Mark Koernke discussed Tucker Carlson's departure from Fox News, attributing it to his recent commentary on prayer and spiritual strength, which allegedly threatened the globalist establishment. The show covered extensive technical discussions on firearms manufacturing, including AR-15 variants, the AR-18 design, the 7.62x25 Tokarev cartridge, and historical weapons like the PAWS rifle designed for post-nuclear-war scenarios. Callers contributed insights on ammunition reloading, case inspection, barrel harmonics, and alternative rifle designs. Koernke emphasized the importance of spiritual foundation in resistance, criticized what he termed the 'kosher mafia' and LGBTQ+ presence in government and media, and promoted preparedness through ammunition stockpiling and weapons knowledge.
school when Columbine happened and prior to Columbine we didn't have the level of violence that we're seeing today. In 1986 you can walk into a store anywhere in this country and buy a fully automatic weapon. And being from Texas acquiring a weapon has always been relatively easy in my lifetime. Were there more or fewer mass shootings across our country when machine guns were available? I think we all know the answer to that.
We still won't have any problems because it's not the guns. It's our core values that have plummeted. The left has been shipping away at our rights for years and also been shipping away at our core values. In 1960, 61% of black Americans were married. Today, the numbers plummeted to 30%. I am a current member of Congress today because I was raised in a two-parent household.
We ate dinner together every single night. We prayed before dinner. We get to the church every single Sunday. My parents were heavily involved in my education. I said the Pledge of Allegiance every single day proudly, and I know every word to God bless the USA by Lee Greenwood.
Because of these values, my sister, my brother and I all graduated from West Point. We all served our country honorably. There's 60 years worth of military service just in my immediate failure, which is by definition the American dream is because of these values. A recent Wall Street Journal survey came out and it kind of confirmed that he's declining our core American values over the course of the past 25 years.
The question was is what values are viewed as quote very important patriotism. In 1998, 70% survey felt like patriotism was very important today, 38%. Religion, 62% very important today, 39%. Having children, 59% in 1998, 30% today. Community.
62% in 98, 27% today. The guns haven't changed. The guns have always been available in the United States. Our society has changed, and has changed drastically, in my opinion, for the worse. So where does that leave us today? There's a reason why crime and gang violence is up.
There's a reason why black women are the fastest growing demographics of gun owners in America. You know that sir. Many of them live in Democrat run cities with rising crime rates and district attorneys that put criminals ahead of innocent women like we see in New York. And by the way, it's not their husbands or their significant others.
that are purchasing guns for them, black women are purchasing guns themselves because we know that Democrats replaced black husbands with Uncle Sam a long time ago. I've been listening to my colleagues on the left talk about guns all day. You have no idea what you're talking about. I fear that if you can't tell me the difference between a man and a woman, I am not surprised that you don't know the difference between 556 and 300 blackout.
The problem with this administration is always having people that are appointed to run these agencies that aren't fully qualified, that don't understand exactly what's going on and how things work. And if I were running the ATF, I would know a thing about the F-ed ATF. And by the way, for the record, that's firearms, sir. It's firearms. And with that, I yield back. Here's where we make sure our Blue Bunny soft is super. I had a dream the other night that, well, I didn't understand.
A figure walked in through the mist with a flintlock in his hand. His clothes were torn and dirty as he stood there by my bed. He took off his three-cornered hat, and speaking low to me, he said, We've fought a revolution to secure our liberty. We wrote the Constitution as a shield from tyranny. For future generations, this legacy we gave. In this, the land of the free and home of the brave.
The freedoms we secured for you, we hoped you'd always keep. 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 to gods. You've given government control to those who do you harm so they could burn down churches and seize the family farm. Your public servants don't uphold the solemn oaths they've sworn.
So Dr. Zhivago, your artillery and guns to floor and shore, and send your sons to slaughter fighting other people's wars. Can you regain the freedom for which you fought? But don't be afraid to sustain the crime. And are there no more values for which you'll fight to save? Or do you wish to kill, put in fear, and be a slave?
Post on to the report.
For even now as tyrants trample each God given right we only watching 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?
afternoon. Sorry about the trouble because I've been making noise. It was obnoxious there during the home visitor from the past by Salem Polk and read by in 1993 a 27 year old Arizona highway patrolman who was a listener and well rest is history. We've played visitor from the past for as long as we've been up on the air with the intelligence report. That's 30 years. Good.
afternoon ladies and gentlemen this is the first hour of the intelligence report I'm Mark Kornke. One day closer to victory for all of our brothers and sisters both on and behind the lines in occupied territories west south northeast and north. Gentlemen you're listening to us on
www.libertytreeradio.4mg.com. Libertytreeradio.org. And we're on satellite. We'll see how all our merchant marine operators out there. Also a fact that we are in a myriad of plethora of cornucopia of other communications technologies, both inside and outside these United States. It is, well, it's weapons Wednesday. It is the 26th of April. It is the
15th year of open obvious and in your face Fabian socialist and Soviet socialist occupation of America with the K 2023 old earth calendar 2023 battle for the Republic the dance of swords dance continue we're gonna make sure that happens organized our equipment trade as militia establish a 510 programming area of operations logistics the key to victory more is always better more is good error
If that's a word, well, it's in our vocabulary. Okay, so anyway, uh, oh, let's see, bunch of things going on. Of course, we're still, everybody's gonna be talking more about Tucker Carlson, who basically is, looks like he, is kind of like Jared from Guns and Gadgets, you know, where he's moved.
from where he was to where he is and he's just like a happier person right off the bat you can just see it's you know you become more relaxed he's got everything off out of the one Soviet state he's just got to make sure where he's moved to stays non-Soviet that means you'll have to fight for it this time
The same is true with Tucker Carlson. It's like, well, on the one hand, you're putting up with whatever you end up having to bite the bullet or re-engineer it after a while. You know, dancing around the Communists gets to be a dull, tiring thing. So when you're in that situation. So we'll see again, he's comfortable. I can't see why he wouldn't be if you're the contract and the money he's made.
By God, he better not have been stupid. He should have retained as much as he could.
Tucked it away and squirreled it away in as many intelligence ways as possible so that he has control of his own wealth and the rest is history One thing I have laughed at but we need my knee we need Jewish female who's complaining about Taka Carlson out of the blue, of course and What's really fascinating is that the be which the usual, you know, hawk nosed, you know rat-looking creature? the female
Tucker Carlson has been doing his broadcasting in Florida. And what's interesting is, yeah, the office where this twit, this female who's of course it's just an ADL hack making noise for the skank bottom-feeding ADL, that's what that's all about. Because they always are going to start doing the propaganda thing. They don't really have anything to say other than, well, there's anti-Semitism. What was the anti-Semitism? Well, the Jewish witch
They saw Christmas ornaments in the office during Christmas. How dare they? And of course, it wasn't a friendly work environment. I don't know, it was probably as friendly as it could be, but when you got some squeaky wheel kosher mafia, a piece of trash that wants to be the center of the universe constantly. And it's pissing and moaning because it's not getting in its way. Remember the squeaky wheel? That's the first rule with a Jewish mafia.
What are you talking about? We're expecting you to do your job. Shut up. Do your job. Oh, I'm a victim. Oi, oi. And here's the thing. Tucker Carlson had nothing to do with whatever's going on with the twits activities. Because Tucker Carlson isn't in the office where the twit is. So they've tried desperately to find some kind of bizarre connection. And while the sector theoretically worked for his show,
Okay, and then the twit was you know, either booted or you know went on down the road You know, this is the this is the closest they could come to a Monica Lewinsky or They had Christmas decorations in the Fox office with his Jewish, you know Princess was working. Oh my god That's exactly what they're saying right? That's that's what they come up with Really? Well, you know fight the bullet and kiss my hand in
Here's okay to have menorah there though right mark. Oh, okay to have that menorah all eight lights and the satanists and the menorah you know you can have the cabalas you can have quads but how dare you dare you have the Christian and this is just like a like University of Michigan I told you guys we saw all this kind of crap way before it became what's vomited out into the country now Not that it's ever been different with a Jewish mob
Well, you'd also run KBR and Kellogg's brand, the Kellogg's... Well, that's kind of separate from broadcasting. But anyway, hold on here. The interesting thing is, we would have Christmas. I tried to... I'd like to be inclusive. I really would. I figured we have a Christmas party at the university. Whatever you wanted to, you know, bring to the party. It was a Christmas party. It was the holidays party. Trying desperately to change it. It's a holidays party. Okay.
