June 15, 2022
Evening Show
4h 8m
Complete
Radio Episode
2022
▶ Audio Player
Summary
Mark Koernke discussed ammunition development projects including the 6.8 government round, with focus on creating alternative ammunition types (Pactail discarding sabot, conventional AP penetrator, and duplex/triplex rounds) that could be used in AR-10 platforms. He covered magazine sourcing and quality considerations, emphasized the importance of CB radio communications infrastructure as a preparedness tool, and provided extensive discussion of historical and improvised weapons systems including flamethrowers, boiling water defenses, and indirect fire weapons. The show included caller contributions on magazine reliability testing and CB radio setup procedures.
- 6.8 government round
- ar-10 platform
- ammunition development
- cb radio
- preparedness
- magazines
- flamethrowers
- duplex rounds
- sabot ammunition
- communications grid
- weapons wednesday
- ar-15
- militia
- gun confiscation
- second amendment
Transcript
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dead, will things get? You've got some lawmakers expecting that we're going to see blackouts this summer. We will see. power outages because of too much pressure on the electrical grid. That's one issue that we're waiting to watch. The other issue is inflation. Have we peaked? I see no evidence of inflation having peaked. And one issue is around the COVID-19 relief package, which was signed into law by President Biden back in March of 2021. The recording has started. That's when inflation was at 1.4%. We're at 8.6%. Why should inflation get worse from here? Because much of that money in the COVID relief package has not even gone out yet. I spoke with the ranking the ranking member of the House Budget Committee, Jason Smith, and Congressman Smith told me that there are hundreds of billions of dollars that certain states received from the COVID package that has not been appropriated. So as long as all that money is still chasing too few goods, that's the definition of inflation will probably be hovering around here for a while, if not get worse before things get better. Add to that gasoline. We haven't even seen the peak. driving months yet we're getting there but once we see the peak driving months you'll see gasoline go higher as well another issue for for consumers who are facing a higher cost on just about everything. We'll be watching two o'clock hours today. 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 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 traded in your name You've given government control to those who do you harm so they could burn down churches and seize the family farm and keep our country deep in debt. Put men of God in jail. Harash your fellow countrymen while corrupted courts prevail. Your public servants don't uphold the solemn oaths they've sworn. And your daughters visit doctors so their children 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? Most 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 Iowoki vanished in the mist for whence he came. His words were true, we are not free, but we have ourselves to blame. For even now as tyrants trample each God given right we only watch in tremble too afraid to stand and fight If he stood by your bedside to dream while you were asleep and wondered what remains of the freedoms He'd fought to keep what would be your answer if he called out from the grave? Dill the land of the free evening ladies. Oh, forgive me. Good afternoon evening My feels like it's been another day. Forgive me on that one. Good afternoon ladies and gentlemen This is the first hour of the afternoon intelligence report. I'm our car key. One day closer to victory for all of our brothers and sisters, both on and behind the lines and occupied territories. Southwest, east, northeast and central. Ladies and gentlemen, you're listening to us on www.libertytreeradio.4mg.com, libertytreeradio.org, and we are unsettling. We'll say hi to all of our global listeners, especially Merchant Marine virtually across the whole of the planet. Double plus good, thumbs up, keep it up. And of course a myriad of communications technologies, both inside and outside the United States to include The independence separate from the internet. We are no way linked through ultra net hallmark and golden spike technologies. And with what we see on the horizon, especially with what's happening right now with all the glitching and all the other crap we're seeing that's being intentionally done. Having freestanding technologies in every category is especially critical towards the next phase in what is obviously going to be a war inside the United States. So, we need solutions before we see things kick off. The enemy's obviously in motion. They got their plans. We've got the sellout Republicans who are planning on handing America over to the globalists, some of them before they leave the country, so to speak, leave the government. They're just going to get a paycheck from us. But those pieces of action have been filled in the Senate. These turds, their logic is, well, piss on America, they're just gonna be able to kick rock, leave, you know, and not worry about it. Well, that isn't the case. Everybody's gonna remember what these characters have done. And just on the list, when the time comes. So anyway, it is, well, it is Weapons Wednesday. It is the 15th of June. It is the 14th year of open obvious and pissing in your face, baby and the socialist and the Soviet socialist occupation of America with a K 2022 older calendar 2022 battle for the Republic. The dance of swords and a couple things here real quick. First of all, Edward, if you could, I believe there is a new guns and gadgets out as of today course, I think he's getting. A little flustered, for us it's like, hm, it's everything we've expected from the pissant communists in Washington. The excrement, the turd, the filth, the detritus and debris. But, the sheriff's got, if he gets to see even more that he doesn't really talk about on the air, this is something you understand when you're doing programming like we're doing. There are things we don't talk about because we still have to get validation on or there are things that you just don't want to incorporate because you don't want to, you know, provide anything for the enemy. You don't give them anything, nothing. In fact, treat them like the dirt that they are on the other side every last one of them. So anyway, there is a believe a new guns and gadgets out. If you could add will play that here right from the beginning. It is weapons Wednesday. And there are two that are up, dad, for today. One from six hours ago, one from one hour ago. One from one hour ago is about Miami police running an illegal firearms buyback program. And then the one from six hours ago, a Senate deal in trouble. AOC claims jeopardize, passing, dot, dot, dot. Okay, just do the earlier one of the two. The one with cops selling guns. Guys, let me point something out. Buying and selling guns. Okay, they're doing a fake buyback. What that means is that the cops are shopping. You do understand that, right? You can't stand out there. I guarantee that nowadays more and more, a lot of people have stepped up in front of the line and, you know, hey, I'll pay $100 for that gun rather than 50 or a pair of tennis shoes. Really? And so what's fascinating is, needless to say, it's a cop shopping experience. They laugh their ass off because grandmas bring guns in that are worth fortunes and hand them over the cops for chump change. Pretty much most all of that gets stolen sideways. What's left is the old Kresge's guns, the Kmart guns, the Sears pump shotgun if they didn't like it, etc. And the rest are stolen sideways by the cops. just how it works. Especially if it's something really nice. After all, they love those sigs. When some woman brings her husband's sig in, it's like, oh, ma'am, it's a good thing you brought in a horrible crime gun. Why don't you let me just take care of that for you. There we go. Yeah, there you go. Look. Slabbers, you know slobbers slabbers slash bug guys. Hey everybody. Welcome back to the channel. I appreciate your time. Thank you for watching to all the new subscribers. Welcome I hope you find value in this on this channel learning about the constant attack on our rights This video a little bit of good news There are some cracks in the armor some chinks in the finish of the bipartisan gun control agreement There's no text yet. It's an agreement on the framework and agreement in principle, if you will. And several of the senators involved in the process have said now the difficult part begins, and that's actually putting pen to paper and getting language that at least 60 senators will agree to. And now we're seeing how difficult that's going to be. Now, while they might get the 60 to pass the Senate, it still has to be approved by the House. And they have a very short period of time to do it as they're trying to rush this through as well. Now, Senator Schumer has said that next week he wants to put it on the floor, he wants the verbiage done this week. And assuming it gets to the Senate and goes to the House. And one of the most prominent members of the House, Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez, old chicklets, well, a horse teeth has come out and said that... Looking back into the juvenile criminal records of people who are 18 through 20 For a part of this extended background check Could be racist. That's right The party of grabbing guns, the party of we need to have all kinds of great background checks and we need to check bone marrow of people to make sure they're pure as the undriven snow. Well, if you want to check into the criminal background checks of people, that's racist. Hmm. Doesn't make sense. Well, here on screen are some tweets of a reporter, Eric Michael Garcia, and he said this, AOC tells me she is worried about the criminalization in the gun framework, particularly the juvenile criminalization, the expansion of background checks into juvenile records. I want to explore the implications of that and how specifically it's designed and tailored. After Columbine, we hired thousands of police officers into schools, and while it didn't prevent many of the mass shootings that we've seen now, It has increased the criminalization of teens in communities like mine. Garcia also tweeted, when I asked if she was worried if the mental health aspects would increase stigmatization, she said absolutely. Because what people are blaming on mental health are really deeper issues of violent misogyny and white supremacy. And while there are mental health issues attenuated like the deep isolation, that we see with a lot of these folks, at the end of the day, we are not addressing. There are some issues like the boyfriend loophole being closed, the connection between domestic violence and mass shootings, etc. So while everything the AOC says is, oh, I'm a victim of everything, and you can't do anything because racism and don't treat a criminal like a criminal, you're just going after them because you're racist. It's amazing. Racism is forced upon everybody, every election. It's the way that they can motivate people to vote certain ways, and unfortunately it works all too well. But the good sign here is that influential people in Congress are coming out against this agreed upon framework in principle and that is going to prove that it'll be that much harder for this thing to fly through Congress like they hope it will. And if AOC is against it, then there's a very good chance that the Squad's against it and if the Squad's against it, we know there are a lot of people in the House that want to be the Squad. So this could prevent it passing the house. And if it doesn't pass the house, it's dead in the water. So this bear's watching. You know I will stay on top of this. If you'd like to stay in the loop, hit that subscribe button down below so that I will let you know when I put out new content. Well, YouTube's supposed to let you know. And how do you do that? You hit that bell icon as well and turn it on to all notifications. Going to need you all when it's time to put out information fast and we need to spread the word. The subscribers are going to see it first and I appreciate each and every one of you. Until we see each other again, be safe. Stay vigilant and carry a gun to keep you, your friends, your family, your community safe. That's what the Second Amendment is for. Doesn't matter what everybody's emotions make them think, the fact remains. See you in the next one. Take care. The other one has to with the Miami illegal gun buyback. We're about playing that right now. It's pretty obvious. It's whatever, look at it this way. It's police state 2022. It's whatever the stinking swine wanna do as far as ripping people off, stealing stuff or kicking in a door. Isn't that what the whole thing is about now when you get the leftists in power? The cops love the leftists. They just let them do anything. especially the kosher mafia controlled areas, which is Miami to make the mistake about that one. Come on, oi, go bold. Anyway, it's weapons Wednesday. A couple of things here real quick. The 6.8 by 51 government round that's popped out, again, classic brown envelope big government failure. We need to see a production 6.8 by 51 magazine. And I've seen A couple of videos where, oh, we're gonna get to shoot the new 6.8 by 51 SIG, but I've seen nothing comprehensive about collateral comparison. Is the magazine proprietary? That would be typical and typical especially for police state promotional units like SIG or HK. They hate you, they hate regular gun owners, now elitists and snobs, they dare up the government's arse so deep their ears are brown, okay? But with regard to the average irregular real shooter out there that's American public, they hate you. They love supplying government contracts, that's why they got lots of them because They make sure that if they could, they wouldn't let you have any guns. Whatever, well, no, not even whatever. They wouldn't let you have any if they could. They got government employees and government wannabes for that. So anyway, the SIG, 6.8 by 51, first of all, it's a grossly overcomplicated case, which is interesting. And I would love to see a diagnosis of the spent case. with regard to specs and where because that's something we don't know about yet. That's something that's coming as this weapon goes into service. First of all, it's got a lot of plastic on the punkajunk gun. With that being the case, it's guaranteed. It's a one-way trip. When something significant fails, there'll be no fixing it. And it'll be a punkajunk thing. They toss out the back door into the barrel and put into the chopper. The big thing here is the magazines. Curious again. The most common way to do this with a magazine is to make the magazine proprietary to the government model. in that the magazine stay is so askew from the standard AR-10, for instance, which again, the 6.8 by 51 indicates that yes, a standard AR-10 magazine should work with that ammunition. There's nothing to indicate that it wouldn't. The 6.8 by 51 as opposed to the 7.62 by 51 NATO round, Comparable length is always the biggest issue. Diameter is close enough. I don't think it makes any difference. There should not be anything with regard to the step in the case from the steel back, the spacer and the brass forejacket. So, I mean, there could be. This is why we're curious about some of the things that they're not talking about. They have got all these pictures. Oh, I got the 6.8. Big deal. What did it do? Well, it was just exciting. It was not exciting. Okay, that's nice. It was exciting. Let's walk through what does it do. Okay, what was it doing? How does it function? What does each part do? What is copacetic with the existing part system? Because SIG is notoriously a bastard just like HK. HK will make a military product And then they make, oh, for you civilians who want the kind of look alike, HK will make a not kind of look alike. And they've made them in such a way that magazines aren't interchangeable, no parts are interchangeable, making it a cute little silhouette firearm, but a useless firearm for the most part when it comes from HK. Does anybody remember the gray family and the gray green family of HK rifles you can't even get magazines for? And of course, let's not forget HK made them proprietary magazines and marketed these god awful expensive rifles to the American public. Well, people who thought that they were gonna be special and got an HK, and then they did get the HK. And it was special cuz it was unique. It was so unique you can't get any magazines for the gun. Anybody remember the number of 9 millimeter and 40 caliber carbine type rifles look like stretch taffy, kinda like a spas 15. And I can buy stocks, I can buy parts because there were the leftover junk from the guns are actually out there for those particular weapons, they're surplus parts. from the production run of those orphaned firearms that were made by HK. SIG's the same way. And especially since this is a government contract, it would be fascinating if they were smart enough because you could feed off existing production inventories with people who have already perfected the magazines to do a standard AR-10 type connection keeper, whatever. But I can't see that. I'm not really too confident on that. And here's the thing, as I pointed out. It's kind of like the difference between the AR-15M16 rifles magazine and the M18 slash AR-180. The AR-18 originally, when the design was built, had the exact same keeper as an AR-15M16 rifle. So in other words, all the mags that would have fit in the M16 would have fit into GAR 180 slash the AR 18 or M18. What happened? Well, they decided so that they were not interchangeable because they didn't watch you peasants. And Armeline also wanted to see if they could sell a completely different magazine pattern, even though it's the same mag, the body's the same. It's just where they put the keeper latch and how it was built for retention of the magazine and the magazine well. It's a bastard, okay? I know people who bought whole legions of those AR-180s and have bought every existing factory mag that exists. That's why the AR-180 is missing. It didn't get cut up by the government. It didn't get disappeared because government was confiscating them. They were bought up by purchasing agents and there are whole armories full of AR-180s. British, American, and Japanese made because they were made in all three countries. But the thing is the magazine is proprietary. So this is something I would ask if anybody out there, if you want to really the watch to see how people respond. What is the what's the comparative design or format for the AR 10 magazine and the 6.8 government model SIG? What are they identical? Are they closed? Are they magazine-wells kind? I mean, externally and internally, since internally the dimension will be the same. If you have a 6.8, what would really be cool? I had this conversation earlier today with one of our allies. If the thing, and this is why I don't think they'd like this, this is really why I can see them making a different magazine catch point, and you build it so that if you try to drill out or mill out the catch point, It slops out the magazine connect and it won't work. You can't pick it to me pick the dimension and the location so that if you can't open it up to make it work or you'll make it step it up or down. You can't do that. First of all, the polymer magazines. So, it's a bugger right from the get-go. And now, that's why, like I said, this is part of that colonial mindset about keeping your peasants unarmed with the new stuff. Not that the new stuff's good anyway, but it's okay. Anything will work. We'll capture