Who's down again? Yeah, who's downtime? But it's one of those things where it depends purely on the weapon and in this case we're grossly over complicating something we don't need to which is a perishable component a throwaway item a discardable because as was pointed out earlier are you mentioned it government doesn't reload ammo So they don't really care, but you also don't want to make your What it comes down to is your case, okay, is more expensive than the bullet you're putting down range. You probably come up with some neat little projectiles, but to be quite honest, that case, I don't know what the quantification will be, but a bewilderment is gonna cost us the equivalent to three or four conventional rounds, maybe more. First of all, wait a minute, what am I saying? It's being done by SIG, right? We're screwed. The number marked the idea is not to win any wars. The idea is to soak the American people until there is nothing left here. That's exactly what's going on. Yeah, it's saying what can I say? And don't forget, as I pointed out the other day, I will say this again, guys, it's like my OK. We're buying a scale, at least as far as I know. Now, I've heard any more about that. The Marine Corps is going to buy H.K. Rifles at three thousand some odd dollars per gun. Does that mean that we're buying the HK AR-15M16 mags? If you bought an HK mag, if it says HK on it, it's an AR-15 mag, what's it cost? How much did your steel American made mag or your polymer mag cost you? Now, remember government's supposed to crank out more and charge, they're supposed to charge rock bottom. But have you gone out and bought an HK manufactured AR-15 magazine guys? How much do they cost? Oh my, wait a minute, hold on, I gotta do the George Tech I think. Oh my. So you know what? Sig, hey, Sig, Sig magazines. Oh, you're screwed. You're all screwed. You're all screwed. Probably 10 times with a good quality American mad would. Remember it's that Jewish thing. 10 times or well no, 7 times the price at half the value. And Willow man, they just saw us coming. But anyway, and again, I told you much but not just give you I think about things that happen things that have already happened And where this is going The good thing is you've got a more reliable weapon in general in your hands and what you're gonna see being fielded by the Donut of destruction and their usual Button paid for or way so but we will be ahead of them and this is where again the 6.8 Round has to be a priority, but also we will be near barrels. So we need a chambering ready to go and then we'll do the R&D. I mean, everybody's got there enough AR10s out there that we can figure it out. And I will remind everybody again, if you want to, or if you're looking at doing this, where do we go for AR10 parts? Right now over at CDN N Sports, CDN N Sports dot com. cdnnsports.com. They have a ton of AR-10 parts over there. Why? Well, they got a bunch of the stuff that came out of the foreclosure slash bankruptcy of Bushmaster. And in fact, they guys have mentioned this many times, if you really want to get serious about doing an AR-10 and you're looking for parts, those parts are all over the industry. If you wanted to build a Bushmaster AR-10, everything is sitting out there right now. The only variants might be in barrels, like I said, if you want to Bear Creek Arsenal is cranking out barrels like there's no tomorrow. They're doing a good job. Palmetto, they have theirs. And needles of sake is still go with all the standard barrel manufacturers that were out for the last all of my lifetime period. And everybody's got something as something you could. Cherry pick out of the industry depending on how much money you want to save Sadly the problem with the ar-10 family of rifles is that some dingleberries thought to change things up? So there are proprietary parts That was stupid. Okay, that's just nothing because problems to the American shooter. Oh Well, we'll live with it. But what we need to do is start focusing on most common for parts The Bushmasters are out there. Maybe that'll kind of settle it, kind of like the Bushmaster spare parts from the failure. The good thing is it's kind of like when the AR-10 parts came in from Holland the first time around. That's what braid life into everything and was affordable. So right now you can probably put an AR-10 together reasonably priced that way. Now I know somebody already asked me a question, you know, actually this came in what, three days ago, because we were first started talking about these subjects. I guess you could... You could rebarrow any .308 some .308 some .308 some .308 some .308 some .308 some .308 some .308 some .308 some .308 some .308 some .308 some .308 some .308 some .308 some .308 some .308 some .308 some .308 some .308 some .308 some .308 some .308 some .308 some .308 some .308 some .308 some .308 some .308 some .308 some .308 some .308 some .308 some .308 some .308 some .308 some .308 some .308 some .308 some .308 some .308 some .308 some .308 some .308 some .308 some .308 some .308 some .308 some .308 some .308 some .308 some .308 some .308 some .308 some .308 some .308 some .308 some .308 some .308 some .308 some .308 some .308 some .308 some .308 some .308 some .308 some .308 some .308 some .308 some .308 some .308 some .308 some .308 some The AR-10, well, no, okay, the king in this one is the AR-10, forgive me, slap mark in the microphone. Number one would be the AR-10, number two would be the FAL, number three would be the HK, and last would be the M14, the M1A. In this particular project idea, why the air? It's obvious, it's the Lego gun. Guys, the most forgiving Lego gun put it together from parts from 40 different directions. the AR-15 and AR-10 are in that category. You can take parts from how many different locations and they all legal block together. So that makes it the most useful design, which is why the government is desperately trying to move away from it as much as they can because they've realized they've created a government sponsored monster. Think about it. If you're a police state oriented globalist mechanism, The AR-15 is the worst nightmare for the situation that the enemy faces right now. It's not that it's the best rifle, but in general, if you think about the idea that any average shooter can handle it, it is a niche gun. It's perfect for its purpose. 10 million, 20 million, 100 million coming at you. If everybody just shoots somebody once, you run out of bad guys long before you run out of ammo on the good guy side. Right? Go ahead, Colin. Yeah, Mark. I remember reading something, it may have been in Gundam ammo years ago, where they were testing what seemed to be the ideal barrel length for optimizing velocity and accuracy. And I think I read where they figured that for 30 out of 6, 24 inch was up to as much as 25 inches was optimal. but 23 or 24 was just about right for a 308. So maybe a 22 inch barrel might be more available than a 24 for a 308, you'd think? Well, it should be. The thing is, remember, the optimal is based on the idea that remember you get to a point where your powder burn is complete. And now you're all, it's lopsided with regard to the resistance factor increasing. And that's why you could, in theory, if this barrel's really good, this one, six more inches, eight more inches, 10 more inches would be better. With the OTS-6, you'll notice that a lot of the guys carrying the range Ridge Runner guns are doing a 24 inch barrel. You will see 25s in the OTS-6. 270 is right about the same point about 23 24 inches for optimal performance. You're still going to get a little muzzle burn, not much, but that's acceptable because of variances in lighter charge rounds that you might use. Remember that once you, what's interesting is the drop off is very radical. Once you get to complete thrust where you have everything, every calorie, it can bump to the back of the bullet. For every quarter-inch, you're losing. So a quarter of an inch, not inch. You are losing an inch, obviously. But it's the idea that it's so significant because now you're having to overcome the adhesion and resistance of the metal to the metal, even with the rifling and with the spin and all the other factors. You're detracting from the performance. That's when Fluffy just brought up optimal. There's a point where you with the average round. Now the problem I have with probably have that not me. is remember that if you go to your ammunition books, look at how many different loads you have, for instance, for 30 out of 6, you go up and down the scale with powder and projectile. Nothing changes with the case. So the problem with a longer barrel is you also kind of like a golf club. You're not going to use a putting iron to do a drive, right? In reverse order, you're not going to use a driver for a putt. So, the longer barrel with a heavier bullet and with a magnum or a let's just not say magnum, but with a heavy charge and with expected greater range performance would not obviously, that particular load isn't your best choice for a shorter brush cutting barrel. Even though there are obviously 20, 21, 22 inch barrels made all day, hell even 18 inch for odd sex. Again, they're typically a packer or again, brush cutting gun, which 30 out of 6 does a good job of that. It's grossly overpowered, but you are going to do more flamethrower work with a shorter barrel if you're using a heavier bullet. So usually if you're using that pack gun for intermediate work, you usually drop down. I use a 200 or 200, up to a 220-gram bullet for most everything I've ever done with a 30 out of 6. And that's in a 1903 Springfield. But I've got thousands and thousands and thousands of rounds of standard military ball and AP. In fact, I have several thousand rounds of AP that I bought way before anybody was thinking as well, they were thinking about AP, but I got it for nothing because it came from a competition shooter. Anyway, I will change the round example. You can drop down to as low as 125 grain, 30 caliber, 30 out of six round. You got all kinds of increased