So, I would bring a boom box that one of the other kids tossed out big boom box, really great one, and set it up. And I had a whole rack of Christmas cassettes. They were throwaways, so they were, you know, they were free.
So I had one hand and it would help to create a holiday festivity. In other words, they were going to have Christmas cookies. They didn't call them holiday cookies. And they had Christmas fruit cake and they had all this other stuff. And we had, of course, a meal because it was paid for by the U of M. And everybody came in from all the departments. And of course, I plugged in the Christmas music.
And needless to say, the building supervisor of Mermockley Hall was a Jewish guy. He was a queer. He was a hardcore queer. And he would tell you he was a queer. And by the way, why is it wrong for me to say queer when they use the word queer, slash, you know, poofed it constantly, okay? Well, they don't use poofs that we do.
So anyway, he's sitting there and, oh, you know, everybody's having a great time and he's sitting there fuming because, you know, he just pissed because everybody's having a good time. That's just the basic rule about the kosher mafia types. They're all just rotten, wretched, horrid, nillis, right?
I came back in the room, I'd set everything up, I went away, went to get some of the Christmas presents and stuff that were, you know, give out, stuff that I brought. And everybody brought Christmas presents, which is strange because after all, I don't think anybody minded receiving Christmas presents, especially those other people. But what's fascinating, I came back in the room and he goes, oh, well, I see we're not playing any Hanukkah music.
And I looked right at him, I said, oh, oh my God, you're right. Why don't you run up to your office and go get me the Hanukkah music you've got on tape or on disc, and I'll play it right now. Once you get up out of that chair, go up to your office and go get me some, I'm really interested in this. You know, if we got it, we'll play it. And he sits there and he crosses his arms and he looks all, because you know what?
That atheistic kosher queer had no he didn't have any Hanukkah music up there in his office He didn't have a dreidel there. Yeah, I think I had dreidel. That's a comical I have all that stuff collected for me of this guy is somebody different people that When they leave at the end of the year they leave stuff in the room So you're collecting all this stuff. I probably had more dreidel in the shop Then that fool had at home. Okay, if he had one
But it's always to be a bitter rotten monkey pokey wet sock and it's always the same garbage just like with the queers now with all the garbage is good. Well, you got it You gotta tell me that oh shut up. No, I'll call you is turd if you keep it up
But what's cute is they also then what they tried to do is do the quads of thing and I had the same thing happen the next year where he tried to stir the pot they had some black queer that was there. We have plenty other black employees, but we didn't have any
black queers hardly at all because he's the one hiring them in. He would interview them in the piano room where he'd pull their pants down and they would enjoy and embrace each other's close, greasy company. I'm not exaggerating. They got caught more than half a dozen times. In fact, one of the other black maintenance guys opened up a room. He heard a bunch of piano noise, right?
He quietly turns the key and opens up. He thought somebody was getting beat up and why there's that Mary Markley supervisor the building supervisor with an interviewee with his pants down bent over the piano going bling bling bling making noise while something was happening where they were interacting and coming together. It was a very exciting and interesting interview. And by the way that little poofka did get the job.
So later on in the next year, we had a black poof there that was also queers, a $3 bill. And they thought what they would do is stir the pot with the quads of things. But he didn't tell him, you need to complain because I'm playing the Christmas music. It's another year. And we have any quads of music? I said, wow, this is an, we got another music request. I'll tell you what.
If you can run down to your office down there on the first floor, because whoever's office was, I said, you run down to the first floor. I'm sure you've been listening to Quantum Music all this week. You run down and get the Quantum Music, and all of us will be able to listen to it. You know, we'll play out what's here, but you go ahead and leave right now. And I had everybody looking right at him. And he looks around, he looks at the floor, and he shuts right up. And once again, he crosses his arms and gets all fumey.
It's like listen fool if you bring the music I'll play it I got the Christmas music going okay. I bought I brought the boombox. I got the music It's not my job if you have an interest in something else
And if you're whining about it, then jump in your car, run out down the street to one of the stores there in downtown Ann Arbor. I'm sure there's some Hanukkah music directly available. You can bring it back in. We'll plug it in real quick. You only have 15 minutes before we all gotta get back to work, because it's the middle of the day. But what the hell? But that's the kind of stupid BS you see from these... ...neuronic hypochondriacs with paranoid tendencies that are queers of $3 bill-pedos.
So I've seen all that before. And again, now listen to this garbage with Tucker Carlson, you know, what gets me about it is, as long as they've been making the money off him, Tucker was great. I'm telling you, play in the robes. Play in the robes. Oi, the fake opposition from FAUX, as opposed to, you know, oh, what you mean Fox? No, it's FAUX, as in fall, but we call it Fox.
It's a great play on words and use the spelling all the time. It's not F-O-X, it's F-A-U-X. No, it's F-A-U-X. In fact, it's, you can call it Fox Light, L-I-G-H-T, ooh, play on words, combining two, you know, the, or Fox Bud. There we go. Bud Fox, Fox Bud. That'll work just as well for you. Way sidebar, I just wanted to point that out that they've actually been throwing that crap out there and it's like, really?
And of course they're counting on the idea that they can lie their ass off and then a bunch of other shoe size IQ twits will repeat whatever, blah, blah, blah, blah, blah. I'm a victim, boy, boy! Holy hoke, give me my, I want my. I know you want money, sir. We all, actually, even if you hadn't said that, we would expect you still would want our money. And our neighbor's money. And our neighbor's property. And covet everything and still not be happy and then still have a tantrum and demand more of something else.
It's okay. It's what sickle fat greedy bastards do And or sociopaths and pretty much all the kosher mafia sociopaths. So anyway Now the weezer routine but that's what one aspect of the reason weezer routine that we hear constantly if you ever been in workplace That's why I really do believe that in a workplace men should be working with men the women should be working with women real women Okay, and that'll settle it real quick. No, it's really cool
so that we wouldn't have to worry. This is really kind of neat. Cross-dressing men would still have to work with men. What? Well, yeah, I mean, I would tell you that they can't cross-dress. I mean, if you're some dyke wants to look like a man over in the women's department with the women working together, that would be great. That's not a problem for me.
I don't think that the women will be enticed by them so we don't have to worry about sexual harassment, that's always the scam. And I guarantee that any of the real men that are over on the men's side working in the men's office will not be enticed by the cross-dressing poof-tuh, right? Or poof-tuhs, it could be more than one. So the cross-dressing poof-tuhs can be men, women slash men or men slash women, who knows.
If they're male, it's actually their sex. Their actual organic sex determines which area they would be in. So they would be men, trying to look like women. It would still give the illusion that there were women in that part of the workplace. So it really kind of works out. It balances out pretty well. But there isn't going to be any conflict. The women will be working with the women, bouncing off each other. The men will be with the men bouncing off each other. And that will eradicate any of these conflict issues that just seem to constantly be popping up.
If you want to call your female boss misogynistic rather than just simply a bossy boss, which would make more sense, then you're going to have a tough time using all the rest of the clap trap in a workplace where all the women are women. Well, you know, or women try to look like men, but still it's pretty obvious to all the women that the guy, the females try to look like a man is really not going to be of interest or appealing to the rest of them. So it makes for a very stable workplace, doesn't it?
