Mark Koernke discussed the decline of American craftsmanship and infrastructure quality, contrasting the durability and artistry of early 20th-century construction (particularly Frank Lloyd Wright buildings and Victorian-era ironwork) with modern shoddily-built structures. He criticized the University of Michigan for destroying a historic Frank Lloyd Wright building to create a parking lot, warned against donating property to institutions, and explored how steam power enabled major construction projects like the Chicago World's Fair and Empire State Building. Koernke emphasized the importance of preserving technical knowledge, work ethic, and industrial capacity, arguing that diversified energy sources and manufacturing independence are essential to national security and resilience against globalist control.
Stop living your life behind a loser. A figure walked in through the mist with a flintlock in his hand. His clothes were torn and dirty as he stood there by my bed. He took off his three cornered hat and speaking low to me, he said, we fought a revolution to secure our liberty. We wrote the Constitution as a shield from tyranny. For future generations, this legacy we gave. In this, the land of the free and home of the brave. The freedoms we secured for you, we hoped you'd always keep. 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. It's a number. You trade it in your name. You've given government control to those who do you harm so they could burn down churches and seize family farms and keep our country deep in debt. Put men of God in jail. Harash your fellow countrymen while corrupted courts prevail. Your public servants don't uphold the solemn oaths they've sworn. And your daughters visit doctors so their children will be born. Your leaders send artillery and guns to foreign shores and send your sons to slaughter fighting other people's wars. Can you regain the freedoms for which we fought and died? Or don't you have the courage or the faith to stand with pride? And are there no more values for which you'll fight to save? Or do you wish your children to live in fear and be a slave? O sons of the Republic, arise, take a stand, defend the Constitution, the Supreme Law of the land, preserve our great Republic and each God given right, and pray to God to keep the torch of freedom burning bright. As I awoke, he vanished in the mist for whence he came. His words were true, we are not free. But we have ourselves to blame. For even now as tyrants trample each god-given right, we only watch and tremble, too afraid to stand and fight. If he stood by your bedside to dream while you were asleep, and wondered what remains of the freedoms he'd fought to keep, what would be your answer if he called out from the grave? Dill the land of the fruit. Intelligence report, I'm Mark Carkey. One day closer to victory for all of our brothers and- and behind the lines in occupied territories southwest northeast and troll ladies and gentlemen you're listening to us on the www.libertytreeradio.4mg.com Liberty Tree radio dot o-r-g and we are on satellite what does he hide all our merchant marine out there we're virtual in every ocean on the planet and inland with all the connective links back and forth, God knows how many places they're doing this. Only God knows. They're not even the people doing it. They're not even sure how much they're covering right now, but they know they're on every part of the planet. Anyway, we're also in a myriad of other communications technologies, both inside and outside these United States, to include CB Research slash Test Channel 31 operating here in Michigan at another location this weekend. And they'll be setting up another part of the CB constant communication grid for broadcasting. And of course you're listening to us in some cases on local CB stations that have run now for over 30 years. So congratulations, keep up the good work. The president radios are notorious for that. Well, it is the 20th of September. It is the Communications Tuesday, by the way, 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... Now, you know, I worked at the University of Michigan. It probably got a good idea if you've been listening for a while. And of course, you can read the propaganda where they try to do everything they can to attack me for working for a living, which I think is always fascinating. I mean, unlike the pricks and toadies and turds that do absolutely nothing but parrot, whatever they're told that's in the teleprompter or the AP wire service printout. Yeah, right. And all of us. Really? Are they? No, no they're not. They're parrots. Anyway, I used to work at the University of Michigan. Up on what's called the Hill, which is where the old observatory is, not the radio observatory, which is down the road from the house which is the intersection of, it's on the northwest corner of Territorial Road and Dexter Picky Road. Peach Mountain is where the radio observatory is. And that's been around for quite some time. That's actually was originally a naval complex before it was handed over to the U of M. Hint, hint, wink, wink, nod, nod. But anyway, the hill, which is right there off to the east of Central Campus. This side of the river of North Campus, it's an area unto itself which is referenced for operations. And Mary Markley Hall, which you can find easily on the map, at the end of Mary Markley Hall was a very interesting building. And in fact, an historical landmark. In fact, one of only a handful of institutional buildings of the type that would be of great historical interest to anyone in the country. First of all, how many of you are familiar with Frank Lloyd Wright? Now I'm looking at one of his pictures. It's actually my mouse pad. And it's cool because you may have seen this before. It's a very modern looking structure. Right angles. monolith, the field stone center area, but this creek, you designed the house so that it was built over a creek with a waterfall. You've seen the picture before, and then just as far as the downstream, there's a smaller waterfall. And the whole thing was built to be, on the one hand, totally modern. It's totally, absolutely a modern-esque design while of course, you know, divining to the, you know, integration with nature. In other words, you don't have to shut off the stream or tear down all the trees. In fact, just to reverse. It was intentionally built in a woods. That's not always a great thing because there's a couple things to consider. It's in a northern climb, so flat roofs are not a great idea. But remember, Franklin Wright was famous for the Bogota-type roofs, although not quite as steep as you would see with some of the Asian designs, specifically with Japan. But very much giving you the, like the cross between a flat roof construction and a conventional peaked roof with a very, very, very, very, very shallow taper. Well, Frank Lloyd Wright, if you're here in Michigan, there's a tour that you can go on. And there are many houses and personal structures that were designed specifically by Frank Lloyd Wright. There was... You'll notice I keep using a word. It's a three-letter word, W-A-S. There was one of these buildings located up on the hill. Now, it's right next to the University of Michigan Hospital. And the construction, well, first of all, the University of Michigan are pricks, okay? I have to emphasize, and you're gonna hear me say this several times, don't you dare. Don't you ever. By God give it to a total stranger, but don't you ever give anything to the government? Or to any college or university as a donation ever Ever you are you might as well go out back and whatever you donate burn it You might as well just walk in pit pit if it's a if it's a building you might as well walk in and piss on the walls Smear feces all over everything Cover it with kerosene and light a match. That's how much respect the pricks, the pace, the excrement that make up the managing mechanism of the U of M, the people who make the decisions, they are absolute just arrogant curves, worthless toadies. All part of the in-soup for social research, spit swapping, ring knocking, yamical wearing trash, and they hate it. when you donate something but you're smart and you attach requirements to the operation. Well, at the end of Mary Markley Hall, and you can do a pictorial, you can actually pull this up on Google, find Mary Markley Hall on Google in Ann Arbor. It's located right on the edge, or next to women's hospital, closest to women's hospital. And at the eastern end of that building, there was a very, very unique structure sitting there. It was designed by Frank Lloyd Wright personally. He in fact was involved in the construction of this office facility that was a construction for the benefit of the engineering school and the University of Michigan. Now, there's beyond it is the ARB, the Arboretum, the ARB as it's called. And to the south of it is a cemetery just beyond Markley Hall. Okay, it was. Again, the key word was. Now I know beyond a shadow of a doubt that they had millions. This is the key to understanding the pigs at the U. There were millions of dollars put in escrow to support the building. So in other words, U of M never had any real money to spend on this. But they had money they couldn't steal from. Oh, I've been in meetings, they were, you'd ask about, you know, about that building when there were upper management people around, and they would get all, their panties would get in a bunch, their yamacles would start spinning, and these teeth would come out and you'd be like, you shouldn't have mentioned that. And it's like, why? Well, because literally, they had a rock solid lockdown, system that was established whereby monies were made available to make sure that the facility was maintained and the University of Michigan had to maintain it. I know the inside workings of this and it was imperpetual. In other words, you really couldn't run the money out because there was more money than they needed for the building and it was locked in so the old greedy thieves, the pigs, the excrement, the turds at the U, They couldn't get it. Oh, they stole money from that. They steal. It has to be billions now from that place every year. They've got a science. The kosher mafia and the spit swappers and ring knockers milk every one of these colleges always costing more for you. But with all the funding coming in from idiots who are donating in combination with the massive amounts of federal money that goes to these skanks, guys, they're eating shark steaks. They carry away cases of wine and I'm not exaggerating about either. Okay. So anyway, they would piss and moan but this building had to be maintained. Wasn't a very fancy building, but it definitely had the the pagoda construction, shallow pagoda construction of the Frank Lloyd Wright buildings, you know, large veranda front walk areas and places to move around the building. The interior was really mapped out well and it was It was kind of an oblique odd spot and for the longest time it was there. Now I know from the inside they were just chomping at the bit because they wanted to, they just wanted to get rid of it because, not because it was a burden, because there was no burden. But these panty waste leftist turds, all these institutions hate it when they realize you're smarter than them and if you interact with them you lock them into a promise. So every year they try to figure out how they could do damage or do something to that building. There was even the suspicion that they would try arson. I'm not exaggerating on this, that they might try to have a fire and get the city, because the city's in the University of Michigan's back pocket or horse, to condemn it that they couldn't rebuild. Well, couldn't rebuild is based on the idea that it's just not economically possible for anybody to afford to rebuild. But I know beyond a shadow of a doubt that the $4.8 to $6.8 million it was in reserve all the time was sufficient to do any reconstruction might be