anything and use it and put a bullet down range. We don't care. But from the design perspective of intelligent process, there are too many things here that I can just see coming that would make it expensive and more expensive and then grossly expensive progressively. The AR-10 magazine body might have been used, but again, they've changed the location for the retainer, you know, retainer keyhole where the, you know, the latch goes on the magazine itself. If they haven't, then all you guys who have AR-10s Dudes, you're gonna be able to reap the benefit of all of those mags being interchangeable with your AR-10 light rifle. Ooh, that'd be kinda nice. It would be, but I'm not putting any hope on this. Assume the worst and you won't be disappointed, okay? But it is something to look at. And the other consideration here is, what about, for instance, flash hider? Well, did they just go with a totally goofy off-the-wall? spec for instance the thread for the flash hider is it a pinned I doubt it's pinned but if it's threaded is it ar-10 that'd be cool looks like an ar-10 type an ar-15 type basket there's four or five different flash hiders god knows what they've come up with at the time they're done But just guys they can be up there arson as soon as they realize, we got to change that they'll do it heartbeat just to make it in a skew part. Just make it a goofy stupid as you part and SIG will love that because then you only buy from SIG and SIG doesn't like you. So they like that government the government tax and commies and the communists in the pentagram that hate you are going to love SIG if they've done that. That's why this this weapon obviously has been chosen has to do with sucking up to the you know to the foreign manufacturers again big brown envelopes pass back and forth under the table and the end product being you know crapoo, but hey Like you said in in RoboCop. I mentioned this many times who cares if it works We'd be selling spare parts for the next 10 years to the government And that's exactly how they'll do what they'll do it. I've told you before, you have any weapons systems we've had that they literally have just shop about made to disappear all during the Mac Namera or Europe, by the way, just as a heads up. So 6.8. Again, we need to see a product, a production 6.8 by 51 magazine. And we need to be able to spec it. And if anybody can do that or ask someone to do that, are you tested out to the 6.8? Yeah, one of our buddies has got one. Get on YouTube. And I want you to ask them, hey, is the magazine interchangeable with the AR-10? Is it comparable in dimension with the AR-10? Can I take a new SIG magazine and drop it in an AR-10? Can I take an AR-10 magazine and insert it and use it in the magazine well of the new SIG? That is especially critical. Now, let me bring up to speed on something else. We've been working on a 6.8 Loaded case project now for more than three months Actually in the last month and a half We had a couple other little design engineer teams get together with us and I've also talked to two of the barrel companies three actually forgive me three We have what is called six point eight? Pactelle discarding Sabo We also have a 6.8 conventional AP penetrator configuration. This is instead of all the gobbledygook with the BS bullets they came up with and the goofy case. What we have is a designed 6.8 conventionally built case with a 6.8 AP penetrator just like the M2 AP and the 30 out 6. Now that's already worked out. The problem is production. We can build it and we can build it reasonably cheap. No, there's not been any, there's not enough, there's not enough built. The concept is done. Now the idea is how can we make it fast and better? Okay, because we gotta be able to make it and we gotta be able to make it reasonably priced. The conventional AP penetrator is an exact copy of what's in the M2 AP 30-06. It's a spire point, by the way. The body of the case is similar in configuration. In fact, we just mimicked but compressed the standard 30 caliber projectile. Okay, that's all there is to it now. The other one, which I didn't know until last weekend, is a 6.8 duplex round. Now this is something we already knew all the research on this from back in the 70s. We have a triplex duplex round. The triplex are three conical projectiles, but the 6.8 7mm renders itself nicely to a duplex case. And what this does is with a compression step that takes place with these two conical projectiles, which are stacked one on top of the other. They squeeze, they conform to the dimension, but they're less step like a pitter. You don't have to be fully automatic to get the result of an automatic weapon because you build it through the process of the ammunition. Now, the duplex and triplex rounds that the government made were in 7.6 Q by 51 NATO. They also built them in M250 caliber. Both of these we have multiple infected with the 3760 by 51 NATO 30 caliber. We have thousands of examples of that. We bought tons of this stuff when it was available back in the 70s. I've handed the copies I have over to the group because I have some of the what are clear resin polymer step material that was put into the process so that the rounds separate. Actually, think about it like billiard, Jeff, two balls in a row, but they're not, they're conical like a dart. And as one moves down the barrel and compresses and conforms and accelerates, the other one literally a step right behind it. So what you get is the equivalent to a two or three round burst, depending on how many of these projectiles you stack. It is very impressive the way this worked at intermediate range, but it does not require select fire. the multiple projectiles travel at standard rifle velocities comparable to the standard ball round, depending upon the type of rifle round that this particular bullet, or configuration of bullets, of basically, imagine those copper bronze jackets. When they compressed into the dimension of 6.8, they developed all of the characteristics of a standard ball round. except that there's one stack down the tube literally right behind the other. When they leave the barrel, there is enough variance that what you get is basically like a three shot ball round going down range that hits at impacts with the target creating multiple strike kinetic energy damage. This would greatly change the performance of the 6.8, not that it's a bad round. We know that this is a civilian developed wildcat round, first of all. They just gave it a, you know, we're calling it 6.8 government so there's no confusion. Okay, I'm calling it 6.8 government. Everybody will know what I'm talking about. Now the Pactail rounds are completely developed. That discarding sable, in fact, they did the case, they did the molds here in Michigan. They've already cranked out several thousand of the discarding sables in 6.8 and they're actually in a weapons. They're using a The existing barrel that they cranked out based on specs to include the rifling and they're actually testing the rounds right now for impact performance and at range. So in other words, 50 rounds, 50 yards, 100 yards, 150, 200, 250, 300. That's the limit for the moment because we're looking for consistency and performance. The Sables are so dirt cheap, it's ridiculous. They're 20th of a penny per Sabo. The projectiles originally for this first model testing, they went with 5.56 bullets to nest in the 6.8 slash less than 30 caliber Sabo. And it works flawlessly. The advantage is we are pushing 4,000 feet per second with a standard case. Now, mind you, we're not talking about this ratchety piece of crap the government came up with. It's got three pieces for a conventional rifle case. We're using a conventional brass production case that has actually been produced to spec. Now the conventional AP project, the research is done, R&D is done, but we don't have production as in how many can we make yet. We know we can make it, we can make it consistently every day. We based it on standard government specifications for the M2AP round built for the M2AP 30-06 round, World War II. The 6.8 duplex finished. That project is purely a matter of do we want to go triplex duplex and we have to watch for consistency of load. The advantage of having these different rounds is that, for instance, if I need saturation fire on a target, the duplex or triplex rounds allow me to drop a magazine in and instead of a 20-round magazine, I actually have what is the equivalent to a 60-round magazine with no changes or modifications or engineering alteration to the firearm in any way, shape or form. So you're putting a suppression panel of fire down that's 60 rounds as opposed to 20 rounds of conventional rifle. For suppression fire, the duplex or triplex would be the best solution. Easy to build the difference between the polymer rounds that I had that were R&D that were tested I bought as part of a collection I we used to collect cases. Okay Those cases that have been handed down. They're doing autopsy on we've selectively aren't going to tear them all apart They did an autopsy well, of course powder spec because they're using a different powder reason They were not using a standard I am our powder at that time, but they use something a little hotter So there's a bunch of other stuff being researched there also All of these are using a conventional brass 6.8 by 51K solution. So we're not embracing the goofiness of the dupey round, the dupey idea, five times the price at half the value kosher mafia, same thing that they came up with. That, where the only issue there, as I've said, is what are the cup pressures with the chamber? We actually have some of that spec. The idea is to build a 6.8 by 51 system that can handle both whatever we wanna build or draw from the 6.8 projectiles that will be built in the inventory and be able to use if possible the 6.8 case if it does not create excessive or extreme pressures which may be very intentional so that the weapon is offset against anything the civilian population in a semi auto weapon could would normally produce. I do not See the possibility except for again the clockwork and some of the PS I've seen with the diagrams of the 6.8 government It's a piece of crap. There's too much There's too many things that can go wrong and they intentionally did it, you know, remember Scotty said yeah Make the plumbing complicated enough and it's really easy to bollocks up the drain Well, that's exactly what they've done. So again, it's planned a failure or it's just the idea that some idiot stick got a big enough brown envelope, whatever general was in charge of the project, they care less about what happens to the soldier. And I pretty well figured the committee among keys are like that. So it's that's just where we are. One of the things that I was curious about is if anybody has asked SIG, what is the cost per case? For the 6.8 by 51 is show you pictures and they're bragging about they came up with this really spiffy idea What is the cost per unit? during standard production run For the case, I'm not worried about I don't want to talk about a loaded round I'm just talking about that case and I will guarantee that that case in and of itself Shades against the primer of the powder and the bullet completely on a level that most people are going to be kind of aghast about It's just the nature of the beast and the way things are with regard to graph corruption and failure in the system right now So they're screwed us in every direction you can you can see that and anybody who's in the regime or bureaucracy Especially in the pentagram are gonna do everything they can to screw up through this country and set us up for a fall What we need to do is be able to utilize everything that they're producing To one degree or another the weapon itself may be a punk a junk, but guess what? There are a number of options with regard to barreling or rebarreling weapons to put a number of 6.8 guns in service way before the government gets their production run up. Now, one of the things to consider, and yes, we've already thought about this, is well, why does it have to be a semi-auto gun? Oh, it doesn't. As a matter of fact, as I pointed out, the 6.8 conventional AP penetrator, they just basically put the, they put the barrel that they produced on a standard K98 Mauser action for test. The initial one. Now, very straightforward. No bolt barrel. Don't worry about, you know, about curly cues, lightening it up or whatever. We want to see what we can do with a straight pencil type barrel in a 6.8 by 51 chambering with a really strong, grossly over-engineered Mauser action. I think they used a double X. Standard Mauser, European Mauser. There's a bunch of those that have been available relatively cheap because they're not in vogue right now, but these are actual Mauser work and they're not antique, they're modern production. Now another consideration here is obviously making a barrel that would work with, for instance, the Ruger, Winchester, and the Remington bolt-action guns. It's not a big deal to create a set of go-no-go gauges and to make it possible. to either embrace that particular configuration or go up and into a larger, heavier action like maybe the upper end Weatherby, big bore, belted magnum receivers. Again, you're talking more money, but copying that nowadays mimicking it is not a big deal. Once you have the specs, CNC can pretty well crank out whatever we want. And the other consideration is needless to say, another bolt action variant that is far less sophisticated. And there are a number of designs out there already committed to that have been around for quite some time. Most of them are used for test and evaluation of wildcat cases. And for that reason, the designs are actually very simple, but they're also grossly over engineered. One of the reasons most of you don't realize this but you have typically with every round that you've ever seen built any round you have I don't care if it's 33 Winchester I don't care if it's 300 Win Mag they have what they call medicine ball rounds if you're not familiar with manufacturing what they do is they test at 80% actually they start out at forgive me they start out at 60% Beyond normal spec they go to 80. I've heard that there even 100% over pressure routes. What are these for? Well, they're designed to test the design To failure or to a attempt to fail and this was of course something that is also done with weapons that are custom built. There are a number of different medicine ball type rounds that are built in the industry or the specs are available, the rounds are built. Interestingly enough, there's a whole collection of these where the M1 carbine, which are kind of like a go no go test for a production run, and the arsenal, the armory, the US armory, well the US Ordnance Department, war department, the war department of World War II and before. had specifications laid down to over pressure the rounds. So that they could see, test to ensure that way beyond would be the possible condition that a shooter could experience. The weapon would still be viable or safe to operate without injury to the operator. That's why they built these things. Did it blow a gun up? Well, it distorted gun. It distorted the gun to the point where typically it was a failed action when it was done. But Why did they do this? Well, most all military weapons from post World War I, about 19, the US military should say, forgive me, other countries didn't follow on this right away. First double and then triple heat annealing of the receivers. What did this do? It prevented the receiver from fracturing with gross over pressures. Why? Well, because Martha or Bob or Fred or Wilma could have a bad day on the factory. They wanted to go to that big bebop party on Friday and they weren't paying attention in the last couple of rounds they put together that came out of the machine. There was an overflow or overspill, maybe something happened, whatever the mistake. All of a sudden they got this grossly overpowered case that's mixed in with everything else. Well, we don't want Bob the Rifleman out in the middle of Italy to put the rifle to his head and lose his head, watch the top of his head or part of his cheek fall. He don't get blown off because the action explodes. Well, guess what? The rifle couldn't do that. The Springfield, which is why I get World War I Springfields pre-war are single heat treated. They're still very safe actions. I'd shoot any one of them. I've shot many of them. I've had more than a few pre World War I, 1903 Springfields. But progressively post World War I on and actually at the very end of World War I, they started double heat treating for safety. And then they realized triple heat treating actually was the cat's meow. And we have no record of an M1 Garand failure that was what's called a catastrophic failure that hurt. were damaged the operator. You had blowback to the end of the face from gas. The action would distort, would malfunction. Either the bolt would lock forward or the bolt might retard to the rear. But typically it was expanded. The face of the bolt would expand. The area around the chamber would do what it was supposed to do. And the rifle would stay together in one piece. It just wouldn't be much use to anybody after that other than as a bayonet carrier. the distortion being extreme. Now, there are very, very, very, very few examples of that. And typically the problem that was created was because of some kind of obstruction in the barrel that had to do with mud. The guy was carrying a rifle, didn't pay attention, jumped the fence. kind of bandit jabbed his gun into the side of a muck hole, kept running, puts the rifle to his shoulder, fires, and held him. But in many cases, it's demonstrated that the gun even fired and cycled with mud in the tube in the barrel and the bullet lodged there, and it allowed for the weapon to cycle more than once. It's still kind of operated. It depends on where the bullets stopped and remember the garand that port your port deflector is way down on the end of the barrel be a different story if it was an m14 However, there were no catastrophic failures. There's no rifle blowing up There's only one movie that actually depicted that they got hacked real bad years ago was played back in the 70s It was going to blow up as like the garands don't blow up You know, the guy was all horribly mutilated or he was like, like, ah, look, I fooled you and your weapon blew up. Well, even if you wanted it to, it would. OK, pretty much. I mean, granted, he's overrated anything. I'm sure that would take care of it. But so anyway, the idea behind this is that the technology has already been in place for a very long time. to create a very safe action. We've done it for more than 100 years. This is 2022 and it's about 1922 when the first of the double heat receiver productions really cranked out. The rest of the world followed us, by the way. What we did, everybody else realized, hey, that's not a bad idea. Now, it doesn't mean they throw any of the older guns away. It couldn't afford to. And besides, they would go on to serve in little brush wars. And the next war, World War II, the adventure continues. And even into the Korean War and Vietnam, every weapon built for the last hundred years before that, oh, everything got thrown into the fray. In this case, the 6.8, it looks like the punkajunk, but it's going to be interesting to see how we can be ahead of the game. The big thing is, we also want to make sure that we're able to take advantage of whatever critical components. And one of the other things that's already been talked about is if the 6.8 becomes a dominant magazine system, magazine is, and that's the key, is perishables, okay? The magazine being employed into the AR-10 with a modification of the AR-10 is the thing that needs to be looked at. In