velocity, but you don't have as much fun when it gets there weight-wise. The advantage of that is for it's argued for mid-sized game and also for time on target reduction. Remember they even make game getting 30 out of 6, haven't seen it for a while. Basically what it is is a wide cutter 30 caliber round. The weight of the bullet is anywhere from as low as 100 grains to as high as 148 grains, but it's solid lead, pure lead, and it's a reduced charge. It's designed for shooting bunnies. for hitting bunnies or muskrats or whatever you had to eat for survival food. Bremington, Winchester and Federal all used to make this wide a spectrum of rounds. But that's why you always have taken into consideration what are you gonna do with a gun when you choose barrel length. Personally, I like hitting them farther out whenever possible and as far as possible, I don't wanna hear them scream while they're dying. I don't want to have to figure out where I am, to be quite honest. Most of the shooting that would need to be done for the long-range riflemen, we also need to reach as far as we can to take advantage of that umbrella of control that we create. So that's one of those considerations, penetration, range, accuracy. The 6.8 round looks like, again, All the basics that apply with the 7.62x51 NATO apply with the new dental fritz round they've come up with, except cost. We can do everything that they're doing with the 7.62x51 because it was already developed. There's absolutely no need to go to the 6.8 round. It's purely a matter of somebody getting a big brown envelope under the table and screwing the country. That's what it comes down to. And needless to say, we're gonna buy Sig! Oh wow, we're gonna buy Sig. We're screwed! Is that Mark? All there is to it. Go ahead, caller. Jump in there. Hey, I was just wondering, change the subject a little bit, but I was wondering if for a music request, if I could go ahead and request the sound of silence, but by disturbed. It's a little bit more melancholy, a little bit more, what do you call it? Hey, when I was in grade school, listen, when I was in school, you had to know, it was like, memorize all of the Simon and Garfunkel songs. Seriously, gotta remember, you know, back in the day, dude, you just had to be a meaningful man. And I'm not talking about, oh my, for personal, like, you know, Tex-Mex and I get together and we're gonna sing the song. No, I'm talking about in school. Where they actually you know we have you had to rock read and memorize you know like All the Simon and Garfunkel songs, and you know all the big ones I mean even the small ones because it was all gospel. You know what I mean? It was like this is meaningful man. We're gonna go to break. We'll be back Monday. It is, of course, just a little bit past the top of the hour here for everybody. We are in in the second hour, by the way. For everybody out there real quick, one of the reasons I bring the stuff up I have about the weapons here is, kiss, keep it simple stupid is the first rule. Scottie made a great comment in the one Star Trek episode where he goes, with the more complicated the plumbing, the easier it is to stop up the drain, okay? And that's an old axiom, by the way, that is true. Why are you making this more complicated? It needs to be. In reality, let's understand something about basic weapons design. For the longest time, everybody was smart enough to figure out, minimize, go to the smallest number of working parts, and in fact, blowback guns. The HK blowback pistol, which basically with the high point duplicates. Oh my God, don't do those. Oh, you mentioned HK and high point in the same, yes I did. You know what's funny is they could make the high point pistol looked just like the HK variant that was built in the 1960s. And by the way, that was also a select fire blowback pistol for most people to realize, very Star Wars looking. It's bulkier, it's bigger than it should be for a 9mm, but that's because it was a blowback pistol. Okay? The same comment that people make about the high point, it's kind of bulky because of how the action works, what it does. Okay? But consider this, that HK also took that design and made it select fire. Now the selector is not on the pistol itself. It's part of the add-on shoulder stock that the pistol locks into, which also is very stylized, very unique. Go take a look at the design. You'll see what I'm talking about. And then you had the option. I believe that had triune and had full auto. Semi-tri and full auto, correct me, but that was an HK thing and still has been for quite some time. Anyway... The big thing here again is we have to look at more in, you know, again, don't let the committee of monkeys and the brown envelope show up. And if anybody puts their reaches out with a brown envelope, cut their arm off and then shove it up there. No, show it up there. Fundamental orifice. Okay. We're looking for what are least expensive, most practical solutions to be able to get more out there where it's needed. And the one thing we've had as an advantage here in this country so far with the armed population is that we have been able to take advantage of the, uh, uh, ag- multi-access, but the available old inventories of arms. Now, the argument or logic that the, uh, ring knockers would use is that, well, after all, we have no single system. That's good. that we've adopted, but we do maintain larger inventories of specific martial arms than all of the top ten governments. And I'm not just talking overall weapons, but I'm talking about an example you just saw with Ukraine. Ukraine thought it was a big deal to hand out 18,000 punk AKs to a population of how many million? Do the math on that. You realize, okay, look at available manpower. If you were doing a graph or not graph line, a line graph, okay? And you know, you do the little stackable like digits. You got like, you know, every 1000, of course it would really bad because you got how many millions or hundreds of thousands of men available that could be armed. And you had how many weapons available to arm from the government that was supposed to throw you in this cannon fodder. You had 18,000 big whoopee. Guys, in our least popular martial arm, we have 18,000 of hands down and then some. And example, I think we probably, I guarantee we got more than 40, 50, 60,000 French Moss rifles hanging around. Here's an example, we can hand out 40,000 Moss rifles if we had to, and we have ammunition for them, which is better than obviously the Yuck Radians. with 18,000 AK-74s and no ammunition. You do realize that every category of weapon that we talk about here that we privately possess, we have more weapons than any of those single categories. Just go right down to AR-15, all we outclass everybody, the first five armies. We can outfit the US military as well as US military's outfitted with the AR-15 right now. Don't you think? I guarantee we could. Now let's go right down the only other class of weapons we've been talking about here I mean not the air attendants like I can see he's not the redhead stepchild, but she's the odd woman out But of the bunch how many FNF FNF als do we have how many G3s or HK 94 HK 91 knockoffs do we have how many of them one grands how many of them when car beans And then in every other category we have some that are overlapping that the carbine is probably the most fascinating because I think we have as many carbines as we had in service at any one year in World War II right now in private hands. Because a lot of them came back, went to World War II, came back with the guys who were using them and they brought them home. If not, they went home and bought some and they bought more than one. And so have a lot of other people. And we've been buying back the inventories from coming in from outside the country. So any single category we have the equivalent to a country's issue in arms. That is nothing that's not insignificant. These poor- We have enough guns Mark. We have enough guns in our country to arm every man, woman and child almost two times over. Yeah. They're saying we have 470 million guns, but I know there's a heck of a lot more than that. Yeah, and not only that, but when you consider the saturation, everybody laments, well, people got shot. If you let the people who own guns get rid of the people who are criminals. You wouldn't have, what would happen is, and the corporation that's running the police state business knows this. It's why they're creating business right now by not enforcing the law. If all of a sudden everybody goes, it would be like the Wild West. No, it wouldn't be like a slaughter. Because what would happen is everybody who's tired of the BS would go out, put a bullet in their ass, and there wouldn't be a repeat offender in the gangland shooting crap. It would be done. They would be wiped out and they know this you know, you know what's protecting all of these characters the cops Because it's a business The prosecutors are promoting it and creating it because it's a business Hey guys. In real, your recidivism in gangland shootings would be non-existent because people would simply put them down. Hold on for the send caller. Guys, you know where the drive-by, you know where drive-by shootings came from? I've told you this many times. How many people remember where the term drive-by shooting came from? Anybody? The purple guy. Jewish Mafia, the purple guy. Yeah, they used to, guys drive by shooting, they didn't do it with horses. The Purple Gang who loved Doosenbergs, okay? What they would do to terrorize the general Goium population is they'd idle down the Doosenberg to the end of a neighborhood like during the summer. And everybody would be out in their neighborhood enjoying themselves, this is after World War I. And everybody would be out there playing in the street. The kids would be out there playing with the stick holes in the neighborhoods where all these old track neighborhoods, okay? And they'd crank up the engine and they'd be on the running boards with whatever they had, shotguns, Thompson's, all