needed for the scale of the building. But then one year, several years ago now, the building just disappeared. It goes, what? Out of the blue, in a very narrow window of time, they had a crew come in, destroy the building completely. and level everything in sight, fill the hole that was there because they had to dig up everything down into the foundation. This is a good size building. And then they did something very important. What did they need this space for? Was there something critical that was oh so important they just had to have that acreage that wasn't even acreage. It was only, well, maybe a couple acres, including the grass. Okay, it was a good size building, but it was economical on the area that was allocated to it. What did they do with it? They turned it into a gravel parking area. Well, no, Mark, it must have been important they were extending this or adding, nope, nope. They simply were so vindictive and petty and talking to people that I know that they just came in and they're still in court on part of this. Somebody found out after the fact. I think that what they assumed is anybody who was an aficionado of the institution because it was in a really weird, it was in an odd place because everything built up near it. Mary Mark with all came in after the construction and originally this location was quite scenic. I might point out that it looked into the Arboretum, the Arb, which runs along the Huron River, which is an epic story of thievery unto itself, if you know the University of Michigan. But this is an example of what I'm talking about. This building was on the historical register. It was in the top 35 Frank Lloyd Wright places to go in this area, in Michigan. I would say it's actually the top 20, but I'll just give it a big berth because there's quite a few buildings around Ann Arbor that are all uniquely Frank Lloyd Wright, not inspired, but Frank Lloyd Wright built. There's a big difference, okay? So again, on no way in hell, if they would do that with a national and historical site, imagine what the pigs would do with just your petty property. They have no respect for you, and they have no respect for anything that's done for them. They're power freaks, typically now pedo queers, as they were. And I warned everybody years ago when I was working, I said, dudes, do you know what these creatures are? All people didn't wanna hear that. This is the pedo queer institution that's gonna be frothing at the mouth out onto your public schools in a very short period of time. And lo and behold, exactly what I warned you all about is what happened. But never, never, not to the government, never leave it to the government. You might as well again walk out and just burn whatever you're gonna do, whatever you think you're gonna do. Burn in the backyard. You'll get more out of it, so will everybody else. It'll either be stolen or desecrated and damaged and they hate the idea when they especially lock it in and do a donation with some kind of other attachments. You're typically getting contractual attachments for maintenance. because they don't want to hold the money for that. They want to steal the money, the digits for shark steaks and cases of wine at the executive parties over at the gardens or the golf course. Okay, the other golf course, not the one over by the stadium, the one over on the east side of town of Ann Arbor. It's horrible. It is disgusting. Under no circumstances, he's sure as hell don't give it to the government. Look what they're like. This is worse. You give it to a college or a university? You might as well just shred it. But I argue first, find a stranger and give them a nice place to live. Go find a stranger, a family. Here's what's really cool. You want to do some good? Don't leave it for a stinking college. Go find a family that's got four or five kids and they're trying to make ends meet but they're honest and both family members are working. Give them the house. Give them the cottage, give them the piece of property, but sure is. By God, do not give anything to a college or university. There is none of them that are deserving, not one. They already get enough money from so many other sources that you're just chump change to them. Even if you give them a house and properties or even your business building. Oh God, help you on that. Just tear that down in 15 minutes. And again, I've seen this over and over again. But the Frank Lloyd Wright building to me is the epitome. By God, if they could do that with the contract that they had to lock them in, they just slid in one day, tore everything down, and now they're fighting with whoever it took time. First of all, nobody believed it. Nobody believed they tore it down. I even told other people who were Frank Lloyd Wright aficionados, and they go, the U of M, I always love it, guys. How many times you ever heard this BS? All the U of M would never do them! Oh my God, they did! They killed them! And then they get quiet. I used to look down on that building, or, you know, I could lie down. I worked right there in that area. I used to go around the building, sit down on that porch there. Every once in a while during the summer, it was perfect the way it was designed. The air circulation was phenomenal. Great place to sit down for lunch. It's disgusting. Meanwhile, they build crappy traps downtown that are just facade like Italian monstrosities from the Bonito Mussolini era. It's funny in hell. It's like, well, it's got the facade, but none of the substance. Yeah, it's just crappy looking in general, isn't it, sir? Yes, yes it is. Crappy and poor quality internally, but then again, they pocketed the rest of the money because Blatsonstein needed another bathroom in the third wing of his mansion over in Haifa or Tel Aviv. That's why. Now, in reverse order, I mentioned something. Before there was diesel, there was steam. And by the way, there is still steam. Steam is out there in force. You just don't see it the way you'd expect. Anybody who's getting power right now is, well, being affected by steam, right? Understand that? Wouldn't I hear what they argue? The only one that to a limited degree in the quality of production is so crappy that it's not really countable or useful. I mean it's useful in the combined arms team but not to say this is all we're going to do and that's the wind generators. And again even there the problem with the situation is well wind doesn't work all the time and they can't manage the grid very well. We should point that out. The other half of where the problem is is the lack of ability to effectively, even though they've known how to manage power for a long time, integrate the power grid of the other green crap where it could be, could have been intelligently done, but they want to leave out as many people as they can, because these are the spit-swapper ring knockers taking care of even a smaller little niche click. However, steam. You know, somebody says, if we have World War III, we go back to the Stone Age. And I've argued over and over again, only if you're an idiot. You do realize that most, and this is what's always fascinating to me, is most of the technology, most of the significant constructions for that matter, were done far in advance of the quote unquote modern age. What can it take to electrify and create state to state nation across the whole of the nation single communications Motivated people with a work ethic. That's the big problem You got knows you have to have a work ethic or you can't get anything done but steam Accommodated most of that there were no diesels. There really wasn't even gas engines. So I'll point that out Steam Power gave you all the energy and torque that you needed to do phenomenal work on a massive scale. Remember here about a year back everybody had a bunch of the stuff on the internet that you know and we had discussions about it here on the Intel report about the anniversary of the like Chicago World's Fair or talking about the Chicago World's Fair constructions or other constructions that it was How could they have done this? It was so intricate and they did it in such a short time. And it's, you know, the people, you know, people have a hard time wrapping their brain around work ethic and understanding the technology of the era. Virtually, well, almost everything that we do today with diesel and electric was done with steam. and on a comparable scale of weight, you know, slash horsepower to lift ratio. What do I mean by that? Well, in other words, if I had a steam shovel, remember that term? You might remember that term if you're old enough to use your hair all the time. Hey, he's got a steam shovel. Well, a steam shovel literally was a steam shovel. You realize that, right? You know, we used that term for a very long time, even though the rig that was a big bucket, okay, that was digging a hole for a foundation. was the size of your garage and people used to still call them steam shovels as I was growing up. They weren't steamed, but the energy was where. And I did just about a month ago, I used the same term because I was like, what the heck is it called? I found out it went and researched. It's called an excavator now. It used to be a steam shovel. Yeah, yeah. Yeah, and the steam, but here's the thing. Understand the scale of the equipment we're talking about. because that's the part that everybody seems to think, well, old times and guys only had a sixth grade education and they didn't know how to do anything. I've mentioned this many times about what's missing. First of all, they have to burn all the books, you know that. What did Victorian America look like in 1880? I want you to think about that and see if you can even find some honest images. I'm not talking about the women's foofy dresses. I'm not talking about hairstyles. I'm talking about what did the industry and engineering and the cityscape of the nation look like across the country. What was the big thing out of the 1870s, 1880s, and then into the 1890s? It was the age of steel and iron. In fact, you see machines, the Russians have laughable copies, or actually what they had. Was American equipment taken over to Russia? Have you seen what some of the mills, the iron and steel mills look like? How big they are during the age of steel and iron? How they were built? If eventually a technology is consumed by the next technology, it's almost impossible unless somebody makes a genuine effort to save the technology. Well, now it's not going to be hard because the plastic crap and the computers are, you know, this history is all going to be lost, mostly lost. It'll be even more insane than when you try to talk to people about what I'm talking about right now. Because I can go to, you know, Henry Ford Museum, even though it's being crappily maintained by a bunch of leftists now, globalists, and I can take you to a machine rate that's a shadow. The small versions of what existed in 1880 and 1890. Have you ever seen a steel mill, a dynamic steel mill? Stories tall, stories. a story or two stories. You know, after all, they were so stupid, they couldn't build anything. And everything had to have style. This is one thing. We have no style in this nation right now. We are planet Krapu. We have gone into the toilet, into the ships with regard to this country's idea of any kind of style. Most people would be set aback just by being dropped on the streets in most American cities. because of how intricate things were. Because iron... Oh, the molten... and in iron or iron filigree, internally, externally, on the buildings. Hell, remember the Adams family? America has gotten so used to cheap everything is cardboard boxes dad You know my opinion of the house I meant living in right now was built in 94 and it was built with chipboard chipboard Well, it was yeah, it was by the way. It's and by the way, it isn't cheap Okay, the house is not cheap But here's the thing, I mentioned the Addams Family. What was, okay, they're creepy and they're kooky. When you heard that