other words, the AR-10 pattern is already out there for us. It's readily available over the counter. Guys, if you want to build an AR-10, and this is the other thing I was going to ask for some help with, is we're looking for best price AR-10 upper and lower sets, or at least uppers and lowers that are out there in the inventory. I was asked about one today that it was a complete upper and lower AR-10 billet cut, $239 for the set. top and bottom sold out almost immediately. Okay, so we're curious if anybody has run into anything like that for the AR 10 and yes understand there are differences. Sadly enough people did something really stupid in the AR 10 family. They made some proprietary parts just like I was talking about before. Well, you're gonna have to buy this part because it's from us. So unlike the AR-15s, which for the most part everything is interchangeable, for the most part you do have remember you do have piston driven all kinds of stuff out there. But the basics if we can't go one way and the AR-10 mag will not work in the new 6.8. Remember, we might be able to take the 6.8 magazine and come up with an adapter system to integrate that magazine so we can take advantage of the mass production that the government in theory, in theory, will make. Guys, be ahead of the curve. There's all kinds of cool things that we can do with this. Most important is we got the ammunition issue pretty well dealt with. And the unsung heroes of the reloading, the reloading sphere has already taken hold and everybody's actually, I think to be quite honest, the Sable round is probably going to be the best choice as always. The advantage, we can use any of the 762, or forgive me, the 556 projectiles, or we can make solid steel heat treated. projectiles that could load right into the Sabo they leave they're not going to affect the barrel but when they go down range their armor penetration would be much greater basically it is the penetrator itself flying through the air so that can be done easily CNC machinery cranks about cheap and with some of the older machines you commit them to the stupidest dumbest thing that they can do and cranking out a bunch of bullets is one of them so the old old technology You don't necessarily use that for all the newest work. You are most delicate. You do that for the crude work, like bullet production. Or I should say, dart production, because that's really what this comes down to. Anyway, ideas, not just complaining about the problems. And we need to have ideas. Plant seeds. So, if you can run into, you can do a search and help me during the program here. How's that sound? I know that CDN and Sports has a bunch of AR-10 parts still in inventory. Which means that if you were selective other than the upper and lower receiver and the uppers are readily available It's the lowest that you're gonna have to you know be a new persnickety with It would not be a difficult to put in really nice AR 10 together for now with the advanced idea that pop pop You know two pins off and pop pop two pins on and all of a sudden you got a 6.8 government AR 10 Might be a really good idea Just like those ARs you've got out there that are 556, 762x39, and 300 Blackout. And whatever else you chose. And there's still all the Grendel rounds and everything else. The Grendel cartridge is still very, very popular. And it's not going away right away. What's going to probably overshadow it is the fact, the choice of the... particular loading that the government has come up with that SIG talked him into because SIG's what did it I don't think I don't think I don't think there's that much left in the way of gray matter in the Pedogram as far as procurement goes. It's all abuse and hordom right now. So In betrayal, but it's just the way it is. It's accepted. We've seen it before. It's nothing new anyway Let's see next couple of the things magazines we've been talking about air mags air 10 mags, but Don't forget over at Center Fire Systems, they've had some pretty good buys on AK and AR mags. The Turkish mags are coming in in a couple of different patterns, whatever you want to call them. There are three or four different Polymer AR mags that are Turkish coming in, including a variation on the relatively cheap smoked plastic, not throwaways, but they're not the most sophisticated magazine. They do work. Everybody that's got them says they like them. But they're not going to take as much abuse because of the chips, the polymer that they chose. It's more rigid, but it's also probably in the long run going to be breaking down on you. Okay, parts will break. I will remind you again if you get them for cheap, like under $5 a piece though, you buy a whole bucket of them and you put those into your dump bags. Like we've said many times, you put those into your breakout kits. You're gonna shoot them and drop them. You may get to pick them up or somebody will, but then again you probably won't. On the other hand, those really nice, you know, fill in the blank, your favorite magazine that costs $29.95 or $16.95, well you make sure those are on your combat load and they stay right where they're supposed to be. But the other mags, don't poo-poo them because you're gonna need chuckables. Or here's the other thing. I don't want to give that guy my P-Mags, I spent love about dollars for them. Okay, well how about you have a pile of the other mags, because you got a friend or at least a person of like mine that shows up and they have two magazines. They have ammunition maybe even, but they don't have enough magazines. So handing out four or five dollar magazines so that you can bring the guy up to stuff means that he might shoot somebody that'll prevent you from dying. Okay, so it'd be who of you to have piles of magazines? Now the lesser cheaper mags, you know, you know, beggars can't be choosy as somebody shows up. Well, man, I burned everything in my bags and I dropped them and I got two bags left. Okay, hold on. What do you got? Air? Okay, hold on here. I tell you what, there's six more mags for you. And by the way, we'll make a trade or maybe you'll pay for them. You guys figure that out. Partered exchange, guys. Now, the only thing is the AK mags and center fire system still has a really good price on again, the Turkish smoked polymer mags. I don't know if they've gone out again. They've been restocking. So if they're out for the moment, don't get frustrated. They have restocked several times now. And these mags are serviceable enough. I've seen them. They work. They're just, again, they're similar to the Eagle Polymer mags from the 80s and they're actually, yeah, late 80s and into the 90s. The difference is they don't say Eagle. They're Turkish and they have lots of numbers and lots of letters You know, it's the XL 314 kick them all kill them all zoom begun magazine I don't know who the Turks are hiring. But anyway, they just love those numbers more consonants and vowels But in reality, it's an air 15 magazine or an AK mag or whatever They work, and again, what you do is prioritize them. The other consideration is that you're gonna bury a gun. You don't bury the most expensive gun you got. You buy something that's reasonably priced. You take those really cheap magazines and a bunch of the cheapest ammo you can get, and that's what you bury. And then when the time comes, and you have to dig them up, and you rearm yourself maybe because you're bare butt naked with a towel hanging around your arse. Well, then you go plan a not blazing on inequity and some kind of Hollywood pop up movie expedition. You're gonna be mean and you're gonna pick the time when you can get poor Chao Chu Bang out there, you know, taking a piss. And you're gonna club him to death, but you got the gun there just in case. And you're gonna take the really nice gun he's carrying that his government gave him or our government gave him. Cuz it's not an if, it's just a when the communist Chinese will be working hand in glove with a Pentagon. After all, good old General Miley already told you he'd betray the whole damn country. He was so proud and all of those commies that are in the Congress, they were so proud that he stated he'd betray all of America. So why are you not thinking that he's not gonna bring communist troops on American soil? Hell, he's probably already got them here. We know they got him in Canada. So, again, which will probably be a good idea to actually do a little review. What are the Chinese presently carrying? What is it you're probably gonna see in the field? Unless, of course, again, the US government brings the Chinese troops over and make sure that they're integrated. Maybe they'll get SIG rifles. So the Miley Cyrus and the Pedogram will give the communist Chinese sig rifles to kill Americans cuz he already told you he'd betray ya. So he's planning on betraying ya, he's public about it. Can't say he wasn't honest. That traitor told everybody exactly where he's coming from. And you all better be thinking about that too. And they made it public for days on hell. They were hogging them and they were so proud. First of many American generals to utterly betray the United States and it's why I tell no I anybody who thinks they want to go on the military right now No way in hell. They're but they've got bonuses. Yeah, who cares? What's your life worth? The traders have already told you they'll betray every man woman and you know every veteran that's out there in uniform right now So as far as I'm concerned a piss off Now, you wanna protect the country? Organize armed equipment train as militia. Establish a 510 program in your area of operation. Stand up for the Bill of Rights, the Constitution, the Declaration of Independence. And if any asset tells you that, well, that's racist. Well, then piss on them, I write their name down and know that that's another jackass who's an enemy of America. Just that simple, I don't care about what they think about us. The fools are, first of all, it's your enemy. Most common mistake made your enemy. Why are you worried about? There's nothing you're gonna do to make them like you doesn't make any risk what you do If you're stupid enough to lick their hind end, they'll ask for more They'll expect you after you clean one butt cheek to finish the job and do the other butt cheek What's and by the way fix the metal fix the middle liquid toilet paper? So I don't know where some people's heads are right now. But anyway, I do their idiots. Okay, there are a bunch idiots out there So anyway, it looked at the 10 Senate horrors that are betraying the American people right now that are gonna help to grab the guns. Anyway, last but not least, real quick here, somebody asked about handguns again. At High Point, I actually had an email here a few days ago that I had a chance to look at. Forgive me, I didn't follow up on it at the time, but it's Weapons Wednesday. I don't know yet again what High Point is doing. You know, high points, high point carbine and high point pistol is all just south of us in Ohio. I have not had time to really, you know, do any research or find out whether they have a problem with getting back up in production after the Corona beer virus scam. They do have a regular production run. I mean, we're seeing nine millimeters, 40 calibers. We've seen a bunch of the different high point car beans. So again, I don't know. I really don't know why we're not seeing more of them. There's certainly no problem marketing them. And a lot of people are interested in them and they may not be a Cadillac, but as a body act, they work just fine. And they get the job done. Most important is of all the weapons out there, the high point is not finicky about anything. It will shoot everything. That's the most fascinating thing about the gun. You can't say that about most any other weapon system out there. Not the SIGs, not the Glocks, none of them. When it comes to, you know, inane or whatever ammo you happen to pick up, one thing the high point does, you pull the trigger, goes boom and reloads. Even with abused or really bizarre ammunition that really shouldn't work. Go ahead, Culver, chip in there. You could put a second bullet in that barrel. and then fire a regular round behind it and get a two-fer out of it and it still wouldn't arm the weapon. Right. What'll happen is it'll just keep working. That's the scary part, guys. I don't know if it's still listed. It's now more than a few years old. It's high point, you know, man versus high point pistol. And it started out, it was going to be one video because they were going to blow the gun up because everybody bad mouthed the high point. Then they made a second video because the gun survived. Then they made a third video because no matter how hard they tried, they sawed parts off the gun. They hammered stuff through the gun. They hammered a bolt into the end of the barrel. You want to try that with a Glock? You think about that. Nobody will. How about your multi- thought, oh, I wouldn't do it. My sink's expensive. Well, guess what? It probably would also. Your sink wouldn't survive that. Nor have I seen anybody do what really should be called the high point hammer test. Because they hammered that poor little pistol. They saw the trigger guard off. They wanted to weaken the gun to try and blow it up. They saw the trigger guard off, which does make sense because it is an integrated frame component. And then they jammed a bolt down the end. They did everything they could. They came up with a medicine ball load, like I was telling you about, grossly over pressured rounds, multiple. And the weapon continued to function. So I don't want to hear any BS about the high point. It's just a Pontiac, nothing fancy. Be quite honest. I asked somebody a couple of times that was kind of able to have high points here. You know what scared the hell out of me is if high point really wanted to have some fun. They could machine the outside to look like one of the old, what is it, P7, not P7, it's a P5. Anyway, the blowback HK that was made back in the 60s, it cost, you know, like over a thousand some odd dollars in 60s dollars, okay? The big brag about the gun is that it was like, there were like seven parts to the weapon. And it was a big, big slide blowback pistol. By the way, it was also built select fire. Now, if they were fun, they could have some tongue-in-cheek fun. Somebody could build a slide that could virtually look just like that HK, and you wouldn't know the difference. You couldn't tell the difference until you got close to the weapon. So what's the difference? Styling. It's just not fancy. It works. It does what it's supposed to do. And for most of the people, the high point is no different. We're going to hate this one. is no different from the original mission statement and purpose for building the Glock. The Glock was supposed to be a throwaway gun. You could have pallet bins full of them just laying in the box. And all you had to do is reach in, pull it out, throw it to a cook, throw it to a driver, hand them a bag full of magazines and a bag full of ammo and say, here you go. Now, if somebody attacks you, shoot them with this thing. If it breaks, bring it back. We'll give you another one. Because we aren't gonna fix the one you broke which is give you another one That was the criteria for the Glock pistol and the high point fits the all of the all of the criteria For the original premise for the Glock. Oh my god Marcus committed sacrilege or Glock or Glock or Ridge. I've committed Glock or Ridge Don't worry. I love all guns. I don't care what they are. You can show up with wherever you show up with boy. I'm gonna love you I now say nice things about Sig, but that's because I know better. They're not our friend. Anyway, we are at the top for everybody out there, guys. Gotta take a little bit of a break. We're just past the top of the hour here. And it is Weapons Wednesday. Your mind is your first, best weapon. God is the republic. It's the thoughts, the sons of liberty. The 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. But tyrants labored endlessly while your parents were asleep. Your freedom's gone, your courage lost, you're no more than a slave. In this, the land of the free, the brave. You buy permits to travel and permits to own a gun. Permits to start a business or to build a place for one. On land that you believe you own, you pay a yearly rent. Although you have no voice in saying how the money's spent. Your children must attend a school that doesn't educate. And your Christian values can't be taught. According to the state, you read about the current news in a regulated press and you pay a tax you do not owe to please the IRS. Your money is no longer made of silver nor of gold. You trade your wealth for paper so your life can be controlled. You pay for crimes that make our nation turn from God and shame. You've taken Satan's number. You've traded in your name. You've given government control to those who do you harm so they could burn down churches and seize the family farm and keep our country deep in debt. Put men of God in jail. Harash your fellow countrymen while corrupted courts prevail. Your public servants don't uphold the solemn oaths they've sworn. And your daughters visit doctors so their children 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 torture freedom burning bright. As I awoke, he'd vanished in the mist from whence he came. His words were true, we are not free, but we have ourselves to blame. For even now as tyrants trample each God given right we only watch in tremble too afraid to stand and fight If he stood by your bedside in a dream while you were asleep and wondered what remains of the freedoms he'd fought to keep What would be your answer if he called out from the grave? Dill the land of the I wonder why the Ukraine Conflict isn't really out there on the front page anymore But he has opposed things are oh, oh, that's right. We're not supposed to talk about that now remember introvert extrovert extrovert introvert Mmm back and forth sucking and blowing distraction versus distraction versus yet another distraction Anyway, we got two American mercenaries. Oh well Yeah, no, no, it's just one thing I keep thinking about is like, wow, $40 billion just hit the spit griddle there and gone. On this, 15% of what they've been promised by the way, because it was so important to get there right away. No, I'm sorry. I didn't do your intro. Yeah, it got somewhere. Good afternoon, ladies and gentlemen. This is the second hour of the afternoon. intelligence report. I am our kirky. One day closer to victory for all our brothers and sisters, both on and behind the lines in occupied territory, southwest, northeast, east, and central. Ladies and gentlemen, you're listening to us on www.libertytreeradio.4mg.com, libertytreeradio.org. and we are on satellite once you hide all of our global listeners via the satellite system, satellite phones, etc. Large format, you know, KU, man, forgive me, etc. We're literally everywhere on the globe with that particular idea and merchant marine are the ones making it happen in many cases. We're also in a myriad of other communications technologies, both inside and outside the United States. It is Weapons Wednesday. It is the 15th of June. 