kinds of fun stuff. Semi-automatic Stevens guns, you know, just 30 caliber Stevens. And what they would do is they just started shooting as many people as they could before they got to the other end of the block. And they bragged about how many people they'd shoot, and the idea was to terrorize the population. Well, a lot of the guys were World War I vets. You know how that drive-by shooting crap stopped? It wasn't the cops that stopped it. A lot of people got together that were veterans, and they told their brothers and uncles who were also pretty well in the same mindset, and they all armed up. One day when the do-good Doosenberg got the in the neighborhood everybody gave the high sign and all the kids ran for cover and all the adults took cover and aimed. And you know what? That Doosenberg's over in Ann Arbor, Michigan where it just got riddled with bullets while it was going down the road in Detroit there because the drive-by shooting didn't quite go the way they expected. There's a guy that collects Purple Gang Duesenberg's, his third generation. It's actually the grandpa that was starting that. But that little collection used to be right down the street from where I lived. And you know what's funny is, you never know it was there, but the one where the bullet holes is right there. Just wait, look, when everybody was done dealing with the Purple Gang drive-by. I would pay money to see that. Actually, I'm sure he's got postings. In this day and age, it should be out there now, as a matter of fact. The collection is out of Ann Arbor, Michigan, by the way. So it should be easy to find Duesenberg. Look up Duesenbergs in Ann Arbor. Maybe they may pop up there. What's really cool is they have all the other ones progressively as they got bumped off or they got busted. The other Duesenbergs became part of the collection. Anyway, we have a patient call or a call or a chip in there, please. Yeah, good afternoon. God bless everybody. Robert RTG dot com. That's Robert RTG dot com. Robert RTG dot com has for sale a single M1 Grand. 8 round clips for $1.29. A 10 pack for $10.99. or a hundred pack for $99.99. And also, sir? That's for de-clips, right? For the end block, the de-clips. Yes, it is. It's the one that you put the rounds in a rifle with. Correct. One other thing, I was at my local Dollar Tree over the weekend. And the manager had indicated that her frozen food distributor was going to be cutting back on items to stock the shelves and the or stock the freezer, excuse me. And that he has shared that with her because they had a meeting at his place of business and it indicated that to the the route man. And in case to me, not only will the items shrink, that will affect those people's jobs because any good business as it tries to survive will consolidate items and routes and So you're probably gonna see fewer jobs in that respect also. That's all I got to say right now. I want to just share this with the new world order, whoever thinks they're in some kind of order that's messing with my good order, my peaceful assembly. Me and my friends, we're gonna mess you up. Anyway, be well, blesses of liberty, y'all. Thanks, Mark. It's like that, remember the beginning of the old video game, where it all come, but the fighting... Well, I thought they probably think it's, well, they probably originally thought it was going to be more lopsided, but I think that the biggest problem they got is a whole lot of other people who thunk this through, thought this through. It's not looking good no matter how they turn. That's why today, I don't know if anybody caught this, but every other day now, they keep trying to flap their yap about World War III and a nuclear exchange. And yesterday and today was the comment cycle where, is Putin talking about World War III? So they keep stirring the pot on that or trying to get that going. Remember, if we get nuked, and it's only a couple of nukes like two or three, it'll be the Israelis. Not the Chinese, they'll be helping with it. Chinese might pitch in, even provide the technology, but the Israelis haven't already, and they stole it from us. and they bought it or stole it from other people, they murdered people to get what they got. But if we get hit with one or two or three devices, it's not the Russians doing that, okay? It's just like what we're seeing with the food chain disruption. Guys, the Chinese are as likely involved with that along with the Israelis as anybody else. Let me point something about the food disruption in country. What's the first thing they did when we let these bastards into this nation? What did they do? They hit California's beach and the first thing they did is they start spending money on the leftist politicians to disrupt food growth and production in California. Traditionally, this time of year and a month earlier, so you weren't getting food from Peru or Chile because you needed fresh vegetables in the middle of the year, in the middle of the winter. You got them from California or Florida. Strawberries from Florida, by the way, strawberries. Right now we got strawberries coming in. But what they did, hold on caller, what they did out in California is they attacked the San Joaquin, they attacked all the bakersfield, that all that stretch right there were all the aquifers. Remember what they did here a couple decades ago? Oh, they had to cut down and try to block off those canals that were man-made. They had to stop all that. They had the eco-freak idiot sticks because they're bought and paid for whores. They're communists. That's what you got with the eco-freaks. You got these bought and paid for whores. And what they did is they shut that down and killed whole farming grids. That wasn't accidental, that was planned tactical operation against the food resources and with a strategic mind down the road. Guess what? The Chinese grabbed a bunch of that property. Once they made that property worth less, not worthless, worth less. They walked in, got it for a song and a dance. Now all of a sudden, once they get everything they want, I guarantee that the communist Chinese will put a bullet in somebody's ear if they think they're gonna block the water. But what they did is undermine internal American production. In the 50s, we could feed the globe five times over what happened. I'll tell you what happened. the traders and the filth in the federal government and the Department of Agriculture, not the only one to betray us, but wait a minute, who's the micromanager of our food services in the United States? Oh, that's right. Yeah, the Department of Ag. And what has the Department of Ag done for us? Well, not so much for us, but those brown envelopes slide under the table, or those Cayman Island accounts, or those Swiss accounts, or those Beijing accounts keep getting bigger with their little names on it. It was Chinese underlining. So that's where our problem is. Step by step, we've let foreigners at the strategic end And now, illegal aliens at the border end attack us, pressure from below, pressure from above. This is exactly what you're seeing right now. You're seeing the end of it. 30 years. 30 years, people. Call or jump in there, please. You've been patient. Florida candidate governor, she's Biden administration over marijuana infected and then Then the second one was five hours ago. ACS raised the 80 percent rule to be published tomorrow One is seven minutes and 57 seconds on the other one doesn't say if this is source on it I'm gonna I don't know how it's a source or what those are the latest two guns in the end That's over at Guns and Gadgets on YouTube. Take the time, plug it in. It's a little late. We can't run it now. We might do one of them at 8 o'clock. I'll take a look at both of them. I haven't yet. But again, if you want to stay ahead of some of the stuff as it's progressively hitting, it's not a surprise with the Pedosniffer Meat Puppet and the Back Alley Bar Horace Kefny pads. They're being run by Obama, and Obama promised he'd get the guns. And that's what Obama is doing through the Pedosniffer Meat Puppet while trying to. And also I wanted to let you know that former fan Orrin Hatch died over the weekend. Wait a minute, repeat, who? Former fan Orrin Hatch died over the weekend. Orrin Hatch. Oh, okay. Well, yeah, it's kind of like, who else was it I was thinking about the other day? Dole. He's kind of geeky. Eventually flipped to the point where he was in the same category as the Dole-lite. Progressively, he showed more and more leftist agenda than quote unquote centrist, which whenever you hear the garbage, we use a centrist republic rat. Well, that just means he's a demacon in disguise. And a lot of these characters progressively in the term progressive applies to exactly what they were doing. They showed their colors more and more and they were told they didn't have to conceal themselves while they played the fake left right game. I think census means they just don't have as much blackmail on you, Mike, Mark. Yeah, that means, well, yeah, they just, and they don't need to because they're traveling with the enemy anyway, which is typically what's happening. The big thing here again, real quick, before we forget, on the note of guns and gadgets, share wherever you can, please. That's why we usually put at least one of them up. It's in another format. It's another way for people to hear. Everybody needs to share and share and share again. As a quick note, Elon Musk did exactly what we were talking about. Turns out there are a bunch of other consortium groups that are stockholders with Twitter. And so apparently he's been talking with them. My problem with when I hear that talk yap. is what that means is that, well, you know, they don't want to see it get too open. So it wouldn't make any difference anyway. Elon Musk is just going to be the next owner. We'll see what happens, but I ain't holding my breath nor would I be foolish enough to do so. If it was truly focused. and was maintaining some kind of independence, that'd be cool. But once you start getting, if there are