song and you watched the beginning of the Addams Family, what was Gomez doing? Let me jog everybody's memory. What made them weird? Well, they had that old Victorian house, first of all, which was the creepy mansion. What you see there, you gotta remember the period. That yes, he was remember he was filing sharpening the boys Come on over come on over please yeah, hop over that hop over that fence and let me watch They get they did get dull somehow. Yeah. Well, I see my here's the here's the thing about that guys originally they were sharp iron fences were designed so you could see through things, but it literally did what it was supposed to do, keep people out. Seriously. And everybody, I mean, they were everywhere, even in where, where do you still find them left over? Where do you find iron fences? Most commonly if you were to drive from one end of Michigan to Ohio or Indiana or Kentucky or Pennsylvania, what's the one thing you'll find? Where's the one place you'll find iron fencing? Almost, they count two actually, but the first is more common. What's- And cemeteries. Bingo! Why? Because they had some traditions still attached to them and they were unique. But understand, if you look at the intricacy of those designs, understand that was the social norm of the 1880s. And building fancier and more intricate and doing it in so many unique ways. How many of you have seen in your town? We have one place that back in the bicentennial that was saved, which is the only reason it's there now. is the tin outer surfacing, stamped sheet metal, stamped tin, that was used for siding. It was also used inside for ceilings, and you see it's coming back into stuff, but now they're doing plastic, which is barely affordable in metal. Oh, hell, that's often toilet zone. But the fact is that it was the norm back in the day. And it was always intricate. You go into an old place, you look up at that high ceiling with 14 feet, in many cases, and you'll notice it's, wait a minute, what is that made out of? Whoa, that looks like it's steel. Because it wasn't plastic. And the Augustine Company had its own little print tent that they were mass produced on. But you would go from state to state and find different ones. It's not like everybody had the same generic BS. Right, and everything, and that was the idea. How ornate and how intricate, but how close, depending on what it was. For instance, they made a stamped cement like stone. It was steel. It's what we have in Dexter at the corner of Main Street, right in the middle of town. The one building in the middle, they actually went through in 1976, took all of that off and had a company come in and refurbish and put it all back on. So we know it'll probably last for maybe another hundred years. But that dated back to 1872. Now why am I bringing this up? Well, because a year ago or a couple years ago, yeah, it'll last for an indefinite period of time. Well, by the way, the iron would have too. All of the, in fact, would it not be? Well, first of all, think about this. You build all of this really phenomenal construction. It is exquisite. I mean, really it's par-done. There's nothing that can compare with the quality of the product. Today, you can't afford it. Even though, again, back in the day, the average grade was considered something that pretty much everybody could afford. Think about that one. Even if you could afford it, Dad, even if you could afford all of that. The homeowners association and the building code, which building code really they have the standard for building code is so low in most places. It's ridiculous. And this place is a chipboard. And not only that, but architecture when it comes to what they're doing commercially. And it's not a mistake, guys. We're living in a prison state. Have you seen what they've done with the Taco Bells and the McDonalds? They all look like the same brown shoe box now. On top of that, if you've seen any of them up where you are, dad, but down here, we've started to see Taco Bell banks. Taco Bell now looks like a bank. You can't get in. There is no dining room area. You've got four drive-in spots and an elevator that comes down the chute like the vacuum tube that brings you the food. You don't even get to see the person who's, you know, you don't even get to talk to the person at the window. You talk to them on a little monitor. It's the thing. Wait a minute. Well, of course, Ed, because remember, it was Taco Bell that won the... Taco Bell is not the only one. You take a look at any of these mainstream Food it doesn't matter if it's Panda Express if it's if it's Taco Bell or if it's the only one that's got a unique look down here right now Well, there's two you have what a burger which is slowly becoming like McDonald's and losing its unique You know shape and then you have Sonic which still has the outdoor Roar's gate, you know pull up it later used up thing But all the others they've all turned to this brown shoe box look with maybe a color for their spine. Yeah. Or prison gray. Most of them up here now are all prison gray. In fact, this is it's so low key you drive by it. And that's what's really comical is how much business are you losing for lack of attention, which is a basic rule about advertising. Okay, and again, well low-key advertising, we can't have a big marquee or marquee or anything like that. You know what that's about, dad? America is not allowed to have culture. And they'll tell you, America has no culture. And because all of these companies have gone global, you can't have an American look for the company. And that golden arch is that that float building with the fry lights on it. You can't have that because that screams America and they're globalist now. So they have to be generic, shoebox, globalist companies that leave no signature and can fit into a police state like China. So we don't give them any of our money. Right, exactly. That's what I was going to say. Number one is I don't go to the place and stop doing business and make a point of reminding everybody else how they shouldn't do. The other thing is, remember, it's only a matter of time moments before they start telling you they won't take cash. If they don't already, of course, Star Pukes is, I think, as of, it's either the beginning of this month or it was the beginning of next month. Taco Bell. No, October. The Taco Bell down here on the corner will not take cash anymore. Well, then don't do business and everybody needs to remember. No, I can't do business. You have no idea when cash. Right. Well, the thing about this, the reason I brought this up is, and it actually, although it bleeds into so many of the things, lack of style is one thing that just is very obvious. The gray puke that basically is the socialists. Socialists are turds. Socialists have no imagination. Socialists just absolutely are dead wood. In fact, they're not even dead wood, they're just dirt, because dead wood, wood, dead wood even, could be stylish. They're just dirt, okay? And everything that you see that comes out of the whatever vomitus comes out of their face is what we're seeing and how it progressively spins farther and farther down into nothingness, okay? We got the thinkers and the creative minds. They got the stinkers. They got the worthless turds. The problem is we need to cull them away from us. Now, I bring this up for a reason. I'm going to go back to the age of steam. And by the way, also the age of chemistry, because I will remind you, there's a window there with the expansion and research, development and all kinds of other cool stuff in the physical world that totally changed things. Remember, smokeless powder was created before the age of electricity. Always remember that. Smokeless powder was created before the age of electricity. So for everybody goes, what do we do if they do this? And then, oh, who cares? Get your act together, find out a little bit more about how to do things, and amazingly enough, it's amazing how much we can get done. Once you figure out you don't need all these extra middlemen and a lot of extra, in fact, the more complicated it is, I told you many times, the more steps you add to it, the more complicated it becomes, the less useful it is under critical conditions situations. Okay, always remember that. You want to minimize to maximize. But one of the things that came up here was like I said, all these people were saying, oh, that's Chicago World's Fair. Did you see what it looked like? Have you seen the images? It couldn't have been made by man. Some space aliens had to be involved. The reason that they could actually push that out there is because nobody has, there's no working knowledge of how things work. And the misperception because of the lack of historical education to understand the progressive development of technology. And they want it that way because if you understand that all the crap we're doing now, we could do it with less and get probably more done. Now, sadly enough, if you took the really cool, some of the ideas we have now and applied them, to integrate with some of the earlier ideas, you'd have a great world. But you can't do that when the socialists run your education system, when the incompetence, the idiots, and the fools are allowed to gravitate to where purple hair and teaching your kid to be queer at kindergarten age is more important than all of the foundational information that's necessary to create a great society. You see the problem? Interestingly enough, as I would point out, it was work ethic. Let me give you an example of something. I can use the U of M because I saw this way in advance. The departments had a simple accounting system for keeping track of work, and it was a work slip. No matter what department you would be in at the University of Michigan, you had a work slip for projects, no matter what you do. When I was at in North Campus, we would accomplish anywhere from 23 to 26, 27 work ticks a day for anything and everything you can imagine. And of course, when I first came to University of Michigan, the department that I was in had three supervisors, 127, 100, 29, 131 employees at one time or another, because people were always retiring. And some people would never retire. God, we had negative one guy been there for 47 years when I, you know, even while I was working there and he didn't want to retire and he shouldn't have had to. And guess what? I don't recall what he did in my lifetime. Well, it had to be dead now. But anyway, three, three supervisors, nobody lost a vacation day. Everybody got all their, you know, money, sick time and, you know, everything was up to snuff. Payroll was taken care of. Today, that same department has 57 supervisors plus. has 27 to 29 regular employees. I've heard that it was lower for a bit all the way down to like 21 or 22. I talked to one of the guys I worked with there. And so you have twice as many supervisors, stuporvisors, as you do people who actually do work. But let me give you an example of productivity. With anywhere up to, including up to 27, Work tasks were to be accomplished in a day and the department's varied but still the basic workload was about the same So I talked to one of these guys was doing basically the same job here and this is more than a few years ago now And I said well how things going and he goes huh, and he puts his whole show on Okay, it was really tough today We were busy really busy. I Gotta go home and I'm gonna have to sit down for a bit. We did We did six tickets today. Six. How many? Oh, six. The job area has not changed. The workload, there is no significant addition in any way, shape or form with regard to available sites, but that wouldn't make any difference. So we went from 25, 26, 27, let's say ticks a day, we're one fifth the capacity with the same number of people doing the job since a particular task was, you know, pretty, pretty narrow niche. Okay. So one fifth, the productivity, one fifth of anything getting done in a day, one, what, this is 2022 in a 