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 Old Earth Calendar, 2022 Battle for the Republic, The Dance of Swords. And a couple of things here real quick. The last hour I was focusing on this new 6.8 project, but also the 6.8 government round. One of the things we have to be ahead of the page on, we have to be ahead of the whole curve on this, is being able to employ every round that might be made available to our sector when the time comes. If it's acquired, will it be, can it be used? Now the best solution is the LEGO block AR-15 and AR-10 platform of rifle because they are very user friendly towards an old fast conversion to something else. Needless to say, the bad guys hate this idea. The globalists of course are going to play the game they always have where you let everybody do things and then you completely shift directions. Not an accident, they're trying to of course make you really believe all of a sudden whatever you've got is going to be obsolete. which is kind of comical in of itself because realistically we have two overlapping projects here that in of itself are gonna make everybody scratch their ass and go, huh, what am I talking about? Well, did the Marine Corps just buy a whole brand new pile of rifles from somebody? They just bought a brand new rifle and spent how much per weapon? Over $3,500 per gun? $3,500. The average infantry weapon at peak production typically is hundreds of dollars. But all of a sudden, by God, when the brown envelopes are a flying and everybody's, well, not worried about pissing your money away because they can take it at gunpoint. And those soldiers, government, that's their job. When the time comes to help put a gun to your head and steal whatever they want to steal from the American people because after all, government has a right to do that. And you don't have a right to anything you own. as far as the Communists go, which is why all these military types are really loving the new Communist regime agenda. Not all, but the latest purple-haired versions with the red slippers, okay? So what happens if the Marine Corps drops on the ground while the Army is in the same location? Because the whole argument here is one caliber does everything. Okay, well, that's cool. We've been doing that for a long time. But the Army's got the 6.8 round. And there is no indication that the new rifle, which by the way is, again, a foreign contract gun for the Marine Corps, which is a significant projection force, they're going to be using 5.56. Now, since they just committed to this super brand new idea, It's not likely that they're gonna be told that they need to just drop it a few years down the road because now all of a sudden we got this new 6.8 round. Now it doesn't mean that your tax dollars won't be wasted that way because the one thing the pentagram is good for is chucking money out the back door off a fantail every chance they get. Their job is to waste material, wars of waste. We understand how that works. Okay, destruction. Kind of like if you ever watch that movie the fifth element remember what he explained about you know the look what happens I dropped this glass anybody remember the fifth element the seat in the office for all little machines look I break the glass all these things are busy fixing and cleaning and Changing and I look all and I did that my I did that Okay, so understand that's the war idea too, especially if they don't even have to use it in war. They can just waste resource after resource with no consideration for the waste element with regard to your loss of time, lifetime. Okay, so let's understand. We're cool. We're embracing the game, so to speak, in that respect. We're going to use whatever they make. So the big thing here is Well, if everybody yaps about how, well, what good would it do for you? Your logistics would be all over the place. Well, I don't see anything really up here on the horizon for the Department of Defense is looking too cool. And a big chunk of what the DOD, Donate of Destruction is also buying is almost all foreign made. They're not counting on American production. The companies that are gonna benefit and profit from all of these projects, the profits are all going overseas and leaving the United States. So that doesn't help the taxpayer in any way, shape, or form. And it doesn't protect the taxpayer either because the very idea of these proprietary systems, the way they're doing this, is purely to embrace the globalist agenda when it comes to disarmament. So let's just understand that part real quick too. Okay? Mark? Go ahead, call and jump in there. Yeah, this is Todd down in Orlando. You're talking about magazines and there's some sites that are offering cheaper than PMEG priced magazines for 31 magazines. And I posted a video on the Discord and I think people need to watch it. It's called the MFT Magazine Issues, Unfit for Duty Use. And the name of MFT is Mission First Tactical and they use a cheaper polymer And I guess what happens is when you load it with rounds, 30 rounds, and you tap on it or drop it, some of the rounds come out. And the reason is it's not as sturdy of a... It's enough for you to carry it and to use it, but if you drop it or bump it, then rounds are gonna fly out of it. So if you see these magazines, I think I've seen them for like six bucks each, don't buy them. Because the main thing is, like in my case, I buy a lot of these 30 round magazines just for investment purposes. If they ever do declare a ban on further production of 30 round magazines, the price is going to go through the roof like during Sandy Hook. So that's why I bought a lot of these. But they won't hold their value like a PMAG does. So PMAGs works, there's no issues with them. There's a lot of... Do a search on YouTube to see if... before you buy a magazine to see if they've done some kind of torture tests on it before you buy it. That way you know you're given what you pay for. That being said, Apex Gun Parts still has these steel-setting magazines for seven bucks apiece. We bought them last year for six bucks apiece. We still got them for seven if you buy ten or more. Yep. So... Real quick, before I go away from that, let me help everybody understand something. You guys may have seen these. In fact, if you go to colmans.com and punch in AR-15 magazines, magazine pouches, you're going to run into something. You're going to go, what the hell are these things? The Israelis were the first to do this type of punk and junk magazine. You might recall they actually the magazine were first of all was built to be absolutely the cheapest possible The magazine then was ensconced in a magazine carrier shell the shell Actually has a couple of belt loop slots in it so you can put it on whatever gear you got or slide it onto your H suspender or whatever and These were designed to be shoot them and forget magazines Now, the Israelis, we paid for that project by the way, it was American dollars and they were trying to get the US government to buy this in the colonial mindset that, you know, the government would have magazines, but if you dropped any, nobody else could do much with them. What's interesting is after they built these and then they stopped the program because it didn't go anywhere, nobody wanted to buy, you know, these mags, they ended up out there on the market because they were Israeli made for about $10 apiece. But understand that these were designed to be like I've said they were like they were designed to say We're not gonna we're not gonna build stripper clips, which is really what the bandolier system is now with the molly We're gonna just give you piles of not really great magazines and you just fire them and drop them Oh, you're breaking up you broke up there repeat again Are you talking about the Israeli warlight magazines, the black flash? Yep, they came out way back. The original model came out way back in the late 70s. We paid for it. Our government money paid for it. This is always the case. Israelis are parasites. They're a polypon our ass. And what they do is they they suck money left and right. Well, this project went full course. They actually had them out there. They did use, I think, the same mold. to build a wall. They modified it, they carved it out, made it heavier, made it thicker, and then they actually cranked out a second and third generation magazine that was totally different from the original design, but it also didn't come with the proprietary clam shell to protect it from breakage. So this idea is not, you know, the idea of this is, as I said, if you rate the magazines, It's like the Turkish ones, the Turkish AK mags, the ones that are over at center fire systems. They're only like $3, $4 a piece still. Now, they're the greatest mag? Nope. I figured they're going to be good for bah, bah, bah, bah, bah, bah, bah, bah, bah, bah, bah, bah, bah, bah, bah, bah, bah, bah, bah, bah, bah, bah, bah, bah, bah, bah, bah, bah, bah, bah, bah, bah, bah, bah, bah, bah, bah, bah, bah, bah, bah, bah, bah, bah, bah, bah, bah, bah, bah, bah, bah, bah, bah, bah, bah, bah, b and say the better quality mags that we know are out there. And again, there's aluminum, there's stainless, there's conventional steel, carbon steel. There is polymer of all types. So we can pick and choose whatever happens to be available in the market that might be more affordable as they become available. But even the lesser mags, as long as you, if we already understand that they may have an issue. That's why those mags go into the drop pouch. They go into your breakout kits or they go into your, you know, the 10% reserve that you have that's part of the second echelon where you have the like the, well, here's what we do. The government bandoliers used to be cheap. The six mag pocket, AR-15 bandoliers and ACU. Well, you take those lesser mags and you load each one of those up. And when the time comes, they get loaded up with ammo, and they're sitting in your second, third, and fourth defensive lines. Are they great? No, not great, but you know what? They'll kill somebody dead in a doornail for at least a little bit while you're putting them in a magazine, a weapon, a magazine while in Drano dumping them down on the aggressor. That's how you rate things, guys. Nothing is cast away. If I were picking up battlefield discards, we would rate the parts that we pick up accordingly the same way. You know, even if it's dead or dinged, if it is metal, we'll try to straighten it out. Would I make it my first line priority mag? No, but if it's all I had, I would. It's just the idea that we can probably do better right now and we can. But these reasonably priced mags, if they will stay together for what they're designed to do, rate them and use them accordingly. Consider them, for instance, defensive position mags. You're not gonna bounce them around. You're not gonna carry them in tactical configuration. Okay, think about it this way. Anybody ever watch, I love the one thing about, I don't have much use for Game of Thrones, okay? It's basically hacking and chopping porn, which is cool, but with soap operas combined with hacking and chopping rules, right? But one of the things that impressed me about the series is they did a really good job of accurately depicting fortifications and how they would actually be put together, castle defenses. If you pay attention to that series, you have barrels of arrows. When you see when they're walking the defensive positions of the castles, they have barrels of arrows every so many feet. Were those the most sophisticated and most accurate arrow available on the planet? Nope, they were made by Bob. Bob lives off in the woods. Bob has a real crude lathe. He spins out real straight shafts or straighten off, maybe they're not 100%, but they don't need to be. Because the arsenal armorer needs a whole bunch of arrows. He needs thousands of arrows. So it's got to have a sharp, pointy piece of metal on the end. It has to be properly affixed. It has to be a simple shaft. It can even break when it hits. You don't care because that'll do damage because it'll break off inside someone. Think about these mags and how many different ways you can employ them or explain to people how they can be used when the time comes. These are the mags that sit next to the parapet, so to speak, next to the defensive position in those little cans you lay sideways. Where you take a 50 caliber can. and you lay it sideways and you put it in the sandbags and right next to your shooting position there's 10 mags sitting there. They're never going to get carried anywhere. They're going to get stuffed in a weapon. They're going to be burned out and they're going to hit the floor. Think about it that way. Always remember, this is how you prioritize things. Now that P-mag you got, well let's go to my combat gear. And the best mags I have, like I've told you, always make sure they're first carry. And then all the rest are the other stuff. It's that simple, but we don't throw away or discard anything. I had this conversation. I've had this conversation for 30 going on 40 years now with different people. Well, I got rid of all of these mags and got the others. Why were the other ones paid for? Yeah. Well, you didn't get anything but chump change for them. Oh, yeah. So why did you get rid of them? You already paid for them. You already have them. The newer latest idea came out. But if you bought new to replace the others, now you have twice as many mags. And more is is gooder guys no matter what no matter what more is better Okay, simple go ahead jump in there So yesterday was communications Tuesday, and we didn't get a chance to talk about communication yesterday But I had called in last week, and I was talking about a thicker CB radio that was for sale on eBay and it was the I Told you there was an ESB Trinidad And it had a mod on the faceplate that a lot of other, you don't see these mods on CB radios very much. And it's only mostly because if we got it out of the fade sale, the guy who passed on did the mod and it made it more functional. The reason I'm bringing it up is because I talked about it. It's only $45. and 20 bucks shipping, but there's a make-off on it as well. I assume that the switch on the front is probably a switch to either operate the knob, which transfers it goes from 23 channel to whatever the added channels are, it might be something else. You're not gonna know until you put a frequency counter on it. The reason I'm bringing it up is I made a comment to someone the other day who, this person is, You know, they're starting to have their they had their epiphany everybody did in 2020 But a lot of these people that had their epiphany and they bought their first AR 15 now They're they're back into well, let's see what happens during midterms mode They still don't get it and I'm just wondering how many people that are listening to this show if we could take a poll What the person said to me was? I sent them a link to this CB radio and they said, well, ham radio is better than CB, so I'm going to get a ham radio. I said, how long have you said that you're going to get a ham radio or that you're going to go and get your ham radio license? Oh, yeah, but I'd rather get a ham radio. Okay, well, this is exponentially less than a ham radio, and you can have a CB set up with an antenna, a pole, and some coax cable for about $225. You know, I'm going to get a ham radio because it's better. Okay, I can't stress enough to people who are listening when the balloon goes up. The information that is going to be broadcast on channel 19 is going to be priceless. And some of this information is not going to be on ham radio. Ham radio is going to be good to have. 2 meter, 70 centimeter, 6 meter. That's all going to be good information to have. But the thing is, getting information on channel 19 on CB radio is better than not getting any information at all because you never got the CB radio because you're too good to get a CB radio and you wanted to get a ham radio instead that you never got because you never took the time to do it because you found out the ham radio minimum cost right now is about a thousand dollars. Plus the antenna and everything else you look at about 1500 bucks to set up an AM radio Whereas you can get into a CV radio right now Even if it's just 23 channel and it doesn't have single sideband you can get into it right now for like 225 I don't know why people have this attitude of I'm too good to get a CV radio, but it seems to be prevalent among a lot of people who are I'm not gonna say in the militia, but a lot of people who are into guns and you know some people into prepping I've talked to people in the prepping and They don't want to get a CB radio as high there is because it's like well I'm gonna get a ham radio, but they never do and I think a lot of people In the militia movement who has been around since the 90s if they haven't got a CB radio yet They're cheap right now. They're going to be expensive in about a month. They're going to be about three times as much in about a month, I bet you. I bet you in about a month it's going to be $500 to $600 to set up a bare-bones CB radio. So, just saying. Well, again, the big thing here is you guys can't share a radio to begin with. One of the problems with a lot of people say, well, I'm gonna get a radio that does everything. I know a lot of people who have bought those like the Kenwoods. There's some beautiful Kenwoods, usually. I'll be quite honest, where do we find them? Truck drivers, usually truckers. And the truckers usually even come right to the gas station or the diesel station where you can meet them. And they'll have one or two brand new old inventory in the box. And they're going to cost you hundreds and hundreds of dollars, if not over $1,000 now for a radio that used to cost $300. The thing is, even if you do get it, the problem I have with most people talking about ham radio, is that you still can't share the equipment. If you are running a particular part of the radio bandwidth on that radio, you can't jump back and forth, or you can't listen simultaneously to other activity going on up and down the radio spectrum. It makes more sense because it is cost efficient right now to buy a CB radio and have it free standing and separate. Why? Well, just like we were talking about these magazines, most of what I need to do on CB, I wouldn't be doing say for strategic slash long range communications, although I can, because CB will reach an incredible distance depending on how I engineer it. But right out of the box, CB is immediately user friendly. There's nothing you really have to learn about it, guys. And it's one of those things where if you have it, you can have another operator sitting there listening with a headphone to a CB radio set while you've got another person working, like we've said many times, FRS. And you can have yet another person who's a strategic communications monitor who's watching, we all seeing, physically listening to what's going on in the upper frequency bandwidth, depending on what you choose to listen to. Because some of this stuff is gonna be unobtainium as quickly as the government chooses to block it, okay? I'm talking about the equipment itself. The feds have watched Hamfest for years just like the feds watch gun shows. Most people don't realize that. When you come in and start buying a whole bunch of stuff at a Hamfest, if you pay attention to your traffic and most people are oblivious to this, you've got a whole bunch of characters who are the same kind of rats and spies. in every, from every government agency. We got a bunch of noise. Somebody's really beating the hell out of something. I want to mute up for just a second. But anyway, my point is that right now you can still, as you just said, you can buy CB for a very reasonable price. Guys, watch estate sales, watch resale shops. I've got a resale shop. I buy every CB radio that he gets now, and I just keep stacking them up. Today, I didn't get any radios, but I did get a couple of other handheld devices or electronic support technology that helped keep everything running. Now, when he does have stuff come in, I literally clean him out now. Okay, I mean, mics. Antennas, coax, radio rigs themselves, both mobile and sometimes base. But you can't share these things. It's like a gun. You can't share them. Okay? Radio technology, by the way, if you have to select and keep bouncing up and down