That would make sense. But then again, got to have conflict, got to continue to stir the pot. Great conflict. So and how do you eradicate it? Well, you sort things out. This would sort things out. Of course, it wouldn't be great for anybody who's maybe looking for a spouse, but then you have to interact in other ways. In other words, away from the workplace would be a good idea. That would work out just fine.
By the way, we used to do that with dormitories in schools, too. Women were in women dorm, men were in men dorm, you know, that kind of thing. It would be a good idea again. And then there would be the perverts over in the third dorm. Another thing that is really interesting and has to do with the weezer thing, but it has to do with trying to keep all of you in weezer mode. A couple of comments that were interesting.
having to do with why supposedly Tucker Carlson was fired was the couple of speeches that he did in the last what three four days is now three days ago each of these commentaries or Dissertations or interviews that he did had nothing to do with him thinking that he was losing his job He was talking about the situation where we are one of them. He was talking about prayer
And the comment was that, well, Rupert Murdoch didn't like that because he was talking about praying and being spiritual. And Rupert Murdoch doesn't like that. No, it's not that Rupert Murdoch doesn't like that, per se. It's all of the tribe of ring knockers that he runs with, that they ride with, are terrified that you will find the strength of your core.
and that it will come forward. Another thing that was tied into this that Mr. Carlson was talking about is when you speak the truth, you feel strong, you feel better, you feel, you feel, and there's a term for it, you're righteous.
All right. Oh my god. Yes, you're righteous You're speaking the truth and everybody that you know Everybody's hearing it either likes it or doesn't like it the ones who don't like it Typically are the ones who were the conniving evil wicked bastards that you know You really shouldn't be associated with or you should let nowhere near any position of power at all But one of the things to remember if you listen to what mr. Carlson said
is talking about the idea, for instance, well, maybe you should take 10 minutes and pray for the country. Maybe you should take 10 minutes and pray for, you know, what the situation we're in. And of course, all that, that would curdle the ears of all these turds because once you get out of the weezer whiner, it's futile to resist, we're all gonna die mode.
Then you start to understand what uncle mark has been telling you over and over and over and over again guys We outnumber the bastards on a massive scale on a massive scale Yeah, but I have no illusions We have people who there there's only so far that they will go then they will lose their intestinal fortitude their spine will roll out their Bung hole like a meat xylophone and it sounds really weird and There'll be nowhere. There'll be nowhere to be found. Okay
But in each case, no matter who the person is, it is true, what Mr. Carlson said, and we've talked about this many times, if you have a spiritual focus and you apply it to your mental processes and the physical world, you are a force to be reckoned with. Simple.
and the enemy knows it. I will repeat this again. I swear before my Lord and Savior Jesus Christ as a first witness to this, I have said this repeatedly over the years, I have watched the enemy in response to so many different things and I will tell you the one thing that your enemy is terrified of.
Your enemy, the core enemy, the wicked, evil pieces of trash out there, the ones who want to sacrifice children, the one who want to chop children up, the ones who would like to murder you, the ones that would like to be lords over you, are terrified of the words, our Lord and Savior Jesus Christ. They are absolutely terrified of you being spiritual.
in the face of an enemy and that you are embracing Jesus Christ. Period. I am a physical person. I am fascinated because we have to be, and you know I've repeated this a million times, but the spirit commands the mind, the mind commands the body through the spirit.
And if you have that combination imbued in everything that you're doing, and I know that it's not that you're going to be on the edge constantly. That's not what we're talking about. I truly believe having watched the darkest of our enemies. I've had some of them come forward, literally as I've told you before, I have watched this where they have literally crawled, their body crawls.
the muscles underneath their flesh literally vibrate, literally every muscle is expanding, contracting and distorting, even in their face. And then they scream out, the demon, the creature, whatever the hell it is that's inside each of these poor bastards or what they've allowed to come into them. But what I've seen with the ones that are usually in the higher in the pecking order.
Bellow out a cry that makes men Halt in their tracks and then they flee flee I'm talking run. I'm talking run faster, you know faster than you possibly can imagine I have personally seen this in conflict with our enemy where they've come up literally into your face And I'm not talking the peons. I'm talking a character sent to threaten
And I will tell you again that you must understand the spiritual battle that is part of this overall conflict. Well, it is the conflict in reality. But the part that we... the part that is most important to understand, it's still a physical world and we have to fight in a... in a... in physical form, in the physical realm. It is also a battle of the mind of controlling one's self.
And the best way to do that is to be founded in faith. For all of you listening that are young soldiers, there's something that has happened to the American psyche across the board. It's not accidental. It's part of the weasel whiner. It's feudal resist crap. And it's not feudal to resist. It is not in any way, shape, or form. In fact, just to reverse. And a dynamic number of you right now are already on the right track.
But if you are going to step into this battle, then part of the no fear factor, and I'm not saying insanely no fear as in charging to a machine gun, no, that's not what I'm talking about. I'm talking about being able to face the battlefield that you are in, that having the spirit of our Lord and Savior, Jesus Christ, having that strength, walking with you, riding with you, moving with you as you go about the tasks at hand,
gives you an incredible, incredible strength in the face of your enemy. And also helps to build the society we really need. And that's the other part they're terrified of. Why is this country, where did all hell, where did all these damn faggots come from? We didn't have them in most of them are.
One of the fascinating things about this with regard to the Puftez, the Quiars, and all the perversion, which is the Babylonian perversion, understand the Babylonian Talmudists that you've allowed to get into, the Kabbalists and the Talmudists that are in all of the bureaucracy of the public fool system are the problem. The same ilk that you've allowed into your government are the problem. Period.
How did we get to the perverted level that we're seeing right now where many people are saying, I can't believe what I'm looking at? And why, oh by the way, Rupert Murdoch or all the rest of the kosher mafia types that are running the control media will only show you what they want you to see. And they're very specific and they always have been about structuring the supposed fake right left. But it is always to push you to the same perversions.
It's always to push you to the same wickedness. The military is in trouble for the same reason. I've argued for the longest time. I know you guys. I do not want to see in a soldier that stands next to me a skull face mask. I want you to remember that. I know some of you may even, you know, for talking to all you guys that are younger, I'm gonna tell you something. A righteous warrior with the wings of the angels.
is far stronger than a bone corpse or a demon. I want you to think about that. When was the last time you actually saw where it was like, you know, a righteous standing image rather than a wretched, wicked, from below ground creature as the symbol of your warrior caste? You ever look at the, I mean, this is why I really have a problem with what's happening in the whole land right now.
101st Airborne? Poland is Catholic, okay? Let's make a mistake about that. Uh-oh. I'm sorry, I heard a noise. Poland? No, that was deep. I was saying 101st Airborne. They got the wings on their patch, don't they? That's right. Well, actually, they all... Well, here's the thing. If you look at the different formations at a given point, it will help you to understand...
Well, of course, you're supposed to be airborne, so they're the angels from above. Well, fighting angels is what they were supposed to be. But the Poles, and guys, have you ever looked at the Polish cavalry? What did the Polish cavalry look like for hundreds of years? What was the one thing that from a distance you recognized about the Polish cavalry?
They wore the wings of angels. They wore the wings. They were war bird wings. You ever see the... Go look this up. It's really fascinating. In modern times, it would keep it. It's just a burden in the way. But in reality, it was symbolic of their righteous standing.
how they perceived themselves. They weren't a deaf-head group, so to speak. They were going to wield death. They were going to wield the sword. But it was not because they embraced death, but rather that they defended the righteous. They defended right.
See, this is part of the it's not wrong to wage into a fight It's not wrong to have to wage war or to wage war and wage war to win But you have to be in righteous standing right now. We've got some fake-ass war in the Ukraine You know what? They're actually they're they're trying to arrest people if you're against the war that doesn't exist because we haven't declared war with the Ukraine
So who are all these turds in Washington or who are all these foreign parasites that are manipulating our country? They're saying that they're going to arrest people because you're saying something against participating in a war that we have not declared. We are not in a declared war. We are not in a declared war. We are in an unrighteous war.