20, 20 year period, 22 year period, one fifth So this is why when people look at these phenomenal tasks and how they were done and how were they done in such a short period of time? Well, the guys Chew and Sauerkraut, those German stonemasons were masters of the trade in real world, not the fake ass wadbuddies. And they actually knew what they were doing and they had something attached to what they were doing. So did the steelmongers, so did everybody. They had a work ethic. They accomplished something. Not only that, there was pride in performance. This is another thing that it's one of the first things socialists have to destroy. is pride in performance, or in fact even lame claim to any performance except for the supervisor. And when you have 50 some supervisors, they all have to lay claim to something to continue to absorb and destroy whatever capital you have to work with. So don't worry, you don't even have any money to work with because most of it's wasted on paper pushing incompetence who have no interest in doing anything. Nothing in the real world. spinning lots of paperwork, numbers look great. We come before you to stand behind you. Okay? So when people do this, and I hear this, it's like, well, it's real easy. And by the way, they didn't do it with hands. I mean, they had hands, and they used their hands, but they had steam, and they had electric. And like I said, steam shovels, okay? Have you seen, well, even by the time we see the construction of the Empire State Building. Okay, go look at what you little you can find that might be any realistic essay on the Empire State Building. And most of that's been cobbled or most of it unless it has something to do with the building itself. There's nothing that tells you that much about how things worked around it. But that was an overlapping period of technology. The electric had caught up to a degree along with diesel to a degree. It just was actually fairly new. But steam still did most of the work on the ground. It was a steam rig that lifted the girders. It was steam power that ran. In fact, it ran the pneumatics. Steam ran the pneumatics that ran the lines that went to the power units that did that, when they ran rivets. Cut off tools and everything else. Did it take a little longer to wield everything and bring it into place? Yeah. It's amazing when you're highly motivated and you're skilled and you're paying attention And you actually again have a work ethic and you're gonna you know, you're like even in competition so to speak That you don't dude, we're gonna get this done that we're gonna we're gonna get do better than we did yesterday Bob's crew. They're doing okay, but we can do better Totally different attitude and of course the unions didn't I know I appear first people would be complaining about the unions But don't forget the Armstrong boss was one of the reasons that work got done and as the Armstrong boss disappeared, so did the productivity of the country. Or the effective management in peacetime. In wartime, sky's the limit. What do I mean by Armstrong management? Well, in the old days he used to, you're like, pop your side to head, I'm not exaggerating. Those old German guys and the Italian guys were from the old school. Okay, the old Polish guys are from the old school. All these people are going to go, oh yeah, this is really great. All these people that came in from the old school kids, not that America was any better. Trust me on this one. Don't cough. You're screwed up. They use with mechanical adjustment. In other words, smack your side of the head. Not to hurt you, but it's like, Hey, to get a point across. Oh, you couldn't do that today. You have so many piss willies, why not line in or whatever. Yeah. Which is progressively what did happen. But in the old days and by the way, it'd be just as likely that you both get into a pissing match and end up duking it out But the idea was what we say by Armstrong boss is the boss He not only was the boss, but he was usually the guy most physically capable of handling the crew Mark Think about that one. No. Well Bob's in charge. What do you mean Bob's in charge? Well, he's gonna let oh, trust me Bob's in charge. Go ahead color jump in there I think the official death of the learn by getting cuffed in your ear died with Patton when he slapped that guy with the fear monger going on. Which by the way was the official way? Slap him! Yeah, slapping back to reality, that was a term I remember quite well. Get him back here with us because we need everybody, every man Jack we got. Slap his ass back into reality right now. I know enough men who served in every war, like I said, World War I, World War II, and I said, thank goodness there was a guy, but almost always it was the badass sergeant. Now that badass sergeant was dead in a few months. I know like my World War I friends, they're all gone from World War I, they tell you the same thing. It was that badass sergeant, who by the way, you know, been around a few years, that, you know, kept booting everybody in the ass, and if somebody started to get goofy, he'd be slap ya. But you know what? He slapped you back to reality. We ain't got time for this. I ain't got time to waste with you. So you get back, you know, you get in motion or, you know, you're useless tool. We're all in this together right now. We're all up to our eyeballs and feces. And everybody in World War II, same thing. Korea, my, everybody I know from, you know, in Korea tell you the same thing. And even Vietnam wasn't any different. Then of course you get the panty ways coming in from the regime and the government the socialists and oh, you know We're now to the point where PTSD Everybody's got it and we can go back through every war and if you didn't know you had you got guys talking from the Korean War Well, I never had a problem with the war and I didn't have any problem after the war But a few years ago here I went to the VA and they told me I got post-traumatic stress disorder They actually have got that in film on one of the bullshit history channels. Well, the guy didn't have a problem. You know why everybody was coached, everybody has been coached. If you got PTSD, you get some chump change and drugs. And the big thing is drugs. I guarantee there is no one, for instance, that is in any way, shape or form, I'm gonna be honest about how many of our troops have committed suicide since they came home. Not because of what they saw in the war. But because of government drugs and little Trotsky glasses wearing socialist pigs in the VA and in other institutions who are pricks Absolute pricks just total worthless turds And again, for a chump chain, really, just tell them when you leave. You got, and anybody remember this story, this is not the only one, but there's many, many like it. The guy's not an aircraft carrier. What did he do? He was in the Gulf War, okay? What was he doing in the Gulf War? Man, was he flying attack fighters and flak was coming up and missiles up his butt? No, no. Helicopters? Was he an assault helicopter? Maybe he was in recovery. He was going to rescue pilots, even though not many were shot down. No, wasn't doing that was he on the flight deck and he could see afar the wreckage and the explosion. Nope No, guys got post-traumatic stress disorder and he was a mechanic in a boiler room What he's in the Navy He's in the boiler room. He's a wrench turner, which is fine. In fact, my god, he's skilled trades And you know what? He's got Post-Traumatic Stress Disorder from Gulf War II. Which is why we need to get rid of everything that's steam. Because without steam you wouldn't have a boiler room. Yeah, even with a, and remember that, even with a nuclear ship. Guys, how do you translate radiological power, you know, energy into something useful. It has to be commuted into something. Which is why nobody told you, well, it's steam, that's I and Kate, that's all I told you before. If you can get any manuals on Naval steam operations, grab them. Why? Well, because right now this nuclear fleet, what do you think it runs on? So the state of the art, or even the older, doesn't make any difference. There's phenomenal information there. If you want to understand the trait of steam, you want to collect as many of those manuals as you can from the Navy because they're dead serious about keeping their ships moving. They don't pitot part around the way industry does where they can squander resources, gut the company, and then send it to China. The Navy's got to kind of stay afloat. So the technical information, especially older when it was actually 100% American and not botched the way a lot of it is today at this moment in time. Right now we're screwed. But any of this other information can be saved. There is no reason for us to go into the Stone Age, that's stupid. One steam engine, a handful of steam engines could power a community in every way you can imagine as far as electricity goes. purely a matter of, and again, a machine makes a bigger machine. That bigger machine makes a bigger machine. That's why, like I said, back when NAFTA and GATT took place and they screwed America, they took away what was the equivalent to nine generations of industrial development, all with the signing of a pen by those horrors, the Bushes and the Clintons. Then it took us a hundred well at that point in time 220 years 210 years to get to But again, if you have no working knowledge of how things are made you can baffle everybody with whatever bullshit you want and lie your ass off It things just happen you have the idiot sticks right now coming out of the public fool system. Just exactly thinking that way Which is what and ran in Atlas Shrugged? was talking about. And in fact, there's a lot of idiot sticks out there that I've noticed for whatever bizarre reason, this is the leftist slash even a fake right, where they're making snide comments about Anne Rand. Go read Anne Rand's Atlas Shrugged. Go read The Fountainhead. And then come back and ask yourself, you know, who are the turds out there? When you hear things said, because it's safe to attack the people who were showing you what communism, socialism slash the parasite is all about. So anyway, the fact of the matter is, we don't need to go back into the Stone Age, but we do need to preserve whatever we can so we have a starting point that is much more advanced. And by the way, whatever leftovers are advanced, could be integrated. In other words, how will you power it? Oh, I can show you a dozen ways. I can think out of every box that they try to put you in. And that's why diversified wins. Okay, what they're trying to do is they're trying to tell you we're going to drop all, for instance, gas motors right now. This is the subject that everybody's talking about. Well, if we're going to drop gas motors, what are we going to do with the gasoline? Well, we're not going to make gasoline, that's not how it works. No matter what, you're going to be pumping gasoline or oil out of the ground. And I've told you a million times, all of the eans have to come off a barrel of oil before the real valuable products can be used. And there is nothing in everything that they're doing. Not one thing that they're talking about that isn't gonna require lubricants on a massive scale. There isn't anything they're talking about. Suspension systems are still gonna be needed. Races and bearings and yes, you can use, oh, we're gonna use high-tech aircraft, blah, blah, blah. Well, do you know what the price of high-tech aircraft greases and lubricants are and where they come from? They come from the barrel of oil we just talked about. But you know what their cost is? Well, if you don't like paying for a quart of oil for your engine, wait till you have to start paying for the POL, petroleum oil and lubricant products that will be made for those electric cars. Talk about Jack Ripoff. Not supposed to talk about that. Now again, this is why an integrated system with multiple you want to you want to stay alive