October 21, 2022
Evening Show
4h 2m
Complete
Radio Episode
2022
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Summary
Mark Koernke discussed food production and supply chain issues, including fruit harvests in Michigan, global sourcing of food products, and upcoming chicken processing restrictions that will create shortages. He covered Second Amendment court victories against New York's gun restrictions, analyzed weapons systems and machine gun logistics from historical and modern perspectives, discussed decontamination strategies in chemical/biological warfare scenarios, and addressed various caller questions about firearms maintenance and preparedness.
- food security
- supply chain
- second amendment
- new york gun control
- browning machine gun
- preparedness
- michigan agriculture
- weapons systems
- decontamination
- chemical weapons
- biological weapons
- militia
- constitutional rights
- department of agriculture
- communist china
Transcript
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Walked him 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, of the brave. You buy permits to travel and permits to own a gun. Permits to start a business or to build a place for one. On land that you believe you own, you pay a yearly rent. Although you have no voice in saying how the money's spent. Your children must attend a school that doesn't educate and your Christian values can't be taught According to the state you read about the current news in a regulated press and you pay a tax you do not owe to please the IRS Your money is no longer made of silver nor of gold you trade your wealth for paper so your life can be controlled You pay for crimes that make our nation turn from God and shame number You've traded in your name. You've given government control to those who do you harm so they could burn down churches and seize the family farm and keep our country deep in debt. Put men of God in jail. Harash your fellow countrymen while corrupted courts prevail. Your public servants don't uphold the solemn oaths they've sworn. And your daughters visit doctors so their children won't be born. Your leaders send artillery and guns to foreign shores and send your sons to slaughter fighting other people's wars. Can you regain the freedoms for which we fought and died? Or don't you have the courage or the faith to stand with pride? And are there no more values for which you'll fight to save? Or do you wish your children to live in fear and be a slave? O sons of the Republic, arise, take a stand, defend the Constitution, the Supreme Law of the land, preserve our great Republic and each God given right, and pray to God to keep the torch of freedom burning bright. As I awoke, he'd vanished in the mist from whence he came. His words were true, we are not free, but we have ourselves to blame. For even now as tyrants trample each God given right we only watch in tremble too afraid to stand and fight If he stood by your bedside in a dream while you were asleep and wondered what remains of the freedoms he fought to keep What would be your answer if he called out from the grave? The Republic that'll begin good Ladies and gentlemen the first hour of the afternoon intelligence report. I mark kirky One day closer to victory for all of our brothers and behind the lines by territories Southwest Northeast. Gentlemen, you're listening to us on www.libertytreeradio.4mg.com. Libertytreeradio.org and we are on satellite. Let's say hi to all of our merchant marine operators and inland operators across every ocean on the planet. We are literally everywhere and you guys are making that happen. In addition to all the other myriad of communications technologies that we are rebroadcasting on both inside and outside these United States. And again, Channel 31 CB is presently in test mode south of Battle Creek, Michigan today. They will be there for the next 12 hours and then they are, after they've established their three new stations there actually. Then we're going to be moving 31 up towards Saginaw. Again, we've got a couple of the locations there, kind of bouncing, neglectically, all over the state. But what's happening is we're mapping out by terrain best locations and prioritizing as quickly as possible. Anyway, it is, it's the 21st of October. It is Friday. That means it's Cinco di Avo Day and Quartermaster Friday. And it is the 14th year of open obvious and pissing in your face, Fabian the socialist and Soviet socialist occupation of America with a K. The 21st of October 2022, old earth calendar. Give it all she's got, Captain. And 2022 battle for the Republic, the dance of sorts. And for everybody out there again. It has been a very busy week, but we have had a...not for the spring, the obvious spring, more on that in a minute. Even there, we have had a perfect Friday. You could not have possibly asked... for a better fall day than what we just had today. Now, all of the walnut and the lesser trees have lost a lot of their leaves, depending on where you are. The maples are turning, and of course the oaks are just now kind of starting to turn a little bit. So we still have plenty of fall color across the state, especially in the bottom of the state here. Fruit production, as I told you earlier in the season, we expect it to be big. The biggest problem has been limb damage because of some orchards that did not trim back their blooms. It's okay because they'll fix what's damaged. But example, I've got a couple of pear trees. We're going to harvest probably everything off them that's available. And unfortunately, one branch has got so heavy and it probably has a third of a bushel of fruit on it. It just snapped. It just came off. Couldn't help it. Nature does what it does. However, again, the apples, the fruits, especially late plums, the traditional purple plums, they are lush this year. In addition to that, pears, of course, pears, it's hard to get. There's in trouble, but there are lesser years, but this year has been a massive pair production year. If you need natural pectin, where pectin comes from and why it's in most of the fruit objects that you have if they're fillings is pair. Interestingly enough, pear is such a universal, let's just say, it can be a blank slate for flavoring. You might look at the next, for instance, Hostess fruit pie that you get, and it'll say pear and fruit juice, depending on where it's made, which are part of the country. Yes, it might be blueberry, but instead, most of the year, what they do is they take pear, cube it down, and then use pear syrup, slash concentrated pear juice and flavor it that way with men making the filling the way that they do. You'll notice that a lot of other flavors have pear in them. Well, they all have pectin, so for the preservation of the fruit. and its original process, it will probably be listed one way or another. But if you pay attention to the actual filling, it's like, well, it doesn't look like a blueberry. What is that? And if you read the instructions on the label, it'll tell you. So again, pear is a very valuable fruit to have around. You may have many other types of berries or whatever. And to create a bulk, say, pulp type material to create the illusion of a pulp from a barrier or grape or whatever, pear is very commonly used, okay? But pear in and of itself stands forever, easy to can. I found two other trees. I have an ancient pickling pear on the south side of the house. But I found two more trees that have the same breed, which means also it's the ancient breed. And these are perfect for both, just exactly what it says. Pickling, like pickling crab apples. or for canning because it's a much firmer fruit and so it will last much longer depending on how it would be preserved. Okay, that's why the older breeds are not as popular because they're not off-the-shelf munchers for putting in the produce department as far as just grab it, knead it. They were designed for storage. So you'd have something in the middle of winter that you could actually eat. It would taste like something other than rolled oats. Okay. That's why I told you before many of the other old recipes. Sauerkraut is why there's so many recipes for sauerkraut, but sauerkraut was a very easy to process food with all kinds of nutrients. Once you pickle it, you know, make it into sauerkraut, make cabbage into sauerkraut, etc, etc, etc. So anyway, pears looking good too. All of the fruits are looking good that are in for this season. cider is of course now the in thing hopefully we're going to squeeze some cider here shortly we got a really nice cider press and does not industrial but I guess light industrial it's heavy but traditional so we're working on that too. Food reserves not looking good in several categories but that's expected of course they're still talking about food quote-unquote shortages If everybody becomes more efficient in use, we wouldn't have as much of a problem with quote unquote shortages. So let's remind everybody again that there's the old Navy Axiom that my dad repeated from World War II over each of the mess halls when you went in and over the area where they serve the food is eat all you want, take all you want, but eat all you take. Okay, forgive me, take all you want, but eat all you take. In other words, they'd feed you. But you didn't pile stuff up on the plate and then do the finicky nose routine and you know dump it If you didn't want to eat it, you don't take it. It's that simple And if you've decided you're not sure don't take it why well one way or another that's all you're getting That's the other part about the future menus Another thing is something right here. Oh, yeah coffee on the shelf. I want you to go take a look at the numbers for coffee production this year. Most people have not done that. They've not drawn a whole lot of attention to South American production. But South America actually is doing very, very well. They're profiting off us. The Chinese are too, but South America is where they're stripping all of the reserves and foodstuffs. to kind of keep the shelves stacked here in the United States. Now, if you might notice something else, for instance, at the Dollar Tree, you're seeing more stuff from Vietnam. Yes, from Vietnam. And if you knettle that in India, which I think is rather interesting, Tampa is the generic bulk company that does a lot of jarring and canning out there that shows up in the merchandise five and dime which we now call dollar store merchandise sites now pamper in many cases you'll find well yeah it came from it was being it was a product from China and by the way the company is Chinese base but they're working up and down the coast too and they're searching for better deals or trying to again make up for production while not maybe eating up theirs because they see the writing on the wall so China has shifted Pampa over to India, South Vietnam, or forgive me, Vietnam, there's no South Vietnam anymore. In addition to that, Cambodia, and you will see a few other Pacific Island states listed on the packaging. Go to Dollar Tree, pay attention to Nation of Origin. Now another thing somebody asked me about here, oh, it's been more a few days, about, well, what about all this stuff from the Middle East? Egypt is a big fruit and, again, pit fruit and berry producer, and they ship literally all over the planet. In fact, they also provide a lot of the fillings, even though it might be, for instance, a European pastry that's an export pastry, like, you know, shelf stable. A lot of the stuff is coming from the Middle East. You'll notice when you go to Dollar Tree, if you go to the fairly good sized strawberry, raspberry, and apricot. And apricot being the big one too, by the way, apricot jellies. They're very rich, they're very heavy. And if you read the label, they're from Egypt. I mean Egypt, right? So from Egypt, There's a lot of stuff that is popping in also in odd areas over in other categories with regard to food production on the shelf from these stores now. So you need to read the label because it will have the country of origin if it's not the US. Now, I don't know that the Egyptians are going to do anything strange to the food because they may be eating it themselves. quality of the product is reasonable. This stuff has been around for a long time. Most of the time you've been eating it, maybe not even noticed that the, for instance, the apricot preserves, a lot of them are from Egypt. They may have a variety of different names on them, but they're from Egypt. They do have a large, that is a very popular fruit in the Middle East. Apricots are considered one of those high-end fruits, which they are. They're, in fact, just delightful fruit. but it's a royalty thing. So apricots are the upper end of the food chain for special events, things of that nature. So they do produce a lot, very popular, just like we see here in Michigan on the west side of the state. The other thing here is pay attention to the products that are coming from India right now. Example is pickled peppers and other stuff that you would expect that you would think, well, probably come from South America, you better read the label. Don't assume because the system is bouncing all over the place to try and make up for loss. A product is not available from one source that traditionally has been the asset. So they're jumping the border going to the next target. With South America, it's mostly the legumes, rice, and other products dried bulk products that they're stripping their reserves out. So it's interesting, we're very much global right now, but we're very much global because of how they've screwed up American agriculture. I think one of the first things that needs to be gone from this nation along with several other issues is the Department of Agriculture and all the eco-freaks tied in with it that shouldn't even be there. It's like there was a discussion here, and you know, it actually hasn't been brought up now. You've got a bunch of eco freaks in Idaho that have our move-ins. That's the part that everybody forgets. And I've told you before, there was this campaign started out in the 90s called the New West. And what these asshats want to do, which is why when they talk about energy, I've told you before, notice they don't talk about hydro. Well, in Idaho, they want to destroy five major dams for the salmon, okay? Because we got the salmon that aren't there right now, by the way. They're going to introduce a breed maybe, but it's not going to be the indigenous, quote unquote, indigenous breed that was there. So we've got these Wamoxes, who are these eco-freaks, who rather than coming up with other solutions to, in fact, upgrade the dams, if they think that they want to incorporate a a line fish like that, well guess what? You've got water ladders that can be built. There's a great project for someone. Keep the dam in place. Continue to produce electricity for everyone. And I've told you before guys, well, it's just gonna be, that's just gonna affect Idaho. No, that's not. A lot of the energy that's produced in Montana, Idaho, Eastern Oregon, Western Minnesota, goes all the way to California. Now, if that's not happening right now, it's because those power companies don't trust California to pay their bills. Okay, but remember, the idiots and pigs that you have doing this in Idaho or in Montana or wherever are move-in punks. slash parasitic pieces of gutter trash from California that are to do eco freaks. I'm not talking about our people that are leaving California and going there because it's a smart place to go or anywhere that's better in California right now or Oregon or Washington for that matter, okay? At least on the coast. So the big thing here again is that the hydro would more than help to make things happen if you were looking to diversify and incorporate electronic vehicles. But the asshats are intentionally trying to bring the Chinese into control of the electrical grid. So this is why they're cooperating and there's ulterior motives to the fake ours. New West program. Okay, just like what happened in California in central California with all the ranchers being put out of business because of intentional mismanagement of the aquifer and the water reservoir systems that were in place and it was done intentionally to run out the Americans so the communist Chinese can take over the real estate there which step by step by step their kosher buddies are making sure happens. So again Things to take into consideration, pay attention because it actually is being brought up in conversation. Now that, well, you know, these crazies want to destroy these hydro dams. Well, of course they do. In fact, they've been destroying lesser facilities or other facilities. In Michigan, we have the same problem. The dyke, we have that cross-dressing man that we have that's governor here in Michigan, Whitmer, and the queer lesbian, you know, staff that they have that runs through all of the different posts that are part of this administration. These characters drank the same Kool-Aid, they've been trying to do everything they can to destroy hydroelectric here across the board while yapping about how important it is that we go electric. Well, in reality, it's because the communist Chinese have paid them to damage the electric grid, especially that which is already established and most efficient, and that's hydro. hydro classes, everything else out there, period. They know it, everybody knows it, why you don't hear anybody talking about it. If we're serious about electrical diversification, in other words, going away from fossil fuels, which we can't leave fossil fuels, okay? Not for the reason that most people would realize. But in reality, we have to pump a certain amount of oil nonstop and a big quantity of it because everything that moves and turns requires lubrication. If it has an elbow, if it has a gear, if it has a gearbox, if it has a a drive shaft, a shaft, or just an idling shaft, it has to be lubricated. And if it isn't, it's gonna fall apart, it's gonna wear out eventually, and it'll wear out faster if it's not properly lubricated or maintained, which I guarantee is already happening, cuz these jackasses are always great about spending money on the initial purchase, and then no preventing maintenance or proper maintenance to ensure that the system doesn't fail. That's the nature of the incompetent effeminate peto queers that we have, the purple heritage effeminate peto queers that we have running the system right now. So again, hydro is a solution, but we would no matter what, we need it for every category, no matter what it is that you're pointing a finger at. And mostly because again, what do you need the power for? Otherwise you're translating it into physical energy almost always. electric cars. You're taking electricity and translating what? Motive energy. It's got to be able to move that, move those wheels. So where the rubber meets the road or whatever it is they're going to choose because they're going to tell you that rubber is evil because it's a polymer too, don't you know? No discussion about that though, right? Oh, that's right. Oil product. Oh my goodness. We're not going to have tires anymore either. Well, that's right. Because you won't have a car by the time they're done. Any vehicle. That's what the communist want is put you on foot and keep you on the in the in the in the duchy to keep you in the fight when the time comes. And again, we shot the rest out of here once gonna have to shoot him out of here now. We're at the bottom of the hour and I'll tell you what a Muswell Hillbillies, the hardest of the kinks album to find. And it is the bottom of the hour break here in a minute but 20th century man. by the Kinks on the Muswell Hillbilly album. I'll tell you what, Edward, that'll be our bottom of the hour break music. Little acoustic guitar starting up. And again, where'd all the anti-war music go? Where have all the hippies gone? Well, actually, the hippies were a lot cooler than the punks we have now. Worthless as they are. Oop, am I hearing the music? Muswell Hillbillies? The Kinks? and 20th century men. Somebody should do a remake but keep it traditional. I think I hear this. I thought I heard a note. I heard a strum. There we go. We'll be back. The warfare century welfare state ruled by bureaucracy Liberty century all the way from me. We're gonna get rid of that But you know what this is like so many other pieces right now You remember the end of history man the end of history you don't have to worry about anything man. Don't worry You're not gonna own anything and you'll well you won't be happy, but did you shut up for the kill you? Right? Yeah Edward, I want you to pull another song. Now, you know, I've been paraphrasing it for a while. Where have all the anti-war songs gone? Long time passing, doo doo doo doo. Where have all the anti-war songs gone? Long time ago, doo doo doo doo. Okay, I'll tell you what we're gonna throw this in here because we haven't played this one so far Where did all the anti-war songs go and the one that was so critical during the folk rock era? Although there are many others They won't be part either by the way Where have all the flowers gone? He had look up. I think the Simon and Garfunkel version is should be available and we want the studio not the Live version the live versions are always horrible during that period of time. Go ahead call her jump in there. I was thinking Does does anti war go with rap music because there really is no music anymore Well, as a matter of fact, there is right now there is a rapper out there that just did a piece and forgive me, I've it pops up on the social media constantly right now and he just did it and it's really taken off. Okay, it's really big right now. Forgive me, I'll have to look for it. Maybe I can spot it during the break. It's basically a George Orwell, New World Order, Eye in the Sky kind of thing. And sheeple, what is it, something sheeple, I think. No, it's a good thing I kept talking. But that's basically the theme of it, the sheeple. And it's rather fascinating that popped up the way that it did, considering right now where we are. But again, I'm desperately trying to, well, make