personalities in the mix, remember that these personalities that are with Twit her are the ones that brought Twit her to where it is. They all were in it together. Nobody put the brakes on, nobody dug their heels in, nothing. Instead, it's just like talking about the election process. You've gotta be insane. to believe that the election process is anything other than fixed. And I've noticed this last several days again, the Republicans are yapping about, it's the only reason that, for instance, the Hunter Biden laptop thing, why did that stay alive? It didn't stay alive because of the control press. It was held in reserve by the same people who lied to you about everything you've been seeing for how many years now? They just needed to use it because they've decided that the Pedostifer Meat puppet who can't put two words together can't read the teleprompter because in fact don't put anything on the teleprompter you don't want read because he'll repeat everything including the comments side for instruction for the reader. Okay. They've realized that they got to try to slide him sideways. You now have the BS going on with the impeachment process. That's purely for the sake of the Republicans rats and that they can sit there for two years, do nothing, sit on their dead ass and in another two years, sit on their ass more. And then let's see, they'll just decide they need to hit the lever again back to the demicons. They slide the demicons in and where they already have clarified everybody to the point where you can't peto anybody that's a kindergarten or a first grader or a second grader. But you can pedo slash indoctrinate third graders and above to be as perverted as possible. But don't worry, by the time they get around to the fake cycle with the Republirat Demikins. The next time the Democrats are in, they'll take out that second first-grader restriction. Maybe the kindergartners will be backed off for a bit, because they got to be reasonable with their bucket of poison. It'll only be half a bucket of poison. But the moment your back's turned, they'll say that all preschoolers need to be clarified, and the kindergartners need to, in fact, probably they'll be telling you they should have sexual relations with their queer teachers, so they can better find their inner queertom. Not a maybe kind of sort of that's where it's going So as far as I'm concerned, like I said this this whole dribble about talking about the election When show me where once the Republicans get into any kind of power they do anything Well, they didn't they did not pass stuff. Did they pass anything to get rid of anything that you don't like? No They spin their wheels by time for the leftist and then the leftist walk right back in and piss all over your face And insult you, the country, then they want us dead. Which is pretty well where they've already got it anyway. So as far as the election goes, save your money. You don't have to spend a dime on the election. You wanna walk in and hit the machine for the sake of being funny. You can do that. It's only an hour or two for one day. Ignore the rest of the bullshit with the election. Why? Because it's not worth your time. Your local election, maybe your state election is a farce. Your federal election is so far away and so alien and corrupted that it's not, it doesn't exist. It's purely an aberration. As far as they're concerned, it's very inconvenient. And they finally got to the point where they figured they're gonna show you how much they care about whether or not you see them cheat, which is what you saw with the last national election. But if the Republicans get in there right now, see the Republicans had the ability to anchor in, for instance, the wall that everybody spun their wheels on like they have every time they've done this and not do what they fall through what they were supposed to do. And they did the same damn thing with what just happened here with the border. We've watched this for 30 years, 40 years, nonstop and ain't nobody fixed it. It's all been fixed. The fix has been in and it's always the Jewish mob doing this garbage to us. So instead, don't spend the money on the process. Don't send any money. Spend your money on food, ammo, magazines, medical supplies, pay off your house. Don't send a dollar to any election process. I bet this man's not even a Hebrew. Not a Hebrew. We'll get out of here. Got blood. Bye bye. We fought a revolution to secure our liberty. We wrote the Constitution as a shield from tyranny. For future generations, this legacy we gave. In this, the land of the free and home of the brave. The freedoms we secured for you, we hoped you'd always keep. But tyrants labored endlessly while your parents were asleep. Your freedom's gone, your courage lost, you're no more than a slave. In this, the land of the free. Home of the brave. You buy permits to travel and permits to own a gun. Permits to start a business or to build a place for one. On land that you believe you own, you pay a yearly rent. Although you have no voice in saying how the money's spent. Your children must attend a school that doesn't educate. And your Christian values can't be taught according to this. You read about the current news in a regulated press. and you pay a tax you do not owe to please the IRS. Your money is no longer made of silver nor of gold. You trade your wealth for paper so your life can be controlled. You pay for crimes that make our nation turn from God and sh- You've traded in your n- You've given government control to those who do you harm so they could burn down churches and seize the family farm. and keep our country deep in debt. Put men of God in jail. Harash your fellow countrymen while corrupted courts prevail. Your public servants don't uphold the solemn oaths they've sworn. And your daughters visit doctors so their children won't be beaten. 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, get the torch of freedom burning bright. As I awoke he'd vanished in the mist for whence he came. His words were true, we are not free, but we have ourselves to blame. For even now as tyrants 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... Dill the land of the free. in occupied territories southwest, east, northeast, and south. Ladies and gentlemen, you are listening to us on www.libertytreeradio.4mg.com. libertytreeradio.org and we are on satellite. Say hi to all of our friends out there in Merchant Marine across the planet and a myriad of communications technologies both inside and outside these United States to include ultra net hallmark in golden spike technologies east and west of the Mississippi along with Alaska a given in the 21st century for the Patriot Movement. It is Monday, it's the end of the workday for pretty much everybody. Even if you're out West, you're probably either just finished work or headed home right now. It is the 25th of April, 14th year of Open Obvious and Pissing in Your Face Fabian Socialist and Soviet Socialist Occupation of America with a K 2022 Old Earth Calendar, 2022 Battle for the Republic, The Dance of Swords. And I know we're not trying to harp on, just want to touch on a few ideas with that. 6.8 caliber slash 6.8 chambering new government around the project. Let me point something out about hockey puck systems that the government comes up with, they lie. I mentioned the commander killer. First of all, how many of you will find any reference to that? The commander killer is a 50 caliber BMG chain bird gun, other than the M250 caliber was built. Two different models actually, three if you count the third last failure. But basically with each gun, the idea was that a commander's cupola was built into the M48 and then one for the M60, slightly different, little more space. And so they came up with a new wonder gun to replace the Browning M250 caliber. Browning's 50 caliber, been around for a while, but it worked. And it really typically didn't get anybody, you know, put out of service by its own operation. Still had a headspace, the barrel, that's expected. However, these guns did not work. It's not all the times they did work. It was the high percentage of failure to function. Initially, the problem was space available, the working space. Another issue with the cupola gun because they didn't make proper accommodation is it only had about a 50 round cup 48 for 150 52 right around there for the others. And we're talking browning M 250 caliber so the cupola gun by the time you're on target you're almost running out of ammo. typically for the kind of, you know, fighting that they anticipated, which means you had to also reload, which means the gun's only gonna be good for so many moments worth of fire, and then it's done. So they found out that the receiver had a tendency to fail. This is something that was kind of embarrassing. The side plate blowing out on the receiver and ergo your head being next to the gun, by the way the cupola was set up. and it would take the side of your face off and probably scallop your brain out of your brain pan too. That was kind of embarrassing, especially since the guy got killed and this guy was in charge of, you know, like making decisions for the tank. So they tried using it upright. They then flipped it sideways. Seriously, they did. Then they tried flipping it upside down. They kind of got it to work better. Upside down. Loading that had to be a bastard. But even there, whatever they tried, it just still had the same problems that it had from the original design. And this issue was expressed in both a problem with the M48 variant and the gun that later was adopted, the M60, and all of its variants with the commander's cupola. And even though they did improve that cupola, there's actually some changes that were made. And that's where the last variant on this gun existed. Interestingly enough, the guns completely vanished from the inventory. I don't know who they sold them to. I don't know where they went unless they just flat out scrapped them. Just like this, not your tax dollars at work. And in the process, you may look at, if