You want your country to stay alive you want hydro solar wind conventional coal unique multi-fuel A figure walked in through the mist with a flip clock 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 said We fought a revolution to secure our liberty. We wrote the Constitution as a shield from tyranny. For future generations, this legacy we gave. In this, the land of the free and home of the brave. The freedoms we secured for you, we hoped you'd always keep. The tyrants labored endlessly while your parents were asleep. Your freedom's gone, your courage lost, you're no more than a slave. In this, the land of the free and home of the brave. You buy permits to travel and permits to own a gun. Permits to start a business or to build a place for one. On land that you believe you own, you pay a yearly rent. Although you have no voice in saying how the money's spent. Your children must attend a school that doesn't educate. And your Christian values can't be taught according to the state. You read about the current news in a regulated press and you pay a tax you do not owe to please the IRS Your money is no longer made of silver nor of gold you trade your wealth for paper so your life can be controlled You pay for crimes that make our nation turn from God and shame number traded in your name You've given government control to those who do you harm so they could burn down churches and seize the family farm And keep our country deep in debt put men of God in jail harass your fellow countrymen while corrupted courts prevailed Your public servants don't uphold the solemn oaths. They've sworn and your daughters visit doctors So their children won't be born Your leaders send artillery and guns to foreign shores and send your sons to slaughter fighting other people's wars Can you regain the freedoms for which we fought and died? Or don't you have the courage or the faith to stand with pride? And are there no more values for which you'll fight to save? Or do you wish your children to live in fear and be a slave? O sons of the Republic, arise, take a stand, defend the Constitution, the Supreme Law of the land, preserve our great Republic and each God given right, and pray to God to keep the torch of freedom burning bright. As 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 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 fought to keep What would be your answer if he called out from the grave? I see him on the line, but we're not hearing anything. There we go. One, two, three. There we go. That's interesting. It showed a positive on mine and what that happens. It's not it. That had to be in the system. Good afternoon, ladies and gentlemen. Sorry about the blank space here. This is the second hour of the afternoon intelligence report. I'm our currently one day closer to victory for all of our brothers and sisters, both on and behind the lines and occupied territories. south, southwest, southeast, and north. Ladies and gentlemen, you are listening to us on www.libertytreeradio.4mg.com. LibertyTreeRadio.org. And we're unsettling. Say hi to the Maroos and everybody across all of the oceans on the planet. We're also in a myriad of other communications technologies inside and outside these United States. It is the 20th of September. It's Communications Tuesday. It is the 14th year of Open Obvious And they are pissing in America's 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 this is one of the things, again, preservation of knowledge. If we have it, we don't have to rethink it. One of the books I picked up the other day real quick, just it's on the subject of what I touched on last night a little bit. Shop Theory, Revised Edition, prepared by the Shop Theory Department, Henry Ford Trade School, Dearborn, Michigan, 19, pre-World War II, but this one was printed in 1942, and of all places, in Ann Arbor, Michigan, by Edwards Brothers. Amazing. I'm associated with everything that made this book, but by, you know, decades later, which I think is fascinating, always how association, leftovers, and end of technologies, but this book, everything is in this book to teach a class. Everything you need, but to bring yourself up to a basic understanding of the trade, which is especially critical. And not only that, but being able to branch off into whichever specialized area would be needed because you have an understanding of the technology, okay? The public fool system offers little to nothing like this, or for that matter, not just the physical world. Dealing with the physical world has been completely undermined and destroyed by the incompetence, idiots, and fools that make up the public fool system at this time. And it's not going to get any better, it's just going to get worse if we continue to allow it. Now, of course, the priority is that how quickly can they clarify your children so that they can end the age of America. That's what that's all about. The perverts are being allowed into it. We already knew the perverts were there. We warned you about them 30 years ago. There's nothing that's happening that's surprising any of us if you've been up to speed. What's fascinating is all these people having this last minute epiphany because football, thank goodness, you know, that's one good thing about the coronavirus scam. It paired off a lot of distractions and a lot of people haven't gone back to them. Now they're kind of looking around because they realize they got screwed. That's really cool. Football piss on it. Basketball, oh piss on them, doubly over. Even the hockey, it's a no. We ain't got time, nope, throw it out the window. Why? Well of course, well hockey at least was gladiatorial sports, but they become wussified real fast and are trying desperately to be politically correct. And with Canada, you know, being in the toilet the way it is, well, again, most of the teams that would be involved are already in the toilet. So... That distraction is gone and people are not realizing while maybe we should have been paying attention a little late But you know, hey at least you can maybe save some of the kids but you know what? They can't peto anybody if they're in second or first grade in some places But if they get into third grade, they can clarify them a hundred percent. So what did you save? What was your compromise on that one? How stupid is that? How about run their sorry ass completely out of the system and need be people are just gonna start getting rid of the problem and you know, that's Oh my god, that might happen. Oh, that would be no, it's not That's really what needs to happen. We all know that it's just well, you can't talk about it. Yeah. Well, I will because You know what, you can sit up and sit in the corner and again let the ship sink or start building lifeboats. And again, this is why I was talking about a combination of understanding technology and understanding real history and looking at it and then stepping back and going, man, they really screwed us. And then while looking at solutions, any small number of people that actually know how to do anything, Guys, you just run over the rest of the plods that we're dealing with, especially the ring knockers. Because they're counting on the idea that you and I are supposed to pick up the slack for their failure and just continue to keep things running while they go ape-crazy, smear themselves with green jello while they're naked, grab your little five-year-old and pedophile them, and then you're supposed to smile and say, please, can I watch? Oh, and let me fix everything you broke. Well, just so you can break it again. No. How about we get rid of them? That's what needs to happen. Stop this garbage with the, you know, this fake left fake right garbage especially. You're already hearing a whole bunch of stuff from the Republicans and they're going to do this and they're going to, yeah, really? Wow, I wait for the, you know, here a couple years out. Wow, we had all that, all the people in the right place, but two years went by really fast. We didn't expect that. I guess we didn't get what we promised done, but well, you know, or here's another cute one. We got like 25 steps forward for the communists. Oh, look, the Republicans will point to three things that they do to roll things back a little bit. But it's still far, far, far, far, far worse than it should have ever been allowed to go to. You see how that works? See why I'm not holding my breath and Hillary Clinton will be arrested any day now. Don't you know? So anyway, again, steam before diesel. And by the way, the reason I use diesel, guys, you know they had to... When they first came out with gas and diesel engines, this is kind of fascinating because the Jim Monahan steam engine show they used to have, that was in a small engine show, that we used to have over, okay I'm gonna wait, we got somebody, okay do we have a caller? I just got off a call and I was unmuted. Okay there we go. Anyway, fact is that The gym used to do a small engine and steam show every year over at Domino's Farms, north side of Ann Arbor, Michigan. And you got to see a lot of really neat stuff from aficionados, people who were collectors, antique collectors, that built or maintained a whole lot of really cool technology. One of them was one thing that Jim had actually completed to continue the project was a steam-powered outboard engine. Hey guys, it was just neater than hell. It was im- and if you wanted to see all of this, if you go over to Liberty Tree Radio on YouTube, go back through our oldest videos, look for the videos on Jim Monahan's Small Engine and Steam event. You'll see a lot of cool things in there that are one of a kind. Now, one of the things that I learned many, many years ago when Jim was doing this, it brought me up to speed about a window of time we're talking about right now. Guys, steam was so efficient and so cost effective, especially because you could burn anything. If you had cow pies, you burn cow pies. If you had corn stocks, you could burn corn stocks. If you had a little bit of coal, you burn coal. You got wood or chunk wood laying around, junk from whatever it is you were clearing the tree line or clearing another acre. It all go into the burner and makes steam. Egyptian mummies. Yep, and Egyptian mummies. If you're the British military or the corporate governments in Egypt, yep, they took all those mummies that you don't even realize existed and used them like cord wood. Okay, so back during that period of time gasoline engines showed up. But everybody was the same thing you're seeing with the fight about electronic. electric cars is the same thing that happened back then with gasoline engines and with diesel engines. And so it's really cool if you watch the videos, there are several little tractors there. Oh, those are steam tractors. Nope, they're not. They were camouflaged by the companies that made them so that the The gasoline powered little tractor would look like a steam engine and wouldn't attract attention with the neighbors, with the other farmers, little farmers, big farmers, didn't care. Now one of the reasons is because, and you've got to remember Henry Ford actually did understand this, But they didn't want to be taken in by big corporation taking over and limiting power. And if gasoline, just like electrical, was in the hands of a handful of people, they could cut it off as need be. But with steam powered tractors, they couldn't do that. There was always something you could burn. Ergo, your tractors would keep running, especially when, let's see, the bankers are trying to foreclose. You had a bad season, too much rain, not enough rain, you know, dry, you know, slash or wet, whatever was the extreme. And guess what? You, if you can penny pinch and then farmers notoriously were can do independent people. Then penny-pinching meant producing your own power so that you weren't beholden to somebody else and it was an expensive it was minimized The same is true with electricity when electricity came to America Most of elect