sure it is the end of history, at least for most people, by starting a nuclear war. Well, I'm making a comment based on the culture. The culture in the 60s was very much in the music. The music was a big deal back then. And obviously it's been the focal point of the 60s has been the music, obviously the counterculture revolution and everything. But today, what have you got? I mean, what cohesive group do you have anywhere other than communists and patriots or sheep? Those are the three groups that she part gonna listen to an anti-war song the communist group they wouldn't as long as their people are ones doing the war they're fine with it and The Patriots, what are we gonna sing about anti-war? We want a war we want to finish it off Well in reality we're looking we're looking for inspirational music not the tears in your beers We know weezer whiner stuff. Okay, and But that's one of the things that's interesting, which they really do hate, when you can take stuff that they've done and turn around and stick it right in their head. And that's the thing that we've been doing with a lot of the music that we've picked up on that is from that window of time when they were trying to, like you said, they were doing the corporate fabricated counterculture scam to create the angst and conflict inside the country. Again, it's fascinating that it's missing right now, guys. In fact, everything is hate America, but let's go kill somebody for the country, or well, for somebody, not really for the country. And the problem they got is, well, who are they rah-rahing? Because for some reason, they do seem to think that we just turned our brains off, and we're just going to let the purple-haired queers of $3.00 bill, pedos, drag us off to something. Now, it's because so far, they really have been doing that anyway. Let's think about this. You know, the neocons are on the same page as all the rest of the globalist butt buddies. They get it. They created a different title or a different block. just so for the sake of making you believe that you were swinging from one part of the pendulum to the other, but there ain't a stinkin' penny's worth of difference between either group. And again, especially of the limousine liberal category of either the fakers, you know, leftist or the fakers mock rightist, when in reality they're all royalists working together. For everybody out there. I mean, again, we all understand this, but it is interesting. When people here, especially younger people, you say, hey, have you ever heard this? When you start throwing stuff at them, they're forced to actually, well, actually, sometimes it catches their ear because there is actual skill involved with doing this. That's one of the other things. The tribal chant thing is okay as an occasional, but... the ability of music to communicate while the other side knows this, which is why they've tried to make it disappear from the minds of all of these younger people. It's one of those things where once in the brain pan it kind of sticks there. That's why I said, where have all the flowers gone? Okay. As a matter of fact, Edward, you may have the music ready. Let's do this because I've been joking about it. I'm going to jog your memory. Here we go. The original version I think, isn't it? Could be right, could be wrong. Oh puff the magic dragon, the sea, some napalm and eight bombs too, and a land called... Oh god please. That was Peter Paul Mary and that was Puff the Magic Dragon, the next one on the album. I knew it. I do have another song to go with Darce request in God We Trust by Tom McDonald, Adam Coldthorn and let's see Shirley Jennings and Nova Rockfeller. The guys have posted this in the Discord a few times. If you want to complain for it, it's probably the rapsong you're thinking about that. I'll tell you what, go ahead and guys, remember, there's always newer culture coming along. You're gonna be cultured here. Go ahead. The elections planning riots for the citizens The government has always lied its history repeating But the problem is the schools thumb you down so you believe them If you try to speak the truth inside a tweet then they delete it Hold administration Satanists who claim they praising Jesus Every year there's a new name for enemies that were facing it Al Qaeda then ISIS and now American patriots Who would have thought those who loved the country the most Would be hated on by folks who call America home Both political parties are equally just as evil They've been working for themselves Don't give a damn about the people Black, white, yellow, brown, humanity needs you, cuz united we stand, divided they will defeat you. Y'all missing what was written in them pages That was history they wrote, now you wanna change it You racist, you hate this Why you want us all to be locked up in cages? I can't stand the left, everything they say's depressing Ship them to the Middle East, they can learn oppression Believe me, I mean this quite literal I love liberty, but I- Liberals Wear a mask, stay home, complain and moan Talk about privilege on your phone in your Range Row Starbucks, mango, foo-foo, whatever cloth I'm cut from can handle any weather you just paper in the rain we ain't the same stand for the flag only near when I pray I just pray we go back to the old days land of the free home of the brave through all the illusions refuse to hear rumors or accept a weird losing easy to get caught up consumed by the consumer truth is so deluded people starve of the confusion comfort is the killer your dreams execution cool persecution if I make a contribution home of the brave look like a mental institution and there will be revolution if we can't find resolution and a threat is a promise stand up Pay homage, they tell lies I'm being honest, just the time is upon us I know that God got us, so I'm fighting in his honor Hear the cries of new crusaders as we're strapping up our armor He sets to the higher ground and drown in a drama If I die for what I love, then my death will be nirvana We fighting for our freedom, don't believe what they've been feeding Be the change you wanna see, the warrior that we're needing Third Direction and get another stop. Message. which is yet another rap song that does act does not understand a word of because he can't get past the company company from sound goes right over the top of the void course it's also the 28 K or 28 bit to on this try and find it somewhere would you text me the name of that I'll listen to it with real real sounds any different different I'll take the direct link to phone I'm pretty sure I have it on mine here we go again for everybody out there. We've got a lot of different people who are in our camp and they're from many different directions but all with the same theme again, is what was promised to us. Oh, Mark, I don't dislike the people that like rap. I don't dislike those people that like rap. I'm not trying to alienate them. I just... Find it mindless and empty and really painful to listen to Well part of what you know, this is something there's a bunch of people that are introducing the music of the last say beyond the last 20 years Actually more like 30 and 40 years ago now because we're getting farther into the you know taillights with regard to dynamic multifaceted in you know instrumentation, etc when we If you look at the progression, it's rather fascinating. We went from beatnik rock, oh, actually it wasn't beatnik rock, but it was, the closest thing to rap is beatnik music. Anybody remember beatniks? Okay. And I'm serious about this. If you want to really, really, I like, I actually like beatnik. It's vocalization mostly with a little bit of background, usually string. Sometimes it's a horn. And don't forget clicking fingers. Snap it pal, snap it. It's not... I don't want to say, I wanted to get into a musical confrontation over rap and stuff, but it's not the same as a beat with lyrics over the top of it. It's the lyrics with some music to keep you entertained while you're listening to them. That's the difference in my mind. It's like a repetitious shanty that would be done for rowing. There are different types of you know like, no seriously, I mean when you think about it, like rowing or working. It's a kind of you know like chain gang, I mean it's like guys, the chain gang shanty or the Ormond's shanty is very much what basically rat fits into category wise. And again, what's interesting about that is we don't use that because of the way we, you know, it's not familiar to us. And it is designed to allow your brain, although again, the lyrics that are attached to the rap are designed to hopefully make you think, okay? It's more elaborate. But most people don't realize that most sea shanties, you know, rowing shanties, work shanties, which people are directorate because I just mentioned chain gang, rose slaves and whatever. But the shanty was designed for repetitious action. It was designed to help you to get into sync and in the process those still be simple because different voices would pick up the work, so to speak, because everybody gets tired. very different from say where you got into celebration or another one is pub music. Every time I think about it, you know, the Irish, Lilt and the Germans have with their style and also say I guess the British Isles because the British Isles were in the Germans were associated quite closely contrary everybody thinks. But it's interesting these particular celebration or relief styles were typically also very intricate. You know, people talk about, you know, the middle, for instance, derogatory about the stars, bagel banner. It's a drinking song. Well, drinking songs were designed to be intricate so that as you drink more, dude, let's do that again. Oh, nothing. I want you to get all but you can't. Okay, and so the idea was that you actually had to try to maintain control and articulate. And remember, if you take a look at most, well even the Star Spangled Banner itself, look at everybody, they try to deride it. But it actually requires some skill to sing. Really does require skill. This is the thing about the difference between a shanty is a chant. Like I said, it's war chant. It's like we're like a drudge chant. It can be depending on what you're doing. And that's where that beat thing comes in the way that it's used. That's all I see. I can just see, drudging along, using the pick, using the shovel, using the oars, and it's repeat, repeat, repeat. The only thing is you like change up because it gets to the point where you shut down part of your brain. That is the purpose behind labor shanties, is that it takes your mind off on a separate, like repeating mental cycle. So on the one hand you're listening and you're thinking, but on the other hand you're shutting off your mind so that you perform a certain action over and over and over and over again. Something to think about there. With drinking songs, oh, eventually you will be over, but definitely because you're probably under the table. Brrrrp! Okay? Just something to think about that. But and then of course there is the music of leisure which is where you Aren't probably drinking although the people listening to sometimes I say you know I have a bit of shari hair. We're listening to the quartet or whatever that my pops to orchestra And in the process what's interesting there is that again? Demonstration of skill is even more important and of course becomes more marketable because you're looking for ways to be entertained by the artisans that are in front of you, the skilled trades people that are in front of you. Again, we have a wide range of songs. There's certain pieces from the early mental era that are certain bands that I could barely listen to. But then all of a sudden, it's like I've said there, there's these diamond cut pieces, this piece of music that just jumps out at you. Some people like metal music, some people don't. Some people like rap music, a lot of people don't. A lot of people do, a lot of people don't, because it's a pretty good mixed population right now. However, on the note of, for instance, metal, we play a couple of pieces here. Though most of their music actually is quite articulate, but if you listen to Blind Guardian, they're a metal band, they're a multi-national metal band. They play all over Europe. They also play in other places than Europe. They've played their music. They actually adapt the lyrics to the language of the audience. And they play in Portuguese. They play in German. They've played many of their songs you can find on YouTube in up to 14 or 15 different languages. There was one person that actually did one of their songs, Harvest of Sorrow, where they took an excerpt from each of the versions. So the one piece has all of the different languages in it. A very different style, but it's interesting that a lot of their stuff is a little more hammery for some people who would like it, but then all of a sudden you've got, like I said, Blind Guardian slash Harvest of Sorrow or Blind Guardian slash Curse My Name, which everybody likes that song. And if you pay attention to the words, it is something, it's like, hey, You know what, we beat the tyrant, we got the tyrant. Now we're gonna tell you what we're gonna do to the tyrant. That's really where we are right now as far as we get into a conflict. We better have to make some decisions now about what we're gonna do there. It's just like this war starting up. If they come out and attack somebody over the guns, we're gonna shoot their ass, okay? They should be able to make that decision in advance. Go ahead, call the chief in there. Hey John from Kentucky When I was paddling on the Great Lakes and a 30-foot bird's canoe We always sang that songs about they were free in French and we sang them to synchronize the paddling of the canoe Right though. Boy, yeah Boy, yeah, yes songs of the boys here And again, that's exactly the point. It would not be something, although sometimes they were adapted, but the songs are, the process is a labor effort. It's designed to get you, enough to go zombie. Yeah, motivated and to kind of ignore the fatigue that is created by the process. Because music is, yeah, it pulls you, it entertains you. It love with you, okay? Go ahead. Yeah, I did that. Roy's here reenacting for like 15 years and I have paddled on the Lake Superior. The Grand Portage and I've been I've done it all. Yeah, that was part of it. Oh, was this, you know, again, for everybody out there, different styles, but they've been adapted into other areas. Now, I don't think that any of the guys doing the rap songs we see are planning on picking up a shovel anytime soon if they don't have to. But the style is there. Okay. They're picking up a Wilbur check. Well, yeah. I didn't say that. Well, I'm out of here. Thank you. Thank you, sir. Good point. By the way, I did have a question. I know it's not weapons Wednesday, but it is weapons related. This is a question. How did the people that had the 1919 carry The a TNE was it in a case a box a string around their neck. How did it carry it? Oh, you mean this ammunition as far as? For a TNE trans, you know transverse and elevation. Okay, as far as the oh god, it was it was a misery. Oh cuts for World War one and even World War two in the Pacific The figure walked in through the mist with a flintlock in his hand. His clothes were torn and dirty as he stood there by my bed. He took off his three cornered hat and speaking low to me he said, we fought a revolution to secure our liberty. We wrote the Constitution as a shield from tyranny. For future generations this legacy we gave. In this the land of the free and home of the brave. The freedoms we secured for you, we hoped you'd always keep. But tyrants labored endlessly while your parents were asleep. Your freedom's gone, your courage lost. You're no more than a slave. Envist 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. It's number. You've traded in your name. You've given government control to those who do you harm so they could burn down churches and seize the family farm. And keep our country deep in debt. Put men of God in jail. Harash your fellow countrymen while corrupted courts prevail. Your public servants don't uphold the solemn oaths they've sworn. And your daughters visit doctors so their children won't be born. Your leaders send artillery and guns to foreign shores and send your sons to slaughter fighting other people's wars. Can you regain the freedoms for which we fought and died? Or don't you have the courage or the faith to stand with pride? And are there no more values for which you'll fight to save? Or do you wish your children to live in fear and be a slave? O sons of the Republic, arise, take a stand, defend the Constitution, the Supreme Law of the land, preserve our great Republic and each God given right, and pray to God to keep the torch of freedom burning bright. As I awoke, he'd vanished in the mist from whence he came. His words were true, we are not free, but we have ourselves to blame. For even now as tyrants trample each God given right we only watch 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? Dilled the land of the afternoon ladies and gentlemen. This is the second hour of the afternoon intelligence report timer kirky One day closer to victory for all of our brothers and sisters on and behind the lines in occupied territories. Northwest, the gentlemen you are listening to us on www.libertytreeradio.4mg.com. LibertyTreeRadio.org. On a multitude of other communications technologies, both inside and outside the United States to include satellite. The 21st of October, the end of the third full week of October, guys. Okay, let that sink in. 21 October, it is Friday. Sink with the ammo day and quarter master slash also sometimes on his quarter bastard Friday. It is the 14th year of open and in your face Fabian socialist and Soviet socialist occupation of America with the K 2022 old earth calendar 2022 battle for the Republic and the dance of swords. Let the dance continue. And we're going to make that happen. Okay. Real quick. We're going to get to something with regard to food processing. Nancy brought up earlier. I'm going to touch on it right now again. We'll probably also talk about it at 8 o'clock. The chicken processing in the United States is already difficult because a lot of the stuff has been stolen up, taken up by the Chinese, communist Chinese. But now the Department of Agriculture is going to make it even more difficult. So there is going to be a chicken shortage. no matter what, as of around January on. And this is because chicken processing, the procedures are by law to be completely changed. And in the process, this is going to create chicken shortages across the board because nobody can change out fast enough. And they want the entire system to change. Of course, while the communist Chinese were getting the carcasses, they're shipping the carcasses of everything, pigs, Cattle they don't have completely but a big chunk of the pork processing. They're taking the double, you know, triple grade A pork we have here, it gets over there. They dump the junk back in, package it back out, shoot it back here while they keep the grade A and they give us the grade B. They're gonna do the same thing with the chickens by all indications. They're gonna progressively creates such a burden for in bureaucracy here that the communist Chinese with no burden over there are going to eventually absorb that and so we're going to have another one of the meat product protein product items that's going to be totally compromised because communist China is the one diddling with it. Okay and the traders here are making it happen. So let's be ready for that. Again, support your local small farmer, take care of the local small people that are around you, do for them, and they get nicer and kinder and do for you too, so you take care of each other, okay? In fact, you should be locally producing. More on that a little bit, because I mentioned barns the other day, and I really didn't follow through on that with regard to barns. Yeah, you know, regular farm barns. Anyway, more on that in a second, and the other. Just to get all get complete because there was a question and what it had to do with it the end of the hour was it's a it is well, it's Cinco de Amo de guns ammo, you know magazines goodies The Browning machine guns and for that matter even the m60 or and now we have the mag 58 which by the way They're already dumping that for something else who knows what they're gonna doing where the idiots sticks are Who's got a brown envelope to stuff in the but of one of these queer generals that we've got that will work for communist China for pennies Come on, who knows how the horse are paid off now anyway At the turn of the last century, from the 1800s and 1900s, there were a handful of machine guns that were American made, the potato digger, there were colts, there were a few browning variants. The potato digger being the most common really up until the Vickers and the Lewis and the US Browning family were eventually developed. The weapons beforehand actually were quite light duty. in terms of their field deployed support systems. In other words, a bipod or a tripod or whatever. The Dennedygar actually was made. It was made, okay, it was a bipod, but it was heavier than sin. It was designed by the standards of the day, which meant that you build it so it'll last forever. It was not tubular per se, but rather solid steel. The first thing that became very obvious is they had to lighten things. A tubular stock became the norm, but still the water-cooled machine guns of World War I would roll right over into the beginning of World War II. One of the biggest issues is that, again, although it was in some cases designated a light machine gun by some armies, You got to remember that the belt-fed machine gun in a water-cool configuration was either rated as a medium machine gun, at least, or in many armies with the full water jacket, the tripod, or the quad pod. God, some of these things were monsters. It was considered a heavy machine gun. by the nature of what it could do, how far it could reach, how you could dial it