you look at the Vietnam War era M48s in service overseas and the early model 60s, M60s, you'll notice that for the tread heads over there, although that gun was available, Typically, an improvised fixture was mounted to use a Browning 1919 air-cool gun on the roof instead of the commander's cupola gun. So this was a progressive problem through the 60s and the 70s. There was no replacement solution for internal use. Though the guns actually were in inventory through the whole time, they simply were locked in the armory and left to rust. Well, in theory, somebody did some maintenance, but why bother? So that's an example of a whole lot of weapons purchased and without somebody doing a whole lot of real R&D, they'd rush the things through. They got a rubber stamp, a pad on the head, a squeeze on the ass, and then failed. So when somebody talks about, you know, what we're discussing about this new idea that, well, of course, it's going to be saying so it's expensive and it can still be a failure. I will remind you that we had a horrific number of problems with the FN M16A2s that were out there and they covered that up completely. But I know that first person from the young men that I trained who ended up being team leaders, platoon leaders, or with companies that received the first M16A2 FNs and they had 100% failure of the gun. Now that's a proven system too, an M16, you know, like an M16 rifle that we already had worked all the bugs out of because there were a lot of bugs. And then FN turned around and was given the contract to build the new weapon and they screwed us. Why? Well, FN, FN Fabric National of Belgium, you know, that Fabric National, Hirstal, whatever, whatever the latest name is, who cares, it just means another kosher mafia runner, the operator is running it. But we got screwed. So I don't think it may any difference to what's going on right now. First of all, it has no business being a foreign contractor. Let's see. SIG is who was building our handguns for the secret police bed. Sig has got the new handgun contract from the other direction now. And now Sig has got the rifle contract. Wow, we just don't have any American manufacturers that can build a decent rifle here in the United States. You just don't have anybody. See, that's another thing that pisses you off. You know, they're being betrayed. You know how you're being betrayed. And everything else are word sculpting to get it where they want it. That's it. And then screwing the process. There are the people who are doing this to you, but not gonna be the ones, you know, getting stuck with the problem when it develops. Anyway, that's expected. So we need to be working around that. And one of the things I will, last comment on this, I was mentioning bi-metal. Now when I say bi-metal, I'm talking dual metals, which is what they're presently proposing with the case. But there is another category in which bi-metal cases were made in World War II. They were used in Korea. Not bi-metal as in dual metals, but a bi-metal product that was a secondary or alternative case. I've mentioned this many times. Now, most of you have seen these in training rounds. Remember those silver looking 50 caliber rounds with a regular bullet, but they got holes drilled in them? Those cases were made to show that they could use the alternative malleable bi-metal to make cases out of but they made 45 ACP 30 caliber carbine and one grand slash 30 on six rounds and they made m250 caliber and m60 caliber. Okay with the m what is it? God forgive me, it's the N59 or 61. It's not an M60. Now we don't confuse that with the M60 machine gun. At the end of World War II, we came up with a 60 caliber gun. Most of you don't realize this. And in the process, they did make bi-metal cases for it. Now, by the way, the 20 millimeter rounds that you see out there are also made in bi-metal material. It's a silver looking metal. This stuff worked. In fact, a lot of the carbine that was used in Vietnam, he used first in Korea and then did show up in Vietnam to a degree. All head stamped and dated between 1950 and 1953, 54. Now some of you goes out to 55. Is this silvered, it's not plated brass ammo. It is in a bi-metal alternate case material. Now that might work. The formulas are available over the counter. Frankfurt Arsenal developed the alternate round. St. Louis Arsenal produced some of it and so did the Eau Claire Arsenal as far as I know. I have examples of the Eau Claire cases. I have examples of Twin City cases in the bi-metal. And it appears that what they probably did is because in the beginning of World War II the policy was to build things first designed it and then everybody that had an arsenal had to be able to make it. So even though they didn't make a lot of it, virtually every arsenal had to show that they could run the bi-metal alternate case. Now this was in the event during World War II we got invaded or there was a total disruption of the supply chain. The bi-metal cases would have been easier to produce and they were a demi-steal of whatever grade or quality. However, you'll notice they didn't oxidize. Whatever the component for these cases, I have seen them where they've laid out in the weather and they don't break down. In other words, they don't powder like the aluminum cases or rust in the same way that we see other steel cases, no matter what they lack or finish, paint, whatever you want to call it. These were very durable. And then we're made to disappear. The whole process was taken out of circulation, like a lot of things that work, but they don't want around because they might stick around forever. Know what I mean? So that would be another consideration is a is a bi-metal, all bi-metal case, or I would this alloy case. It was in the 30-06, you would see it as the 30-06 M2 bracket alt load. ALT, alternative load. And the alternative load was the unique case. Also, they went with another propellant, which was cheaper to produce, but produced just the exact same ballistics as its more expensive commercial counterpart. Yeah, they had to get rid of all that, because you could crank even more for less, and that means you'd have more, and big arms companies don't make a profit on that. Yeah, I can see that, especially when they're scamming us like the aerodil with the garbage coming up. Anyway, ideas. So this is another consideration. There are a bunch of different metals and computers that would be more resilient, can take the pressures of the 6.8 original load, which really we don't want. We need to bring that down, improve bullet performance. The bullet is what we should be focusing on, the projectile. The case, that can be made in standard form. We can redesign the internals a little bit. And we also need an AR-10 6.8 government barrel made ASAP. So that's the priority right now. If we get the barrels, everything else is together, especially in an AR-10 platform, it's not a problem at all. Otherwise, it's a chump change program that the government's suckered into. SIG's gonna screw us price-wise, God knows what the overruns are, what the other dribble is gonna be. We're gonna get tied up with, but it's the usual betrayal of the American taxpayer and the American people. So, on other things today. We also have a couple of other good things that are going on right now. Number one, there are a couple of new ammunition producers. manufacturers that are in country that are starting to pick up and they are not government contractors. So the good thing is that they don't have to worry about lying to us about how production is way up and they're putting all the ammo out there they can't. Well, it's true, but they're not making it for you or me. The up and coming companies look to be about the same size as Midway when it first came into service way back in the 80s and early 90s. So if they keep moving the way they are, number one, they're going with newer machinery, but they're using the older processes. They're going with in-country, in-state manufacturing for their components. Not a whole lot of interstate, no emotion back and forth. So very quietly, we're going to see four significant new ammunition manufacturing operations that are not worried about catering to government contracts. They don't want that. This is a good thing because this eliminates one element of how they manipulate availability to the population. And this is going to outstrip or outpace most of the other manufacturers by the time we're done. And there'll be more on that as it develops, but they're focusing on in-state production first and satisfying specific the populations needs. There we go, let's think of it that way. Right now they're concentrating, I don't get it right, on 556, 762 by 51 NATO. And also strangely enough, they are going to be doing carbine. But there's a lot of carbine out there. In fact, if you're willing to do it in country, 30 caliber carbine will sell like wildfire. I know people right now would be willing to buy thousands of rounds per rifle given the opportunity. And they're looking for the producer so they can, you know, again, absorb the market. So we'll see what happens there. Also, another thing is clothing. If you have been paying attention to what's going on with surplus, it is insane. The DOD is no different. I would recommend you guys, you want to get a feel for where things are and why things have been going the way they are, go over to ironplanet.com. No, you don't have to buy anything from them. ironplanet.com. When you go to ironplanet.com, there's a bunch of little images. One of them is a Humvee. Go over to the Humvee, tap that, it'll bring up the government sales through Iron Planet. And there are subcategories that, and one of them is field gear. Well, go to field gear and go, wow, look at the base price bid that you have to start at for the product. They're insane. You might as well be buying from a brand new, and most of these, you might as well be buying from a brand new manufacturer right now. Surplus was worthwhile when it was reasonably priced because it was surplus. But right now, oh