of the country was electrified not by mr. Edison but by Henry Ford and what electrified most of America the six volt generator packs that were on the Model T's and the Model A's. And eventually the other car company, but Ford was the first choice, as I've been told by old, old farmers who are now long gone, because Ford was the most reliable and user friendly on the planet. And so when they electrified the farms, they were six volt. Later, they switched to 12 volt. But six volt electrical wiring harnesses to put some lights in the barn, lights in the milkhouse, lights in the well house. Oh, and then don't forget, hook up a pulley and hook it up to that generator. And you had wind power already in operation 120 plus years ago, 100 years ago, 115 years ago, 110 years ago for sure, with most of the country catching up without it being hooked up to the central quote unquote power grid. can do American attitude, okay? But taking advantage of the off-the-shelf technologies, it's like right now. You know, electric cars are really cool. Guys, how many times have we covered in the last 30 years people building their own electric cars? My favorite, and I don't even know if the views, videos are still up on YouTube, but they were, he was in the system with the internet. Kids down in Arizona, when I say kid, he's a third my age, now he'd be He'd be in his middle 30s, middle maybe early 40s. But he had a car, a regular little, I think it was a Toyota. And what he did, he was ingenious, he went out and bought a couple of used servo motors for a robotics unit that was, you know, they were changing out rigs. He knew where the, you know, when they were changing out the equipment because they needed to be precise. He grabbed two of these little, well not little, medium sized motor packs. and he adapted them to the vehicle that he bought. Then he took a Honda generator, put it in the trunk, and converted the thing to electric using conventional, no special hybrid batteries, none of that crap. And what he came up with was a combination electric and gasoline assist. So it would be a hybrid. The gasoline assist is that when the batteries got low, the generator kicked in. It was a real quiet little Honda motor pack. It had its own little fuel tank, and that's the only fuel that was carried on the vehicle. And so he got between 94 and 117 miles per gallon for, you know, gallon used. But he did the math and he had a big sign in a couple of signs On the back of the vehicle, you know, ask me about my electric car. You can build one too Now he said the car that somebody tried to steal it at least six different times And he got to the point where he had to lock it up in the garage and put an alarm system on it. Why? Well, it was obvious whoever it was, they were highly motivated and it wasn't some pricks who were just trying to steal a car. It was probably government or, again, corporation because he didn't want anybody to see what he put together. Why? Well, because you could do it too. So you could take off the shelf existing technology, which by the way, the farther south you go, there's no rust. which makes your investment even more intelligent. Modify the vehicle accordingly, and the only time that that little generator kicked in is when he needed to juice up the batteries more and that it shut right down. Once they were up to spec, just like your alternator should work on your car, right? You know, it has a discriminator on board. So he just took applied existing science and used it to put together throwaways, because again, you motors are not dead. They just were not, you know, they were starting to wear. When they start to wear, especially, we got to remember. Think about what robotics do and how precise they have to be. We just got a bunch of the same items brand new for free of all sizes. And I'm fascinated that kind of like Russian manufacturing, the quality of the product, they were all put together We're getting more. We're gonna get more for free here shortly. But they're all put together and then they decide to check the quality control on each of the units. So here we've got something like 160 of these robot control arms, well I mean motor packs and everything, gear boxes. God, you gotta see the gear boxes. And if we didn't take them, they would have been thrown and complete and in the box. thrown in the bins because they're not quite up to snuff with spec. Now my attitude on that is by God it's not economical. That does not seem economical, but the profit on what they do pass is so god-awful that they could care less about the equipment that was on the border so to speak. Rather than rebuild it, they chuck it. Spec minus 16 works for me. Yeah, oh yeah. And so we have a lot of other projects, for instance, let me point one of the things we're doing with this. We needed an articulated servo for doing a turret gun. I need, you ever see how a robot arm actually works? Okay, imagine the gearbox and everything you need. Now, I need to move a very heavy whatever, 20 millimeter, 50 caliber, or a double pack of, say, Brownings. Well, I want to be able to do it without exposing myself so I can be down inside the vehicle This is much like the way a Russian gun turret is go take a look at a BIA BMP you actually a BTR 70 go over to beat BTR 70 turret how it really works. You'd be amazed You're like wow, that's not what I thought Yep, totally alien to whatever you were probably how you thought it was working Well with these we could actually move a phenomenal amount of weight and be able to articulate so I can bring it up over 45 degrees for air defense. It can actually also be used to move the turret, not just to move the arm up and down, okay, not just elevation, but also managed to reverse. And we're not gonna put anywhere near the torque necessary with the armor and everything else that goes around the gun station, but the idea is to come up with a universal mount that I could drop on anything, okay, and I can also make it different sizes. So think about this, if you capture a saw, a minigun, you can make a, I won't say a micro turret, but a scaled down turret that would do everything the other one would do, but would be scaled down so it could be in a separate station for a squad gun with a chain feed. depending on what you want to do. Remember, it's a government-captured piece of equipment so it's like fire. We're not going to build anything. We'll just take it off the enemy corpses. That's why you want universal. You want to design a system so that whatever you, all you have to do is adjust the cradle and it seats whatever it is, predictably, you're probably going to find in the field. And all the specs for those are available over the counter. So again, just a heads up. But vehicles, example, the guy, this kid built this electric car. And he wasn't a rocket scientist, and he did have probably a little engineering skills, more mechanical skills. He was probably a good wrench twister because he did all the work himself. What happened to it? Don't know. Give more publicity if they could help it not. Why? Well, because if he could do it, you could do it. See, I don't have a problem with innovation. Just understand that buying into stupid and being put into a very narrow channel with one system means that somebody else is going to figure out how to break it to either enslave you or to wage war against you. Okay, take your pick and it's one of the same thing. So you have to have a diversification. If you're a nation especially, you need all power sources in service. You don't let some dumbass eco-freak tell you, you gotta get rid of dams. You have to do just reverse. You need to be rebuilding what you've got. And if you have older infrastructure, you don't send it to the stinking Ukrainian pigs so that the Jewish mob can steal that and run it type and Tel Aviv for their bank accounts. Or like the president of Ukraine who bought what, a $14 million mansion here in the United States? Where'd he get that money from? Oh, that's right. You know, he got billions to steal. So it's no big deal chump change to get a 12 12 14 million dollar mansion America with the idiot sticks that were stupid enough to let the government steal the money so they could steal the money over there. Oh, I give all Think come back over here and insult you piss in your face slap down 12 14 million stolen American currency so that pig has some place to run to or can last lay over here and laugh about how they ripped this off. Oh, I give all Think about that So instead, and again, you know, prayer proper planning prevents piss poor performance. We spend the money on us, become strong, yeah you can share again a little bit, but within percentages, not insanity, but the, it's not insanity if it's intentional betrayal, which is what this whole stinking thing is with the globalist, stripping the wealth out of the United States. So we gotta shoot their ass. Oh, well, I'm all right to that. Yeah, it's the only thing that's gonna fix it They're not listening and you're not gonna stop unless you put a bullet in their high gun but Again, we need coal. We need propane. We need natural gas. We need all of that developed You can't beat us if you are diversified Whoever is trying to narrow us into some shitty trench where we have very limited and narrow capacity which is exactly what the asshats are doing. It is setting you up for a failure and then enslavement. That's all it is. Anything else? All your other arguments are BS. Oh, the ecology. Let me point something else out that's really fun here. How's China doing for all of their eco-freak stuff? How is China on the scale of carbon emissions? Even the effect of the weather. Let me ask you all something. Where's China on the globe? Here's something I've had to point out to several people. We're not on a, well, even if we were on a flat map, in theory the wind patterns apparently all work the same with the flat Earth or the round Earth. It doesn't make any difference, right? But if we take the round Earth into consideration as an idea for the purpose of, you know, scientific endeavor here, guys, where is Look on the map. Where's China? Take it, roll your globe, and run it around to our side of the planet. Where does China line up with us? Oh! Now, how is it that we've been, you know, we've been brow beat about how we have to basically eat bugs and we can't fart and cows can't fart or it'll kill the planet. But I can go right around the globe to that cesspool slash pit called Communist China and everything is off the charts. Now worse than not, it's so far around the corner, it can't see the last two corners it passed, okay? Well when the planet spins, don't you think that, and it would tell you this in the past with the eco-freaks in the 60s, you see, I'm messing with everybody's head. Oh my god, what America does affects the globe, the planet, oh my god! Oh, cool. Okay, so now that communist China has 30 years worth of industrial expansion capacity, what is that black pit from hell doing to us? When you talk about weather issues here, understand that all of the sinkhole carbon, actually thermals, it's not so much carbon, piss on that carbon crap, throw that out the window. But it's the idea that what they're doing there with all of the, again, well, let's just put it this way, communists in charge. shares that the fair attitude is, you know, the sky's the limit. Now when the planet rolls around, we're all in line with each other. So when everybody goes, well, they're using weather control here, they might be to a degree, or actually what they're probably trying to do is damage control for the other half of the craft they've bowled with China. to do damage control because they know that, well, if we use the argument that they used in the 60s, 70s, and the BS they're trying to play with everybody's brain right now, which is nothing but a rehash of the crap from back then, or the detritus debris and idiot stick stuff from back then, then lo and behold, they have to keep turning a blind eye to China. But China is a big, sick hole. It's like you could do everything you want with all Europe and the idiot sticks there the fools that have drank that Kool-Aid or America where the idiot climate change fools have drank that Kool-Aid But what difference does it make if you have this sinkhole called communist China? We're everything that they're yapping about here, which by the way We could fix if we focused that what not that we have to fix much of anything But we do need to replace infrastructure. We don't need bridges collapsing with people on them, which has happened in the last 10 years Okay on the Mississippi where the we know the Army Corps of Engineers and all kinds of special engineers We're supposed to keep an eye on things And we had train bridges and we had regular automotive bridges fall with people in cars and buses on them. In America, not a third world country, in America. Where we have bureaucracy laying on top of bureaucracy, laying on top of bureaucracy, laying on top of bureaucracy, because if we don't have all this bureaucracy, we aren't safe. I guess we're not safe anyway, are we? Oh, and then, wait a minute, they might all get out and swim. Oh, here comes that big concrete slab from the other part of the bridge and, wow, like swatting flies. 