the dial, you may miss something. This has been a discussion I've had for years. Guys, I've got all kinds of people who are RO's that... run some of the neatest most sophisticated equipment the size of say two packs of cigarettes Sit right between the dash do everything you can want it to on radio But they can't do anything other than one thing at a time And as I pointed out if you wanted to set up a radio grid You're gonna need a CB radio. You're gonna need an FRS radio. You should have a marine radio And then you still want that ham radio, but to work in the specialized areas of interest, not the common podiac areas. Like I've said before, your ham radio is for Cadillac work, but the CB radio is a yeoman's machine. The marine radio is a yeoman's machine. These are the areas, these are the pieces of technology that do the lion's share of the common work. I'm looking to be whiz, you know, whiz bang daddy. I'm looking, you know, I'm trying to get along every day with, you know, all the other issues that we're going to have to be dealing with, not just a military application, but civilian application. You know, the 800 meg towers are either going to get knocked down by us because we're just going to decide that that really is a distraction. and also a tracking system or the other side's gonna shut it off but they won't shut them down. I've told you a million times, if you're carrying a cell phone, you'll carry it if it doesn't work. And you know what that means? Everywhere you go where you're carrying it, you're tracked. So you carried a tracking device at your expense, which by the way you also paid for, that is monitoring you nonstop. Now we accept that with cell phones, okay? But the fact is that if they want to lock down anything that has to do with being able to use the cell phone, it is absolutely in their camp. All of the other conventional radio, and the only one that's a variation on this is marine, only, or forgive me, two meter, not marine. Marine were freestyle. But with two meter, many of your two meter systems still rely upon for long range, the repeater grid. But everything else, you can do it right out of the box, right there in your car, right there in your house. And CB is part of that, but CB should be the priority because it's the fastest, easiest one to get online. If you're procrastinating on it, I can understand that there are a lot of distractions. I mean, I have enough to do in 24 hours of the day that I have. But still, if you have not done it, it's so ridiculous just to go out and find the equipment and at least have it on hand. Even if you don't take seriously putting it up, if you have it on hand, we can work it out. We'll figure it out. Somebody will show up that's more of a geek than you are maybe, and they'll finish what you started. But it's not that difficult. It's not that sophisticated. It's not like we're talking super rocket science here. It's very, very, very plug and play AR-15 type user friendly. That's really how serious it is. It's how simple it is. CB radio if you can't figure it out by God they all they can go to truck stop and put anything you want up within a few minutes. You know that anything they've got in the glass. You should be able to put together out in the out in the out in the parking lot. So you figure that out. You can't do that with a ham radio necessarily if you there are some rigs. There are some sophisticated rigs and truck stops. It'll work up into many of the ham elements. There are some stores that are better than others, but not very many. So CB is still, it's the working frequency and they're the working machines. Plus here's the other thing, how much you gonna pay for that ham rig? But your cost is gonna be on a ham rig right now to get a good mobile. And I mentioned one Ken Woods used to be the one everybody that was because again, there's a lot of people who worked on them. We've had people come up on the air. That's what they have done is work nothing but Ken Woods rebuild them. But you get brand new old inventory out of the box never issued. Okay, used to be a $300 machine. Now that's an $1,800 machine. See exact same one we were buying. I meet the guy at the truck stop on Baker Road. One of the guys wanted the radio. We'd meet up. He'd open up the back end of the box and he'd go, yep, I got these two left. Another guy just showed up and he bought the third one. Well, pick out whichever one you want. Well, that was $300 and it was significant money, but now it's a lot more significant. Okay, and it requires more sophistication to bring online. Not much, but still some. And it's very unuser friendly because of the anal retentive control freaks that you have out there that right now believe that they should be the only ones on those frequencies. And government created the licensing system for a reason because they knew that anal retentive control freaks would gravitate towards that system. And like everything else, it would drive people away, therefore, negating the number of systems that would be available and in use when the time came. And of course, now then, of course, all those people thought they were special pet puppies. Remember that? Ham radio operators are there for the emergency. What happened after Katrina? They considered the ham radio operators enemy combatants, enemy aggressors. They didn't want any of the ham operators. FEMA told all these ham operators, go kick rocks. So their logic is A, they got everybody powered down, they got everybody peeled back, and then after that, whatever excuse they had for existing, which was supposed to be semi-official, it just hamstrung all of them. Now, it doesn't mean that the grid didn't get set up, it did. But in and of itself, that was kind of, that was contrary to the regime, to the whole globalist FEMA agenda. How dare you do that? How dare you? Hey Mark. Go ahead, jump in there. Yeah, but one thing about CB radio is it's not really like, okay, I'm getting a CB radio and I have to set up, you know, a situation where I'm going to be transmitting to people and sending information out. It's not like that. The reason I tell people to do this is because there's a whole lot more people on CB radio than we think. And a lot of these people that are already acclimated to CB radio like the truckers. are going to have information that is information out on the road. And I think probably the most pertinent information that truckers have been putting out there right now is the fact that they're all sitting on the side of the road because a lot of these loves and pilots don't have any diesel. Okay. So right now, if you jump on, let's say you have a base station at your house and let's say your base station, you have an antenna that reaches over the top. of the roof line of your home. The ground plane goes over the roof line, which is pretty easy to set up, no big deal. And then if you have a two-story home and you have a chimney on your home, you can take a galvanized pipe and tap on it into your chimney, put a serial CB antenna for about 150 bucks on that, and you will hear everything going on on the planet. And the thing is, you don't have to say anything. You don't have to jump on and say, hey, what's going on out there with this or that? You're going to hear it. If you're on channel 19, or if you have a radio that you can just bounce up and down the frequencies and listen to what's being said, you will have already had the information before these people on YouTube even put it up there when they go and start interviewing these people in the parking lots and the gas station. So that's what I'm seeing is that a lot of these people are going to take their you know, when everything grinds to a halt, they're going to take their rig out of their truck and they're going to put it in their house. And they're going to hook it up to a, you know, the base station in their house, even if they have got one or not. And they're still going to be broadcasting information. So this is information that if you have an antenna, you got it up in the air, you're going to be able to hear, okay, we're over five miles away. at this intersection and this is going on over here. There's a shortage of this over here. There's a problem over here. There's something going on over there because here's the thing. People don't understand that all these cell tower antennas are run off electricity, which is produced mainly by either coal or diesel. Okay, how do they get the coal to go to the power plant to run the cell phone tower? A lot of these cell phone towers are just going to you know, be defunct and they're going to go down. And it's going to be the same with a lot of the radio stations. You have an AM radio station that has a 50,000 watt antenna. Well, how much money does it cost in electricity to run a 50,000 watt antenna 24 hours a day? So your AM radio might go defunct too. But there's always going to be people on CB radio because it's peer to peer transmission. And that's the main thing about ham radio and CB radio is that you don't need a cell phone tower in between. You don't need AM FM radio receiver to hear it. You don't need a license to broadcast in case you want to pop in and say something. And it's not it's not illegal to operate. A lot of people think it's illegal to operate a CB radio. They don't have them anymore because it's illegal. Well, I'm telling you that one of the best ways to get your information, that the cell towers go down and the radio stations go down, is gonna be CV radio. You're gonna be surprised how many people are on them. So, I don't know, I keep harping on this to everyone, knowing I've got like five base stations and I probably have 20 handhelds. Everybody keeps buying the bow things. And I'm telling them everybody is on a bow thing. If you want to be in a group of guys and you want to talk to each other, get CB radios. Now we don't talk on CB radios because nobody talks on CB radios anymore. I'm saying that's the whole point. If you're just broadcasting between each other and you're a mile apart or a half mile apart from each other, CB radio is perfect. The handhelds are only going to go out to about a mile and a half, two miles anyway. So you might as well get a CB radio. And especially if you want to stay in touch with the base station and listen to what they have to say from 10 miles away, you can still do that with a handheld. So I kind of hope I'm missing a lot and people aren't getting it. So I'm just saying people aren't getting it. That's all. Well, a percentage are going to respond no matter what, even when we talk about, whenever you talk about special tech, I don't care what it is, gas masks, radio communications, even medical. Only a percentage will respond in time of comfort to any one of these categories. And the only reason that certain people respond more effectively than others because they've had that personal epiphany thing. Medical is the same way. You know, it's one thing to talk about, you know, you should have crash packs and everything else. It's another thing when you finally have something happen and you realize you were reaching for things that you or you were expected, well, I was going to get that next. I was thinking about, oh, don't have that. And you didn't bleed to death, but boy, you really were hurt pretty bad and the right tools in the toolbox would have made a difference. Communication is the same way people are recalcitrant. We run into cycles where things become more aggressive like right now there I mean it's funny too because on the one hand people say well, yeah, we've seen this before yeah, I have to And we've run right up to the wall Where the the ass hats have wanted to go farther than the only thing that stopped them is the fact we're armed to the teeth and even there They went beyond where they should have and people have been murdered people with country has been attacked People have been incarcerated illegitimately, etc, etc, etc And they wanted to go the next step but all the spit swapping ring knockers realized that the conversations are all about hanging their ass Well the given point this is not going to stop and right now It is obvious that they are getting desperate to proceed Well, that means that all the other tools need to be in the toolbox if you can't do anything else, but just get them You'll be forced at a given point to plug them in. One of the things about CB still comes down to is, hey, the truckers are talking about, wow, I've never seen that before. Boy, we got APCs there at that overpass and they've got everybody steered off into the rest area and the traffic's backed up eight miles. Now, you know what's funny about that, guys? You know what's really funny about that one? that happened right here in Michigan in 1993. And you know what? There wasn't anybody getting it out other than the CB. But they were putting random checkpoints up to test the stupidity of the population. Because they were pressing towards the 1994 window of activity and in late 93 and in 94 on I-94 on I-96 on US-23, they set up these checkpoints at rush hour. What was the purpose behind them? Well, we had to have an excuse, so where are you going? You know, how many people are traveling with you? It's like, what do you mean? How many people travel? You send me people in this car. And by the way, why are you bothering me? I'm going to be late for work. You know what finally happened is people started to realize either, A, they were going to put a bullet in their ass, or how about we just ignore the signs that said mandatory checkpoints? Oh, they had state cops there. They had National Guard at different locations. They had them with guns. And they all stood there puffed up and like, yo, you can't do anything. Finally someone's pissed because they know they're gonna lose their job. So rather than getting in the line or staying over in the line for the rest area, the guy just went right on through. You know what, state cops didn't move and the National Guard didn't put their rifles to their shoulder. And the APC that was up there on top of the overpass didn't do anything. And as soon as the first person had the guts to do that. Everybody else started to do the same thing because they had some place to go like it, you know, 7 30 in the morning. They're trying to get their ass to work. But you know what? A lot of people didn't get into those checkpoints because they were using their radios and they talked ahead. Then they talked back and a whole bunch of people got out of the network across the board and all of the grid lit up. But it was the CB radios because the truckers are like, what the hell is this BS? And everybody else that was riding with the CV could hear the conversation, you know, 20 miles back because it echoed back through the machine. And all of a sudden they didn't have eight miles worth of cars backed up, maybe only six. They did it again on the same on I-94 right there where they did this was at the risk area just beyond Chelsea, Michigan. The old one, not the new one. And you know how you would pull right off the road and you pull right back on. The waste stations were the same way and they pulled them at the waste stations the same way. All traffic must stop. Did they collect vital information? No, it was bullshit. It was to see how stupid everybody would be. But once everybody got the message, the lion's share completely avoided the checkpoint. Not with cell phones, because the cell phones wouldn't do you a damn bit of good. Because you can only talk to whoever's phone number you have. But with a radio, even if you didn't get out of the radio, like you said, you could hear the conversations going on and you're like, whoa, I gotta be at work in 25 minutes and I got 30 minutes worth of driving and I am not gonna get in that line. So guess what? Everybody started going around. Then everybody learned how valuable it was to have inter-communicative, you know, squawk boxes. And it became very interesting for a while. The bad guys didn't like that. They tried to bad mouth it. They did propaganda in the news media. But you know what? They backed off on the bullshit with checkpoints. Because the next thing is everybody's like, well, if this is anything other than practicing for a police state, you know what? Some people are really tired of this and they're already fed up. You realize that some people might be so pissed if they lose their jobs and come back and shoot their ass Yeah, mark, which would have been gone by the way these old cvs the first thing you're gonna do when you get it Very first thing don't plug it in just pull the fuse out Look at it and see if it works better yet. Just put a new fuse in it That's the very first thing you're gonna do you can plug it in to see if the lights work. That's fine, but don't connect a microphone to it and then try to talk on it because that's just gonna blow out your finals. So, go ahead. We'll always have a place for the load. Always remember that guys. You hook up antenna and coax before you do anything. Even if you're not plugged into power, just as a rule, remember you have to have some place for the load to go. There are other tricks you can use. I've talked about false loading. That's something you do on the bench. But that's not what we're talking about here. Again, it's just the basic rules. If you had to pull something off the shelf or out of a box or if a yard sale and you were rushed, the antenna gets hooked up before anything. Not the microphone, not the power, nothing. And that way, if you were stupid or didn't pay attention to maybe you were sitting on the mic. God, I've seen that. Guess what? You didn't ruin that piece of equipment you spent money on. Go ahead. So they sell something on eBay called a dummy load and basically it screws in to the PL259 port in the back. That's where you screw in your antenna coax. And the dummy load is like a light bulb. So what happens is if you really wanted to plug it in to see if it works, attach a microphone, a four pin CB microphone to the front and then just key it up. Hit the push to talk. And if the transmit works, the light will turn on. That way you know the whole radio works. So, well, at least part of the radio anyway. So then you're going to put your antenna together, then you're going to put, you know, your tower up, you're going to put it all together, and then before you start transmitting, you're going to have to learn about standing wave ratios. The standing wave ratios is basically your radio being in tune with the antenna. And you want to get the standing wave ratio. If you've got a 23 channel radio, you want to go down to channel 11 and do your standing wave ratio on channel 11. And you want to get the standing wave ratio at one to one, a ratio of one to one on channel 11. And how you do that is on a... a base station antenna is going to have an adjustment on the antenna itself, which changes the distance between the cable where it's connected and the antenna itself. So when you have, when you key it up and you're looking at the SWR meter, and there's a lot of videos on YouTube on how to do this. But once you key it up and once you adjust it to one to one, then it's set. Okay, now you can start transmitting on it. Okay, and this is not hard to do. This is simple to do, but in order to get your CV radio set up to where it's constantly on and you're receiving, even if it's raining outside or if it's cold outside or if there's uh, inclement weather outside, you're still always going to be able to use the CB radio because it's going to push those waves right through the weather and you're going to be able to talk with whoever you want to talk with. So, but that's important is to get that set up. But the thing is, I can't stress enough. Right now, we're having this conversation and you can get a CB radio for about 60 to 70 bucks. It's