no, no, no, it's now crazy town, price wise. Now, another interesting thing as long as you're over there at IronPlanet.com, go take a look at the Humvees. My question on this is how are we getting screwed? We almost always are. I think everything else. I'm not, I'm a very optimistic person, but I'm not pessimistic. I'm just understanding of the regime and government and how they screw the troops and screw the American people. Oh, the Ukraine Estadians need our stuff. Well, go look at ironplanet.com and take a look at how many Humvees they have popping up in the auction. Now I'm gonna tell you something, if you got some third party hack that already has been confiscating guns from their people and ammo, and they did what you told them to do to screw their population, and then you oppressed them and you stole their wealth. If you're gonna give anything to those hacks, you give them the stuff you see over there at Iron Planet. Why is it all those Humvees? See, I guarantee what's happening is they're giving the best of our equipment to those characters if they're sliding anything sideways. But if you look, you might notice something. All the hoods have been changed on all of those humvees. Most of them have a tan hood on an OD green or woodland camo body. Go take a look at what I'm talking about. There's probably 250 humvees listed. Those are what you'd be going over to the hacks over in Ukraine. We got to put a Y there, it's just like, cayeeve, okay? We got to cayeeve, but I'm over in Ukraine. Well, anyway, why are those things being sold there when we so desperately need that junk overseas? Also, the Stewart trucks are the same way. You'll notice when you go over to Iron Planet, there's a listing for the Stewart trucks. Well, why aren't those hacks going over there? Since obviously we're selling them, we don't need to send them brand new anything. General Motors is sending a bunch of brand new vehicles over there to the Yuck Radiance. Really? Yeah, okay. This is like Vietnam. A lot of guys, especially early to middle Vietnam, you know, told me, we're driving the World War II equipment. The Vietnamese were getting the brand new trucks that came right out of GM and Kaiser and whatever. And this was a real problem because, you know, of course, eventually if you were lucky, you could run into a South Vietnamese, you know, Ironmonger who wanted to sell the stuff that he was in charge of and so yeah they bought a few three-quarter tons of renewer that were supposedly combat lost and ended up in the hands of like a Special Forces base or whatever that was the early days guys got remembers catch this catch can't doesn't mean a lot of junk wasn't dumped into Vietnam it's just that the troops the US troops were low priority by comparison now they're foreign counterparts only got the brand new junk like I said So this is the same thing I see here. It's like if you're going to supply the Yukranians, and the Yukranians need this stuff so badly, they got a whole pile of stuff. Go take a look at ironplanet.com and understand that's the stuff that finally got to auction. And he is at auction right now. But next week or two weeks out, there's going to be another auction. Two or three weeks out again, there's gonna be another option. Do you know, I've told you this for years, do you know how easily you could form really effective, I mean if they were worried about the United States, but they're not. The militia could be of each state, could be incredibly well organized and incredibly well supplied. Civil air patrol should be just like a civil air patrol of the Air Force. I mean the counterpart should be just as well equipped, should have all the gear, uniforms, hardware, mechanic equipment, aircraft even, but they don't do that because their job is to make sure that America is kept weak and they piss on us. Of course, they do like the kosher mafia does here like they do with the Ukrainian's there. Steal everything they can, rip everything off, slide it out the back door, pocket the money, and then expect you to go fall on the enemy's sword. And scramble to try and make things work, you see? So same game different day, well different part of the planet but same same courage. So go look at ironplanet.com. The really bad part is when you're looking at the cost of the initial bid means you can't go lower. Okay, if you've done any of this stuff the way that presently is set up. The prices, first of all, not only the prices, that's the base bid. What's going to happen is the prices go right up into the toilet zone. If you want to, sign into ironplanet.com to the Gov Liquidation Sale, the Gov section, and start tagging a few items. Put them on your save list, okay? When you put them on your save list, what'll happen is they'll send you an email when they come up for auction. And you can see, you don't bid on them, you can just let them ride and they will send you the listing of when they come up for auction and also they'll be listed afterwards so you can see what the final price was. And when you do, you're going to go, oh God, that's crazy. No, it's insane. And again, that's an example of why you're seeing the, what that's reflected with the prices you're seeing there are even beyond what we were paying retail before. way beyond. So those are the people who are buying and selling at Sportsman's Guide and all these other places you go to look and that's why American junk you know stuff is at in stellar price range and any other surplus isn't far behind it which is why you have to cherry pick okay. So anyway I just can give you examples so you can help to understand where we are system wise and why we need to build our own. I mentioned this in the 2R block and I'll bring it up again. We're working on a sweatshop. We've accumulated a lot of machinery, a lot of industrial machinery. The biggest thing we're going to have a problem with is inside the United States looms. We have feelers out for a cache of clothing, of cloth for making BDO uniforms, whatever pattern we want. from a company that went down several years ago and they have a unique pattern. There are many many hundreds of bolts of material sitting there and the biggest thing is getting hold of everybody and finding out whether or not this stuff is not under latches. And if it isn't under latches and it's under some kind of paper, then the idea is to buy the whole lot, which is the next thing that's being worked on right now. And that means we will have a freestanding, independent uniform we can probably build quite a few of that'll include hats, basic gear, no basic uniforms, et cetera, not gear. Although there is basically the equivalent to an Alice grade type stock material that was being used to build. Alice components and it's in the same camel pattern. So we'll see what happens, but I don't know what's left and We're still waiting to see if we get a response from the parties involved But that's the kind of thing all of you should be looking at doing we got a caller. Who do we have? Yes, this is Mike in Arizona mark house things and hey, what's going on down the invasion route? Yeah, one of many, I should say. One of many, one of the big ones. You know, it seems to me that most of the illegals are coming through the Rio Grande Valley. I heard an estimate the other day that somewhere between 65 and 80% of the drugs are coming up through the Tucson sector. So it looks like the cartels are well organized. If we have some time, I would like to bring up a couple of things if you ask about the invasion corridor of some of the stuff that's been going on here that you know, there was a pretty big wreck on I-10 last week. I think it was on Thursday. And I was kind of listening to some of the radio broadcasts here on the weekend, and I didn't hear anybody report on it. We got local reports on it. But the thing that I heard that there was some suicide bomber over in Somalia that killed six people. So I kind of wonder about this news media that wants to distract our attention from what's going on by halfway around the world, but not reporting on what's going on here. May I bring up a couple of news articles that's been going on? Absolutely. Okay, I'm not exactly sure. It says here this is 3 TV and CBS 5. I think 3 TV is from down in Tucson and CBS 5 I'm pretty sure is up in Phoenix. The headline says Phoenix man identified as driver after three killed in I-10 pursuit head on crash north of Tucson and it's as around Picacho Peak. It's you know part way between Phoenix Tucson just a little bit south of Casa Grande. The Arizona Department of Public Safety has identified the driver of the SUV who led troopers on a a pursuit on the I-10 near Eloy on Thursday has been identified as 18-year-old Kevin Avila from Phoenix. Interstate 10 reopened near Picacho after Avila was reportedly driving westbound with eight other people when DPS says he crashed into a tractor trailer killing three people. It all started just before 9am when a state trooper tried to pull over Avila near Eloy. Investigators said that Avila sped off and drove into the dirt medium where the rolled over a villa then crossed the median into the eastbound lanes and slammed head on into a tractor trailer. Five people were flown to Phoenix and Tucson hospitals with serious injuries. Two people died at the scene and another died at the hospital. Investigators start my homeland security told Arizona family that they may have been involved in attempted human smuggling activities. Customs and Border Protection is also investigating and it goes on and people haven't been identified and stuff. Part of what I'm trying to get to is, I think it was back in October I called in here of about the down by tombstone and a tombstone sheriff deputy tried to pull over a vehicle and then sped off He called for backup and he was joined by a couple of border patrol vehicles. And then soon after that he pulled off to the side of the road. Two people jumped out. And then he sped off, the border patrol stopped and there were two illegal aliens that exited the vehicle. The vehicle was