48 tons of concrete just dropped on all the people that got out of that bus and they all went flat to the bottom. Wow. But everything's okay. Just keep sending your money to these asshats in the Ukraine, right? Because after all, why worry about America? So, again, interestingly enough, We could fix it. Actually, there's really not much that needs to be fixed. We just need to find the cockroaches causing the problems. You know, that bump behind the curtain that needs to be shot. Then everything would be running just fine here. That's where our problem lies right now. It's the minority, small little clique that if we shot their ass out of this country, we're in pretty good shape. Even now, even with all the problems you got, we have an open venue for development. Let me ask you something. You know what I've been talking about for the last hour and a half here about construction or at least, you know, a era? What's famous for this era? What have you seen? This is the year 2022. I want you to show me an epic construction. from the last 30 years. I'm giving you a wider range of opportunity. What's not physical, but how about Bitcoin, digital currency? That's a new thing. That's highly imaginative. No, that's not what I mean. I'm talking about the, okay, when all is said and gone, Bitcoin is dust. From beginning to end, isn't it? Give, you know, you know what I'm going to do, Dar. Give me, reach into your pocket and give me a whole handful of Bitcoin. Do you have a book where you take bitcoins and put them in there? But I've got a 1998 Bitcoin. And oh, look, this was mined in in Bratislava. It took them 16 months to make this one Bitcoin. That makes it really valuable because it's from Bratislava. And here's another Bitcoin and I don't have anything that's tangible. OK, but what I'm talking about is what is the style of this era? That's how I started this out. If you really know the epic era of the 1880s, 90s, and 1900, it is such a phenomenal, dynamic, and intricate world that if you could spend so much time exploring, then you would be fascinated because most of you would never know. It's true. I always, I still learn, I ain't never gonna learn everything, but the more that I open books, I've read a history book, it wasn't really a history book, it's from 1890. I've been reading it for the last couple of days. As I can, because I'm busy with other, you know, I'm busy, can't time sit down. And I am fascinated, the more I read, the more I look, the more I read, the more I look, the depth and intricacies and the fascinating things. that would fail immediately in this age and could never have happened because of the can't-do, absolutely worthless environment we're in right now. Throwaway concepts. You know, there are plenty of railroad trestles that were built back in the 1880s that are still standing iron proud and rolling trains right across some, across cabins and rivers. Even as we speak, yes. Not only that, but even concrete and cement. Like I said, my grandfather, I just passed under one two days ago. Today's Tuesday, no, three days ago. But it's one that my grandfather built in the bottom of the state. And it was out in the middle of nowhere. Back then, none of the construction you see around it, nothing except for the old farms that are nearby, is all that existed in the bottom of the state of Michigan. This was farm country, okay? Not with all the popcorn buildup we have now that's pretty much shallow, but it's interesting I know beyond a shadow of a doubt though my grandfather got that job at the beginning of the depression Which is almost a hundred years ago now that these things were all built and they're still sitting there out in the middle of nowhere Although again, it's really weird because these have even like arched sidewalks on either side of the road You know arched walkways They're really not fancy, but you know, they wouldn't bother nowadays. But it's interesting and out in the middle of nowhere, was there a walkway in a village on either side of these overpasses? No, these were out in the middle of the county in the middle of nowhere. And yet they were built to last and they were built with Portland cement and steel. And they're still hanging in there pretty much looking the way they have for all of my life. And it's interesting because in Michigan we got salt. Okay guys. And a lot of places with cement and salt because usually there's some iron that gets leaked out here and there. Once that salt gets to that iron, that roxidation starts to expand on the steel and it just pops. Now mostly because today, in this day and age, or for the last 40, 50 years since I've been alive, well 40 or 50 years, 50 years, Most of it's been punk steel brought in from Japan or from China that they use for rebar. But understand that the steel that was built way back in the 1800s to the early 1900s was 100% American Virgin stock. Mine in Michigan, forged in Michigan or Wisconsin, hauled to the work site, applied, and that was the only application from the earth to man's use with no scrapping in between, no pollutants of other materials because, well, that's good enough. The quality of the product was mar-none, which is another reason, like you said, that iron bridge today, why is it still standing? Because it was made with Pennsylvania foundry steel. or iron that was built. And by the way, when you hear iron, don't think iron like your stove. That's frangible iron. We're talking about malleable iron. Always remember these terms, malleable iron. Most people don't realize, you know, y'all were in armor and you guys in tanks, you do realize that a bunch of your track parts are not steel. Your track parts are malleable iron. It's cheaper, but it also is more durable. What? Yeah. No, iron steel is strong, but malleable iron is as serviceable and because of the nature of the weight applied and how the material responds to compression, malleable iron is as good or a better choice than carbon steel for tract. It's also just more economical. I get five, six, seven, ten track, depending on what year it was, for the price of one pad, for the price of a pad made out of high carbon steel, which one is more economical in wartime, malleable iron. But guess what? Those bridges, same thing. Either A, industrial virgins, you know, a virgin steel or whatever grade, or B, industrial virgin iron. made in, you know, relatively close, but not necessarily, especially the farther out West you are. There weren't any foundries out West. Had to come from Michigan, Wisconsin, Pennsylvania, New Jersey, and just a few other states, but those were the core states. And they mined it right there out of the hills, right there out of the ground where it was produced. In fact, it was part of that gold standard of America that the world wanted. Think about that. Why do we call it the American gold standard? Now all that's waiting by the way, it's not that we can't produce guys, you know what they've done and I don't think it's accidental. It's like the oil companies. I've told you this and I've warned you about this. The oil companies here in Michigan, more than a few years ago, went across this state and started capping off their oil wells. Were they viable? Yeah, we know the people who run the oil wells here. You know what they did? They did it intentionally because they saw this dribble fit that's coming right now. If you want to ride the profit wave, guess what? You wait till all this fiddle-fart crap is going on and either A, we beat the shit out of them and run them out of the country and then all of a sudden industry gets back to doing what it should do right or they wait till they collapse the country the other way with the economic incompetence. and whatever they come back with, they can market at whatever price they want. The oil companies make a killing. You cannot get rid of the oil industry, not because of gasoline. Gasoline is a throwaway convenience, a waste product convenience. All the things that move, anything that's heavier it is, the better the lubricants have to be. And also will have to be replaced. And it's the higher end petroleum oil and lubricant products, POL. It is those POL products that are in the higher range that are worth so much more. And that's really what made the oil companies fortunes. Of course, another part of that is we talked about aircraft. Well, how much of the air industry has been parked? How much of it? Now, they're trying to take us back to get us isolated and cramped in again. And that's not an accident, that's part of the globalist agenda to make everybody surf slash peasants. We reached a zenith where everybody could travel, but also travel comfortably and enjoy themselves. Well, the first thing that you want is to angst everybody and take that joy away. So anybody fly recently? I swear to God, until we have this American War for Independence, I won't be flying other than our aircraft. I know, in fact, we've done some things here and there, but it's our aircraft. I'll never fly commercially anywhere again, period, because no way in hell am I gonna support that crap. But the idea is right from the get-go, you have this goose-stepping leftist police state run by, you know, heartland-suck-you-righty slash now homeland-suck-you-righty. And these operations, no, if you support them, you're slitting your own wrists, you're cutting your own throat. However, first you make it, again, incredibly oppressive, oh, but I just have to do it because people were used to the convenience. The sad part is that there's no legitimate reason for doing it. There is no excuse. We warned everybody about it. And just like everybody yaps about the Corona beer virus, what's the difference between the Corona beer virus scam, which has shut down the economy within less than two years, and the same BS applied in a very long-term plan with regard to mass transportation in the aviation sector. Which by the way, it's done the same thing to aviation. We've gone from the ability to actually get aircraft thousands and thousands and thousands of aircraft off the ground any hour of the day and to get you where you need to go. Now we're like a stinking Italian train service that used to be the butt-joke of the planet from the 1920s. Well, I'd get you there, but we got 2,000 planes down right now. And all flights are cancelled third rate. That's not an accident. That's intentional. And they're laughing their ass off about doing it to us. Another reason we need an American war for independence to get rid of the Shysters. You get rid of these bastards and it's amazing how well things at work. And by the way, you get rid of most of the same bastards are stirring the pot that cause all these problems