up. Now these were all supposed to be infantry weapons, and so the problem, as the question was here earlier, how the hell do you carry it? Well, with a lot of misery and pain. And in fact, let me point something out. Everybody knows, if you've been in service, you've handled a 50 caliber Browning. Guys, understand that the M2 50 caliber Browning originally was an infantry gun. How much does just a receiver for the Browning M250 caliber weigh? Now in World War I, oh awful lot. You're looking at 77 pounds worth of steel. Overall, if you had tripod and all of the other components, Don't forget a barrel change. Okay, gotta have a barrel change. That's a quick change barrel. Okay, when you go to air cooled, you can't just think of the basic system. You have to carry spare barrels. And here's why. I mentioned World War I, everything was water cooled. Well, most. That potato digger I mentioned was an air cooled gun. But the Vickers, the Browning, the Maxim, those originally were water-cooled, configured. And the purpose behind this was to sustain fire, which they could. Remember, one gun was able to demonstrate a 100,000-round constant fire, constant feed. Maxim was able to do this. The Vickers was able to do this. And I believe one gun even achieved supposedly a million rounds fired. There was no barrel change per se, but I'm sure they did something in the process. These were all promotionals that were done to sell these guns to the militaries on the planet. But the tripods were quadpods. In other words, not just three legs, but four legs. In some cases, even had seats. So that you literally could sit like a bicycle seat, sit behind the gun, grip it with both your paws, and chug away, of course, and become an Emma G man. If you remember that word, Emma G, you ever see that, Emma? That's from World War I. The Traverse and Elevation Module alone probably weighed about 22 to 25 pounds in that period of time. Well, between wars and the fact that they wanted to reduce the amount of junk being carried, in theory, but we'll get on that in a second. They decided to go to air cooled because, well, with air cooled, I can make the weapon much more mobile. And it can keep up with the infantry which were going a combination of infantry and motorized. You get them in a truck, you run them down the road, they leap from the truck or they leap later from an armored car and they go to battle. Well that means everything had to be mobile to a degree. However, what we, and it's time to come up with a weapon system like this, there's always parts that just don't, they're not copacetic with a human's shoulder, okay? The two misery points in the infantry during that period of time and he probably he's still today is the The tripod if you're gonna carry the tripod into the field. It's one complete fixture usually There's two ways with a gun depending on how quickly what a brain to service you leave the entire fixture with a pintle Attached to the gun, but you're adding more weight when you move it. So whoever is gonna left the gun is carrying an additional 10 pounds of weight sometimes. So this is where he had divvied it up. The guy carrying the gun could still get the gun in service if you left as much junk off it as possible. What do I mean by getting service? You see movies in World War of Not Movies, a lot of propaganda pictures showing a guy with a water-cool machine gun with a, he's got his arm under, he's got it resting in his left arm and he's holding the back of the gun and it's blazing away and there's cartridges in the picture, the image, the painting or the propaganda poster. They did the same thing in World War II. Now you could do that. At least to put some rounds down range, especially if you were making hasty contact, you were ambushed, whatever, you could do something with the gun. But the more junk you have on it, the less likely that would happen. So unfortunately, the guy who carried the tripod usually had the rest of the fixture all attached to the tripod. This means that he was carrying a lot of weight and still had to keep up with the rest of everybody else. And by the way, he was supposed to carry his own firearm, which in that period of time was a bolt action rifle later on to be the grand or the carbine if they were lucky. Springfield, grand and then carbine because they lightened up their weapons. But the cost in weight and also fatigue because these these mean parts beat up the operator when you had to carry him. One of the things they did in the very quickly tried to do whenever they could get away with it is to pull the equipment if it was World War One. Although usually the no man's land or the battlefield was pretty beat up. But you take an oak or a maple sapling, chop it down and lash the thing and have a set of ropes, cables or strapping. And what they would do is lash the heavier fixtures to a pole and two guys would move it across the field. Now, what was the advantage of that? See, it makes sense. The Army didn't come up with anything to do that. Like it was asked, do they have a transit box? Yeah, they did have a transit box. Here's the problem with that. The transit box was made out of plywood or made out of sheet steel. And it might be lightweight by comparison of the day, but every time you add more stuff, you add more weight. And it's kind of like when you go from carrying a 50 caliber ammo can to carrying a 30 caliber ammo can. Initially when you pick it up it goes, damn that 30 caliber can is a lot lighter. But have you ever carried two loaded 30 caliber ammo cans down the road? I want you to do this someday just to grab a couple of your ammo cans and just walk to the backyard with it. One in each hand. Don't even have to carry gear. How long does it take before those old elbow tendin? Oh yeah, almost tendons in the arms start to get special. And remember, you were supposed to take this miles down the road. Now, in addition to slipping the quad pot or the tripod for that medium or heavy machine gun, because eventually they realized, don't go make a light machine gun, the BAR, that was World War I. The BAR was out there in service, and the Chuchon, that's one of the other guns similar to the BAR, but made by the French. Both of those weapons were considered light machine guns at 20 some pounds plus. And by the way, it could be bipod or do they were bipod mounted but initially not, but they actually tripod mounted the BHR at one time. More than a few times, they tried doing that in World War II, supplementally and it worked. I mean, it's obviously can be done, but it defeats the purpose behind it being a light machine gun, okay? So basically if you were you knew in the team by what most of my friends explained their World War one They're gone now or World War two if you were the new guy guess what you carried something you carry the tripod Yeah, you carried the heavy stuff my carrying. What do I get to carry the gun? No, son I'm the one who knows how to use the gun. So I'm gonna carry the gun Don't worry. You'll get your chance. But you see that right there. You just pick that up and follow me Now I would point out that with the machine gun crew, it was the tripod and fixture, okay? With a mortar crew, it's a base plate. Somebody's gotta carry the base plate. Somebody. Ask anyone who's infantry that was ever in a mortar section about that one, okay? The better part about the base plate, it still had a few bitey spots on it, but it was a hell of a lot easier to carry than a tripod or a quad pod during that period of time. Eventually, they lighten it up. And by the time you get to the Browning 1919, the tripod and all the elevation and traverse mechanism are much lighter. If you do a comparative study, you'll see what I'm talking about. You don't have a cast stirrup or like cradle. Instead, you simply have a very simple cradle that is minimized to the absolute smallest it could be, and it drops right into that station on the tripod. Tripod is designed to be quickly collapsed or quickly deployed. It has a chain limiter for expansion so it can't splay out too far if you mess up. And still, it's a lot of weight. Now remember, if I can shave weight off in one direction, what usually happens if you're infantry? Well, congratulations, son. We got extra cans of 30 caliber ammo. And you're going to pull that on one shoulder, and you're going to grab a 30 caliber can and follow me. What well everybody carried more ammo on top of everything else rule number one you want to live carry more ammo and What really was a base of fire weapon for the the weapons section attached to the platoon? Or for the weapons section attached to the cup weapons sections attached to the company the belt fed guns the medium machine gun or heavy machine guns, depending on how you rated them So you might have lightened it up, but that just meant, well, hell, son, we used to carry those and they were a lot heavier. That's a lot lighter. So why don't you carry another cat ammo for me? Now, they still did come up with hangers and carrier straps that were designed to at least be able to change location. You'll notice that there's a million suspension straps made if you get a surplus in the last 40, 50 years. They were tan or brown if they're from World War, or OD green if they're from World War I, line number 10. You see that they changed to OD Green, well, Pacific Theater, although there was some khaki stuff made for Africa. And then when we got to Korea and Vietnam, oh, god, some strap company got a hell of a contract. Boy, always got some of that contract. And they made a series of just utility cargo straps. What you don't usually see is that they made the straps and they made the pads for them separate. So for years you could get the carry straps, but the pad that was supposed to make it more comfortable because it would slide along the pad, you could put it on your shoulder, and it wouldn't bite so much. Those never got to the troops half the time because they were a separate component. Okay? So if you either, you either trekked it on your shoulder or you carried it in a carry strap and kind of hung it, you know, around your neck or over your one shoulder and, you know, controlled it with one arm, If you could, you'd pull it, which would still be your best choice even with a lighter variant if you were in transport, in other words, you're moving. You didn't always have trucks, you didn't always have APCs. The Island Hopping Campaign was a misery because Armstrong is what did most all of the work. And that means cross-country legwork and lift. So there's not much you can do. You can cover them with canvas. There are all kinds of canvas carriers. There's XM. Always when you see XM, that means experimental model. There were a series of experimental bipods that they came up with and tripods that were in alloy, not necessarily aluminum. But there was a bunch of different metals they tested. They lasted for a little bit, but they couldn't hold up to constant abuse in the field. And the biggest problem, you couldn't guarantee resupply. So the logic was it was better to carry something that was a little heavier and girthier, but it worked and it always worked as opposed to, there's the new fangled one, but yeah, we carried two of those Bob. Halfway through what we were doing, they just didn't function, they just fell apart. they are folded apart most common but would have heard. So this is the thing that you have to suffer with the weight and you have to figure out ways. I think one of the solutions for instance if our caller's got a browning and I'm sure some people do I know a lot do. Guys regular they already do this on the 50 caliber competition range you'll see a lot of them is adapting and making a golf a golf caddy. two-wheel golf caddy into a support carrier for a weapons section like that. Oh yeah, they are designed to be collapsible. I mentioned before that the newest ones, the absolute newest ones have a really wide tire so they don't bite into the greens. And what that means is they float well, which means that the tire is really great for cross-country or moving down the road. They're well built because they do have to take a bag of golf clubs and the bag. The older ones are steel, the newer ones are a mix. I have both and I've adapted them to ammunition carriers or for instance some other support technology like what you're talking about for carrying spare barrels, carrying for instance another tripod or other equipment. The biggest thing is that these can be used for pretty much if you make a little rack that you screw right on. Remember, keep it light because the weight needs to be, it's got to be durable enough that it'll hold together. Usually what you can do is pilfer out of what's in the surplus system. What works really well as a shelf for what we're talking about are the steel or aluminum shelves that go underneath the Alice pack. There used to be a ton of them and they'd be pennies apiece. I don't know they're costing more now, but there's still a lot of them out there. And what you do is take that, drill a few holes, drill a couple of holes in the frame low and run a couple of nuts through the frame. Now you've got a shelf that's the right size for a 30 caliber browning can or a 50 caliber can. And what you do is you then run a couple of guides up along either parallel with that so they match up a couple of pieces of angle aluminum, L aluminum, and what you then do is add strapping to hold everything in place. And you can do two or three cans, maybe four cans if you're lucky, of ammunition. Gotta remember, 22 pounds approximately for the 30 caliber can, 40. pounds plus or minus five out three pounds for 50 caliber cans depending on what it is. So while you'd like to carry a lot, the poor little thing and you are only going to be able to carry so much. But it's still better than your arms being an inch and a half longer when you get six miles down the road trying to carry those two 50 caliber cans full of goodies or those two 30 caliber cans full of goodies. So I think I hear music. I know I did. Wouldn't be bad. It was manpower. And guys came up with making pads using towels. That towel was a real common tool. Go ahead and call the trip in there, please. Yeah, those ammo cans, the handles are not meant for comfort. That's for darn sure. Right. Well, and that's where, again, if you look, the cargo straps were It was designed to take some of the weight off, but you still had to handle them. So what you did is you crossbar them like you had a, you know, you put one over your shoulder and go to the left. And then you put the other one over to the right. Then you take the little fish hook, you know, hangers, and you clip it to either side of the handle. Now what's happening is your shoulders are supporting the weight, but you adjust the straps so they would be long enough so you can still hold the handle with your hands. And what that did is it made it a lot easier to move for traveling purposes with that much ammunition. The problem is that you then you're tied up or you're not quickly able to operate a weapon, but it's a matter of priority. What are you trying to do? This is where everybody has to work as a team. If you're moving and you're a Sherpa slash your schleppin ammo to the front, okay, or moving ammunition, you know, into your area of operation, see area of control. The priority is to get the ammunition to where the men needed, personnel needed, or weapons systems. And so that's why it was, you know, they came up with these ideas. The big thing is balance. Another thing is, remember, it's one thing to say, oh, I'm going to move these two boxes, cans or that tripod or whatever, over there to the other side of the yard in broad daylight. Understand the other problem you've got is, you know, if you're off balance and you're trying to move around, for instance, middle of the night and we don't use flashlights, right? We don't want to get shot. So what happens is you've got to take into consideration system out so you can focus on being able to move across the terrain, traverse the area of operation. These are all things that are part of the math formula. Most people don't think through it. It's like, well, I don't worry about that. One of our friends listening, We'll recall a lesson learned when he had a full allotment of 556. Oh, wait, what was it? 762-NATO. 308 BOG, an ammo can. In his pack with one of the training events we had, we caught him on film when we went through all of the process of the activity. The end result was to swing back around and we were going to fire maneuver back towards the base of operation. And he did everything he was supposed to, but it was kind of that scene out of platoon when he got to the end point, you know, to the demarcation point, return point. He threw his hands in the air, flopped forward, and that's as far as he'd go for a little bit. Why? Because he did press the limit. He pressed it to the limit. That was just one can. We're not talking, it's still carrying his main battle rifle, full combat kit, all nine yards. It's a balance and you have to constantly take into consideration limits and not everybody has the same capability. The military tried to do as much as they could, you shave off weight and then balance it with durability because that is the problem. How long will it last in the field? In the early stages of World War II, just like you're going to see with this crap we're getting into right now, if they start World War III, it's going to be a lot of sacrifice where units that are right now forward deployed are going to be dead within weeks or a month or two. They'll be gone. Why? Because there is no proper accommodation for resupply. Hey Mark. Go ahead, jump in there, caller. Just remember the 50 cal can only holds 100 rounds. Yeah, exactly. Round. It's a ball belt on a 30. It's 250. But if you're using the import links, you can only get about 200 in there. It's not very much. One can is just not enough. I know it's what it's why they say lighten your finger. Remember guys? Okay, you know, once you hold off on that trigger finger a little bit, son, And it's another reason that when you fire, this is, remember we talked about the three to five, okay, cycle, needle, I'm gonna hose them down. It's like, really? Well, movies show you a lot of really cool stuff that really doesn't afford you long survivability on the battlefield. Again, you only have so many rounds carried, you may also only receive or be allocated so much ammunition. So this is where, again, accuracy and using your common sense, and it might also require the sergeant to do his job with the boot up your ass, to slow you down. You know how that works? Yeah. Go ahead. You got an idea how I can lighten the butterfly on a 50. It's also hard to push down. It takes both stumps and you really gotta crank it. Well, we know how much. Remember, Browning did everything for a reason. That's one thing always everybody has laughed about. Remember, Mr. Browning understood human nature. And remember, everything works the way it's supposed to. Of course, for the longest time, everybody said, well, Mr. Browning builds nothing but perfection, which is kind of true, because the interesting thing is that on the one hand, for manual operation, It is a stiff action. But the whole thing is, again, it's an Armstrong gun. Yeah, I mean, first of all, cock and lock it, right? You know, what do you got to do? Chunka, chunka. And it's like when people first grab the weapon, they're assuming because they've watched a lot of movies that, well, that must be pretty easy. and you've got to put weight behind it. You've got to be ready with the whole of your body to operate the weapon. It's that simple because if you want to operate it efficiently. Here's another thing about these weapons. You're not going to break them. Okay, the only part on any automatic weapon as far as belt fed is the dust cover slash the top cover. You have to pay attention. The M60, it was a little bit of a goof that they made there. That's not a browning design. But with the dust cover slash the over cover, guys, if you're not careful, you can snap the latch. You have to pay attention to what you're doing there. It's kind of like when you put the AR-15 together. Remember, close the dust cover, make sure the hammer's cocked back. We were just talking about that last night. If you're tired, you might forget, and you damage your weapon, you don't need that. But otherwise, most all of these weapons, you really aren't going to hurt them easily, but there is a requirement to be able to, again, perfect and train so that you become more efficient with the weapon. And that includes ammunition. The 50 tripod, put both feet on that crossbar and grab it and lean back and pull. Just to charge it. Exactly. And you're stabilizing. Well, I've even known crewmen that'll jump on the, I mean, granted, you don't want to be anywhere near that muzzle. But, you know, depending on how light the guy is, you know, the other guy, your other crewman or your assistant gunner might actually, you know, also put a little weight on that front support just to make sure that when you do apply all that energy, the gun doesn't lift off the ground. Yeah, it's... That's the hard part, is actually charging the weapon. You know, you move it back and then you pull, and it takes a lot of kumbla. My uncle Lloyd, I mentioned him many times, he's been gone now, but he used to talk about using the Browning. He's the one I talk about, it was at the Choson reservoir. And his voice would always break when he'd say, I don't know how many people I've killed. You know, because you just you couldn't miss right but he described one of these ends well when they were when they were leaving the The lab the first Valley and they they've retreated many many many times nobody was firing back and the Chinese started to get you know, everybody was fatigued they were tired and Every time he talks about this until I got into uniform when I was a little light, you know, he'd talk about some, not very much. They talk about what happened when he was there. And I didn't appreciate it when I think about Uncle Lloyd soaking wet might have been 130 pounds when