going to be a bare bones, but it's going to be American made from back in the seventies and it's going to work. And once you get it set up, for about $225. Watch some videos, watch how to set it up, put some kind of pole in the ground, get it above the rooftop. You're going to be able to receive a lot of information as the collapse starts to set in. The information is going to come at you a lot quicker and a lot more frequent. And it's going to be local information and it's possible, even if you don't want to talk to people locally, if you just want to listen, that's all you have to do, is just listen. But if you wanted to, here's the thing, as we're watching Southern Prepper One, he's having some really good videos come out on updates that are happening around the United States. He says the first step really in getting people to start preparing is to get them acclimated to a neighborhood watch. If you talk to your neighbors about a neighborhood watch, they're willing to do that. And that way, once you get, make friends with them and start talking to them, then you can start talking about prepping. It's a little bit late for that because, like I said, we're having a conversation now. We can pick up a CV radio for about $225, $250 for everything. I think by the time, in 30 days time, you're probably looking at least double that price. That's how fast these prices are going up. So, get it now, because it's cheap now. and 55 to 75 bucks is still cheap. The realization is that people are actually having enough problems, which this is because of planet crapoo. The cell phone systems are starting to malfunction to such a degree, it's identical to the power grid failure. There's no excuse for it except incompetence and malfeasance slash also intent. It's not accidental, it's intentional. And because of this, a lot of people are now having that little epiphany about I better have some way to shout to somebody else that's friendly. And that is a fact. It doesn't mean it was what you pick. I really guys, this is like weapons. You're gonna choose what you're gonna choose to do, but understand that certain things will make you off the shelf. You'll be able to monitor and hear more than you would with more specialized pieces of equipment. Now some of you will hear a lot of noise initially. Example, we've talked about FRS radios. FRS radios in the early stages, the metropolitan areas are gonna light up because a lot of the dope pushers, a lot of the street gangs, a lot of other criminal operations are running on FRS. In addition to that, they're also overlapping into other technologies, needless to say, they're using cell phone. But there's a certain amount of paranoia about cell phones right now. This is why in certain metropolitan areas, the cops are also monitoring FRS radios. Because they know too that there's you know, they've got codes worked out. They know how to use phonetic coding Conversations or coy in other words what you think they're saying what they are saying at two different things Everything has to put it, you know to push this meeting. That's not an accident. That's intentional So with that being the case again these as we've said many times The CB and marine radio are the two that are gonna be probably the most useful for the longest period of time from beginning to end. From the beginning of this activity to the where we find peace and the hostility cease, we're still going to be in a situation where we need to speak distance and the technology will be better perfected by them. Not the cell phone, which by the way, the cell phone has no real security because It is not a phone. Always remember that. It's one of the many radio transmitters we're talking about. We're transceivers. This is why, if you watch 2000 mules, they showed you something I've talked about forever. Well, they just went out and bought all this information on where everybody went with a cell phone. Yes, and you know what a why because it's not covered under the copper wire rack It's covered under the FCC because it's an open transmitter now It's restricted because you create prioritized numerical communications grids. Okay, you have a phone number as you call it in reality It's a radio call number In fact as I have pointed out a million times Your cell phone is a direct copy of what we originally put together, which is the two meter radio grid which was using a proprietary coding system so that I could isolate my signal from one point to the other and have a conversation only with the other party on the other end, even if I had multiple repeater links. The government wanted to take over two meter. Okay. Now with the DB, you don't have that middle person doing anything. And if depending on how you want to direct your signal, your signal is pretty much, you know, again, it has every opportunity to access the other target party, target party, whoever it is. Go ahead, call her champion. We're almost to the top. I saw that movie 2000 donkeys is the one I saw, but Yeah, it was amazing. I mean, I didn't know their ability to track you and know exactly where you're at and your pattern of life is pretty amazing. And what got me was part of what they were saying was that how they were able to grab just about everybody they wanted to grab from the January 6th deal up in Washington. Everybody they wanted, that's how they tracked them. They tracked them through their phone, they tracked them where they're at, they tracked them. They were tracking them before they even got there. And what was really amazing, what was really amazing, they can do this. They can do this now, but they can't catch anybody for eight months rioting in all the cities and burning them down. And going from city to city. Now, here's the thing about that. Your transceivers like your AM and FM radios of independent broadcasting units like we're talking about, the CB radio, the two meter, VHF, UHF, whatever, at the height of the CB craze. Guys, do you know how many, and I don't say many, it's how few a number of intercept vehicles they had for the whole of the country. The FCC had 23, 24 vehicles initially that were designed to monitor and to try and intercept CB in the United States. What? Yeah, well, they doubled that number within a year and then they doubled it yet again. But for the whole of the country, what they look like, by the way, is it looked like a big U-Haul camper box on the top of a standard government sedan. And these vehicles could be seen trying to monitor and catch truck drivers with over power and CB radios. But everybody was watching for you know, knew what to look for. And everybody knew to key down their power. And so nobody really got caught unless they're really stupid sloppy. But they had at the most when they physically had to go hunt. For equipment, you know radio equipment and by the way They use similar intercept vehicles to try and tow in the the two meter operators and to try they had another batch for Trying to tow in the ham operators who weren't ham operators because you didn't have a license and you know what we're talking Handful dozens of vehicles for 50 states of the Union including Hawaii and Alaska That's the difference between that, this technology we're talking about and what you see with the cell phones were literally which it's logged and dated day by day, minute by minute, second by second and it grids you out on the map and it's amazing also to me how much money and how deep the coding and memory system is. Because that 2000 mules program demonstrates what we've talked about for years. Oh, we wake up. We're at the top guys very we gotta be a get out of here. Greg's coming up. Go ahead call real quick Don't you get to feel any force you to any joy any void taxation without representation and it's not fair but when the pioneers complained the king said I don't care but tea to put it kind of this tea. 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. But tyrants labored endlessly while your parents were asleep. Your freedom's gone, your courage lost, you're no more than a slave. In this, the land of the free and home of the brave. You buy permits to travel and permits to own a gun. Permits to start a business or to build a place for one. On land that you believe you own, you pay a yearly rent. Although you have no voice in saying how the money's spent. Your children must attend a school that doesn't educate. And your Christian values can't be taught according to the state. You read about the current news in a regulated press. and you pay a tax you do not owe to please the IRS. Your money is no longer made of silver nor of gold. You trade your wealth for paper so your life can be controlled. You pay for crimes that make our nation turn from God and shame to 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 and dead. 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? Oh, sons of the Republic, arise, take a stand, defend the Constitution, the Supreme Law of the land, preserve our great Republic, and eat God-given right, and pray to God, eat 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 rite, 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... When you guys started to come through the door, we were gonna shoot ya, but we realized that would give guns a bad name. So I hooked up this double stack supercharged water heater and if you look overhead, you're gonna be boiling like lobsters about now. I know it would have been faster, but I don't wanna use a gun, I wouldn't wanna see horrible headline news tomorrow after they find all of your lifeless, spoiled bodies down the road somewhere stripped naked of all your black uniforms and web gear. Yeah, sorry about that. It's just gonna have to be. Anyway, good evening, ladies and gentlemen. This is the evening intelligence report of our kirky. One day closer to victory for all of our brothers and sisters, both on and behind the lines in occupied territories west. South, Northeast, and West. Ladies and gentlemen, you're listening to us on www.libertytreeradio.4mg.com, libertytreeradio.org. And we are on satellite. Let's say hi to all of our overseas rebroadcasters, listeners, and sharing people. who are, well, literally around the globe. So congratulations, you guys are doing great work and you've also expanded the technology, which is good. We're also a myriad of other communications technologies, both inside and outside these United States. It is Weapons Wednesday, it is the 15th of June, 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 Old Earth Calendar, 2022 Battle for the Republic, The Dance of Sword. Let the dance continue. And a little heads up there. Guys, medieval, we were talking about like Game of Thrones, only the whole idea. Remember, if you didn't hear what I was talking about. The one thing I did like about the series is relative accuracy with a lot of things the way they would normally be done. The fortresses, if you pay attention to the fortress scene, a lot of times you just rehash the same location. If you're smart, you make it so you can integrate different parts, change the banners, and it's another wall that you're standing on. Lots of walls to have conversations on. Okay. But the one thing that they did is, for instance, it was an active defense slash an active fortress. And every so often along the rampart, if you paid attention on the outer walls, as they're walking by, there's barrels of arrows. And now the only difference is that if they didn't have overhead cover, these were like machine gun ammunition, it's the best way to describe it. They were volume ammo. They weren't the best arrows on the planet. They were potty eggs. They weren't Cadillacs. They were potty eggs. There's just lots and lots and lots of them. Why? Well, guys, if you're six, seven or eight stories up from your target, everything works as a weapon. Rocks. boiling water, although the problem with boiling water is it doesn't take long to cool on its way down. So you got to measure how you use the boiling water and you have to have volume. Okay? Boiling oil, which everybody always sees as popular in movies because then you can light it. The guys are screaming and burning and thrashing and whatever. But darts of all kinds were the most economical because, well, oil was where to get it from. Whale oil, tallow, fats, lard, could be any number of things. What were they making boiling oil out of? They didn't have petroleum oil, oil wells back then, guys. Not the way you would understand them. Oil was on the surface. Really, it was. It was all over the planet on the surface. My God, it's so horrible. We got oil out there. The world is doomed. It used to sit on the surface in pools as big as lakes. Okay, so yeah, they probably could have had regular petroleum product if it was nearby. If there was a bog or whatever or something, it might have been part of the pustulence that was available. But darts, arrows, volume, because typically when you're having somebody attack, they're accurate. They need just to be reasonably accurate, like a Pontiac as opposed to a Cadillac. I'm only needing the best arrow available. Your marks might carry better arrows. But your volume fire weapons, especially since, wow, it's a target rich environment, if I shoot into that crowd, I'm gonna try to hit that guy when I aim at him, but I'll bet you I hit somebody with that arrow. I told you, see Bob, I told you it'd work. Now here's another thing, darts, which they don't show in any of these at all hardly, very few movies even that were done back in the 50s or 30s, but there are a few, show the traditional dart. And in fact, what were traditional darts in a bar or a pub back in the day aren't the kind of competition darts you see now. Traditionally, they were like a big long teardrop with the flinches out of the back of that. So they kind of look like a bomb. Actually, quite a bit like a World War I 25-pound bomb. Except they had a dart in the front, sometimes barbed, sometimes notched, and typically rusted. Why would they rust it? Well, were there any tetanus shots back then? No, there weren't any tetanus shots back then. So all the wicked things you could think to do to make your enemy, you know, eat, treat, okay? To engage, destroy, or neutralize the enemy, you know, eat, treating. You wanted to eat treat as many as you could, and you wanted to make sure, even if you just tagged them, that was enough. So there were all kinds of mean, mean things. When you knock a blade, like on a dirt, It hits and especially if it's barbed or if it's corned. What happens is that the weight of the of the dart itself was enough to snap off the blade in the target. If they tried to pull it out, typically it was just strong enough so that with energy behind it, it would penetrate. But when you tried to grasp it and extract it. The blades were designed to snap off or break off with any kind of aggressive action. Sometimes just you falling on the ground would be enough as you're withering in pain. But the arrows were most critical because they had the reach. Darts, it became a matter of developing your expertise. This is why dart throwing originally did not start in the pub, although they had that competition in a form one from another with full-size darts that were as big around as the grip of your hand like a baseball bat. Okay, they were that size. But later on, more sophisticated for the indoor pub participation as opposed to combat training on the wall. Now all these weapons are still work today. You wouldn't want to get hit with a wooden properly sculpted and built dart and there's a guy on YouTube and I have not looked at all the videos he's done but he does a really good job of showing you everything from the Roman and Greco personal throwing weapons like this all the way up to the Middle Ages. I mean even after guns were in service gravity sucks and it's always there so as we said gravity is your friend when it comes to making weapons. Now, the other thing is flame technology or heat. Here's the problem with flame. What you start burning in one direction might come back and burn you. But using, for instance, boiling water to neutralize the target in the future, you get all the goodies that the enemy's carrying. It incapacitates, if not kills the target. But you also get to strip the enemy dead of everything and boiling water is not gonna have much of any effect on any of the equipment. Body armor can be recovered from the corpses. Myself, shoot them or stab them or pop them like a baby seal, hit them with a club. That's probably your best bet because you want to save ammo and you want to be as quiet as you can. They don't care about their suffering. They can care less about yours. If they kill you or try to kill you, they will laugh about the pain and misery they did to you. So why are you concerned about doing pain and misery to an enemy who has brought the fight out to your home, to your community, and is working for the globalists? They deserve every wretched death we can create for them. Because they'll brag and laugh about what they do to you if they get away with it. We don't want that to happen now, do we? So prior proper planning prevents piss poor performance, okay? And again, the advantage of boiling will, well, Let's put it this way, it's as old as fire, okay, just about. There are a few accurate representations of what really life on the frontier was like through the American histories, or for that matter anywhere on the planet. Where you see the engines are outside, or the Chukabunga tribe is coming after us. Well, yeah, but the Wingo tribe still likes us, yes, but they're miles away and they aren't gonna be here to help us in good time. Well, the women didn't scream and panic. They certainly were, I'm sure, scared as everybody was inspired to be fearful because if you got caught by the Indian tribes, Oki, the God of pain, is what they worshiped. And the idea was to inflict as much torture pain on you as possible if they could catch you alive. So this motivated you to fight better. Well, if you had a cabin, typically had all kinds of neat tricks, but one of the first things that the women would be doing is finding the cutlery while they're busy stoking the fireplace or stoking the wood stove. Why? Well, a whole gallon of boiling hot water to someone's face has a tendency to kind of break their concentration. And if you have limited access through what are controlled windows and short doors, that's why they made them short so you had to duck down to get in, makes it inconvenient for you to try and mount a defense while you're getting bonged with a skillet or boiled with water. So boiling water is a very useful tool. I would say something, there's one movie that's comparable to maybe some of the examples that are very rare that you find. Every time they always do it, they show the women screaming. The women knew just as well as the men did that, you know, women might put last one standing. You might win almost, but the women had to fight just like everybody else to defend the homestead and defend the children. And the children pitched it. You think the children allowed to go ahead and the men? Oh, no, no, no, no, no, no, no. Between the women and the kids, they could finish off the wounded or they could at least, you know, bonk the ones that are trying to sneak up the back way, you know, the restricted way coming through that back hatch that was the fire door. Okay, for throwing the firewood in. Guys crawling through there next thing you hear is that frying pan ringing and there's a little gray matter stuck to the bottom of that number 10 frying pan They weren't kind of trying to just make a statement. They were trying to kill the bastard. So trust me everything that was a weapon was used Everything but water boiling water. There's another example of this and forgive me I don't off the top of my head. It's