We are in an evil war. It was fabricated step by step and I really think that one of the reasons the Khazars are trying to kill off as many of the Christians on both sides in what we what I've told you before and in old royal terms is called a
You have Ukrainian Orthodox Christians who were pushed into battle and stirred into conflict with Russian Orthodox neither are of the Roman Catholic side of the church
And so the Jewish mob has made a deal with the Catholic Poles to kill off as many of the Ukrainians and as many of the Russians as possible. The Jews in reality, the Jewish mob in reality, being the wicked ters that they are, have yet a separate agenda that nobody is going to acknowledge or talk about. And the management of Poland probably even knows what's going on.
They've murdered off the Christian population the white Christian population You remember back to the made and had Uprising in Ukraine that came about because the Ukrainians were Too close to the Russians and the NATO wanted them to be part of the NATO contingent So they sent Victoria Newland in there
And she basically was, I saw an article today that called her the midwife of the Maidenhead Revolution. And they basically ousted the legitimate government and put in the stooges, the international Jew's stooges. And you know, there's stuff going on in Sudan right now. There's a revolution going on in Sudan. Guess who went over to Sudan just prior to the revolution starting? Victoria Newland.
Whatever she goes, war breaks out. It's another little, bomb-y-en-est coup. Again, here's what's most important, and Ron Paul used to talk about this all the time. Several of the Republicans, when they're used to being Republicans, would step forward and say, well, first of all, you have to declare war, but here's what's happened.
Because of the Patriot Act, that evil, wicked document that we told everybody under no circumstances should anybody support, and we stopped it for eight years.
All of a sudden good old neocon George W Bush fabricates with the Israelis and elements of the secret police, the 9-11 event, and we just have to gang rush all of this communist crap into place. So what they're doing is, it's now 2023, that's 20 years later plus.
Exactly what we said what happened is now happening. They are turning it on the American people, which they did right from the beginning. There was never any intent to do anything but use Homeland Succuriety against the American people. And the Homeland Security operation is a globalist, international, private contractor operating out of New Jersey.
Now that is why they're saying that they can grab people like they grabbed a couple of these black militants Because they're either against the war in the Ukraine. Everybody should be against the war in the Ukraine period
I won't hesitate to say that. And by the way, I'll be slap you if you think you raise a hand to me about not supporting it because I don't see any benefit for anyone there. An equitable situation would be just exactly what you are now seeing through force of arms whereby the eastern half of the Ukraine, which has been Russian, would be ceded to Russia accordingly because they could vote in referendum. But you see,
The Jewish mob wants them as pack slaves as they've used them in the past. And again, all of the clique presently running the Ukraine are not Ukrainians. They are kosher mafia brought in from outside the country, dual citizenship status, including the play actor slash the actor that is the, you know, Kielinski, Zielinski, Faglinski, Take a pic, whatever. He's already pocketed so much of the pilfered cash that they don't even know how much he's stolen.
Well, they probably do and they just wait to use that if they need to to get rid of him I heard another voice caller jump in there, please Hey, this is Tom. Hey, have you ever heard of a 3.7 Magnum? A what? A 327 Magnum. Came up about what? You know what? That's funny. I was looking at something singular That came up that idea came up about What 15 years ago?
And it didn't take off why have you got access to one its weapons Wednesday? Somebody's looking at one No, and yeah, I get the free paper every Saturday and Some guy was selling 3.7 magnum. I kind of first Okay, hold on the ammunition or the pistol it's the ammunition
Well, the 327, what they were trying to do is play on the 357, but basically it's a 32 Magnum. Okay, there was, you know, you've got 32 Smith and Wesson, 32 Smith and Wesson long, and then they came up with this new 32 Magnum load, which, you know, 327 Magnum instead of 357 Magnum. It's just a long 32 case.
In fact, that particular pistol itself, as I recall, in fact, it's like a couple of the other new ideas they came up with, like the .357 maximum, which is longer than a .357. All of the other cartridges I just mentioned will slide right into the cylinder for the .32 Magnum. So actually, it's kind of a utility gun. It'll take a bunch. It'll take...
That the pistol itself if you can find one will take 32 Magnum It'll take 380 or 32 ACP not 380 32 ACP because that's semi-rimmed It'll use 30 to Smith and Wesson long and it could shoot 32 Smith and Wesson shorts Which in a pistol like that be like firing at 22? So the how much they want for the ammunition though? What was he asking?
$35 a box I believe for $50 and $60 and $15 for like $20 or something. But you know I never heard of it. So I called them and asked them if it was like an air-axing, a 3-point service. So he told me no, it was a 3-point service. I never heard of it. He went on to explain it. I'm like, oh, okay. Then I learned something new today.
Yeah, if it's if you've got the pistol it'd be worth the money because I don't know I don't know how much ammunition is being built right now That's fresh. I it just didn't take off the way they'd hope there were there were some Smith guns. I believe Taurus made a few and there are a couple of the Derringers that were done in three five in the 327 slash 32 Magnum
It's a hot round. I won't get shot by anything, but it basically is exactly what it describes. It is a hot 32 caliber dagger is the only way to describe it. It's gonna drop some energy on you. It's just that there wasn't really a niche because you can take 38 or 357 and do pretty much everything you need.
But it wasn't it was it's an interesting gun. I think Smith made some I'm pretty sure Taurus made a few it's probably in there oh hell the little J frame not the 86 but it was something there's another one. It's anyway they made it in the J frame just made it with a little you know a little longer cylinder and I think I'm trying to think who else I think Ruger did some too.
You might find a pistol laying around but it's one of those things where the first thing I would be thinking that get checking you It might have been a typo the guy loved to sell his 357 magnum ammo, but everybody thinks he's got 327 So I can understand good I need to call on it because you never know because people would not be interested You might be able to get some regular 357 for a good price, but that's not what it is It's a it's a round Go ahead on the key but on the keypad on a keyboard the two is right above the five in it
Yeah. Well, in or if it was, you know, somebody else transpond, you know, God, come on, transcribing something, then something could happen. A boo boo could be made. The big thing about that round is that it does take all and we'll use either cast bullet 32, which by the way, is cheap, cheap and or any of the jacketed semi jacketed and the hollow point 32s that are out there.
And the neat thing is also though that if you ran into any .32 caliber anything in a box, you can buy it and still shoot it in that gun. It's built to handle a higher pressure load and .38 Smith & Wesson is like, you know, like I said, it'd be like shooting a .22 short all day in that revolver. You wouldn't even know you were pulling a trigger on the round.
with 32 ACP would be about the same. And I should point that out and remind everybody, there's 32 ACP. Yes, 32 ACP, guys, if you have any decent 32 revolvers for the most part, this is an old camper trick, is 32 ACP is semi-rimmed.
Now it doesn't have as full a rim as you have on a revolver cartridge, but it does have a rim. It's called semi-rimmed. And because of this, a lot of people used to, if they had to, because they were, you know, poor, you run into some, with a lot of little 32 Smith and Wesson longs,
because they're again a little bigger cylinder typically because it was the longer cartridge so it didn't offer that much more energy. The 32 ACP would be an emergency round. So just something to think about there. This is why you grab any ammunition if you do see it for free or for cheap cheap cheap.
because you sort it out, you bag it up, and then eventually somebody else you know is going to have something to be used for. Or when there's something going on down the road, maybe those will be the eight rounds and save your ass because Bob's got eight rounds to put in his, you know, whatever it is he's carrying or six or whatever you have. So just a good idea. Anything else, Tom? Please. No, I just want to know if you heard any, like I said, I've never heard of it. And I guess the guy's there.