being chased by the sheriff deputy. And then after they exceeded 80 miles an hour, they backed off because of policy. The suspect continued on about seven or eight miles at a high rate of speed and he tried to blow through a red light. hit the other vehicle at greater than 100 miles an hour and broke the car. The impact was so great it broke the car in half. There was a 65 year old woman driving the vehicle. It was her birthday. She was going to go meet her son for lunch and she died at the scene. And I think he turned out to be a 16 year old from Mesa. It appears that what's going on is that the kids down towards the southern part along the border cities, they know the danger of getting involved in this, but the cartels are operating on social media, trolling for stupid kids that'll drive down. They pose as, quote unquote, Uber drivers. And then somebody gives them a call and they go down and pick them up and that's their plausible deniability. Here's another one after I think this was from the Arizona Daily Independent. Last week the Sierra Vista Police Department arrested the suspected load driver on multiple charges including aggravated assault with a deadly weapon, aggravated assault, burglary, criminal trespass and kidnapping after he crashed his vehicle and fled on foot in the area of North Lensner Avenue and East Tacoma Street. Shortly after 10 a.m. on April 7th, Sierra Vista Police Department was notified of a possible fast-moving load vehicle headed toward Sierra Vista via Highway 92. The driver, Ezekiel Frias, 28 of Tucson, was identified as a possible load driver, the name given to drivers who attempt to accept payment to transport people who have entered the country illegally. from pickup points near the border to larger metropolitan areas in the state. People were seen bailing out of his vehicle. And I had heard about this only because somebody was interviewing the sheriff of Cochise County Sheriff Daniels. And he said, it doesn't say that in this news report, but he was going through a school zone at 80 miles an hour. I'll continue with the the deal, something about he was going here and the vehicles on the right side of the road and into the center lane. They were border patrol helicopter maintained its visual on the vehicle and provided direction to travel updates law enforcement. Sierra Vista Police Department officers, Cochise County Sheriff's Officer, deputy attempted to get into position to clear intersections to protect other modus but the vehicle was traveling too fast. Due to the dangerous and high speed driving demonstrated by the driver, law enforcement did not engage in pursuit. After turning west on the Fry Boulevard, the vehicle later sped through a school zone near Bella Vista Elementary School before striking a bicyclist and crashing near the intersection of North Lenzer Avenue and East Tacoma Street. The bicyclist was transported to Canyon Vista Medical Center with minor injuries. and reportedly alert and able to speak with law enforcement officers on scene about the incident. After crashing, Frias fled from the scene jumping fences in the neighborhood. He was able to enter a residence in the area before being pushed out by the owner. Frias was taken into custody in the 1100 block of March Banks Drive. He's booked into Cochise County Jail on aggravated assault with a deadly weapon aggravated assault. Burglary attempted burglary, two counts of criminal trespassing, two counts of kidnapping. Then it just goes on about a passenger. Now there's one here. We're going to switch here just from not in Arizona alone, but as I've reported previously about some things that are going on in Mexico and in some other cities or countries around the world. If you could, Mark, if you could go to borderlandbeat.com, and if you can't, I understand that the listeners want to maybe go there and jot this down. It's dated the 19th of April 2022, so it was just a few days ago. And the headline is young man bring down all those thoughts of greatness. The video, after you get there to that site, because you go to borderlandbeat.com and then it'll just bring up a scroll of all the articles and stuff. And you go down to the 19th of April, young man, bring down all those thoughts of greatness and then click on that and then the headline and then that'll bring up that specific article. And then the video will be there. You scroll down a little bit. Now it says warning graphic video. It's an infrared footage. It's only 55 seconds long and then you click on it to get the video rolling. The video was actually shot a couple of years ago, but they're bringing up this point. It appears that the young man that seems stepping off the curb as the car pulls up, he was a local drug dealer and the other local drug dealers didn't dig. is cutting in on their turf. And it's not a whole lot of blood and guts because it's shot at night in infrared. But I don't know how many hundreds of times they shot this guy and it's only 55 seconds long. The door opens up, the guy backs off, back up onto the curb. And then it looks like somebody shoots him twice with a shotgun. He falls down off screen. And then the guy in the backseat opens up the door and he pulls out something that looks like some AR-15 and just starts plugging the daylights out of this guy. And then somebody comes around from the back of the vehicle after most of the shooting is done, it looks like with a belt fed. And he just opens up on the guy. He must have dumped at least 50 rounds into the guy just spraying it. for all of those that don't think that there's any violence going on in Mexico. But anyway, so that was kind of that part of about... What's going on here in the danger, because like I said, these young children are being, and it's not just 15, 16, 17s. They have some of them that are up into the early 20s. College students trying to make some money on the weekends so they don't have to get a college loan to present themselves as Uber drivers, but they're actually transporting illegals. There's also there's another thing has to do with the longtime history, especially of the Sinaloa cartel down in Mexico in the state of Sinaloa. But back during when Pablo Escobar was down there in Cali, Medellin and doing all that, the cartel, the Sinaloa cartel, had gone down there and made friends with Pablo Escobar to be a transport of the cocaine because most of this cocaine at that time was coming up through the Caribbean. Remember Don Johnson and Miami Vice. So the Sinaloa cartel got involved in transporting cocaine up through Mexico and then into the United States. And so then after Pablo Escobar got eliminated, pretty much the Sinaloa cartel was already in place and took it over. Now this article here is from borderlandbeat.com and it's dated from the 12th of April and it says Bogota, Mexican cartels swap arms for cocaine fueling Colombia violence. There's a lot of stuff and it's not just the cartels and this and that. quite a few gangs like the PCC and what you call it the FARC and several other gangs that are battling out for turf and because there's a lucrative amount of cocaine coming out of Colombia and then there's a lot of border skirmishes between there and Venezuela. Back when Venezuela was fairly a rich country, if we can say that, and then the government of Columbia had signed a peace treaty with the FARC that you guys stay over there, we'll stay over here and everything's fine. Then they got the FARC to surrender and start turning in their arms and the government of Columbia started eliminating some of these people that had handed in their arms, but they had been leaders of some of these FARC groups. different deals. And then after Venezuela collapsed, then the Venezuelans, because they're starving to death down there, then they're coming over onto the border and help transporting drugs. They'll work all day for a plate of food because they have nothing there. And then they're facilitating the drug transport about of Columbia through Venezuela and then on into the Caribbean. Now this next article, this is from the CBP at CBP.gov forward slash newsroom and the date is the 21st of April 2022 so just the other day. Border Patrol agents arrest convicted murderer Brackettville, Texas. US Border Patrol agents assigned to Del Rio sector arrested a convicted murderer shortly after he illegally entered the United States April 14th approximately 10 30 a.m. Brackettville station agents apprehended a group of five migrants near Brackettville. During processing records, Treck revealed that one subject, the Honduran National, was convicted of second-degree murder in North Carolina. Victor Alfonso Cruz-Garcia, 35, was arrested by Charlotte-Macklinburg Police Department in charge of second-degree murder. Cruz-Garcia was found guilty on February 13, 2012, and was sentenced to 14 years and three months confining. as a convicted felon with prior removals to subject faces a charge of eight United States code, subsection 1326, reentry after deportation. Now it's kind of odd though that it did say here that he was arrested in 2012, but he got a 14 year sentence. So that, doing my math, that would have been about 2026. So obviously he didn't even complete his full sentence before they let him go. Here's another one. This is back to the Columbia and the Mexican cartels. This is from borderlandbeat.com. This is dated from the 8th of April, 2022. Brian Dona Siano-Vardugo pit. and that's in quotation marks, P-I-T-T, an emissary of El Mayo, Zambata, captured in Cali, Colombia. Now, after a lot of people got the impression because the media was so misinformed that El Chapo Guzman was the head of the Sinaloa cartel, and that's really not true. There were three or four people at the top in kind of a power sharing. One of the people that was with El Chapo was El Mayo Zimbada. And now that El Chapo Guzman has been removed from that equation, El Mayo Zimbada. So now once again, we've got an emissary of El Mayo Zimbada captured in Cali, Colombia. So the cartel, especially the Sinaloa cartel that I pointed out earlier, that