a sci-fi horror piece. It's a vampire not vampire. It's a werewolf movie You might recall it was made in Britain. It's the guys are on a training exercise. They end up out in this one woods. They're they thought they were one group is looking for something in particular, but nobody knows what they're looking for. The other group are out there in a training exercise. In reality, they're not their bait. And they guys, these guys end up getting picked off, but they end up in this in this household and none of the people are around, but the werewolves are showing up. If you recall, part of them were commandos, modern day SAS, I guess. I really didn't pay too much attention to what they were supposed to be with, but they were highly energetic and motivated troops. And so the guys getting ready to protect this, he's going to stay in the house and defend it. And one of the other guys is on the second floor to defend that. And the guy, what's the first thing you do? Fills up all the pans with hot water, boiling water on the stove and turns it up full pitch. And then finds all the cutlery, finds anything. That's how people would have acted in the frontier the same way. None of this, I'm panics stricken and frozen. No, you aren't. You wanna live, you fight. Panics stricken and frozen died a long time ago. If you're still out there, it's because you were a highly motivated individual or group of individuals and you have a plan. Now, here's another thing that that Dimplehead Idiot Stick fool that we have, the Petosniffer meat puppet, Obama's meat puppet, Stuge, Biden. They keep having the Idiot Stick make the comment, well, you couldn't have a cannon back when the country was founded. Really? Well, they're counting on the idea that a lot of people having been in the public fool system are so stinking stupid they don't have a clue. But those same frontier outposts we're talking about, you might even have one of the houses from almost the later end of that era that's an octagon. I can take you to two or three of them here in Michigan that are from the pre-Civil War and actually go back to War of 1812 era, okay? They were octagon for a reason. They were a stockade households. They were fortresses. And the reason the Octagon was built so that every side could bear firepower against a target. There was no dead zone, there was no place to hide, to get in and get close and hide from the defenders, okay? But one of the other things you need to know, everybody that was in the outposts like that bought cannon, and they didn't buy a cannon. It was most common, in fact, this goes back before the American War for Independence. In fact, it goes back to the original settling of the country, but especially with the closest or nearer frontier outposts that were on the edge of the wild. Either a stockade, if you had a plantation, or if you had a farmstead, and you were a fairly good, well-to-do farmer with other allies nearby. You had stockades that you built up that were block houses or octagon or a sectagon it depend on what what you chose to do The second floor is where your bigger guns were located and your lighter guns If you had them were down below for you know raking the infantry Head on You know, what, what, what, what, what problem? Oh, wow, that buckshot and pebbles and rock and broken glass and anything else we could find when you touched off that little three inch bore howitzer that was only about two feet long. It was just like a claymore mine. So old, old dental frit slash idiot stick who keeps lying to other idiot sticks who drink the dog vomit, but he spews. Don't have a clue about history, don't have any understanding. There was a big deal to go out and buy because metal was always expensive, guys. That was the issue. It wasn't just the gun itself and the work. It was the metal that cost money. Brass, bronze, or iron if you were lucky. But Brasser bronze did well and so most of the guns you see in the frontier like in the Ohio Valley, the ones that you would find up in Pennsylvania, would typically be bronze, two pounders, four pounders. And if you were lucky, you had like I said, short, short infantry howitzers. Sometimes even colster mortars would end up out there, but everybody could afford one bought one. One of the most common guns that was pilfered from shipping was called a parrot gun. Now you see these in many movies, maybe you've built a model of the HMS Bounty and they never do show them being used, but the parrot gun was the equivalent to a machine gun on a deck back in the day. No, it wasn't automatic, but it could either fire one big solid shot. which was about one and a half inch bore, sometimes one, but typically one and a half, two inch bore. Or more likely it was loaded with ball. It was loaded with 70 caliber or 50 caliber or whatever caliber lead they had or ball bearings or what you iron shot. Just criplet iron shot. And they'd load it up and you touch that off and it would rake a deck. Well, a lot of people bought those off the coast and took them inland with them. They were everywhere. They were all over the place. Why? Well, you're by yourself and whoa, whoa, whoa, whoa, whoa, whoa. Look, there's a big cluster of woo-woos. It kind of breaks your enemy's spirit. When the chunk of Chief Potawak is stuck on the guy, six people back's head, and the arms and legs are in two different directions. And by the way, he might still be trying to say something with that decapitated head for a moment or two more. And that means that the Wakatok spirits are in trouble, and they might wanna break contact with the enemy. So, we had cannon. Any weapon that the military had, we had it before they did. That's another thing you gotta remember about the lies of the idiot stick, the lies of the socialist, the lies of the parasite, the lies of the ignorant. was of the set of Meat Perfect. accurate in many, many ways. But again, like when they were talking about forting up, anybody like that that was forting up, it wouldn't have been one or two or a few people. They would have been loggered up. They typically also would have been built up in terms of fortification. It wouldn't just be a cabin. It would look like a cabin. You always want to make things look like they're far less important than they are. But as far as how they were built no no no they actually were very understanding of the frontier wars between the tribes or between the Colonials and the tribes Especially if you're out there for any period of time you were a survivor Okay, that doesn't mean you're worried about people who were fertilizer by then but those people were a fertilizer Well, what have I said before learn from the mistakes of others? You won't live long enough to make them all yourself So anyway on that note Again, I know everybody loves, you know, flamethrowers. I love flamethrowers. Okay, guys, East Vietnam Creek, we get down and shoot them. Sergeant Ellsworth had three or four of them. We have in the unit. They got moved sideways as he, when he, before he passed away, he kind of made sure they were spread to the engineers. But one of the reasons we picked up the flamethrowers were military so we could see what was done because the flamethrower is not a hard tool to make. If you understand plumbing, And you are disciplined in making sure that you build things right. Building a flamethrower that's of military grade quality, as opposed to the stuff you're seeing that's out there, two different worlds, okay? In fact, we can mimic the exact later models, the most sophisticated conventional pressure tank models, and even include nitrogen purge for the lines. But let me point something out, I said earlier, it looks really cool, but if it's your place or if it's your allied territory, You better make sure when you pull the trigger you wanted whatever you'd hose down with flammables to burn. Okay. It depends on what you're doing. If you're falling back and you're evacuating and you know you're going to lose the property anyway, yeah, you can burn them in your own pieces of property. But this is where heat, water are a good friend because water damage is pretty easy to take care of. And in many cases with extreme supercharged hot water or steam. Oh, steam is wonderful. High pressure steam is terrifying. It'll cut you. Okay, it will cut you like a laser beam. And there's people that have set stuff up like that. They're, well, hoping for the day they can use what they've been experimenting with. They have steam heat for their house. They are experienced plumbers. They put everything together the way they wanted. And each entrance has a vestibule that you can't get through. Oh, you get through the first door. But you won't ever get through the second door. So hot water is your friend and boiling to couple of regular 55 gallon conventional propane or electric water heater set to maximum in line with each other works like a supercharger on top of a supercharger. So it's like a roach moat gal. Yep, they come in but they don't come out. They don't go out. Well, they might go out and roll around in the yard mewling and screaming. With flamethrowers, the advantage is, again, if you have the enemy contained in a corridor or a hallway and you don't care, what you do is you put a short burst, one, two, three, into the corridor. Guys, there's no oxygen. Well, you didn't have to really flame them on. Now, that just helps to eliminate the oxygen supply and they just don't last very long. On top of that, they're still burning. If there is any oxygen, you're high, low burn from a flamethrower, a real one. is pretty wicked. Now there's all kinds of things you can do to enhance and in fact there is flame mix for flamethrowers is commercially sold in like 50 gallon barrels. It is enhanced with magnesium and other high burn metals depending upon what was cheap. It has both a high and low burn combination although the high burn is the metal. When you take the material and mix it to proper proportions with gasoline, what you get is the proper high burn, low burn mix so that the high burn gives you the temperature very quickly. The low burn is what sticks. Now there's a whole cookbook for flamethrowers. And in fact, it's very easy to understand that again, you need something that's low burn so that it keeps the high burn material on the target or in the area of the target. The metal flake and metal powder that's used and metal chip is designed to accelerate to an even greater degree the temperature of the contact burn point. This is where it works more effectively against vehicles, even if an armored vehicle is buttoned up. If you are using an actual high-low burn napalm slash flame additive mix, What happens is those metals work like tiny little welders all over the place. They get other things burning, obviously, but they also do damage to optics. They do damage to sensitive equipment because it accelerates very quickly and stays at a much higher operating temperature while it's making direct contact with the materials. This is hellacious on vision blocks or optics of any kind. cover plates for optics like the fire the fire control box on the turret of most modern battle tanks and Again, yeah, the problem is you got to be close relatively close This is something most people don't realize with a with the with the more sophisticated conventional flamethrowers made by both the Russians the United States and any NATO country and China At the height of the best or the zenith of the production technology of the flamethrower, the backpack models that you would see, they had an effective range of 100 to 150 yards. You always see the images where the you know, the guys, you know on a pillbox and he just washes the entrance to that pillbox and it's always, you know 25 30 yards you might pay attention There's a few shots where you see the guy standing back a lot farther Well, here's the thing scale the the image if you pay attention What's the average height to the guy that's probably out there in the field? We'll say about five ten to six foot Okay So the guy with the flamethrower I have to take his height and turn it sideways and count it to the objective and go, oh, that's a lot farther than I thought it was. Now, another thing about actually knowing how to use flamethrowers is you can create flame minefields. No, we're not talking about bombs out in the field. If you have the proper jellified material with the additional or supplemental burn stock, in other words, the metals, You can hose down an area 24 hours in advance the low burn helps to lock the majority of the high burn on the site and You can literally come back and with the same flamethrower at a given point. Oh here. They come I've already been near everybody's out of the way I'm in my first position and when everybody walks into the area or they drive into the area you Send one burst you've seen how it works with a flamethrower you hear that And then you see the flame go out like a little finger. Well, the moment that it hits the ground where the gelified material, the agent is deployed, that whole area goes up in flame. Things they don't show you in movies because they don't want you to know about this stuff. Well, that's a lot more sophisticated than people might think. Yeah, and it's also very crude. The Russians, if you look at Russian flamethrowers, what do they look like? They look like... Cappuccino machines made with regular half inch plumbing pipe. And if you look at the weight of them, I believe that's what they were. They were just regular iron plumbing pipe. You take a look at the stock and what they were built out of, they're built like a brick doghouse. And you better be Bruno when you pick them up. But you know what? They worked. They worked really well. Now, if you take more sophisticated building materials, And you combine that with other advantages you have in today's age with aircraft components and things of that nature, you can build a model quite similar to the last models of regular Marine Corps and Army flamethrowers that were half the weight of their cousins from World War II. And in fact, as I mentioned, had, for instance, a nitrogen purge tank so there could be no backwash down the feed line. It didn't happen very often, but it was awfully nice if you had to use the flamethrower a lot. But you wouldn't have a failure of the feed seal and of course you still have something burning on the end of the muzzle and it kind of follows down through the line. So to prevent that, it needs to say first of all you do have a cutoff switch, but also you actually had a second little lever or trigger that you pulled and what it did is that little purge tank would push nitrogen down the line, evacuate the flammables and prevent anything from burning or extinguish any fire that might be out there. So, or any backwash that might initiate a failure of the primary line or the tanks. There's all kinds of neat little technology. It's not that hard to figure out and it's all off the shelf. Okay? However, flames are unforgiving. Remember, they know no friends, no weapon made, knows any friends. I do not believe in the idea of friendly fire. Friendly fire isn't. There is no such thing. Bullets, no no, no ally. Grenades don't have no friend. Order rounds, they could care less. Bombs, hey, wherever they show up, you're a victim. So all of them should be treated the same way, with great respect, obviously. Most important here again is with what we're facing in the future, a lot of stuff that we're gonna have to be working with more off the shelf. Plumbing is everywhere. Now you can also create flamethrower mines in literally a flame projector that could be on standby. And it's fairly crude, but basically it's like a big CO2 fire extinguisher. Only with an air charge and under pressure. And all you do is either hit a switch and a valve opens up and needless to say, the igniter is ready to go. Or you simply hit a valve or something compresses a valve down, opening the line. And wherever you have the primary line facing, everything that's in that reserve tank under pressure is going to wash that target area. Now you don't have to have an igniter on the launcher. Any flare will do. Tracers typically will do quite nicely. So remember that if you are using it for part of a kill zone activity and you have, you know, hunt, hunt, hunt, you know, gun confiscation agents, planning their big, you know, hoorah with the globalists and the Chinese to go after the guns. When you have a hut, hut, hut pile, that's for a hut, hut, hut, whoa, whoa, whoa, whoa, where a flame mine might come in handy. Remember, once it's pushed under pressure, it has tendency to hose down a target. So no matter how hard they try, the high-low burn sticks to the objective. You either launch a flare or you have a combustible already burning in the kill zone. That's a really mean trick because it can look like just burning wreckage. But in reality, that burn means that the moment that the pressure valve is opened up and that spigot releases all of that pressurized material, as soon as it hits any kind of open flame, it's nothing but a big bulbous stream of hurt, of burn. Of course, you can also drop stuff from higher up from buildings or whatever. It doesn't have to be that sophisticated gravity sucks. That's another solution. But again, it's a matter of being creative and minimizing to maximize. This is one thing you all need to remember. Whenever you are creating these types of munitions to deal with an aggressor that has a lot of other toys, the one thing about fire is it's not going to be forgiving and that when you hose something down, probably what they're carrying is going to burn, you think? Yeah, probably. One of the other things that can happen out of that, by the way, I will remind you that many of the grenades that are being carried have a very soft or what is a malleable slash pliable safety pin. The quality of some of the metals vary depending on how long you carry a grenade. This could actually create a risk. A minimal amount of heat may allow for a failure of a grenade safety or it made the heat itself may simply activate the fuse, not necessarily the charge. It's the fuse that goes first. And if the fuse goes even without you capping it with the striker that's on your grenade, that fuse is gonna go to the main charge and that's all she wrote. So you are going to have to be prepared and you need to be thinking about taking cover not from the fire, but possible secondary explosives, you know, explosive charges. Don't forget your enemy may be carrying satchel charges for breaching. You know, if they want to breach a house like they did Scott wood rings where they want to kill all of you and in the house and claim you did something else because they were planning on murdering everybody and then laughing about it afterwards at the cop bar. Well, if you hose them down, that satchel charge is going to deal with a whole bunch of them right there. And it's because not that the explosive activates with the heat first, but again, remember, it's amazing how much actually is necessary depending on how the charge is ensconced. But any combustible will activate the fuse at any point, wherever it does. The fuse is now in motion and nothing will stop it. Certainly not somebody flapping around trying to take put fire off on their body. Well, guess what? The bag they're carrying on their hip is already on fire and that fuse is 123 boat. See how that works. So there are all kinds of good things that you can produce with a fire effect, but you lose the benefit of stripping the enemy dead. I mean, you're still gonna find stuff laying around, trust me, it's contrary to what you might think. It's just cuz things blow up, doesn't mean it isn't all there, it's just spread out more, okay? Making for a much messier retrieval of what might still be useful. So heads up on that, and