he got a little older. But he couldn't have been more than maybe 120 pounds or maybe 110 when they got done starving you to get you in the military. And him operating that gun, everything was work. Because he was not a big guy, okay? He wasn't a real big guy. And of course he got starved while he was in the military because he was in Korea through the chosen route, you know, through the, I've forgotten about the choice and chosen. Did I say that? The Yalu. He fought back from the Yalu for the Chinese invasion. And it's like he said, he was up on the roof of a truck and he just tried to crank that, you know, nobody wanted to fire back. So he'd crank the gun around, realized there was some ammunition, then he started firing back. after he ran out somebody threw another can up on the roof of the deuce and half and he's like oh okay and as long as he kept it go ahead yeah you have to rely on the adrenaline the fear the fear the old crap because that's the only thing i'm gonna do it for you because well that's another thing you want to think about you won't even think about that charging angle you'll just do it That's part of the thing too about why I think the again, the resistance issues and all of that, because just as you're pointing out, you're the adrenaline rush and all the energy that you have available. Don't worry, you'll make it work, like you said, but it's also, it's part of the factor that has to be calculated into everything with regard to human response and how things are built to integrate or work with the, the abilities of the people who are the war machine. Okay, so it's rather it's fascinating that that gun hasn't changed for well, 100 years now. This is the year 2022. The M250 caliber basically came in at the end of World War I in its earliest form and didn't really change much from that point forward as it was embraced. But the reason it didn't go into service in any great, great number during the earlier period is because of the preponderance of other weapons that they had. The government didn't want to spend the money. At the time, as I mentioned, the heavy machine gun for the US Army in World War I, going into World War I, was the Gatling gun, carriage mounted Gatling. And that stayed there in official form for pretty much all of the war. And again, remember what they mean by Hetty is what is its longevity and performance if it's brought into service, you know, what can it reach? Obviously range is always an issue. But remember a carriage mounted gun was incredibly accurate. Big target when treated like the tree like artillery, but it was incredibly accurate Yeah I've shot it 500 yards on a What 12 by 14 inch plate and just blew the heck the dickens out of it 500 yards. That's close. I know but Just the accuracy of it once you raise your T&A and well you literally can dial the gun up That's the thing about it even with the brownings Because everybody asked me before well whoa semi-automatic brownies guys during the 90s We built a massive quantity of semi-auto because they couldn't say anything about it What it did is it gave us a massive number of weapons to train people with Okay, it's hard to get people. Yeah, it's hard to get people to understand what we're talking about here and how all of the nuances of trying to get a crew served or a support weapon into the field because again, movies don't show you all the other heartburn that goes along with that really cool thing you're firing. And remember, it's teams that support the weapons section. Each gun has a team. And you get eventually you're gonna lose somebody that's the biggest problem. So it's a priority to be quite honest Your infantry are important. But guys if you receive support if you receive replacements You're gonna allocate a larger portion to replacing whatever personnel are lost in the weapons sections Because they provide the greatest amount of fire firepower and range and they directly you know, they protect and support the infantry in operation, which is something that you'll never see a discussion about. The thing is, machine gun crews, light mortar units are all within range of every weapon the enemy has. And this is the thing, they're really cool guns to operate, but remember that both armies have kind of told their infantry that you shoot these guys first. Always remember that. That's the weapon that will... Go ahead. One person, can I? move handle, operate a 50 and it's pretty difficult with a 30. Too few seconds. Mm, minimal maybe, but it takes more. Just that goes away as a sunshade with it. It just takes more people. This is why they like the idea of mounting it on things. Always remember that real quick. It became, in fact, the three quarter ton weapon carrier, a pickup truck, guys, pickup truck, with a pinel mount in the rear bed. was the platform for virtually every weapon we're talking about. In fact, in beginning of World War I, well through World War I into World War II, the BAR as a light machine gun was considered a fixture gun. It could be mounted just like you would see the Browning belt-fed machine gun. And again, it was a light machine gun. And the advantage was that box magazine. You really could, if you were good, you knew how to bring it into service and rotate magazines in a very hasty fashion. Your life depended upon it. The big thing of obvious advantage is with the belt feed, it sustained fire. And so that's why you're the step up. That's the next test. That would be the priority. If you had a pecking order of weapons in the field, the belt-fed weapon allows one person, if they are behind it, if they're the last man standing, to still put a lot of firepower down range and probably maybe break the spine of whatever it is you're dealing with. You see again, a lot of World War I, World War II, Korea, and even Vietnam situations. where it was that last guy standing with a browning or an M60 hog or, you know, take your pick depending on what window it was that manned that gun to the last. It still ended up fighting with a shovel or with, you know, a pistol or whatever or whatever rifle or some machine gun they had left, you know, on hand. But the first thing they did is man that gun. So keep that in mind. You want to keep those weapons if somebody falls behind your squad gun. You aren't going to abuse them, but you got to get another man. You got to get another shoulder behind that gun as quickly as possible. Always remember that. I know. Go ahead. Everybody needs to be trained with operation and how to headspace a 50. You have to head and know how to do it. Everybody needs to learn. out of headspacing because if you don't you're going to be in trouble. You know that. And again, that's part of the toolkit. Now again, or actually, well, first thing you start doing is stealing from the armors box, if you can, because you want more than one of the headspacing tools in hand. You want to actually, there's three basic tools you want to have spread out so that there's more than one set hanging around. It's kind of like I know that everybody was, what was it, the television series of HBO, the Pacific? Remember where the most important man in the mortar section was the guy with the optics. And that was the tool you had to have. Well, they show that they only had one and it's true that they were, okay, they had one allocated, but remember like most of my Dad's age men said it's like, well, really, real quick, learn to lose parts and ask for more. And that way if Bob got shot and he's back there 40 yards behind us, I don't have to run through machine gun fire to put that mortar in service because I don't want to. So, you know, the basic thing is the one thing they try to do in movies is on the one hand, they're very accurate and the men that gave you the information are being fought with about how things work. But remember that spares of any intricate item are especially critical. This is why I tell you guys over and over again about buying spare everything. I mean, literally, if you can afford, if you're a weapons aficionado right now, and you have an AR, yeah, it's nice that you've got, you've got optics for your gun. Do you have a replacement? Do you have an exact replacement? If you have a bolt carrier and an AR-15, buy another one. Why? Because that's where all the breaky parts are. So why not just buy another one? $65 would get you another one. But it's not the whiz-bang model. Nope, it's not. It's a $65 I can still shoot your ass model. Okay, that's how you end with optics for indirect fire weapons or for any even direct fire weapons. Some weapons require specific support tools. You want to start accumulating and having spares and you distribute them. This is the key word. You distribute the support equipment through the whole of the team in redundant form so that one way or another whoever is closest or whoever is right there might be the person to change the battlefield, to change the tide of the action. by being able to perform right there. If you only have one set of, and this is why if you have any types of support weapons like this, you start looking for spare parts boxes. There's tons of stuff out there for a lot of the weapons, apexgunparts.com, apexgunparts.com. They have been collecting a lot of the armorers kits and also field operators kits for a lot of guns that you haven't seen in a while. Now, I would point out that if you were to look, if you got something you inherited from your grandpa or your dad, you might wanna look to see if you don't have but the basic weapon. You might wanna think about getting the rest of what you need to make sure that your grandpa's gift will continue to sing for a very long time. be creative because there's a lot of stuff that came back from four wars. Guys, go ahead, jump in there. Yeah, you know, you were just talking about getting parts and getting some things. That's something that I've ran across. You know, how many people have SKS's AKA's guns like that? You know, just the penance. Just the pins for holding like the front sides, the rear sides, the gas block, or even like the pin for an SKS if it's got the pin barrel. You know, you can buy those pins marked just by a piece of drill rod. And a lot of people don't know that that's just a piece of number 31 drill rod is all that is. And on like an SKS, number 31 and number 38 drill rod are the two sizes of pins. Well you can go to Grainger or someplace like that and you can buy a three foot stick, a drill rod for three to five dollars. So how many half inch or three quarter inch long pins can you get out of a 36 inch long piece of drill rod? If you're a Mauser person and you want the pins for like the trigger and sear, okay those are three millimeter diameter pins. Those were technically 14 millimeters long, but Granger has those where you can buy a hardened. It's actually a Rockwell 60 on the C scale. You can buy a whole box of 100. Now, what you do on those, you buy dowel pins. and you buy a box of dowel pins and basically all the pins you need for 100, you know, 100 Mausers you now have or 50 Mausers you now have. But those are little items like you just talked about. These are little items that if you went to say E-Gun parts to buy one pin for an SKS that's going to cost you $3 to $5. Plus you're going to pay shipping on it. Well, why not pay $3 to $5 and get a 36 inch stick from someplace like Granger's? We can do that now, but if we get into a war, we get into major conflict, we look at the supply chain distribution problems we already have. Think how it's gonna be if we get into a war, you won't be able to get anything. But like you were just talking about, and like that gentleman was talking about with the 50 caliber BMG, if there's any parts or anything that you can get now, get it now. If you have one of those headspace gauges for a 50 caliber, You know, you can make that headspace gauge. It's actually not that complex. Just if you have another one, just get your piece of steel and duplicate it. I know money's tight, but if people can buy a lathe, even if it's these little hobby lathes, these 8.7 by 29 and a half inch lathes, like they sell on eBay. You know, you can make gun parts. You know, how many people want a gas piston for an SKS or a gas piston extension for an SKS just to have extra setting around. You know, a piece of stainless steel, 7-4 precipitating stainless steel will make the gas piston. So right now, a used gas piston for an SKS is almost $50 and they're hard to get. But the gas but if you have a lathe you can make that gas piston for maybe eight to ten dollars Same thing with the gas piston extension rod. That's actually a grade eight bolt will make that gas piston extension rod It's hard enough and it's big enough if you got a three-eighths bolt a grade eight bolt three eight inches diameter four inches long you can now make the gas piston extension for an SKS. So, I mean, there's little things that we can do now, but things that the fan, we may not be doing that thing in the near future. So that's all I have to say, Mark, because I like to say I called in, I know that other man's on the line there about talking about the 50 caliber stuff, but you know, right now we can go to Granger or anywhere, even the local industrial supply, but a number 31 and a number 38, the real rod, You can make your pins out of it. You can buy other and then my little dowel pins for like the Mausers and things, but we can do that now. That's all I have Mark. Thank you. Appreciate that. And again, the input. We're in a situation where for the moment, in fact, I would say they keep yapping about two weeks out now that get ready for something two weeks out. The Russians are planning an offensive two weeks out. Well, Is NATO going to respond? Is somebody going to get stupid? Guys, a couple days ago, remember, we were talking about the Russians caught what obviously was an Israeli plan to do a dirty bomb or a nuke. Now they're trying to flip that around and they put some people out there that are going, oh no, it was the Russians that were, guys remember that the kosher mafia always throws mud at you with all of the whatever they were doing on it. You know, trying to throw it back and misdirect. If a nuclear exchange begins, and let's say that for whatever reason everybody kind of, you know, enjoys that experience and then realizes it wasn't the day at the beach except for lots of sunshine that they expected, then what's going to happen is all of a sudden you're back to, okay, maybe a pregnant pause. Well, Nobody's going to be shipping certain things. In fact, a lot of ships just aren't going to move. In fact, everybody would be running for cover in that pregnant pause window if there's a hiccup. Nothing that you would normally see will be prioritized. And in many cases, you're going to have difficulty even getting the people that do the job of transportation, let alone work and labor. Locally is basically what you got is all you got. So right now we need to plan ahead. This is what we're talking about here and accumulate the components or the basics, do a little research and put it on the shelf now. It doesn't take up that much space. There isn't even that much greater cost for a lot of what we're talking about. Even with the parts. My attitude is like if you have to go out and just buy the parts. Each one of you has to figure out, you know, what's this worth? What's your life worth? Number one. If you're serious about fighting this conflict to beat the New World Order, then each of you has to contribute personally the resources that you need for you to field yourself as a warrior. There isn't initially, I mean, each one of us has done some of this. I can, I always tell you to do a 5'10 program. I do 4,100 programs. I have put material, equipment, boots, socks, weapons parts, ammunition for years. Why? Because it's for the long haul. By the way, even if we weren't gonna go to quote unquote war, we're supposed to be that way as part of the militia concept. There's no sugar daddy supposed to be supporting from on high and raining breadcrumbs down on your goodies down your retreats. That's not how it was supposed to work. And the idea behind this is it creates an integrated deep tactical national defense that cannot be defeated because there's no place you can grab where you can choke or cut everything off. Right now they're showing you that what we warned everybody about 30 years ago is exactly what's happening right now, guys. Now how many choke points do you have that have destroyed how much of your food supply, parts for equipment, how many have bought automotive parts in the last couple of years? What's that been looking like? Just auto parts. We're not even talking about critical auto parts. So imagine that on steroids, if the idiot sticks decide that they want to kill a bunch of us off, or try to. The best laid plans for rats and rodents never work out the way they hoped, but they sure as hell can do a lot of damage. Now, the first thing we have to do is secure ourselves and secure our loved ones, secure our community, and then we go hunt the bastards that caused all these problems. Of course, we're going to have to fight the other bastards that they invited in to cause more problems, but no matter what, the solution is going to have to be at the tactical, the personal end. And that includes maintenance, supply and support, and all the other things necessary to continue to be able to function and field yourself. We have to be well-rounded in that. Anyway, we're at the top, because we've got militia town hall coming, so you guys aren't going to have to go anywhere. We're not going to get out of the way and probably have to leave. In Congress, July 4th, 1776, the unanimous declaration of the 13 United States of America, when in the course of human events it becomes necessary for one people to dissolve the political bands which have connected them with another, and to assume among the powers of the earth the separate and equal station to which the laws of nature and of nature's God entitle them. A decent respect to the opinions of mankind requires that they should declare the causes which impel them to the separation. We hold these truths to be self-evident. That all men are created equal. That they are endowed by their creator with certain unalienable rights. That among these are life, liberty, and the pursuit of happiness. That to secure these rights, governments are instituted among men deriving their just powers from the consent of the governed. That whenever any form of government becomes destructive of these ends, it is the right of the people to alter or to abolish it and to institute new government, laying its foundation on such principles and organizing its powers in such forms as to them shall seem most likely to affect their safety and happiness. Prudence indeed will dictate that governments long established should not be changed for light and transient causes. And accordingly, all experience has shown that mankind are more disposed to suffer while evils are separable than to right themselves by abolishing the forms to which they are accustomed. But when a long train of abuses and use of patients pursuing invariably the same object evinces a design to reduce them under absolute despotism, it is their right, it is their duty to throw off such government and to provide new guards for their future security. Such has been the patient's sufferance of these colonies. and such is now the necessity which constrains them to alter their former systems of government. The history of the present King of Great Britain is a history of repeated injuries and usurpations all having in direct object the establishment of an absolute tyranny over these states. To prove this, let facts be submitted to a candid world. He has refused his assent to laws. the most wholesome and necessary for the public good. He has forbidden his governors to pass laws of immediate and pressing importance unless suspended in their operation till his assent should be obtained. And when so suspended, he has utterly neglected to attend to them. He has refused to pass other laws for the accommodation of large districts of people. Unless those people would relinquish the right of representation in the legislature. A right, inestimable to them, and formidable to tyrants only. He has called together legislative bodies at places unusual, uncomfortable, and distant from the depository of their public records for the sole purpose of fatiguing them into compliance with his measures. He has dissolved representative houses repeatedly, reposing with manly firmness his invasions on the rights of the people. He has refused for a long time after such dissolutions to cause others to be elected. Whereby the legislative powers, incapable of annihilation, have returned to the people at large for their exercise, the state remaining in the meantime exposed to all the dangers of invasion from without and convulsions within. He has endeavored to prevent the population of these states. For that purpose, obstructing the laws of naturalization of foreigners, refusing to pass others to encourage their migrations hither, and raising the conditions of new appropriations of lands. He has obstructed the administration of justice by refusing his assent to laws for establishing judiciary powers. He has made judges dependent on his will alone for the tenure of their officers and the amount in payment of their salaries. He has erected a multitude of new offices and sent hither swarms of officers to harass our people and eat out their substance. He has kept among us in times of peace standing armies without the consent of our legislatures. He has affected to render the military independent of and superior to the civil power. He is combined with others to subject us to a jurisdiction foreign to our Constitution and unacknowledged by our laws, giving his assent to their acts of pretended legislation, for quartering large bodies of armed troops among us, for protecting them by a mock trial, from punishment for any murders which they should commit on the inhabitants of these states, for cutting off our trade with all parts of the world, for imposing taxes on us without our consent. For depriving