Had him died and he was selling all all these guys ammo. He had a bunch of ammo. All right, so really when I called he had 380 and But he had sold that and I've seen a 327 I was trying to survive and yeah, he went on explaining about him. Oh weird, I guess I never heard it last time. I want to call him. He's fewer
Well, to be quite honest, it was probably the most innovative cartridge in the last 20 years. You know, something new that's different from what everybody else is doing. The only other thing that's comparable are some of the little mini assault cartridges like 5.7. You know, it's one of those things where there's not a whole lot anybody, nobody wants to shift away from the core calibers simply because of cost.
And the neat thing about it is some, you know, there are some neat things can be done with rounds and with cartridges so that you can come up with something that has a niche. And the neat thing about those little 357 pistols that are out there is that they're relatively compact, but that little 32 Magnum could be a little smaller still and still bark like a dog.
That's the other nice thing about 32 ACP and most of the smaller rounds. You'd think that, well, it shouldn't be too noisy. I don't know, for whatever reason, they make a lot of boom noise. So while they may not, you know, knock you down like a freight train, they sure as hell make you know someone's there. Boom, boom, boom, boom, boom, boom, boom, boom, boom, boom, boom, boom, boom, boom, boom, boom, boom, boom, boom, boom, boom, boom, boom, boom, boom, boom, boom, boom, boom, boom, boom, boom, boom, boom, boom, boom, boom, boom, boom, boom, boom, boom, boom, boom, boom, boom, boom, boom, boom, boom, boom, boom, boom, boom, boom, boom, boom, boom, boom, boom, boom, boom, boom, boom, boom, boom, boom, boom, boom, boom, boom, boom, boom, boom,
So otherwise, yeah, if you run go ahead call her. Yeah, let's text mix. Hey Let everybody know there's a boot sale at and at boat ash. Yeah For all and and not just not any boots ultimate boots. It's pretty good. Again Boat ash calm is in the clearance section Well, actually when you go to the clearance section there, you it didn't props up with a bunch of options You probably can prioritize boots
It should be there. Oh, I would think so. I don't know. I got it through an email that Dixon me email So I just fixed my email to They've got these Ultimas, I mean they're good kick around boots. They look like Chuck Taylor's they you know, I guess they call them assault Chuck Taylor's I guess I don't know and and they've got some of the other Ultima boots there. I got a pair of those but the some of the sizes are running small and really big
So for all our guys that are either, well, if you've got a bunch of kids and you're trying to get them decent footwear, then the small sizes will work for your kids. All my boys and girls grew up with tiny adult sizes because you can go right down to size one and zero for boots. I've never seen zero in a long time, but zero did exist.
So and also extra large while you guys are really big out there I want to check to see what they got available did they have extra whites anything in double extra flex No There was a couple of ones that had the width on them, but most of them did not have the width so I'm just gonna assume they were regular Yeah, and so yeah, and but I mean, you know ultimate boot is a that's a
That's a Department of Defense boot. I mean, they make boots for the military. And, you know, they had the regular price on some of that stuff. And it was like, what was it? Some of those boots were over like 150 bucks. They were down to 60 bucks. I went out to go, Mark. I got another call. Go, go, go. Take care of that. Thank you, sir.
Appreciate the update. And for everybody out there, remember, Bowtash always scan Bowtash for their lots. When you go over to Bowtash, right now, if any of you people have the money, have the wherewithal, they have a batch. It's, I don't know, it was 100 and maybe it was more than that. 100 and some AR-15 mags. It came down to $6.10 a piece.
If you, when you go over to, when you go over to the Botash site, when you go to search categories, put lots in, L-O-T-S. Then what will pop up are all of these batches of body armor.
which is kind of pricey because it's all mill grade stuff or, you know, be, but it may be, it may or may not be used that heavily. We got to remember with all these departments, they're spending your money. So the moment that they read another magazine about what's over super special, they'll dump whatever they already have brand new in the box and buy the over Uber super special stuff next, which is great for you because you're buying the stuff for a quarter what it costs if you would did it over the counter retail.
and they do a lot of police trade-ins. Now, but what I've been told by you listeners that are out there in Nevada is if you can get kabotash, there is a bunch of stuff that never makes it into the webpage.
But they do have a percentage that they post there They've had vests for as little as 25 to 30 dollars for undercover vests There is no such thing as outdated outdated is because government contract, you know, I think we only do the outdated
It's not that the armor is breaking down. It's that the police departments usually have, especially the police unions, two things that they have mandatory contract issues on body armor. Every two years they're gonna get us new armor. And every two years, a certain percentage of these squad cars are guaranteed to be replaced. In most big cities, that was a traditional contract arrangement.
So, a lot of this stuff, it hasn't even, in many cases, especially with the body armor guys, it's been sitting on the shelf, stacked up. Every couple of years, the Donate of Destruction does the same thing and so do all the Fed agencies. Most of the body armor that we have is actually all from the inventory that was disposed over 60, 70,000 vests at a time.
And in fact, the chicken plates I've told you about, the titanium chicken plates all came from the fed disposal. Brand new in the wrapper, brand new in the box, still in the plastic, never issued. And so, trust me, they were using titanium when everybody else didn't even know what titanium was.
for your center breastplate. So just something to think about, and that's Botash.com. They do have a wide number of other magazines. If you have, if your group is using the Jericho or the CZ75, they did, as of a few days ago, have a massive pile of those mags. And we should mention that more because it was a good price. They're actual factory mags.
So those are harder to get really because the CC's for the longest time you couldn't get any spare mags Most people forget that so right now magazine bundles magazine lots Clothing lots gear lots another thing they have is a holster lot which is so many hundreds of Factory brand new in the wrapper holsters you take a look at it. Good color. Who do we have? Okay, we got you go ahead
You're fading for... I'll take it, Mark. Go ahead. I sent you a video. I sent it to Ed, you and Darr about Tucker. Did you get a chance to see that yet? I have. Well, I've been watching a bunch of different ones on and off as I've been moving around today. We had to work outside and get rid of some of those felled trees.
So I'll take a look. Did you send it to Edward? You sent it to us through... I sent it to Ed's email and your email. I sent it to Dar. And it is a 29 minute video. And it's exposing Tucker, his background, where he came from, his father, CIA ties, Jew ties. He is a shill. Oh, actually that's...
That's one of the things that he's talking. Okay, last, there's a couple of short videos where he's talking about certain things and he actually discusses that. I don't know if anybody's noticed it, but he said, no, my dad was in communications. I was in broadcasting before he was. And he even says, no, I pushed the Iraq war. He goes, I'm ashamed of that. There's some interesting things that he's put out and said.
that were just before they decided to fire, decided to let him go, whatever, whatever it was. Here's the thing, because they decided to let him go, I guarantee, no matter what, he's not hurt for money. Oh no, he got $36,000 or $36 million last year, $32,000, $36,000. And for how many years? He started out at $6 million and he worked his way up to, what, $32 or $36 million.
So, yeah, he just signed a 10 year contract with them and Fox says that they're going down to the contract and pay him. I'm sure there's a lot of strings attached, but that's probably all gag order.
Right, if that's the case, yes, I was going to say, if they go with that, see, there's two things about this. If they were to cut him loose, there's usually a severance pay mechanism in that kind of contract that they can wiggle him into that, okay? On the other hand, you got to remember, this is like original Bushmaster, guys.
Bushmaster was attacked, wasn't attacked, it was bought by the Soros group that also bought Remington. When they did that, one of the things they did with the original owner, because remember Bushmaster was the golden standard for a long time. Everybody wanted a Bushmaster.
Well, what they did is they told him for two years, you can't make anything. Don't you dare create a new company. So at the two year mark, what he did, I think it might even been a little longer. I think it was two and a half years, but either way, they basically said you can't build anything. But what he did is he has now come back with wind-dumb arms. Now, that's a mouthful and it doesn't catch.