they have a very strong presence. Here's one. This is from border layer, excuse me, CBP.gov, forward slash newsroom, child predators arrested by United States Border Patrol agents. And it was dated the 19th of April. Edinburgh, Texas Rio Grande Valley Sector Border Patrol agents arrested two child sexual predators. and more gang members, agents working at the Faltarious Border Patrol checkpoint referred to tractor trailer to the secondary inspection area following a K-9 alert on April 18th, the search of the trailer revealed four migrants illegally present in the United States. Among the group was a Salvadoran adult male record check revealed he had a 2020 conviction of assault, a sexual assault on a child. On Friday, the 15th Rio Grande Border Patrol agents apprehended a group of nine migrants, repared checks on the Guatemala National Adult Male Radio. He's convicted of sex with a minor less than 16-year-old and served 180 days in three years probation. Additionally, Rio Grande Valley agents arrested in 18th Street, an Amara Salvatrucha MS-13 gang member with extensive arrest records to include unlawful carrying of weapons and assault. Now just because everybody thinks that maybe this has happened in Mexico and Colombia and stuff Little Rock, Arkansas, Oklahoma man pleads guilty to trafficking firearms parts through Arkansas to Mexico. That was from borderlandbeat.com and it's dated the 21st of April. I won't go into it, but somebody was shipping him weapons parts to be coded to add to their longevity and some of the parts finisher. had noticed that there were a lot of counterfeit parts, so they had contacted the ATF and then they launched an investigation. This one's from borderlandbeat.com. Navy seals more than a thousand kilograms of cocaine on the coast of Jalisco. This is from borderlandbeat.com, the 14th of April. This is another one, borderlanddeep.com. This is from the 18th of April. Police chief killed during an ambush in Chihuahua. Chihuahua de Juarez is just across the border from El Paso. The attack occurred shortly after 6 p.m. on the Federal Highway between the municipalities, and at least five people died at the scene, including the ministerial commander and the agent and three civilians. Let's see just a couple more just a couple more bear with me I'm just trying to raise the awareness of what's going on because obviously ABC NBC CBS CNN or nobody else is talking about this this was from CBT gov Ford slash newsroom Rio Grande Valley agents apprehend five gang members Edinburgh, Texas Rio Grande Valley sector Border Patrol agents arrested to MS 13 and a Serrano and two 18th Street gang members in two days. I won't go into too much of that. Let's see. Here's another one. This is borderlandbeat.com and it's dated the 14th of April. St. George, Utah, three men with suspected ties to Mexican cartel arrested. So, and we reported on this before that the cartels are really branching out. There were people that were, the CJNG was caught up in, I think it was Seattle, Washington trying to establish a toehold there. They've got them all across, you know, from Los Angeles, Phoenix, Atlanta, and now they're pushing more farther inland. There's this next one here is borderlandbeat.com 20 April 2022. Tapal cotopec michicon that's way in the south of Mexico. Sedina apprehends El Johnny. He trafficked drugs from South America. So once again, we've got the Mexican cartels are the branched out and either they start off as couriers or foot soldiers down in South and Central America. And then they just branch out. Sure, go right ahead. Yeah, that's fluffy. I just wanted to relate something I heard on the radio earlier from Santa Rosa County in Florida. For sure, if there is doing people go ahead and shoot anybody invading your home. If they break into your home, shoot them and save the taxpayers money. He said it in response to a somebody who broke into a citizen home there and didn't get killed. He wound up in the hospital and the sheriff said, go ahead and shoot them. Save the county. Come take a class and shoot better. save the taxpayers money. What he was saying is hit him because they did the person that shot kind of spattered around a little bit with his rounds. And what the sheriff is saying is, hey, come to our classes, we get one out each week, you'll be a better shot and you can save the taxpayers money. And they're like, oh my God. Yeah, yeah. He said, yes, you shoot them, but you shoot them better. If you shoot them better, we don't have to put up with any other nonsense. You know, real quick on this note, let's back up a little bit. I don't know if too many Uber drivers, if they're real Uber drivers, that if you pick somebody up, are going to, I mean, anybody out there have been picked up by an Uber driver. When you get picked up by an Uber driver, does he stomp on the gas, do 80 to 100 miles an hour and randomly ignore every police car on the road? You know, the whole smoke screen, pickle, smoke, and wears BS on that one is, well, you know, we all fool them because you're an Uber driver. No, I don't think so. Somehow the performance of the driver negates the value of the supposed, you know, fake title or the cover. You know, it's destroyed the moment you stepped on the gas. So not only that driver, you know, go ahead. Go ahead. No, no, you go ahead, Mark. Yeah. I was gonna say, well, driving over the guy on the bicycle, the amazing thing is the guy's lucky is alive. My only first thought was on that with some of them I've seen as a poor bastard Midas intentionally stepped out in front of the car thinking he was gonna collect insurance and miscalculated that this guy wasn't gonna slow down, which he didn't. And maybe he made it, maybe he made a deal. Maybe he made it intentionally, maybe it was accidental, who knows. But I'm just reminded of the, remember the guy with the auto driving car, he was busy playing on the phone and the person walked out in front of the bike and the car didn't stop. Well, it was an auto driving cars, not the driver's fault. The car was supposed to, you know, observe that, but the guy who walked out in front of him. He's looking away from him. He walks out literally like he's looking in the opposite direction. It's at night. The lights are on. You can see a car is moving. So I think the dink head thought he was going to collect insurance and stepped out in front of a car that he thought was going to slow down. So you always remember that when you hear some of these stories. Go ahead. Yeah, they were also crossing mid intersection. They weren't in a crosswalk and then I forget that what the name of the company was at what was doing that one of these smart driverless vehicles that they went ahead and just paid off the family. And that was one of the first things that had crossed through my mind that this person thought that they could go out there and get hit by the car. It's what lawyers refer to as the law, the deep pockets. But they actually got killed, so they weren't going to collect anything on that part. So I only got two more, and I see we only got just a few minutes here. Let's see, this is a borderlandbeat.com 20 April. the war of Los Russos versus Salazar, two police officers executed in Sonora and they've got about five or six pictures of this vehicle. It's just the municipal police, somebody pulled up next to them and just Swiss cheese the car, shot the windows out, shot the two police officers in there and everything. It's just like Man, they just shot and shot and shot. And one last one, this was from cdp.gov forward slash newsroom wanted murder suspect fleeing US captured by CBT and Nashville police. It was 17 April. 2022 Nashville April 10 US custom border protection officers from the office of field operations Fort Lauderdale International Airport took command in custody to face murder charges in Nashville Brandon Swaby a 20 year old Jamaican citizen was attempting to fly to Jamaica via spirit airways and was a person of interest after an April 5 fatal shooting near Nashville International Airport. After coordination between Metropolitan Nashville Police Department, U.S. Secret Service, and CBP, Swaby was found to have an outbound ticket at FFL where CBP officers located and arrested in prior to boarding without incident. Swaby had entered the US in 2020 with a non-immigrant visa and that overstayed his allotted time. And so I'm just bringing the news that the mainstream media does not seem to want to cover. And that's all I have. That was the end of those. Thank you for your time Mark. Any questions? Hold on. You go to the bathroom. You turn the light on. There's a cockroach, he's old. You go and you step on him. You smile because you know you just killed all the cockroaches that were in your bathroom, right? Now, these are the ones you caught. So how many didn't you catch? You know what I mean? In other words, it's already been discussed that that is the problem right now for everyone that officially is going to the Walmart greeters. We used to call them border guards. The US Walmart greeter with the five gallon pail of free bucket money for whoever comes across. For everyone that does that, there's two, if not three, they didn't even see. Now, which ones do you think they are? Do you think they're the seeking, you like an opportunity or are they part of the inbound army of other operators? I would put my money towards the inbound army of operators. Yes, they refer to him as God aways. I've heard a interview just recently from Tom Holman. He used to be in charge of I think customs or border patrol. And this, as I recall, he said, since Biden has taken office, there's been 700,000 God aways. And now what their logic is God aways. Yep. Don't know who they are. Don't know where they're going. I think we understand the nature of the bit by the porter, the huge group is in there, door greeters. The cedar and the straw, and the sun will operate free. And we are the sun, yes we are the sun, we are the sun. First dead and lit, goes crack to my shoulders like a woman, my granddaddy's gone.