us in many cases of the benefits of trial by jury. For transporting us beyond seas to be tried for pretended offenses. For abolishing the free system of English laws in a neighboring province establishing therein an arbitrary government. And enlarging its boundaries so as to render it at once an example and fit instrument for introducing the same absolute rule into these colonies. For taking away our charters, abolishing our most valuable laws. in altering fundamentally the forms of our governments. For suspending our own legislatures and declaring themselves invested with power to legislate for us in all cases whatsoever. He has abdicated government here by declaring us out of his protection and waging war against us. He has plundered our seas, ravaged our coasts, burnt our towns, and destroyed the lives of our people. He is at this time transporting large armies of foreign mercenaries to complete the works of death, desolation and tyranny, already begun with circumstances of cruelty and perfidy scarcely paralleled in the most barbarous ages and totally unworthy the head of a civilized nation. He has constrained our fellow citizens taken captive on the high seas to bear arms against their country, to become the executioners of their friends and brethren, or to fall themselves by their hands. He has excited domestic insurrections among us. and is endeavoured to bring on the inhabitants of our frontiers the merciless Indian savages whose known rule of warfare is an undistinguished destruction of all ages, sexes and conditions. In every stage of these oppressions we have petitioned for redress in the most humble terms. Our repeated petitions have been answered only by repeated injury. A prince. Whose character is thus marked by every act which may define a tyrant is unfit to be the ruler of a free people Nor have we been wanting an attention to our British brethren We have warned them from time to time of attempts by their legislature to extend an unwarrantedable jurisdiction over us We've reminded them of the circumstances of our emigration and settlement here We have appealed to their native justice and magnanimity and we have conjured them by the ties of our common kindred to disavow these usurpations which would inevitably interrupt our connections and correspondence. They too have been deaf to the voice of justice and of consanguinity. We must therefore acquiesce in the necessity which denounces our separation and hold them as we hold the rest of mankind enemies in war. in peace, friends. We therefore, the representatives of the United States of America, in general Congress, assembled, appealing to the supreme judge of the world for the rectitude of our intentions, do. in the name and by the authority of the good people of these colonies solemnly publish and declare that these united colonies are and of right ought to be free and independent states that they are absolved from all allegiance to the British crown and that all political connection between them and the state of Great Britain is and ought to be totally dissolved and that as free and independent states they have full power to levy war Conclude peace, contract alliances, establish commerce, and to do all other acts and things which independent states may of right do. And for the support of this declaration, with a firm reliance on the protection of divine providence, we mutually pledge to each other our lives, our fortunes, and our sacred honor. time for the militia town hall meeting again here on Liberty Tree Radio. It is, uh, let's see, October 21, 2022. And we are up live. I hear we got somebody else on the line already. Uh, but before we, maybe we don't. Okay. That's weird. That go myself. And that fun. Well, we are up live. It's about 12 minutes past the top of the hour there. We just finished up with the Declaration of Independence. We've been opening with that all year long. We used to usually open with a prayer, but I thought the Declaration of Independence was a good opener. Kind of touches on all the bases of what we've been covering here. I still don't want to put out a prayer request for Fluffy's Jamly. If you don't know, Fluffy passed away. We do have his own bitch-wary up in a couple of spots on the Discord. I want to send to Fluffie's family our best wishes. Join them in their morning. I'm still a little raw on that one. Oh boy. Well, other update for Liberty Tree Radio. We are into the last three months, more or less. Although I think longer this year. because of the way the billing cycle went last year. But we got three months left. We're in the last three months of the year. And we're going to do our end of the year fundraiser. Usually we would have started in July. But there's been so much stuff going on, guys, we really haven't had much together. Mark wants to start doing the drawings. I'm going to try to hold his feet to the fire. We'll definitely do a drawing on the 31st on Monday. We are still using PayPal, although I really don't like. using their system right now. If you want to donate to be in the drawing, one dollar donation to the PayPal will get you in the drawing. But please, if you're going to donate for the drawing, include in the note and address that we can send your gift to for donating to Liberty Tree Radio if you win the drawing. If you don't put a note, PayPal's still being goofy about that where they're not always giving us the address. It fumbles the ball, you know, when they screw up and they don't send us or whatever happens with the system there where we don't get a mailing address. Also, it helps to reconfirm the mailing address you have on PayPal because sometimes people have moved, forgotten to change that information, and it just helps. Hmm, let's see. I don't think that there's a whole lot more there other than I know there is a problem with the archives again. I'm working on that. I saw it when I went and did the rebroadcast. I was supposed to rebroadcast with Craig, but I couldn't get his file up. Ended up playing an older program, hard drive for the server. I think that's about it. We are, this is your program at Snethide. Live call in program, guys. If you want to call in, bring up the subject, change the subject, move it in the A direction. You're more than welcome to. The number is 667-7. 667-770-1524 room number 957-464 in the pound sign again that's 667-770-1524 room number 957-464 in the pound sign a couple of things we're gonna go to from the discord real quick first so Thank you guys for posting stuff over there. I know I said I'm gonna try try to You guys are doing a great job of posting stuff over in the discord. I mean we have so much material that you guys have provided that I've actually had complaints. It's hard to keep up because people are posting so much stuff. Well, you know, that that's a good thing. Posting so much stuff trying to keep other people up to pace on what's going on. Let's see. And then Civil Guard lawsuit ruling. Now, before just posted by never know in the. Discord, I'm gonna see if there's a video to go with this, cause otherwise I'm gonna have to read it. And I'm not the best in the world to do that stuff. Who'd do for me? Uh, cause he knows I'm pre-monotone. Uh, let's see what this is about. Give your business an advantage right now with Nationwide 5G from T-Mobile for Business. Unlock new insights and efficiency with leading Ultra-Capacity 5G coverage. Only T-Mobile for Business has 5G that's ready right now. It's been more than two years since that violence erupted in Albuquerque's old town. Protesters clashed. Eventually somebody was shot and it was all over a controversial statue of Conquista de la Juan de Onate. In the middle of the chaos, we learned about a militia group that was there called the New Mexico Civil Guard. They were armed, they were organized, and now a district court ruling says they were breaking the law. Brittany Castello has more about what this ruling means. District Attorney Raul Torres filed a civil lawsuit against the New Mexico Civil Guard in 2020. Today he calls this ruling a victory. He says the New Mexico Civil Guard can no longer publicly operate and organize as a military unit. And he says the message it sends goes beyond that. The New Mexico Civil Guard showed up to a protest in Old Town two years ago, a protest that quickly got out of hand. The group was wearing camouflage carrying weapons. District Attorney Raul Torres says acting as a military group threatening the safety of those around them. What we resolutely stand against is the idea that any individual can organize themselves into a cohesive paramilitary unit. and exercise the traditional powers of the military or the police to intimidate fellow citizens and otherwise engage in conduct that would threaten our constitutional order. District Attorney Raul Torres filed a civil suit in July of 2020 to get the group shut down. He has been working with Albuquerque Attorney Mark Baker and a Georgetown University legal team that fights against the rise of private militias. A second judicial district court judge made it official. The overarching message today is that in the state of New Mexico, there is no right fundamentally to establish your own paramilitary unit or police unit without authorization from either the New Mexico Constitution or the task statutory framework. This is clearly a victory for the rule of law. The New Mexico Civil Guard and its members can no longer operate as an organized military unit. It's a rule he says can and will be applied to any groups to come as individuals. They can be in public as individuals they can keep and bear arms. What they cannot do is engage in a coordinated effort to present a show of force in the public that would threaten and intimidate anyone else in the public. This ruling follows a deposition earlier this year with one of the New Mexico symbol guard founders. The founder admitted to destroying evidence and refused to answer basic questions. Brittany Costello, KOV4. Okay, obviously they haven't read the Constitution. You know, the right of the people to keep and bear arms shall not be infringed, the right of the militia. Go on down the board there. So that's interesting. Again, it's a ruling, it's not a law. And it doesn't go with the law of the land. It goes against the Constitution and the Bill of Rights. So it'll be interesting to see if they have a smart lawyer. They may try to Supreme Court. There has been a lot of Supreme Court rulings in the favor of the Second Amendment. And it's okay for the other side to organize, threaten the civilian population, and tear down statues and destroy private and public property. But it's not okay for you to stand up with your brothers and sisters in your community and defend your heritage, your history, your community and private property from bugs that the police have refused. to stand up against and do their job. Or have been to stand down. You're right. This post count rev, you're right because we're standing up against the United Nations. That's what that was. That was a speech. No, that was no, no, no, no. No, prosecutor who is in his little, um, has his own little fiefdom going on right there and he is putting his foot down because they stopped the protesters from tearing down the historical statue that was there. There was bloodshed which is regrettable but again we don't know the detail I don't know all the details I remember seeing some of it the skateboarders attacking and To say that the skateboard is not a weapon, all you gotta do is go back and take a look at that Summer of Love and see how many people were beat down and basically chopped with the skateboard. They're using it as a weapon to attack people. They used the skateboards as a weapon to break into buildings. They beat the one guy to death who tried to defend his shop with the samurai sword with the skateboards. So hey. That type of behavior that criminal behavior is fine if you want to stand up against it It's not sorry. I know we got a color there, but we've got some other stuff. We're gonna play To it because we're going to guns and get a lot Amendment rulings have been going on that yours been doing a good job covering some of it New York's gun man has a ruling against it now But New York has pretty much been thumbing their nose Supreme Court Eating oil and it's almost six dollars a gallon. Thank you Joe Biden. You are an ass clown So I want to give us some great news that came out yesterday. I Had a lot going on yesterday so I couldn't do studio work, but This decision came out yesterday and it's a temporary restraining order on New York another judge Smacks the hell out of New York and Governor Hochul's Concealed Carry Improvement Act, which was a direct response to the Supreme Court's decision in the New York State Rifle and Pistol Association versus Bruin case, where Clarence Thomas and the judges that were behind him that didn't dissent, basically said that Americans have a right to carry a gun outside the home for self-defense and you know the rest. The text, history, and tradition is the test that every state, every entity in this country shall go by when they want to pass something restricting that core civil right. So, here on the screen is the document that came out yesterday from, listen to this judge's name, John L. Sinatra Jr. Couldn't be a better name for somebody smacking down New York. And Firehouse Policy Coalition and Second Amendment Foundation assisted in this case And let's go right to the decision in the order. It says, The complaint and motion in this case focus solely on one aspect of the new legislation, namely the portion making it a felony for such a license holder to possess a firearm at, quote, any place of worship or religious observation. Ample's Supreme Court precedent addressing the individual's right to keep and bear arms from Heller and McDonald to its June 22 decision in Bruin dictates... that New York's new place of worship restriction is equally unconstitutional. In Bruin, the court made the Second Amendment test crystal clear. Regulation in this area is permissible only if the government demonstrates that the regulation is consistent with the nation's historical tradition of sufficiently analogous regulations. As set forth below, New York fails that test. The state's exclusion is, instead, inconsistent with the nation's historical traditions, impermissibly infringing on the right to keep and bear arms in public for self-defense. Thus, and for the further reasons set forth below, plaintiffs' motion for a temporary restraining order and joining defendants' enforcement, New York, of this place of worship restriction is granted. In fact, let me give you some quotes here from the judge. He said the Constitution requires that individuals be permitted to use handguns for the core lawful purpose of self-defense. and it protects that right outside the home and in public. Nothing in the nation's history or traditions presumptively closes the door on that right across every place of worship or religious observation. As in Bruin, where the court stated that nothing in the Second Amendment text draws a home-slash-public distinction with respect to the right to keep and bear arms. Nothing there casts outside of its protection places of worship or religious observation. New York's exclusion violates the general right to publicly carry arms for self-defense. It too is one of the policy choices taken off the table by the Second Amendment. Damn. Now I'll have this decision pinned down below as well as in the pinned comment, well in the description and the button. You know what I mean. I'll have it down below. You might want to read this one. It's 40 pages. It's a good read. The judge just destroys New York. It just obliterates them. In fact, one of the things the judge says, and I'm paraphrasing, is that people having a firearm in a place of worship helps to secure the security of the public. The judge annihilates New York. Let's go to the last page. And this is the conclusion. It says, Ordered that this TRO, temporary restraining order, will remain in effect through the disposition of plaintiff's motion for preliminary injunction. Ordered that no bond shall be required and ordered that defendant's opposition papers on the preliminary injunction application are due October 28, 2022 at 12 p.m. Reply papers, if any, are due by November 2nd, 2022 at 12 p.m. The parties shall appear for a hearing on the preliminary injunction application on November 3rd, 2022 at 2 p.m. in the Chautauqua courtroom, 8th floor east, 2 Niagara Square, Buffalo, New York, and this was so ordered by Judge John L. Sinatra Jr. So, start spreading the news. Sorry, I had to do that one. New York gets kicked in the groin again when it comes to their gun control attempts. It was so obvious that it was unconstitutional, illegal, and just a knee-jerk reaction by Karen Deville, Cruella Deville, whatever you want to call Kathy Hochul. But, I mean, it's transparent, and you're losing left and right. And I'm glad to see New York get kicked and beat down again, but they're going to keep trying. So I'm glad that these federal judges are standing up temporary restraining order for now November 2nd will be the preliminary injunction hearing so as of as of last night, New York, they can't restrict people from lawfully carrying concealed in places of worship and that is a good thing. Guys and gals The winds keep coming, the anti-gun dominoes keep falling. I know that our viewers play a big part in this. The fact that people are educating themselves about these restrictions and the core rights enshrined in these documents here. It is... We're starting to see a swing and I love each and every one of you for watching these videos and sharing them and I ask you to do the same. Please like it, share it, comment down below, turn that bell notification on and of course subscribe to this channel so you can get all the Second Amendment news, good, bad, ugly or indifferent every single day and I thank you so much for your time. Until we see each other again, be safe, stay vigilant, carry a gun to keep you, your friends, your family, your community safe. That's what the Second Amendment is for and even judges in New York are seeing That it's time to push back on these tyrants and that's a good thing Can you believe heating oil? They're saying it's gonna be almost ten dollars a gallon after this election One last video I wanted to play before we move on but I have to pull it up here because when I played that one it closed So let me find this again Here we go. Joe Biden has... I want to share with you... This is from... YouTube, not YouTube, in Discord yet, so I'll post that over there. I remember Joe Biden went to visit the Saudi Arabians to ask for them to increase their oil production and they ended up cutting it off. We now know why. There was a polite excuse... But apparently, while he was over there, he threatened him. He asked him to hold back on increasing the production until after the election to see how the, uh, how the, uh, oh, how the political race went. And the Saudis pretty much said no. And when they said no, he threatened him. Tell me how we got into the situation with the Saudis right now. And, uh, mind you, Joe probably doesn't even remember doing it. But here I'm going to play this real quick. This is by Sky News out of Australia. Of course, it's Australia's news that's covering this. You won't hear it in ours. Not because you're not paying attention, but because it involves Joe Biden and the media always shuts these things down. And I'm not talking about Hunter Biden, though it is looking increasingly likely that the president's deadbeat son is soon going to be indicted on some sort of charges involving gun ownership, drag use, or tax avoision. That's right, I said a voyager. It's a perfectly cromulant word. But how can we tell? Well, even CNN's Jake Tapper asked the president about it in a softball interview this week. CNN's reporting and the Washington Post reporting suggests that prosecutors think they could, they have enough to charge your son, Hunter, for tax crimes and a false statement about a gun purchase. Personally and politically, how do you react to that? First of all, I'm proud of my son. I'm proud, all right. And I'll tell you what, it's something as staged managed as a Jake Tapper. Joe Biden sit down. Nothing like that is ever asked if there's not a reason for it. Mark my words. Speaking of Sunzo, Joe Biden had an absolute shocker this week concerning his deceased other son, Beau, who died of brain cancer in 2015. Or did he? Just imagine, I mean it sincerely. I say this as a father of a man who won the bronze star, the conspicuous service medal and lost his life in Iraq. Imagine the courage, the daring and the genuine sacrifice. Genuine sacrifice, they all mean. Lost his life in Iraq? For the second time in just about as many weeks, the president has shown that he can't remember who has died. Remember the Where's Jackie incident for a few weeks ago? Or indeed, how they passed. Yet, if that's not shocking enough, evidence has also emerged that Joe Biden has tried to manipulate America's allies to help him out. Now, remember a few months back when Joe Biden went to the Middle East to try and mend fences with the Saudis? And just coincidentally, get them to pump more oil to bring down gas prices and save him from the mistake he made shutting down the Keystone pipeline? Well, of course, it was a tremendous failure. But now we are starting to learn about just how much of a failure it was and what happened behind the scenes. Now, since the trip, Joe Biden has been drawing down the United States Strategic Petroleum Reserve. something that really exists more to protect the country in times of crisis rather than to prop up Democrats up at the polls. Although when you are a progressive like Joe Biden who thinks that Republicans are the enemy of all that is good, well, it's a bit easy to get confused. It's also easy to get confused with Joe Biden anyway, but that's still the story. Anyway, after all that begging, the Saudis have told the US to take a hike. Because Lord knows they have not been happy with the Biden administration's ties to