not everything will be consumed in the fire, so. Another thing is, again, with regard to indirect fire weapons, it does not have to be launched with gas or a rocket or an explosive charge. Guys, pretty stinking quiet. There are a number of ways that things can be launched reasonably good distances and farther than you can throw. that are just as effective as many grenade launchers or, you know, like the 40 millimeter, etc. And in fact, they're quite devastating because they're absolutely silent. And the only time that it's known that the weapon is being deployed is when it detonates. Projecting with either light arbalisk or with any kind of centrifugal throw system that you come up with gives you the ability to reach hundreds of yards. Now depending on how heavy the technology is, Arbalisk make a launch noise. You don't click, click, click, click, click, click, click, click, click, click, click, click, click, click, click, click, click, click, click, click, click, click, click, click, click, click, click, click, click, click, click, click, click, click, click, click, click, click, click, click, click, click, click, click, click, click, click, click, click, click, click, click, click, click, click, click, click, click, click, click, click, click, click, click, click, click, click, click, click, click, click, click, click, click, click, click, click, click, click, click, click, click, click, click, click, click, click, click, click, click, click, click, click, click, click, click, click, click, click, click, click, click, And by the way, it was really bizarre. The US military built a lot of this stuff during the middle of Vietnam, simply because we had more money than brains. And so a lot of this stuff was actually built during the war. Not built for improvised munitions, but actually new production out of the factory, limited XM production runs of all kinds of bizarre stuff that really worked. But you didn't make any, you know, DuPont didn't make any money on it because it didn't require a weapons charge to get the device to where it needed to go. the explosive, the demolition warhead, the charge, whatever it is. So think about it, much quieter, but then boom. You might have heard something sucking through the air depending on how big it is, but when it gets to the objective by the time it does, it's a little late to figure out when it sounds like something just rushing through the air, but there's not all of the other signature identifiers that you'd be looking for like boom and boom, or pump, pump and boom, boom. Depending on what it is 40 millimeter grenade launcher or say like mortar Well, the first part of that sequence is missing the bone but the other part is the other end is there But it's rather disconcerting when you can't figure out what it is has been delivering the weapon See how that works. So just think about it ideas be creative Just be you know, be wicked the other side planned. They're gonna laugh all about what they do to you I think we should be laughing all about what we will do to them Okay Now, anyway, enough on that, but flamethrowers, yes, are very viable. They work. By the way, there's a cookbook for using every kind of low burn fuel and high burn component you can find. There used to be a cookbook for all of the flamethrower operators so that if you were in the field, you could scavenge what you needed. Used air pressure, obviously, to charge the tanks. And there was a whole process using everything from transmission oils to crankcase oils to sludge from the fields combined with a high burn, which could be alcohol or could be gasoline or whatever grade. And again, etc, etc, etc. The idea was that they could improvise, adapt and overcome in the field with the weapon that they were carrying. Pretty well guaranteed work every time too. Next. I am looking for, and I could use some help with this, we're looking for AR-10 lowers and uppers stripped. Now there are a number of companies that have AR-10 parts in good quantity, and I know Bear Creek Arsenal should have some 308, 762, about 51 AR-10 systems on the shelf. But what we're looking for is, again, remember a stripped upper because we're not using the 7.62 by 51 NATO. We're going to be using the 6.8 by 51 government round. So with that being the case, we're looking for the best price because after developing the ammunition that we've developed, the 6.8, which is that track is already in motion. We are now looking at a manually operated weapons that's already been figured out and pretty well it's been determined that that's not a difficult issue at all. If a weapon can handle 7.62x51 NATO, it should, as a manually operated multi-logged modern heat-treated receiver, be able to handle the 6.8 government round, the new one for the SIG rifle. However, we also need to look at the AR-10. And while the barrels are not complete yet, and I don't know what's going on with that because there are three different project groups working on that from manufacturers that are already in existence, the 6.8 round in the AR-10 is the priority because it's the most logical first choice for fastest conversion. In other words, the Lego gun is the way to go to develop right now a 6.8 government rifle that fully functions. We it would be nice if we could use the government mags But if the government mags do not match the air 10 mag for the time being we don't care because we have a committed and existing AR 10 platform rifle to work off from This means that all their parts all the main primary components barrels that are developed But most important magazines would all integrate fault flawlessly for this project. Go ahead jump in there for Yeah, mark Wouldn't the 7.6 to 51 round with a Sabo achieve at least the kind of velocity that they're talking about with the 6.8 and perhaps better? With a steel core Sabo in there? Right, that's exactly what the 6.8, the new one, the three rounds that presently are now developed from our side, they're actually the bullets that are already being tested. They're actually to the point of now, like I said, we have a bolt action. I also think they use a drop block bolt for the one action because they're developing the barrels. But in this case, a 6.8 pack tell is what they're calling it. It's a 6.8 pack tell discarding sable. And what it is is although right now they're doing it in what they did is they made molds and they're doing it in five five five six. But they're doing a for testing they were using a ball round. For production, the idea is to do a, for instance, a carbide or a steel or whatever material you want to. Because with a Sabo, the material is not going to affect the barrel. However, easily with a 6.8-pack tail discarding Sabo, they're able to achieve 4,000 feet per second right off the bat. So you're talking about a possibly a 60 to 65 grain inside a Sabo, inside, obviously nested in a 6.8 government case, and easily able to achieve 4,000 feet per second, which there's two advantages to this. No, one is excellent penetration, comparable penetration at 300 yards, probably to the M2AP in the 30 out six. But most important is also short time to flight. Now granted, the 6.8 is a hot round to begin with. And this is why they're gonna have to retrain everybody to the trajectory and point of impact issues that are going to lead up to a lot of problems with people presently using the 5.56 and adjusting over to a heavier main battle rifle cartridge. But what's cool is that right now the PACTL is the first project that one's actually finished. They're just trying to figure out how to work it on the AR-10 barrel right now and it shouldn't be a problem. And it's just a 6.8 standard government chain bring that they're doing. The other one is the 6.8 conventional AP penetrator. That's making what they've done. They have made prototype versions of the 6.8 projectile. using the standard internal penetrator that was used in the regular M2AP3006. That tested out flawlessly, so it performs comparable to the original M2AP. Point of impact is comparable to everything that has to do with the 6.8 government, but we have superiority in penetration. The last is the 6.8 duplex or triplex rounds, and basically that's a way to defeat the idea of select fire. We don't need select fire. If you have a triplex, you can fire one round and the duplex or triplex exactly what it sounds like. You have two conical rounds going down range, one behind the other that conform to the 6.8 dimension and compress as they go down the barrel, one behind the other. When they leave the barrel, there is a slight variance in point of impact, creating the equivalent to a two or three round burst, depending upon whether you had the duplex projectile or the triplex. The triplex are three conical projectiles stacked one on top of the other. Now all we did with that was mimic a government program that was developed in the late 1960s to the early 80s. Frankfurt Arsenal and Aberdeen Proving Ground did all the research. So all we did was take advantage of your tax dollars at work. And what this would do is make the 6.8 standard round a three round burst weapon without three rounds bursting. When you pull the trigger, three conical rounds go downrange, one behind the other, lead the barrel, and at point of impact, there is a dissipation or a dispersion of the pattern. And so you have three separate kinetic energy strikes on the target. And the 7 millimeter slash 6.8 lends itself to this project because originally this idea came in with the 7 millimeter assault that they tried to push back in the 50s and they dumped it very quickly. But the government picked it up in 1969 and by 1974, 75, they had perfected the triplex and duplex rounds. to the point where all the head do is get the wink on the nod and instead of like I've said, if you had a 20 round magazine with an M14, instead of 20 rounds going down range rapid fire, you'd have 60 rounds going down range. Now think about that. In other words, and again, remember there's a dispersion. So what you want when you're firing select fire guys, you don't fire with one bullet impacting on top of the other. Get that out of your brain. That's not what you want. What you want is a cone of destruction. You want a patter pattern so that as the first bullet strikes and creates kinetic energy response, the second and then the third bullet hit. When you use a G3, okay, or any of the HKs, they have that three round select or you go to full auto. Why'd they do a three round burst? Well, it's actually traditional and as I mentioned many times, it goes back actually to muskets. When for night fire, if you were on guard duty, you loaded buck or ball. If you loaded ball, it was typically during the day because you can see what was going on. But at night, a three round burst or in other words, buck was typically loaded in a 70 caliber muzzle loader. And when you pulled the trigger, it was more likely you were gonna get a hit if you were pointed in the general direction of the enemy. Well, the basic philosophy of that carried right over to the modern age. And if you were trained during the Vietnam War, you might recall that you were trained for night fire to shoot three round bursts. Even though you had select fire only, you were supposed to gain discipline and experience. And you were supposed to work three round burst on target and then change or follow up. So, the Germans went one step farther and created a three-round burst on the weapon. Well, guess what? This eliminates having to pull the trigger three times or select fire control. If you pull the trigger once with a duplex or a triplex round, you get a number of projectiles going downrange. They literally look like they look like they're initially stacked as a bullet. They look like a stack of street cones, you know, street marker cones. It's what they look like. When they leave, they actually discharge from each other one after another as they are going down the barrel. They also compress and so each one is approximately 55 grains of Copper and well, the first ones were tungsten which they said it was too expensive So they just went with conventional lead and they found that lead worked just fine. They also went with a bronze core For rigidity to make create a more disciplined projectile all of it worked everything they tested worked Basically, we now have that in the 6.8 We could do it in other calibers, but this was somebody just got a burr up there asked as we were talking about it So they're actually doing what we asked for which is cool. So the triplex means that once we can assure everybody that that works the way it should, the way it does. I guarantee somebody's gonna start working on that in 30 caliber. And the advantage is you don't need a special trigger, you don't need to get three bullets down range. Granted, you're firing a 7.62 by 51 NATO round, and you're basically pushing 355 grain bullets down range, which is the equivalent to firing a burst from an M16. But it's a pattern gun, so it's okay. You're doing this, especially again, for suppression fire. Which is it's optimal when you have 20 rounds and you're dumping 60 projectiles down range. That's pretty stinking good Now you could also do it with stacked, stacked lozenge type projectiles. The government tested those during the same period, 1971-72. Basically, it's like a wadcutter, only a tiny wadcutter, and they actually put four projectiles stacked, one on top of the other, 762 by 51 NATO. They had to build them to conform two specs, so they are lead washed. But they are steel, steel, they were steel, how would you call it? Kind of like a Lego or a wadcutter, just a wadcutter bullet, but very short. And the idea was when you pulled the trigger, they had a, they had a spacer element that was crude. Well, it looked like it was almost fibrous cardboard, you know, fibrous cardstock. Anyway, when these things went down range, while they would typically hold together, if they separated, you'd end up with the same end result. But what they did in reality is they got to the other end and those four bullets would go in four different directions upon hitting the target. So you have one coming out your rear end, one going out through your rib cage, another one riding around your rib cage and coming out your spine, another one going in your chest and coming out your ear. They were devastating rounds, but they needless to say did not conform to the Hager Geneva Conventions So they were you know they were tested and the argument was at the time That the projector was supposed to be for survival escape innovation for game getting Well, yeah, I think if you shot a monkey with that he'd be dead I'm pretty sure okay. Go ahead call her chip in there. Yeah, I'm pretty sure I've seen pistol rounds I think there were 357 might have been 38 with two or three short conical projectiles that were stacked very much like that. And when fire they all slam in pretty close with a inch or two of each other creating a much more devastating yet. They were made by CCI and about the same time that they came up, when they came up with those, they also remember came up with their Plastine shot shells for a 357. It became a quite nice little bat kit because you can carry standard 357. You can carry the anti-personnel, you know, laws in charge and you had shot shells for snakes supposedly. You know, they called them a snake charmer because they were Number eight shot and I think I had number nine also But the but yes the projectile the stack projectile system was CCI was the one who brought it out in the 70s About the same time that Winchester reintroduced their 357 armor piercing rounds They'd always had them but they kind of were sitting in the background The original three fifty seven was also a conical projectile looks like a pyramid that comes right to a point about the same steep or the same angle as a, when we're looking at a pyramid, the dimensions from the base to the angle of the approach to the top of the conical. Anyway, they all were quite popular and then of course there was all kinds of propaganda in 77 that mixed most of these projects made them disappear back into the shadows. That government didn't like the idea we were doing just exactly, you know, when they took their money only we saved a lot of time because we looked at their projects. Some of our people actually were participating in them because they were in the military or they're in a research group like Bendix or you know, well, it was Bendix Aerospace, who actually developed some of these projectiles. And Bendix Aerospace, world technologies and also general dynamics. We're all tied into these. Which we're right now. Right, we made them simpler. Just keep it simple stupid. That's one of the things to remember is if you have one example you can do an autopsy on it and you can back engineer quite easily because the big thing about this is that's why I said this idiots stick crap with what they just did with this 6.8 rifle with the case. That's totally bass-ackwards. It's as ludicrous as you can get. It's grossly overcomplicating one of the simplest parts of the system with regard to a firearm. It's grossly overcomplicating what is also supposed to be a throwaway, discardable, perishable item in that small arms ammunition should be of least cost. And there's a reason for that. I've said it a million times. Guys, half of what we built at the beginning of World War II, you know where it's sitting? It's sitting at the bottom of the Atlantic. Why? All our factories cranked it out, they boxed it up, put it in pallets, took it to the coast, put it on ships, they got 200 miles out, and they went straight down. If you can't make it super cheap and make more than you need, you're not gonna get what you need when it finally gets to where it's going. How many racks of Thompson's we had lend lease to the Brits ended up at the bottom of the ocean bottom of the Atlantic Oh God, there's this beautiful picture of drivers have gone. Yeah, there's thousands thousands and thousands shiploads full You know, there's pictures showing Thompson racks down in the depths that they're just sitting there in the arsenal racks the way they were boxed in the steel racks that they were in and They don't mags in them. They're just a gun but these are classics, you know pre-war guns And they are just gradually being eaten by the salt. They're sitting right there. They were brand new in the factory. The reason they lasted so long is because they were cosmoleined and greased for long-term transport and storage. And they knew they were going through a saltwater environment. So salt air is damaging to anything. So everything was packed per mil spec. That's why a lot of that stuff, when they get down there, you can still identify what it is because it's taking time for the ocean to do its job. That's why it better be cheap or it isn't worth it. The military has done phenomenal things, just incredible stuff. Go look up the Frankfurt Arsenal history books, there's three of them. The Frankfurt Arsenal, Arsenal, or Armory books. The first one alone is a treasure trove because you don't have to reinvent the wheel if you find out what wheels everybody made. Anyway, we're at the top for everybody out there. Weapons Wednesday, be creative, remember your mind. your first best weapon. God bless our republic. Come on, cause I'm in world order. We shall prevail, ladies and gentlemen, the Empire is on the run. We are on the march, but day and night, kill them all. We're gonna get away out of here for the moment. We will be back tomorrow, same time, Thursday with the intel report. The landmark, the seat in our home and boys, let it get so tough. And now, let's take the town. That's a sack outside the game. You know what I'm talking about. Just let me know if you wanna go. Boom I don't know. It rains, we got a lot of nice girls.