Windham, it's a good company. He's making quality rifles that are on the upper end of the spectrum in the AR-15. Windham Firearms, okay? The company is named after the location where the factory is. It's the original location where he had the company. But for two years, he couldn't do anything. He had all the expertise. He had everything he needed to actually do it. And they already saw in advance that he could.
So they basically gagged him mentally. The consideration here is what I've said before the last couple of days. It doesn't make any difference what it is that he's doing, you know, how this came about as far as where he is in the scheme of things. The big flare with this is that they've done Dan Bongino, they did him. There's one or two other people in the executive end that probably were the ones that were allowing for these guys to go as far as they could.
And if they're going to attack the American people, and if they're going to try to baffle everybody with bullshit, they can't have any loose ends. And the real issue with these two is internal operations against America.
Because when Carlson started talking about the internal attack and systematically fabricated bullshit by the agencies, that's when they all went crazy. I've told you before, Dan Bongino, the reason that they had to get rid of him, he's been a Secret Service agent. He has credentials where he can say, no, what they just did, that's not how you do it, not even by any stretch of the imagination.
So they need their voices down so that when they do the bombing, whenever the government does the next attack on you guys, which is going to be a, the government's going to do a bombing, the Mossad's going to be involved, the Jewish mob's going to all beat the gong on it, and they're going to demand a massive, you know, quick police state. You just got to surrender everything. Get the guns. Let's go to war. You know, take your pick. Go right down the shopping list. They can't afford to have anybody that can stop, you know, put brakes on it.
Because they got a dumb, it's dumb rush or bum rush. Take your pick. Which do you think it is? It's a bum rush. We're using people who are stupid, who they think we are. They're just going to roll right down like a bunch of lemmings into whatever disaster or crisis that they've created. That's what this is about. The overview. Now, as far as the details.
Everybody, I've said this a million times in the controlled media, one way or another, they know where their bread's buttered. This was the problem with Alex Jones coming over and going, when he abandoned the Patriot effort and pissed on all the people who made him, and he went over to the commercial industry years ago.
And what happened guys is, well they're not, they like me. I don't like you guys anymore because they like me. The Patriot broadcasting melon element was independent, free and independent and wasn't enwrapped with this mechanism. So guess what? They enticed Jones over like that because he's one that everybody knew. And then they played along with him just like a first year, a first cycle candidate that they didn't want.
And once they got to the point where they could string him so far, they pulled the rug right off from underneath him, and then they pariah'd him. They did that. It was all intended from the get-go. And he should have seen it. But no, no, no, they like me, because I was in broadcasting before. See, that's what they said. Do you think they sent them a side agent in to marry him? Hey, guys, we're past the top of the hour. You are not hearing the...
Bumper music so yeah, we are going I'm gonna do we're gonna take it. We're gonna go to break Close it go ahead and close the program out dad But then I'm gonna disconnect and reconnect and hopefully you'll be able to hear everything. Look we'll try it So it's gonna take a minute guys It's usual after all when five o'clock hits all of a sudden nothing works, right? Everything works great through the whole day till five o'clock and you all know why as well as I do So God bless the Republic
Yes, the world would be black and stain We shall prevail ladies and gentlemen the Empire is on the run and we're on the march and Let's not forget. We're just around the corner with the communist May Day anniversaries guys We are just around the corner with the communist May Day anniversaries They always love hitting those yeah, so let's all be ready for that one, too
Okay, we're gonna take a break everybody the music's playing all participants are muted and they can unmute themselves I had a dream the other night that well I didn't understand a figure walked in through the mist with a flintlock in his hand His clothes were torn and dirty as he stood there by my bed He took off his three-cornered hat and speaking low to me said We fought a revolution to secure our Liberty. We wrote the Constitution as a shield from tyranny
For future generations, this legacy we gave. In this, the land of the free and home of the brave. The freedoms we secured for you, we hoped you'd always keep. The tyrants labored endlessly while your parents were asleep. Your freedom's gone, your courage lost, you're no more than a slave. In this, the land of the free and home of the brave. You buy permits to travel and permits to own a gun.
permits to start a business or to build a place for one. On land that you believe you own, you pay a yearly rent. Although you have no voice in saying how the money's spent, your children must attend a school that doesn't educate, and your Christian values can't be taught according to the state. You read about the current news in a regulated press, and you pay a tax you do not owe to please the IRS.
Your money is no longer made of silver nor of gold. You trade your wealth for paper so your life can be controlled. You pay for crimes that make our nation turn from God and shame. You've taken Satan's number. You've traded in your name. You've given government control to those who do you harm so they could burn down churches and seize the family farm.
and keep our country deep in debt. Put men of God in jail. Harash your fellow countrymen while corrupted courts prevail. Your public servants don't uphold the solemn oaths they've sworn. And your daughters visit doctors so their children won't be born. Your leaders send artillery and guns to foreign shores and send your sons to slaughter fighting other people's wars. Can you regain the freedoms for which we fought and died?
Or don't you have the courage or the faith to stand with pride? And are there no more values for which you'll fight to save? Or do you wish your children to live in fear and be a slave? O sons of the Republic, arise, take a stand, defend the Constitution, the supreme law of the land, preserve our great Republic and each God-given right, and pray to God to keep the torch of freedom burning bright.
As I awoke he'd vanished in the mist for whence he came. His words were true, we are not free, but we have ourselves to blame. For even now as tyrants trampled each god-given rite, we only watch him tremble, too afraid to stand and fight. If he stood by your bedside in a dream while you were asleep and wondered what remains of the freedoms he'd fought to keep, what would be your answer if he called out from the grave, dill the land of the free?
in the slot five by five. I had noise in my earphones. That means that everything's working the way it's supposed to. Thank you, Edward. Good afternoon, ladies and gentlemen. This is the second hour of the afternoon. Intelligence report. I'm our current key. One day closer to victory for all of our brothers and sisters, both on and behind the lines in occupied territories, south,
North, Northeast, West. Listing to us on ww.libertytreeradio.4mg.com, libertytreeradio.org. And we are on satellite. And I said, how are all our merchant marine operators out there? It has been a very, very busy, busy week. And for our friends, especially with satellite. And we'll say thank you for all the
technical expertise you have been sharing with some of our allies. Again, very good work virtually in every ocean on the planet. We're in a myriad of other communications technologies both inside and outside these United States. It is Weapons Wednesday. It is the 26th of April. It is the 15th year of open and in your face Fabian socialist and Soviet socialist occupation.
of America with a K 2023, older calendar 2023 battle for the Republic. The dance of swords. Let the dance continue and it will. We're gonna make sure that happens for all the out there at one. Say thank you for all the input. The last hour. Let me hold on for a second here. I got a little Oh, I got a couple of super espresso and I'm gonna smell and then taste and
contemplating my belly button for this. Yes, I am going to the center of the universe. Yes, the coffee at this taking me there. No, not really, but it is tasty. So again, for everybody sit back, relax. And again, enjoy what we have for now. Remember that we're going to be out. We're going to be running and playing scatter dodge real quick. Whenever the bad guys decide to start, we're going to start in there. There are obviously in motion to do so.
The castle society thing they're trying not to talk about. It's in the wings. That's obvious and in your face. You need to be prepared for that. We need to have a money system on standby, which we do. And all of you are going to have to become true American entrepreneurs and understanding, you know, economy and money and what it is. In fact, the fact the ideas that we make it valuable, not the bankers, we do.
And what we determine our currency to be is what we use as we need to. Go ahead, caller, jump in there. Hi, Mark. This is John from Kentucky. I had a weird thought the other day. You're always talking about building ARs. Has you ever thought about building an AR with a 7.62 by 25? I know that a PPS 43 mag will fit in the mag well.
going to need a rear spacer. Over. You know, that would be a good idea. You know what? It's a matter of whether or not they're just willing to do the tooling. But considering that we have 45, we have 40 caliber, we have 9 millimeter, 7.62 by 25, other than, like you said, the magazine solution, that would be the only issue. And you know what?