Iran, among other things. Not only have they cut oil production, but the Saudi Kingdom has also released a statement claiming that the Biden administration asked them to wait a month. i.e. until after the midterm elections before taking the action which would inevitably push oil prices higher. And what's more, there is even talk that the White House threatened the Saudis with the withholding of arms sales if they didn't play ball. Now, let's just think about this. Using a foreign policy instrument as a cudgel with which to manipulate domestic policy and election outcomes, Gosh, I remember when the Democrats drafted articles of impeachment against Donald Trump for doing similar things after there were claims he had a quid pro quo with the Ukrainians, offering to release military aid in exchange for investigations into oil and gas experts under Biden's allegedly corrupt dealings in that country's petroleum industry. Amazingly, though, the White House didn't push back on claims that had been Saudi Arabia and instead issued this classic non-denial denial saying, quote, we presented Saudi Arabia with analysis to show that there was no market basis to cut production targets and that they could easily wait for the next OPEC meeting, i.e. after the midterms, to see how things developed. National Security spokesman John Kirby said in that statement, and it is a sign, though, now. I mean, think about this. It is a sign of just how bonkers things have gotten. That in a credibility contest between the American White House on one hand and the Kingdom of Saudi Arabia on the other, the Saudis seem like the ones you'd actually want to trust. about what they did, but it was Joe Biden who was in the meeting. You can't trust, you trust him to read the teleprompter and say what he needs to say. They've got him out painting in Pennsylvania for, oh, come on, what's his name? One who had the stroke, trying to think of who that is. I was just talking to my wife about him, but he helped me out here. The one that's running against Dr. Oz in Pennsylvania. I'm gonna go back, I'll probably find it here, because I know I was watching a couple of people. I don't follow politics. Hard to miss because he's been up, they did the interview with him on, what was it? NBC, and the reporter was actually honest about his condition. He is not fit for politics, but the Democrats are still pushing it. He cannot understand what you are saying to him. without a teleprompter in front of him putting into word because he's got dysphasia, I think that's the proper term for it, from his stroke. His brain can't process the audio signals. And when he talks back to you, if he doesn't have the teleprompter there, even with the teleprompter there, telling him what to say, he's having a hard time getting the communication out. He wasn't the brightest bulb in the first place when he was running anyway. And Dr. Oz is not a politician. He hasn't been doing, you know, the typical politician crap, excuse my language, that's been going on in Pennsylvania. So we really haven't heard much about his campaign. Do I totally think Dr. Oz is going to be a terribly great politician for Pennsylvania? Nobody, probably, definitely be better than the Oh. I think we might have played this lag before anyway. But it's a good reference to understand that... What? Is it Orrin' Hatch? No, it's not Orrin' Hatch. This is somebody else. No, this guy's had a stroke and he is... He is crippling. Hey guys, welcome to the liberal hive mind channel solely focused on exposing the abundant hypocrisy of the left Well exactly as expected it's happening folks John Fetterman hasn't budged in the polls for months He's been under that 50-point line for a real long time and he just hasn't been able to break through that ceiling Well folks, it seems as though that ceiling is dropping and we haven't even seen the real impacts of that MSNBC Expose a as of yet I mean we're seeing little remnants of it, but it's really gonna take some time to materialize. But the simple fact of the matter is John Fetterman's campaign is crashing. And the most recent Trafalgar Group poll not only shows John Fetterman's lead reducing, but it shows Dr. Oz catching up and he's essentially within the margin of error. And that doesn't even account for independence and undecided voters who are most likely going to split for him and the voter enthusiasm gap. Of course, I'm not going to rehash those points because we've done all the polling analysis. But the basic point here is that John Fetterman continues to crash and Dr. Oz gaining on him. It's exactly what we were expecting, considering all the bad news and the bad moves that the John Fetterman campaign has been making. We've been reporting that they are in serious panic mode. Well folks, that panic mode just turned into an emergency declaration as the Fetterman campaign is straight up freaking out. And boy oh boy when you get emotional, when you get desperate, sometimes you don't exactly make the most sound of decisions. And John Fetterman's campaign, this time through his wife, just made a serious, serious blunder. Let me show you guys exactly what's going on as the Fetterman campaign continues to tank. I mean, this is two weeks straight of PR blunders and campaign disasters. Of course, we've got some stuff to get into. Let me show you guys everything that's going on. So let's roll the tape. Alright folks, so let's first start off with the numbers here. John Fetterman's campaign is officially tanking. In the most recent Trafalgar poll, his ceiling drops down to 47.2%. Dr. Oz gains at 44.8%. That's a 2.4% lead for John Fetterman, right within the margin of error. Then you have 4% undecided and 3.4% for the libertarian candidate, I believe, Eric Gerhardt. And so clearly the question is, is a 2.4% lead for John Fetterman enough to win in Pennsylvania? Considering the undec- decided split considering the fact that the libertarian candidate might not get 3.4%. And of course, the most important factor, people actually showing up to the polls. I don't think so. I mean, if you look at the most recent Rasmussen poll, where Republicans make massive gains in generic congressional ballot data, specifically isolated for the state of Pennsylvania, Republicans are leading in generic ballot votes at 48% to 43. And if we look at independence across the country, 2022 generic congressional ballot polling trends by Rasmussen, on September 29th, that was 38% for Democrats, 37% for Republicans. Fast forward two weeks later, Republicans hold a plus 16 lead at 46% to 30% for the Dems. Considering the fact that Pennsylvania voters are leaning rightward, how the heck does it then make sense for Pennsylvania voters to then go and vote for John Federman? Not only is he one of the most far left candidates currently running, but to add insult to injury to make it even worse, he's unhealthy in Pennsylvania voters' know that, and increasingly so after the most recent MSNBC report. Clearly it's not looking good for John Fetterman's campaign, and they know it. And now, as I was mentioning after that MSNBC piece, the expose into John Fetterman's health, well the emotional and desperate reaction from John Fetterman's wife and his campaign is another campaign PR blunder. Disaster. John Fetterman's wife just came out publicly claiming that Dasha Burns, the reporter who broke the story on John Federman's fitness for office or lack thereof, should quote, face consequences after going live with the piece. I don't like saying rage because I think that's a really unhealthy feeling. And when you feel those things, it only harms yourself. But I just, you know, what a disservice that she did to not only my husband, but to anyone facing a disability and working through it. And I don't know how there were not consequences, right? I mean, There are consequences for folks in these positions who are any of the isms. I mean, she was ableist, and that's what she was in her interview. It was appalling to the entire disability community and I think to journalism. So I was shocked and still really upset about it. And I think the positive is it's brought a lot of conversations around accommodations, around rights, around ableism, right? I mean, ableism was trending on Twitter. It just shows there's so much work to do. But these networks have to take accountability, right? Like where is your training? It was appalling to see. And you see that in schools, you see that with young children, you don't expect to see it at this level. And I haven't heard an apology, it hasn't come. I am hopeful that they will reflect and see that they did an incredible disservice too. All Americans. a good idea. But if that's what you believe, then fine. But then for John Federman's wife to suggest that she should face consequences for practicing journalism gives us a direct view into the mind of an authoritarian leftist. And then of course to justify it with some woke nonsense, once again gives us a direct view into what Dr. Jordan Peterson is always warning us about with the compassionate leftist authoritarian. It's just not a good look and it's similar to what we're seeing with Katie Hobbs. This idea that voters don't deserve to see the truth about their candidates. It's all just completely ridiculous and it's clearly going to backfire. It's a really bad look. People are already discussing this clip in the overwhelming majority of the comments that I'm seeing, of course, this is anecdotal, finer statements to be completely absurd, ridiculous, and I'd say rightfully so. But at the end of the day, it all signals one thing, total absolute sheer panic coming out of the John Fetterman house and of course, the John Fetterman campaign. They don't know what to do. They're scrambling and it's everybody but John Fetterman that's speaking for John Fetterman, which makes the optics even worse. Federman can't even come out publicly and defend himself because of the damage that he has suffered after the stroke. The whole thing is falling apart and you know that they're getting seriously desperate when they're launching a last-minute, Hail Mary desperate attempt to turn this thing around by calling on Joe Biden to campaign for John Federman. It's happening. To mention Joe will go to Pennsylvania to stump for stroke victim John Federman. I mean honestly with this one the jokes write themselves. I think I'm gonna refrain on this issue specifically, but let's just say John Federman Joe Biden, not exactly an all-star lineup when it comes to public events, public speaking. This is as I stated a last second, last ditch effort. This is pure desperation and again, I think it's going to flop. Very simply because Joe Biden is incredibly unpopular in the state of Pennsylvania and even more unpopular with independent voters that you're currently trying to convince. Trump leads Biden in Pennsylvania, 2024 poll. Donald Trump is beating Joe Biden by a staggering amount. in Pennsylvania across all of the most reputable pollsters. And John Fetterman's strategy here to turn this around, or the Fetterman campaign strategy, is to bring Sleepy Joe to resurrect his campaign. Again, not a good look. It's PR blunder campaign blunder after blunder. From the crime campaign that backfired on John Fetterman tremendously, trying to brand himself as a law and order candidate, and then everything in between to now this. John Fetterman's election efforts are spiraling out of control. And pretty soon, folks, the whole things going to implode, I don't see this guy winning on election day, and certainly not after the late October debate. But of course, we'll just have to see what happens. I mean, really, the balls in Dr. Oz's court will just have to see what he does with it. But when it comes to John Thetterman, it's been airball after airball. One big, massive disaster. That's what I got for you guys, though. If you enjoyed it, make sure to leave a like and possibly subscribe to the channel if you guys are up for it. Like usual, though, I gotta get back to work. I wanna thank you guys for watching, and I will see you on the next one. Hey, I'm you five years in the future you got this cool house again That was from the liberal hive mind. I think we played that last week or the week before But it's good to play it again. I don't think that the That there's gonna be a look at difference between the Democrats and Republicans other than one might move a little slower than the other or we might have like a brief Pause because as we know the Republicans like to sit on their hands and do nothing Hey, when you played that declaration in the proof, they call them savages, North American Aboriginal savages. They said it in the Declaration of Independence. So when I went on this program, the public was the, you can't call them that. I could tell it to the founding fathers. They said, the eyes with us. The savages that they were referring to were just that they were referring to were usually the savages that were cited with the French. Although the England did turn a blind eye to the English traders coming in and trading weapons, demo hawks, gunpowder and stuff to the Native Americans who were raiding the colonists post at the time. It's 650 a gallon for soda. Forget about gasoline. How the hell did Coca-Cola cost 650 a gallon? That's what it's costing here in Colorado. $3.00. Again, it's coming back to that fuel issue again. You can't, for about the same price as you could, but weight and distance, it changes the price of it. That's why everybody had made fun of the one stockbroker who said that he paid $25 for a burrito meal at Taco Bell. Taco Bell came out and made a comment, it's like that's impossible, how can you do that with our, but then this week it's come out that hey, depending on where you are in the country, we've joked about this a couple weeks ago about how the new Taco Bells, the new fast food restaurants, if you have seen the design that they're building, They look like a bank. None of the food preparation is on the ground floor. It's on an upper level. They have no... They all got armed people. They're getting armed people at these places. Well, I'm not completely getting rid of the dining room. There is no dining room in these new design fast food restaurants. It's like you drive into a bank to the outside deposit. There's an elevator chute from where the food's prepared down to where your car is. All right. I posted a picture of it in the discord a couple of weeks ago. It makes sense. When the food is costing that much, they are starting to treat it like it is a bank. They don't want you to come into the building. Hell, we got banks here locally that sense the COVID thing. You have to ask their permission to come inside. You have to ask them to open the door for you. Is that where you are? Yeah, that's right. We really got that. That's right here in loving Texas. Oh, yeah. There are places that, well that's what I'm saying. I haven't seen any of the new Taco Bell constructions like this come up yet in our area, but I have a couple of people, like I said, who have sent me pictures. I've sent the pictures to other people. Well, you can take a look at it. These are custom built. They came in, tear down the thing, built it up, and you have the Taco Bell bank. You have the McDonald's bank. What was the other one? And that's what they're building them like, but none of the food is on that ground level. They've got a small area, staircase, and I don't know what's in that area down there, maybe some cold storage or something where their deliveries come into. But all the food preparation areas up above, and you go through the drive through, they elevate the food down to you. You never see, you don't even get to see the person you're ordering the food from. You never drive up to a, you don't even drive up to a window to get your food out the window. It's all done over Intercom and they send the food down to you in an elevator. it sounds ridiculous, but that's what they've done with the new building designs. And for whatever money that they think they're saving by not having the dining room, all of the maintenance on the elevator shafts and everything else is going to come into play with this, it's going to really mess up their calculations in, they're gonna have to have a lot more... It was better in 1960. It's like the whole like... Oh, in 1960 they pushed it out the window, 15 cents a burger, no tax, and then Johnson started ruin everything with his 1964 Civil Rights crap. Then everything went to hell. They started taxing everything, no more 15, and they started interior design for Burger King and the McDonald's. They were better off just wearing paper hats and... pushing it out the window in a bag. And they had a little cardboard little box. They called it the, and you never ate indoors. Then they went to that, and now you're going back the other way and charging a thousand times more. They were trying to make the sitting area like it's a family event. They used to have the little, we could come and sit down. But now, when it would sit down, diner area, think about this. We're getting rid of the diner area and these fast food restaurants. At the same time, we're trying to push electric cars on people where people are going to be stuck waiting for their car to charge for sometimes if you look at some of these states. and you're not going to be able to go and sit down at a restaurant or wait till your car has a little bit of charge so you can go down the road. No, because you're getting rid of the sit down restaurant area. You won't even be able to walk up. I mean, they don't have a walk up you can order. It's not like Sonic, which still is, they'll pull up outside, order your food, they bring it out to you either on roller skates or they walk it out to the car. And they have a little, if you're not in your car, they got a little sit down area. There is no little sit down area. It's all, you're either getting it through your car or you're not. So if you're waiting for your car to charge, there's no place to sit and wait, need food there. One guy's hotel room, if they were waiting for their whole car to charge up, you know, or get food, they went to, I think they went to a can't see restaurant. and sat down inside. But yeah, Kansy was the other one. That was the other one that is building the food bank elevator chutes now. Well, we got Sonic in Colorado, but Bubba says it ain't as good as Texas one. So Sonic in Colorado is going downhill. They're all going downhill. And soon they'll have to have impossible burgers everywhere. They're not going to even serve beef. Somebody talk me into trying one. Okay. taste like meat, it has a really weird aftertaste and if you ever try to cook it out on like a grower or stove yourself, it's gonna look freaking weird. To cook it for, to try to cook them here, they stink, they got this weird chemical smell and it's not comes out of it but some red liquid while you're cooking it comes out that Plus, I gotta hold the boxes of this new contaminated stuff that says, that says biologically altered strain in this boxes thing is called corn biscuits. I'm not kidding. And it says, I called the company in Minnesota, but we don't ask what they're doing to the corn. So I said, well, are you gonna sell it? Don, for instance, I'm like. Oh, but get away. Yeah, because they're the ones who approved it. No, they're the ones who approved that stuff. Where that's coming from is the genetic alteration that they did to the corn for ethanol to make it produce more corn alcohol. They had a big lawsuit over it in Michigan because I can't remember what company it was. They planted like a whole field of corn, like in the middle of all these other farmer's corn, and it cross-pollinated, which it was not supposed to be able to do. That was one of the things that came out of the lawsuit. The cops pollinated and they were suing the other farmers for selling their genetically altered corn product. That was like, that's like early 2000s, man. Back away. This box of cereal was from Post Foods where only a special section of their factory is always make the regular shredded wheat at Post Foods. In the US anymore. Kellogg's. Post and college used to be out of Kalamazoo. They're Mexico? No. We're supposed to have a candy shortage this Halloween. All your candy, like Hershey's, Butterfinger, any Hershey's product. Now that's being made in Mexico. Your staple American candy, hell, even Twinkies aren't made in the US anymore. And they have been, you know, I... every now and again. I buy a box of Twinkies and I'll eat the whole box of Twinkies. My wife does it. But the new Twinkies, I don't like them. They have done something to the Twinkie recipe since they moved it to Mexico. There's just something off about it. And all the Twinkies is in shortbread. Isn't it golden cakes and whipped cream? No, it's not whipped cream. It's sugar and lard. They lied. Well, that's all sitting on where you're at. That's all whipped cream is. I hated it when they coated it with chocolate. But the old cake, it's not golden cake still. I tasted it. It doesn't seem like they're cooking it right, though. But we're two minutes into the next hour. I'm sure we got Dan sitting there on the line listening to this conversation wondering how we got here. But the intelligence report is coming up next, guys. So we're going to step down, get out of the way, and get visitors from the past running. We'll be back next week at the same time. Remember, we are going to have a drawing on the 31st, if possible. You can donate through PayPal on the Liberty Tree Radio website. Please include your mailing address if you donate that way Just because PayPal still screw with that with us helps to confirm that we have the right mailing address Just because you know on some people invitations and it has been updated Let's see or you can donate through the PO box PO box 194 Dexter, Michigan 48130 Every dollar that you donate will get you one drawing one one kit in the drawing So if you donate multiple dollars, I'm gonna give you multiple chits. The intelligence report is coming up next. We're just gonna jump right into Visitor from the past, guys. We'll be back next Friday at the same