overseas. And America Being pretty civil people most of the time, we used to be, well actually people used to wave at you and like to have you visit. Not many people like us anymore. Why is that? It's because of the characters that we allowed, the parasites that we allowed to move into positions of power. that took advantage of the courtesies and the kindness of the American people. And at the expense of those same American people destroyed any common sense courtesy, honor or respect that we had overseas through the process of pissing in everybody's face. In fact, we could even go to Iran at one time, though that's mostly a joke, because the Jewish mafia there is running that crap behind the scenes, just like the Jewish mafia is running the crap over here behind the scenes or in Ukraine and laughing their ass off because they can do all of this. My favorite, Major Keen. Guys, I got my new, I remember this like it was yesterday. Comes into the office, guys. I just got my latest assignment sunshine the people are friendly I'm gonna be able to take the family I'm going to Iran Everybody goes what oh yeah, he'd already been there a couple of tours And he was going back of course what's funny is the cars that he had are still sitting in the embassy parking lot is rusted monuments to the Takeover of Iran by the ayatollah kakame me okay Yeah, I drove him to those guys real road didn't drive But I rode in two of those cars sitting in that parking lot. Now when they were over there, I drove in them, I rode in them when they were over here in Michigan. Now exactly whose vehicle? The license plate's still on them. From Michigan, by the way. If you pay attention and look at some of the images from Iran of the embassy, the U.S. embassy that was taken over. Oh yeah, yeah. They almost got those cars out. So anyway, again... knowledge is power, but some things, hopefully it makes you think a little bit about some of this stuff where you're like, step back for a minute. And what I meant, you know, in diary writing, we have fascinating things we've done, but they're shallow, they're dust. What have we done in a testimony or monument to our abilities that will be tangible? that will pass down at least for a few generations, but if preserved would last much longer. Why have we not built something that is that durable? Well, they don't want that, because if you're trying to burn down America, you can't have that. If their purpose is to look what they're doing, destroying monuments, does everybody remember this? I'll jog everybody's memory. They kind of got off that bandwagon and you notice how that went to its full frothing at the mouth level of insanity. Where they're pulling statues down and destroying stuff, you know, Viva, Viva la kosher mafia, Viva la Mossad slash Jewish mob, you know, moving the rabble to destroy. Can't build anything. But boy, the old yamacoers can get those suckers to burn stuff down or bust up with a put enough shekels in those little rat's pockets and they'll do anything for ya. There isn't, even if you tried, you have to first pair off all of you have to kill the bureaucracy locally in order for you to build anything good or anything great. And if you don't have big envelopes with corruption payments to the parasite inspectors and to the parasite government local and state swine, you're not going to get anything done. And that's a fact. Any group of people, always epic. Have you ever, again, like a lot of you said, if we're talking about, when were all of these great monuments built? You ever noticed that? They were built post-Civil War. There's a lot of stuff they complained about. Well, the South wasn't rich. Okay, a lot of the the statuary and stuff or big monuments that were put up were put up to remember the fallen and family members. All sides had them and everybody took that in consideration because America was for America. And if you look, what's the window of time for most of these monuments to be built? It's the era of time I'm talking about. There have been no great examples. In fact, there's been a pittering off step by step by step. And in fact, even in Washington, there's a whole bunch of stuff they built as an insult that in no way, shape or form is durable. The more recent the event, the more they first of all, yeah, they'll acknowledge it while you guys are alive. But as soon as they can get around or slide around, letting them pull the stuff out or making it disappear, just like you saw them doing all over the country with the coaching of the Yomikal wearers to tear down this statue or attack that statue or whatever. It was planned. It was not accidental. Well, they'll do it with just over-the-counter sign-offs down the road. And the bits of history that they don't want you to remember, those shallow monuments will be gone. They won't be around. But what represents this era? This era is not dynamic. This is a sad period of time for America. It's a sick period of time for America. In the last 30 years, it's been a spiral down across the board with nothing to show for it, especially, again, in the physical world. What city has actually grown? What city has been maintained? There's not one that either hasn't been burned intentionally through it through very much intentional strife But not one of them has recovered or built back built from that This is one of the reasons that they hate the whole mega thing. What is the magazine make America great again? Oh hell No, the commies can't have that look what they've been doing to damage everything for so long So mark good color jump in there Yeah, going back to, you know, American exceptionalists and how great we were, I do believe the Brooklyn Bridge in New York and some of the other bridges were built before the Civil War. And actually, I think the Civil Bridges, when they were doing the piers, they figured out that how men were getting the bends and they had to, they figured out they couldn't keep down there for that long. Well, not only that, but you know what's interesting, that's an interesting point of itself is how were the pylons made and considering the difference in technology, look at how long they've lasted. I had a civil engineering class on that with an excellent teacher and I hope to God he's still alive. But what he did is he, first he did this in Detroit and they had him doing this around the country, is, you know what, do you know what the underground of the city looks like? If you were to take, you know, and he could do this with digital imagery is what he did, but he took one building at a time. And he showed, what he did is he did a skyline of every building in Detroit, 3D. But what his job was, was to be able to do a 3D image of the pylons and the support structure that makes that skyscraper possible. So here's what's really bizarre. Every foot that you see above ground has to be equally displaced below ground. So when you see one of these, when you see these skyscraper, understand that there's this reversed image and it's really cool because he made it so you could turn the image upside down. And you can go anywhere through the streets. And the bridges are the same way. And the way that they did the pylons on some of these bridges is so fascinating because, you know, guys, we didn't use Portland cement for everything. Many of these bridges are supported by oak and elm that was cut back in the day with logs that were as big as your kitchen. And they were laid like Lincoln log and they were filled with rubble. And then they built up step by step by step. And here's what's fascinating. In most cases, like you're talking about with the bridges, Tex-Mex, guys, they haven't settled. With the impact. Brooklyn Bridge was like a 1982 post-war. Yeah. Yeah. No, but there are several bridges in, yeah, I know what Tex-Mex is talking about. And by the way, most of these bridges Again, that's why I love rubble construction. I've told you this many times. If you want to research, if you want to build something right now that is going to last but also survive conflict, you want to do rubble impact construction. Remember the stories about Monte Casino? Okay, World War II, the German paratroopers dug in. They didn't dig in, they just occupied Monte Casino. And then we decided we just shell the living hell out of it. We dropped bombs out of it, we hit it with everything, artillery nonstop, days and days on end. Well, because it was already a hundred centuries old construction, it was done in traditional rubble construction to begin with. So when they bombarded, they couldn't destroy it. All they did was made it a better fortification because it reinforced certain points of the construction of the design. It fell on itself. But it didn't collapse in the pancake or it couldn't do that by the nature of its design. So basically it became a series of caves and underground warrens because of the way the rubble lay. Okay, so most of these bridges like where we talk about like say the Brooklyn Bridge, but there's others that are older. Brooklyn Bridge is one of the oldest and its foundations with at least two of them in New York are laid upon the original bridges that they replaced. In other words, well, hell, we've already got this crap down there. How far does it go? Well, let me check the specs. Well, okay, all we got to do is add to that with so many metric, you know, so many tons, so many yards. of whatever, cement, fill, impact, slag, whatever they were gonna use, and then they built it up from there. But what's fascinating is everything you see above ground, it's a support structure, its counterpart is equal underground, always. And it's interesting, as my instructor pointed out, is he goes, look at some of the ages of these buildings. And these buildings were done with wooden pylons. They're either driven or they were constructed in rubble layered. Because these buildings haven't moved. Whoever built these obviously knew what the hell they were doing, but these buildings did not settle or adjust awkwardly or, you know, like somebody chinsed out in construction. Everything that was done was done to such a degree of professionalism that the quality of the product matches the latest and greatest we can build. That's why many of these buildings that are skyscrapers are skyscrapers from back in the day, as everybody would say, now getting near 100 years old or more. And yet they basically sit there as shells. You know, Detroit has a skyline, but let me ask you something heavier or check to see how many of those buildings are actually occupied and actually are being maintained. They're like big monolithic boxes of steel and limestone and granite. And were it not for the quality of the material, that steel I was talking about earlier, they wouldn't be standing right now. Because man has not maintained what he has built, especially the American nation in its failure has not maintained. That's because we've allowed lesser creatures to move to positions of power that must be gone from our presence. We need to get rid of them. These parasites and and queers a $3 bill pedo twerps that have no business being near any of the tasks that they're allowed to be near and they are the failure of our country and it is not accidental There's so much that we can talk. Well again, we're gonna go any farther. We gotta get out of here for a little bit There's one God you don't want to get steamed up. It's Hades, cause he had an evil. But up the dead were dull and uncrewed. He was his mass, he was ruthless. It's the gospel to leave.
Recordings of The Intelligence Report are the intellectual property of Mark
Koernke and the Patriot Broadcasting Network, used with permission. The content
present in these recordings and the resulting transcripts are the opinions of
Mark Koernke and do not represent the opinions of the Koernke Archive, its
owners, or its service providers. This website, transcript, and summary content
has been generated with the assistance of Artificial Intelligence tools, and may
contain errors.