There's still a ton of those mags out there in the system. All they'd have to do is come up with a barrel and a pickup, make sure that the pickup is consistent out of the magazine. Yeah, and that's a spacer in back of the mag. I've already got it. I believe the bold face of the AR is almost the same size as a 762x25.
Yes, it is there. No, actually they are so close that you probably wouldn't have to change a thing with the bolt face Because we've been doing this for years. Remember if you look at equipping part two There's two things that we put into that video Number one was discarding sable remember in sub six two by twenty five and The the ammunition that we built that you see in that video
That was 556 brass cut down, reformed, annealed, and then introducing the discarding sable mechanism. Seriously, that was 556. That's 556 amble in that picture, in that magazine of that firearm that's in the video. It's on the table there. If you look on the table, equipping part two. And that was one of the things we were pointing out is that
That's why, you know, we don't want to do it right. You don't just cut brass down guys for the sake of cutting brass down, but you're going to eventually have tired brass or brass people step down or whatever. Well, you're not going to reform it back up to 5.56, but you can cut it and form it down to other chamberings. And, you know, 7.60 by 25 would be one of them.
So you're actually right there. In fact, you could make, see that's almost like building a baby assault rifle or assault cartridge. You know, something, several people have already done this. I don't know if you've seen any of the work on it where they've taken just a regular 5.56 round and shortened it by half. Well, basically that looks to me like it's almost, if not right there at the 7.62x25 round. And if it isn't, it's pretty stinking close.
So using standard Tokarev ammunition out of the box would be kind of handy. And if you had it, at least you knew that the vast inventory that's out here every once in a while you'd run into it and you could actually employ it, which would be a good idea. But it could be built. It'd be very easily built.
You could use 30 caliber carbine projectiles if you needed to. You could use 556 cases neck down. I would buy an RCBS carbide dye set or many of them. Order them and or whatever other company you want, but you want carbide dyes and then you could go to town and build a hell of a monster round. In fact, you could you could actually make it a super toker. You could build it as a super super toker of round.
Which would be kind of cool. You know what I mean? Well, I'm just some food for thought so Take it and run somebody can take it and run with it Okay, thank you, sir Well, all I tried was the magazine getting in the AR mag well, it's okay laterally, but you got to have a rear spacer Well, okay question. There wasn't really any any slop, right?
Very little. Very little. So it would function. The big thing is making sure that you have a magazine latch system. Now there's two ways to do that. The spacer could be on the front and you have a longer trail to the chamber. But it's always best, it'd be better to have it forward. But the thing is, the magazine latch on the ARs are all to the rear.
It won't touch the mag release on the AR, will not engage the PBS 43 mag. It's short. But as, he can make some kind of spacer. It could be done. Okay. Well, that would be a curious item. And it actually would be something that anybody that's already doing like Bear Creek Arsenal or Palmetto,
It's interesting that they haven't done it. Everybody went to... everybody has built five four five by thirty nine uppers. They've kind of disappeared again because the only reason it was popular is because the ammunition was so stinking cheap. It was cheaper than the 7.60 by 39 for a while. But the 7.60 by 25 pistol ammo is still out there. In fact, if you want to just go brand new out of the box, you can go to PPU right there at AIM surplus.
Yeah, that's true. And they have a good price on it, because of that. Or you can make your own out of spent .223 brass. High five cents. Brass. So you can make your own for the long run. For the long run. Yeah. Well, I actually built a production facility just to build the ammunition. I mean, we've already got everything. We really need to do that. But I would commit a certain amount of equipment to that simply because of how many
7.62x25 weapons we have. How many Tokarev pistols are out there? I mean, guys, everybody was... That was just like the SKS's. Everybody was buying Tokarev pistols. There are still tons of them laying all over the place. Now, they did start bringing them in at 9 millimeter, but the vast preponderance, the vast number are in 7.62x25. So it still behooves you to invest in the ammunition, into the brass.
For giving into the the dyes and then collect the brass specifically for that side task Because you are gonna have to feed them eventually anyway It's not an if it's just a wet. Everybody keeps pulling the trigger Nobody ever thought they'd run out but you don't take long when the trigger finger is twitching a lot And that's gonna that's exactly where we're gonna be
The 32 cast lead 93 grain I believe will work in the 25 because it measures I don't know 311 and the focal rate round is about the same in measurement. That being cast lead 32 long or whatever you want to load it in but the 93 grain I think would work. Over. Thank you for the input I appreciate that.
Appreciate being able to share. Now I'm going to make a few calls. That's what I'm going to actually have making notes on this for a reason. They're always looking for something to market at the very, of course, the problem is when you do the tooling.
Well, the tooling is off the shelf. With the COC technology, there's no actual specialized tooling. It's simply what variant you need depending upon when you're already building a basic system like the AR-15. It's a minor variant issue that you're dealing with. And in reality, the only... Well, I don't know if there's any of the 30-caliber AR barrels, because the only thing would be chambering.
If there's anything you're actually waiting it. They're already making 762 by 39. Call the 300 blackout. So and we're 300 blackout. So you've already got a barrel dimension, you know barrel option ready to go. What you need to look at is chain bring and that's it. You already that's the only thing that would change. Could a subcaliber adapter work in the say 300 blackout?
Well that would, yes, that probably would work because you could do the same thing that the government did with those insertable step modifiers that they did for the Navy 30-06 guns to .308. Probably you could do the exact same thing. And do it in carbon steel. Now it would be just, you'd be in the same situation. Ooh, wait a minute.
Yeah, but remember yeah, well no that's not a big deal because you would use You could use a 300 blackout barrel, but remember a 300 blackout. What's the base of the case? Is that 556? Yes, I believe well then yeah, we'll be ready to go It just be the shoulder and the neck portion it'd be a short little we're gonna have to take a look at that now
They made a short insert to go in a grand 30 out of 6 so you could shoot 308. Right. No, the thing is that it's so close. In reality, it would be identical as far as the way it would deal with. But it's rather funny because you have 300 blackout already.
You wouldn't necessarily want to sacrifice the gun over unless you were out of ammunition, but it would be another option. I think it'd be better to just have another complete upper ready to go. A new barrel would be a better choice, just having a new barrel committed.
It would have its application. It's actually, remember, out of a 16-inch barrel, you wouldn't want to go any longer. The only thing there, you have to go, you know, carbine barrel length and that's it, because it would, you still, you wouldn't lose any energy. You'd gain maybe a little bit of velocity, but you're not going to, you're not going to lose anything. Remember, with pistol calibers, longer doesn't work with everything.
The average submachine gun barrel for the 45 is what, 11 inches? You go beyond 11 inches, like to make a carbine 45, you're right at the limit with regard to performance. And what they don't usually talk about is that what they did is they compensated by changing the barrel twist to help with the physics of trying to not drag the round.
Because there's that's one of the other because you because what you're doing is if you stretch out the rifling the the spin and the the energy applied is pushed faster down the barrel not by much, but everything counts with a Lower slower velocity round like that with a 45 now with a towcraff. They're already hot So the big thing is you could actually make similar to what the French did a hot
7.62x25 round if you're using the rifle brass. It's like a plus P. Think about it like a plus P or only on steroids. And the rifle would have no problem handling the energy. What it would do is bring up the cyclic rate and if it was a select fire weapon, obviously the overall mechanical cyclic rate of the automatic weapon.