time. We fought a revolution to secure our liberty. We wrote the Constitution as a shield from tyranny. For future generations, this legacy we gave. In this, the land of the free and home of the brave. The freedoms we secured for you, we hoped you'd always keep. The tyrants labored endlessly while your parents were asleep. Your freedom's gone, your courage lost, you're no more than a slave. In this, the land of the free. and home of the brave. You buy permits to travel and permits to own a gun. Permits to start a business or to build a place for one. On land that you believe you own, you pay a yearly rent. Although you have no voice in saying how the money's spent. Your children must attend a school that doesn't educate. And your Christian values can't be taught according to the state. You read about the current news in a regulated press and you pay a tax you do not owe to please the IRS Your money is no longer made of silver nor of gold you trade your wealth for paper so your life can be controlled You pay for crimes that make our nation turn from God and shame number You've traded in your name You've given government control to those who do you harm so they could burn down churches and seize and keep our country deep in debt. Put men of God in jail. Harash your fellow countrymen while corrupted courts prevail. Your public servants don't uphold the solemn oaths they've sworn. And your daughters visit doctors so their children won't be born. Your leaders send artillery and guns to foreign shores and send your sons to slaughter fighting other people's wars. Can you regain the freedoms for which we fought and died? Or don't you have the courage or the faith to stand with pride? And are there no more values for which you'll fight to save? Or do you wish your children to live in fear and be a slave? O sons of the Republic, arise, take a stand, defend the Constitution, the supreme law of the land, preserve our great Republic and each God given right, and pray to God. To keep the torch of freedom burning bright As I awoke he'd vanished in the mist from whence he came His words were true, we are not free But we have ourselves to blame For even now as tyrants trampled each God-given right We only watch and tremble, too afraid to stand and fight If he stood by your bedside in a dream while you were asleep And wondered what remains of the freedoms he'd fought to keep What would be your answer? If he called out from the grave, dill the land of the free. out there, of course on every ocean on the planet and inland along with other porting facilities, etc. We also have a myriad of other communications technologies, both inside and outside these United States. It is Friday and it is the 21st of October. It is the end of the third full week of the month of October. Just a heads up on that. 21 October 2022. and Friday, which is Cinco diemone, Quartermaster Friday. It is the 14th year of Open Obvious and Pissing in Your Face, Fabian, Socialist and Soviet Socialist Occupation of America with a K. 2022 Old Earth Calendar, 2022 Battle for the Republic, The Dance of Swords. And it's Friday, and it's been a beautiful Friday. In fact, it's nice outside, even temperatures are as high outside right now after sunset as they were a couple of days ago during the day. In fact, it's not even that cool, I don't think, right now. Still a wear jacket. Remember, this is Michigan. You're in the upper part of the country, no matter where you are. If you're in the north, that whole weather situation can change in a matter of moments, and you could be freezing your hind end off. So take gloves, take a hat, take a jacket. Don't have to wear them all the time. Put the gloves in your pocket. But if we get the weather we can expect at any moment Then we will be prepared for it, which is most critical Anyway, a couple things here. We were talking about weapons systems and of course weapons teams with certain weapons When we talk about the m250 caliber you're talking heavy as sin Traditionally when it first came out the infantry actually deployed it just actually any other Team served weapon that you see today. We've got, oh, they don't see any infantry mounted tow originally, even the tow had to be ready to be infantry mounted. The dragon, which a lot of you guys were, you know, served out of one time or another, which was an individually operated weapon, but one man can't move all the support cases that move the dragon into the field. But it had to be palletized so it could be moved. The Browning's and all the other like the M60 or the MAG-58 or its equivalence, those are all supposed to be infantry transportable. Mostly what happens is rather than constantly carrying that tripod we were talking about in the 2R block, the weapons are provided with a bipod and that is mostly how they are employed for quick action in the field. Even with the Browning 1919, One of the last variants that was developed, they'd come out during the Korean War, there were copies of it made in World War II that were homemade in the field. But a buttstock, bipod-mounted, 1919 was produced in two variants, creating two different batches of nomenclature. And there's a bunch of XM models, which always means experimental. They could do 100 of them, they could do 500 of them. Traditionally, the XM designation was that they were getting ready to standardize on something, so they do 500, get them out to where the troops are, let them beat them up, and look to see if there's anything that needs to be tweaked, and then they complete production. They keep building them, okay? So the bipod was the solution for fast, support, stable engagement. And you see this, especially in any of the Vietnam reenactments of any kind of movies that are done. The browning, the bipod is less commonly seen. And while we did use it and the American forces had it, we had it in the SF arsenal. A handful of those brownings were always in each SF group's available arsenal and inventory because the Browning 1919 from Korea on was a generic firearm virtually everywhere on the planet. So it was sterile. Anybody could have it. Good color. Jump in there. Nice John, Kentucky. That bipod is a we're the shoulder stock. I think was called the a sex version and it had the barrel was taped had a tapered barrel to lighten it up. Well, the big thing, it also had a cone flash hider model. And those parts could be lost and just easily replaced with whatever else was in the field too. But the buttstock was stamped sheet metal, which is kind of interesting, with, of course, an add-on pistol grip to give you the simulation of other weapons of that class. It worked. I mean, I have to... Israel? Israel? Hell? Made that? Israel made a bunch of them. What they did, if the Israelis built it, it's because we gave them the machinery. Always remember that. The Israelis did make copies. Anything that we got that we were going to produce, we were going to produce, and then we kind of backed away after we'd already spent the money. The Israelis always get to steal. Let me give you an example. The Browning gun has been in service with them for a very, very long time. In fact, right now, most of the Browning parts that are coming back into the country, the 1919 parts, no matter what they are, are coming again from the leftover inventory from the Israelis. However, the Turks have a bunch of Brownings also. And so it's very likely that unless Turkey pisses everybody off, which they are trying to right now, they're saying they're going to go with the Russians. If that happens, then we probably won't see any of that surplus loin showing up in the US, other than what we've already seen. In addition to that, Korea made copies, Pakistan made copies. I will bet the Yugoslavians did, we just didn't know about it. And the communist Chinese did too. It was regard to parts for all of the guns were mentioning the communists have first of all, they always capture a quantity or they were given to them. It was given to them. And so the Chinese have made replacement parts or conversion units for a lot of the guns that were already out there and they upgrade them. So. Well, they make them here now, that's a good point. Thank you for the guys the the Browning 1919 the American Belt-fed gun which could use cloth or steel links Does come in 8 millimeter Bowser 762 by 51 NATO and 30 out 6 and There are some variants that were made for South America that well They built them in country in South America. They converted more to 7 millimeter Mauser and the Argentine produced a quantity converted over to 765 Argentine. But see, that's not hard because 765 and 3006 are pretty much the same. They are interchangeable, but as far as all the ballistics and performance, the 765 Argentine brownings would operate almost identically to the regular 1919s in M2-3006. I have seen the conversions to convert them to 54R, 762, 54R. New bold, new barrel, and... Go ahead. If somebody's still making the... Go ahead. At the time, it was just cheaper to shoot the 54R than it was anything else. Well, again, where they got that idea from was the 303 British variant. It was already rimmed round. All they had to do is to set the final math to compensate. So whoever built the 760 by 54 are probably got their their basic specs from the three or three British brownings that were built for the Canadians or by the Canadians and by the British or by or either for the British or by the British. World War Two. You just have to open up that channel in the front of the bolt that holds the rim. Yeah. And that will slide down. But there was some other modifications that were made also. One of the other things about these guns is that none of them are obsolete, despite, I always hear that term obsolete. Well, I got this funny feeling that anything built in the last hundred years will kill you just as dead and just as efficiently as it did when it came out 100 years ago. Let's remind everybody of that. Well, they're using obsolete brownies, really? Here's another interesting thing. We kept going down in Caliber and the Patriot movement has a lot of 30-06. The US government is now trying to slide back up to a main battle rifle cartridge, guys. We've always had that. I want you to think about that. We've had 30-06 for as long as it's been in service, the civilian population has had it. But on top of that, we've maintained a vast inventory of 30-06 rifles and 30-06 weapons of all classes. Vast. So we already, in fact, filled that niche with slightly better performance in general because we did not have, in fact, without making too many specialized rounds, or having to have another factory for a specialized round because we make two different types of rounds for the gun. Two different types of chamber, you know, component, the brass component, which in, you know, with the 6.8 you have a triplex case and with the, you know, the 6.8 training round you have a standard brass case. So... Interestingly enough, at this point in time, we're not in equity. I've said this for years and nobody wanted, everybody's been, of course, the other side plays it down, but we're in a superiority environment with regard to small arms. We have main battle rifles and basically a traditional combined small arms team because we have a vast number of 5.56 weapons, a vast number of AKs in 7.62 by 39 and 5.45 by 39. Not only do we have an equivalent number to any army standing on the planet. In fact, really, we possess more weapons than the top 10 armies of the world, right? If you do the math on that, that means that in any class of weapon, we have equal to whatever army you throw a dart at. In other words, 30-06 type main battle rifle or belt-fed weapons. We have so many of those in personal hands that we already outnumber them there. Okay, but how about 556? Well, guys, how many 556 weapons do you think are actually out there now in the last because it's been around for 50 years? And then we can add 762 by 39, 545 by 39. And don't forget, by the way, just as an aside, yeah, we also did a bunch of 762 by 51 NATO rifles of every class you can imagine. So if you pick any one, we have sufficient to field an equivalent to what the US Army presently has. Any one of those. Of those calibers, we could outfit and field an army with a class A firearm in any of the categories I just mentioned. May 545 by 39 would be an orphan round out. I would be the odd man, I just say if it was eight days. And we have a deep logistics train to support that, just as a heads up. I want to step back for a second couple of the things here real quick to the Israelis, okay? They get hold of our stuff, they steal it all the time. I've mentioned this a million times, for the longest time before you had this shoulder brace scam that was being pushed now. And I warned everybody that this is what was gonna happen, but okay, now it's happening. For years to try and tell you you don't need a shoulder stock a shoulder stock is useless the military application for a shoulder stock and I I have pointed this out many times for all of you as listeners go to the Special Forces Unconventional warfare manual on guerrilla warfare. It's usually out there if you got a copy go find it on yourself Want you to pull it out now once you get it out. I want you to go to the Code for material for resupply the the actual list that's there for calling in via radio for specific supply or resupply packages. Now when you do that, you're going to find that yep, there's the M14. You get so many of those in a bundle with so much ammunition and it lists everything you're going to get in the pod that gets dropped from above, right? Then there's a grand. Hey, look at that. What a surprise. Then there's the grease gun. Oh, okay. Then there's the 1911-45 kits, which come with so many pistols, so many magazines, so many shoulder stock. What? That's right. If you look at the SF drop manual, they list so many 1911s per kit. So many shoulder stocks for that 1911. So many magazines per gun. So much ammunition dropped in a bundle so that you can supply a group on the ground. Where did that shoulder stock come from? Any of you ever get issued a shoulder stock while you're in the military? Probably not. So wait a minute though, this is built by the US government. In fact, it was made by Lake City, the arsenal of Lake City as a matter of fact. Here's what's fascinating. Many years ago, many years ago now, 40, 45, 50 years ago. If you go to shotgun news, maybe you got some old shotgun news later on. I want you to go over to Sarco, shoulder stock, Lebanese manufactured for 1911 with main spring housing with fixture. 1195, generic cardboard flat box, traditional for in fact the construction even just so easy to spot if you've ever disassembled government junk. The box is a flat stock box. It's wrapped in disaccent paper. The metal is all in a standard phosphate finish. It is a linseed oiled walnut stock. It does not have a butt plate. And it's obviously American made, but there is not a stamp on it. There is no identifier. So what they did is they said, oh, it's Lebanese made, Lebanese. Why did they do that? Well, they were allowed to sell the stuff or the Israelis actually are the ones who dumped it. They got hold of them after about the time of Vietnam probably. And they probably got the tooling too, by the way. They got all the tooling machinery to make everything. There's not that much tooling to it, but it's worth it because you got a pretty darn nice main spring housing, brand new for a 1911. And basically when you replace the main spring housing, There's two slots just like on a broom handle mouser or a Luger and you slid the buttstock out to that flip a little lever locks into place and your little 1911 becomes a little like carbine Does it work? Well, you know what I used to do with it I'd get a whoa, that's right get one of those extra long slide barrels for a standard and put it on a regular 1911 and carry that as a combo. Of course, I have a bunch of hardball or long slides and that mainspring housing would go on that too. But you could keep a little lighter, but what's really cool, you got a little longer barrel. Although they do did make at the time 15 inch. Yeah, for the 1911. It was Yeah, so the cool thing is is you basically exactly as it was intended You have a little leave you carry the barrel you carry, you know, you can leave the main spring housing attached The only thing is it doesn't come with a carry system in other words, you know when you get a Luger the This the strapping attaches to the body of the clamshell holster If you get a broom handled Mauser rig, including the shoulder stock, the shoulder stock is the holster and the leather is all attached to that to hang it. There isn't an equivalent that was with the stock. So you have to figure out how you want to carry it or you put it in a utility sat, you know, a ditty bag, whatever. not a big deal because it wasn't that big to begin with. Now, another thing that the Israelis ripped us off for big time is back in the 50s when they were having the competition with the M14 and the British bullpup and the FAL, etc. And we actually were, they were so sure that the FAL was going to win that competition that the US military actually did many manuals and I have quite a few of them from that period about the time of the transit what would have been the transition in which the US soldiers that are depicted both in modern-esque art like outline silhouettes and in other line imagery are all carrying the FN FAL with the American foregrip stock system. What's interesting is that they went so far as to actually, most people don't talk about this, and then they claim only Israelis made, no they didn't. The US government actually had a number of contracts set up because it was assumed by the general staff, and I'm sure investors, that they were absolutely gonna go to the FNFAL. So they already had a leg up. They'd already produced, for instance, foregrips, the American pattern buttstock. Otherwise, the rifle was pretty basic. I mean, really, when you couldn't... Most average people couldn't tell one a fail from the other 90% of the time anyway. The big thing is that it was in a... It was in a phosphate finish again, parkerized. And the tell-tales were the foregrip and the buttstock. Well, guess what? We didn't make it. But then all of a sudden, the Israelis did. And if you'll notice when the Israelis did, lo and behold, all of that tooling that we perfected, paid for, and then just it was made to disappear, it got slid sideways and the Israelis cranked it out. Now, their copies mostly were probably just finish-ups of whatever wasn't quite done from the factory because most of them were actually shipped over complete to the Israelis and they used them on their rifles for a period of time because you do see examples from the FN-FAL standard period for the Israeli forces with every variation on the stock configuration you can imagine. I mean, but the one that really jumped out is the American pattern stock system. It's a rounded foregrip and has a more stylized buttstock with a few more bells and whistles on it. It was a win and Another interesting thing is it was made, most were made not in grade A walnut, which was standard spec, and I've mentioned this before, but instead were done in birch wood. And at the time when they were doing that, during the middle of the 50s, they had changed US government regulations so that grade A birch was authorized as a hardwood replacement for grade A walnut because walnut was becoming difficult to find to proper spec. So in the process, that's where the birch wood was easily acquired and much cheaper for the Israelis to buy and then dump on the market the way they did. And then we ended up with some of the surplus, of course, too. But it was not really Israeli. It was all American tooling, and in many cases, American parts. In some cases, if you pay attention, the parts are even stamped with US ordinance markings. And it's a combination. You'll see some of the Israeli markings they stamped or should say burned into the wood afterward. That's purely a wood burner slash a solder pen that they're using to do that. And otherwise, the rest, all American Standard production. So there's a lot of stuff like this floating around where It even is acknowledged in official circles. It's just not given like I told you guys about movies. Okay, movies, they want to keep your brain very narrow. They don't want to offer any kaleidoscope of anything. They want you to be, you know, in fact ignorant of a lot of what's going on. So you don't really wrap your brain around how things really work. And that's one of the things we all need to remember when we look at a lot of this stuff. There's a lot of standard American equipment. The Johnson rifle. during World War II. If you ever watched in the Pacific, remember, or you know, the Pacific. Guys, in the early stages of the Pacific, the Marines were carrying their version of the 1903 Springfield. They didn't get the Grand, but what did they get? They got rifling submachine guns instead of the Thompson. They got the Johnson Rotary Magazine sub-automatic rifle. And they got the Johnson squad gun, but you never seen examples in any movies. Now, I will take it back because if you watch the Pacific, you'll notice in the early, early scenes, they show some of the men carrying rising submachine guns. Basically, it looks like a blown up Glenfield 22, like on steroids. It took a stick magazine, but it was all wood. Now, I'm gonna say something right now. Of course, you would never do this. Well, yeah, you could. If you do see any of the rising car beans now with the racing car, you know, it's a wood stock They made them with it would take the standard submachine gun magazine They were made by racing and all they did to change the gun is they took the selector rod out of the weapon and it was sold over the counter after World War two If you see a ricing carbine anywhere, shut up, act like you don't know what it is. Oh, it looks kind of interesting. May I buy it if it's reasonably priced? Shut up, take it home, make it disappear. Understand that a piece of coat hanger wire about six, seven inches long with a couple of bends on either end to make kind of like a Z on either end. And that ricing all of a sudden is the same one the Marines were carrying in World War II. Now interestingly enough for the longest time there's lots of magazines the average price for a racing car being at the gun shows like in the 60s and 70s when they popped up was only about $75 and if anybody sees a racing even if there's no wood don't worry about it you can figure out how to make wood for it but if you run into a racing car beam and it's reasonably priced as in well maybe get it for you know a hundred dollars if there's no wood Maybe even less, you know, I ask what they want Sometimes he yard sales estate sales, whatever But once you get that understand if you take a look at the rising design You'll very quickly understand what I'm saying and there is nothing you do to modify the weapon the internal parts are all correct There's just one part missing of course you would never do this And I'm warning you to watch out for these things because they're very very dangerous. Remember that Last time I saw a racing car one guy we kick ourselves in the arse We walked past the table guy had two racings on the table for $75 apiece at a show down below us South of us and we walked by and the guy that was really said were those rice things and I said yeah as a matter of fact and we turned because we were Reaching for our wallets only because I would just wanted a 45 semi-auto carbine Then right guy literally right behind us by two steps looked at those had his wallet out being $150 and he got both of them and he left for obvious reasons So again rising but these are weapons that were standard for the Marine Corps at the beginning of the war guys the Johnson's Automatic rifle was their replacement or I should say their supplement for the bar. They had their own automatic rifle Mag side magazine fed Very reliable work just fine. The only thing is is the way that the whole thing reciprocates for instance with a rifle with a racing rifle is putting a bandit on the end of it which they had to do. The weapon travels to the rear because the barrel is moving okay within the receiver system. You're not familiar with it go take a look at it. The neat thing about the Johnson Both the, well the Johnson, some had a rifle, is that it took standard Springfield stripper clips instead of a D clip. You loaded one stripper clip at a time, crook, with a stripper guide that was already on the gun. Dropped that stripper, picked up another one, crook, and now you have a 10 shot instead of a 8 shot sub-automatic rifle. Only because they wanted to standardize on the Garand could the Johnson get withdrawn from service. And it was never fully withdrawn. It just went to other units. And also was handed over to constabulary tribal units or to a couple of the different colonial fighting forces. After World War II, Holland got most of them. They built some in 7mm Mauser and otherwise also converted a lot of the six rifles to 7mm Mauser so it conformed to their Colonial Fighting Forces standard caliber. And either way, it's a lethal weapon. You see it in any movie? No. One of the reasons is because it is pricey now. It used to be Johnson's weren't that big a deal because the Grand was always winning out over them for popularity. At this point in time, go look at the price of the Johnson rifle. Now granted, grands are expensive, but the Johnson now outpaces it threefold, just as a heads up. And you know how much a grand costs right now? Well, Johnson's are a lot more. So anyway, other weapons that work again, but are not. something that jumps out at you unless it's in the history books or where it belongs. It should be out there in front of everybody else. And like I said, the rising did show up in the Pacific. So they did, they were accurate with that. And they did show the, mostly the 1903 Springfield's water cooled machine guns, et cetera, et cetera. So it was appropriate for the early days of the fight, which is okay. They're trying, they did their part. Anyway, real quick, I had another request on that. I want to make sure I repeat this. For those of you who want to experiment with the walnut dye, using walnut hulls for dyeing, you go to YouTube. You go to Boondockery. I'm not a god man, he's committing Boondockery. Yes, sir. I know. We are going to arrest him. So Boondockery, B-O-O-N-D-O-C-K-E-R-Y. Boondockery is the channel. Go to boondockery and slide down and find walnut dyeing fabric making a cu usable There are there's more than one video. There's two or three of them. I think said third one, but I haven't looked at that one yet Go check them out and there are other videos on Walnut dyeing on YouTube take a look at all of them But this is where that idea of going over from colonial reenactment to historical verification This is taking it into a modern venue. The only thing that we have not tested yet, and forgive me, we're working on this now, is to do the walnut dye and look to see how it affects the thermal signature with clothing. If you walnut dye your field jacket, walnut dye the ACU uniform and you put them on, What does it do to the thermal signature? Because remember most things that are used for thermal reduction are organics One of the primary materials used for instance for anti radar dispersion and the paints is oatmeal That we do years ago chipped oatmeal actually highly granulated oatmeal You know for the stone fighter, you know, oh my god, no one can see it with a special paint And of course that paint is also used on most of other aircraft in one color variation or another. So anyway, it would be very interesting to see, and we need to do this as soon as we can, what the, what if any neutralizing effects are with regard to infrared slash thermal and visibility at night or during the day for that matter. It won't make any difference. With thermal, you use it day or night. So that'll be worthwhile. That's something we are in the process of finding out. I'm actually got everything set up to that another batch of burlap for the ghillie suits. I've got it ziplock bags. An experiment with running up the dye doing the batch, pouring it into the ziplock bag, sealing it and just leaving it in it. I want to see what that does. Rather than having to, you know, constantly monitor and watches it's boiled, bring it up to hot temp, put the stuff, you know, in, take it out, flapping into the bag. pour some of the material in there, hit the zip lock and leave it. I want to see what it does. We'll find out. I need to minimize the amount of time I have to watch the product. Everybody does. So we need to find new, quicker solutions for the modern age of, oh God, I need a lot of it now and I don't have much time. And I also don't have many people to get the job done. So if I can get the equipment, the technology to do work itself, without burning more material and other things that I need for other projects, especially things that burn, in other words, heat, then I'm going to do that. So we'll find out more about that too. Also, again, there was a couple of questions, you know, okay, if we use, if the bad guys use mushrooms and marsh gas, the other question that popped up had to do with, well, what about combinations? Well, Here's something I want you to think about. Why a combination of biological or chemical and a nuke are really kind of a waste of resources. Okay. If you have a smelly room, okay, and you've got candles, anyone will do. If you light it, it will help to eliminate the odor. Why is that? What does it do? Now, certainly it can be perfumed and it carries the perfume in carbonized form to bond with the air molecules. And when you breathe something in, smell something, it smells better. But that's not all that's happening. Whatever the material or effluvia is that's in the air is actually being burned and carbonized by the candle. same time you might get a pretty ocean spray or you know chunky cinnamon or whatever material which is part of the ash product infiltrating in the air bonding to the air molecules so it becomes more pleasurable less obnoxious in the process what that's telling you is that the effluvia in the air is burned by that that stupid little candle is consuming air it's dragging stuff into it it's kind of like a mini little air freshener only only it's hot okay So consider that if you don't really have so many, but so many tactical delivery systems, okay? So it's best to either choose, you know, pick a direction or don't do anything at all. If you drop a biological and then you throw a thermal in behind it and nuke, you're counterizing most of what you deployed. Now, even if you go the other way around, the problem is residual radiation, and this is a nuke test. that even though you were hoping for mutations, which you probably will get some really wicked mutations, you may, the biggest issue is that, again, either way, the radiation and the area that's at risk, in one way or another, it's going to neutralize the biological, not going to enhance it. It's better, or your choice would be if you're thinking strategically, no matter who you are, whichever side, is that you use the different weapons in overlap or, you know, again, taking into consideration wind patterns, physical condition and environment, especially seasonal, because certain weather conditions, the biological and chemical are not as useful. Their range can become very limited. Cold weather is not friendly to biologicals and it's not friendly to chemical weapons. Radiological doesn't care. So that's why those three are always because they're dirty, because they're messy. They have residual effects that can last for a long time, but still, long by military standards, but relatively short overall. That's where, again, if you've deployed something, you may even want to let it set. Biological weapons, for instance. Well, then you start throwing nukes into the area. It defeats the purpose. You've counterized the area of the threat that you were trying to use to impose a restriction of travel or motion on the part of the enemy. So it's gonna be initially one or the other. Now, if everything gets haphazard in the later stage of a limited exchange, and you know what the policy of a limited exchange is, you're limited only by the number of weapons you have to launch. That's a limited exchange. How many do they have? 10,000? Well, that'll be limited. 10,000 rockets, 10,000 shots, 10,000 weapons they can deploy. Well, that doesn't sound good that way. I know, but it sounds so good when you tell somebody it's gonna be a limited exchange and you let the imagination think that it's gonna be really limited as in only a few shots fired. That's kind of stupid, okay? Again, with the biological, for instance, that can be used certainly as a wanting weapon. But more likely than not, it's not going to be used so much for blunting, as it will be used for rear areas of activity to prevent reinforcement and escape. In other words, deployed in an intermediate area, somewhere behind the forward edge of the battle area, the FIBA, but forward of the corps or say Army command. What this does is it isolates that fighting unit from retreat. also makes it much more difficult to resupply. And in the process, the conventional arm can take over knowing what the limits of the attack may have been while the whoever does not have an attack with the weapon, the biological or chemical, they're going to have to suspect the entire environment until such time as they can confirm or deny the extent of the attack. So you see how these weapons work? You have to hesitate. Now, the Russian policy, and I gotta emphasize this, the Russian policy is fight through. What do you mean by that? Well, it's just exactly what it sounds like. If you're hit, you come up, you drive through hard and fast, and you proceed with the mission. The faster you go, the sooner you get through the area affected. Now, to a degree, this has been the policy with the US on and off for the last 60, 70 years since we ended World War II. But we have, we spent more on follow up with the static environment, so to speak, than we have with mobility in mind. The Russians, on the other hand, had a lot of technologies. And now, after the Cold War, the only stupid people going, the Russians had some really dumb It was like a jet engine on a tank. What was that for? That was stupid. No, you're ignorant because you don't realize it was part of the chemical core decontamination system. And once you sauce down or slop down with chlorine bleach and whatever other disinfectant they were using, which you use with fire hoses and basically the equivalent to crash fire trucks, They had other vehicles armored with large reservoirs of decontaminate, and then they would either pull from the local water supply, or they had tankers that would show up. And the idea is that the units would, again, what did we say earlier, fight through. If they were in an area of activity, what they would do is pull forward. They set up the decontamination equipment mobile. And as the vehicles are moving forward, they hit all the hit full hep on the air system. That means that everything is positive pressure for the vehicle. It's pushing air out wherever there's a leak. And everything is being filtered through a complete hep system so that there was no possibility of contamination in theory internally. Then they drive forward, step one, they get hit with the first decontaminate. Number two hits them with a second. Then they get hit with a rinse and all of this is just picture big ass fire trucks only armored in column side by side by side down a road. And the last one was your jet dryer, okay, designed to blow off the vehicle and push the material off into the environment. Remember the other solution was, you know, dilution is the solution. So, the idea was that spraying it off into the environment locally there, since pretty much it was already a wash with decontaminate, it was not going to be a threat or a significant threat to the environment. Plus, remember, everything was wheeled if they felt that they were getting a little deep too deep in detritus from whatever they were doing. They just move everything down the road another half mile and keep doing what they were doing because they were all mobile. They were all tracked, they were all wheeled, they're all armored, they're all fighting vehicles. So ignore a lot of goofy stuff that's being done now where they, you know, somebody built something and who was that stupid? What did they do to have for every dummies? Well, if you don't know what they did it for and you're asking that question, then they're not dummies. You're just ignorant of what it is that they were using the tool for. I always look at it this way. When I look at a toolbox, I do this right now all the time. There's several sources I have. If I see something where somebody bent a wrench, I grab it. It's got a right angle one way and a cant the other. Well, nobody would go to the trouble of doing that unless they had a very specific interest. There's a lot of tools I've picked up that, oh, I've now found out what they're for. But they were just A, excellent condition, B, intricate, and C, American made from years by gone and better built than anything today. I get them for pennies. Turns out the tools worth $200 or $300. It's a unique, useful piece of equipment for rebuilding engines. The same is true for unique tools. I'm not going to look at that wrench and go, boy, look, I was stupid. Man, he took a torch and heated up his SK wrench and he bent it this way. That was stupid. And then he bent it that way. That was stupid. Well, did you know what the tool's for? Well, no. So how do you know it's stupid? Well, I think it's stupid because he did it. But you don't know why he did it. So in other words, again, remember tool, the man making the tool. the tool making animal, I'll go mark, we'll get that right eventually, when somebody sees a problem and they have to deal with it all the time, rather than have to fiddle fart waste time, and will make the tool that fits the need and make it work. So that's what those jet engine packs were on those T-54 55s that were designed to keep up with the rest of the mechanized unit. They weren't any other kind, they weren't hard core air conditioning. Basically it was a hair dryer a hair dryer for tanks. How's that sound? Go ahead call her jippin there Remember Murphy's law if it's stupid and worse it isn't stupid Exactly. That's the most common mistake made is well again again guys if you see something and it's a unique tool You can get it for nothing grab it the one time that you use it pays for the half hour or hour, you might have had to go somewhere else to find something that might have only been remotely appropriate for the task. And what's really cool, this is America. Unlike the commies up in Canada, where you will own nothing and you will be happy, at least for the time being. And because we can do this, we are going to own anything we want. And if we need it, we got it. And if not, well, I'm gonna leave a whole bunch of cool stuff to the next people in line and they can play with it. The big thing is just make sure you take, try to take care of it. I know it's tough, but try to take care of it. That simple. So anyway, the big thing here again is mobility, mobility, mobility. Remember that the other side plans on fighting through the American forces. Their policy and theory is that right now. We'll see how application works for both sides if they start really spitting this garbage out big time. Another thing about decontamination material, because I know immediately, well, what other decontamination material is out there? Soaps, by the way, I should have mentioned this sooner. Conventional detergents are used along with bleaches and base elements. For instance, lye can be used depending upon the threat. Now, in fact, a multiple number of decontamination materials are used against a biological as a precaution. Now, the only other consideration here, guys, you know, we're talking about spraying the stuff on vehicles, is the vehicles themselves have to be planned and built and were. All the Russians weren't stupid, they didn't make the most expensive armor in the world for vehicles, but their vehicles were oriented towards their mission assigned. Decontamination technologies on board, engineer tools are on board. The air system, as I said, was typically what's called a positive pressure system. You intake through a filtered air processor. It pushes the air to the middle of the vehicle. The vehicle itself has seals. However, no matter how hard they try, seals fail on occasion, or things get old. And because they can't change everything out fast enough, The positive air pressure system means that the air is pushing out and away in all directions from the epicenter of the vehicle on the inside. The advantage of this design is that there's no possibility for air being pulled in that will cross contaminate the environment or contaminate the environment internally because the air is always going out. And it's actually under a pretty good atmosphere, pressure wise. Again, there's minimal There's minimal threat area with regard to the vehicle. There's another reason for this, water fording. Remember the Russians have to. We're good at it, but the Russians know that to fight a war, just like they're fighting in the Ukraine right now, Warsaw Pact forces typically were set for water fording or submersible operations. I mean by submersible. You've probably seen these goofy pictures of M60 or leopard tanks. with a big look like a bunch of 55 gallon drums stacked over top of the commander's cupola and In fact, the tank was built was set up when sealed so that they could drive across a river by driving on the riverbed and If you remember this you guys are the military should remember it, but you might recall images both still and video Showing these pieces of equipment and service. Well, the Russians had the same thing and they carry snorkel bars And they actually travel on the base, on the floor of a river if it's not too deep. Now if it's too deep, you're screwed. And if your tank stops there, you're screwed. You know what? If they lost 10%, that was considered acceptable casualties. So one, 10 tanks go in, one tank doesn't come out. Well, Vlad will be right there waiting for us when we go back to get their tank. If we can find their tank, that is. Go ahead, call or jump in there. back at the up back in m I'm back and just keep praying a Oh, this is just doing all over. And again, this is for your brother, Josh. The amputated his leg. Right. Everything went well. Right. Everything went well. Yeah. But not that. No, it didn't go well and that we didn't want to see his leg taken. But it didn't go well and that what they had to do was done right this time. Yeah. There we go. Yeah. And this thing that he'll be set. He'll be probably in January, but right now they just want him to heal and get him to stay in it and all that. So this is probably January. And also my sister, Priscilla, set up a GoFundMe page on Facebook. I don't have the link yet, but as soon as I get it, I'll be passing it out to people. Absolutely. Put that out as soon as you can. She did that to help me and Josh with our finances here and to get everything set here. Like I said, I'm still trying to get electricity and stuff in here. It's electricity and stuff in here yet. Now it's another setback that he had this. It's a trying time. Again, we'll do what we can. As soon as you can give us that information, put it up on the impact. get it this weekend, email it to Nancy, and again, also come up on Monday and make sure we give out the information. I'm sure. Well, what does it matter which hour Monday? No, no. Whichever hour you need to come up, just come up. All right. Ideally, we should, we'll repeat it every hour anyway to make sure that it's out there more than one time and more than a few times. Before, go ahead. No, yeah, I was disagreeing. Yeah, very good. One more thing guys on donations Edward mentioned that we have a we're gonna have our drawings starting the end of the month here and this will be for the end of the year bill