But it would short stroke, you know, everything contributes to how quickly the operation the weapon, you know, obviously Falls back and then recovers goes into station and is ready to shoot again
And that's another consideration with with the Tokarev the Tokarev remember guys for all you don't know For the longest time if you had a Tokarev pistol Body armor is not guaranteed most of the old class 2 and class 3 armor was not guaranteed against one cartridge They didn't have
Yeah, they didn't have that key at key bracket on the nomenclature Your vest wasn't going to stop 30 Tokarev Now it's kind of funny because well, it's a smaller bullet and they said yeah. Well, it's a baby rifle cartridge It's a bottleneck and this is something you know the one that I don't think anybody ever tested Well, if you have 30 Tokarev will do that. I wonder what 30 carbine does Or not 30 carbine throw that out throw it out 30 Luger
Because 30 Lugers and yeah bottleneck it's a bottleneck round again, and it does it's got a lot of energy It's not it's pushing almost comparable to a carbine out of a lot of a Luger Not quite, but it's it's got a lot of velocity and the barrel twist is again significantly different So it's just you don't see any 30 Lugers out there in the hands a homie fry doing a you know a party store rub
The 30 Lugers, they made a naval model with a longer barrel. Correct? Lugers made a naval model with a longer barrel. Yes, they made the 763 Luger round that was built. Initially it was just simply to be a commercial offering to go along with the paddle stocks.
But during the war, 9mm was the, you know, Parabellum was the dominant round that was used. After the war, because of the Treaty of Versailles, one of the tie-ins is that certain parts of Germany could not have military calibers. So the very reason that the Italians are still making 30 Luger
They can't have, at least the loss may be worse now because the Communists have had more time. But originally here for many decades, the Italians could have any gun that existed that was a military arm, but they couldn't have it in its military caliber. And for that reason, in Italy and Spain, they were still cranking out 30 Luger rounds like they were standard, which they were, standard ammunition.
because you could have a Beretta Model 92 but it had to be in 30 Luger, couldn't be a 9mm. 38 Super? Yeah, well no, they could have in 38 Super but think about it, the advantage of, okay here's the advantage of 9mm and 30 Luger is it's all the same magazines, all of your extractors and everything are identical, the only thing that changes is the barrel. If you have a 30 Luger, always remember this, in fact thank you for bringing this up because now this is another subject.
If any of you out there listening have a 30 Luger pistol and you're thinking well I'd probably use it if I had to but it's in 30 Luger. My recommendation is go to Gun Parts Corp or to SARCO or whoever, find yourself a standard cheapest 9mm Luger barrel and keep it on standby.
Because all you do is deep in torque off. It's a threaded barrel It's like traditional rifle assembly rather than the drop and drop and click like you see with most pistols may automatic pistols nowadays But yeah the threads the same for all of the Luger's there is no change in any of them because if they're a Luger They're either Luger made I should say German made or there's their subcontractor to German spec
So all the spare parts, so you're not worried about it being a W, you know, DWM or, you know, a, you know, a list cow, blah, blah, blah. You're not worried about the make of the barrel. You just need a nine millimeter barrel. Most commonly you will find today that it's going to be a German World War II barrel, might be brand new in the wrapper. But if you have a 30 Luger by a nine millimeter barrel, the only other thing you probably want to do is buy, typically they come in the, they may come in the white, but they usually come blued.
and they'll be in the original paper and you'll find that there's no front sight. So you also want to buy either an aftermarket or a, I mean, they're aftermarket Luger parts. You're not worried about collectability. You're looking for shootability. So you can buy another front sight, you can buy a barrel and have them on standby. And that gun could go right over to 9mm and there's nothing else you change, nothing.
So, that's... I'm happy that I've given you some projects. Oh, I'm going to actually... I've talked to somebody right away about this because, again, the other consideration, if you drop a dime on people who build things, they're looking for new product ideas. Now, they may have already looked at this and thought, well, maybe it's not that useful. Remember that the reason... I mean, it still might be... they may even come up with this idea and thought about it.
The big advantage is there's still this surplus of Russian Peppier magazine that's going to be out there for a little bit. In fact, right now at CenterFireSystems.com, they have the Peppier 41 and the Peppier 43 kits right now for between 129 and 149. Now, they come with four mags.
They come with all the parts. Of course, it's a cut receiver, upper receiver. But the advantage is that for the, well, again, that's the next wave. I'm re-numbing it up is because there's mags now coming in again for a short time from whatever source they've got. And they're not the only ones. Apex Gun Parts has the kits.
And that means that whoever the provider is, they've got to quantity these things possibly from the Middle East, probably not. They could be from Bulgaria or Romania. There's a bunch that came from Poland. But the big thing is the magazine. If the magazine will fit in the magazine, well, that would be the only consideration is making a spacer or if you've noticed guys, they're building magazine specific lower receivers to accommodate a particular
pistol mag, you know, so that changes the dimensions of the lower receiver, but it's specific built for that purpose. The nice thing about the Pepiche magazines is that only a spacer would be probably required or they just don't machine that space out with the CNC operation and they adapt the magazine release accordingly.
They make the magazine release work, you know, with the particular, you know, with that magazine system. So it's a matter of being creative. They'd have to work that out. It'd be nice if they could actually use the same type of latch system. If they were building, when you're building the AR and you were machining it, you would eradicate most of the rear of the magazine well.
and then mill out the back of the magazine well to accommodate a latch that mimics what's used on the Peppier submachine guns. It would make sense. It would not be a big deal. This is not, we're not talking, I mean, it's purely a matter of doing, figuring out, laying down the mapping it out in a blueprint, doing all of the programming, and it's done. The machine does all the work in this day and age. And since they're already building them, it's, go ahead.
The peppyish mag catches on the back of the mag with a mag release. It's a push you push and that's it catches on the very back similar to an AR or AK. AK, yeah. Yeah, AK, so every very similar. So what you would do is you would make them the magazine well would be on the forward part of where you presently have a 556 mag.
You would then adjust all of your engineering to create a back plate when you mill out the bottom of that that lower the the Magazine well because it will all be a solid blank And then what you do is create a couple of ribs for a pivot for a cross pin and then you have to also broach you have to You're gonna cut the access point for the magazine catch and it would do exactly what it did on the peppers. Yeah, well
Go ahead. If you set the heavy-ish mag back about a half inch, it would meet the mag. I'm trying it right now, okay? If you were to go back a half inch, you would meet the mag release button on the AR. Yeah. Well, very good. Back about a half inch. So, you can make it work.
The way to use it is in such a way that you don't have to do anything to modify the magazines. Whatever we come up with or whatever would be proposed, you're going to have to maybe make one separate unique part, but everything else is basically CNC. And that unique part would be whatever adapter can be made for the existing magazine release to the back of the mag, or
to make a cam, a pivoting magazine release that would be stamped or could be made of whatever material you choose. It's going to be metal. It has to be for wear and tear. But it could still just simply mimic. It would be on the back of the gun. It would be right where it would normally be in the magazine well for the pet fish. And it would just be whatever materials and whatever pattern they come up with that makes sense. And that would be... Would your wooden lowers
Since you're making the entire thing couldn't you cut the mag well out or the oh yes Yes, oh yes It would know that would be I would do the same thing what the difference is you have a center slab Which has to have cutouts and whatever because remember that's going to be your spacer for the width of the two panels that are cut And all you would do is the exact same thing you would change your magazine. Well. It would be less material and you guys the only cuz
Go ahead color jump in there. Hey, this is Carlin, Virginia Instead of monkeying around with a magazine. Well, why not just do a side magazine upper like a sin? Well, the thing is you're trying to use an existing air 15 upper though. We're talking about not making a Well, you see that that's been done before with a gun. You probably wouldn't expect the Springfield Okay, the Peterson device with the Springfield
I always thought it probably looked kind of unique because basically they came up with a, when you put the Peterson device in, the magazine comes in on an angle but on top and you use a standard bolt action 1903 Springfield receiver for the action. So you could do, but we're trying not to engineer anything or do any specific machining but to one place. So the magazine well makes sense.
And the magazines, this is the other thing, it's 7.62x25. So the most common magazines for the moment are those peppish mags. It used to be Sten gun mags in 9mm, grease gun mags in 45mm, and nobody had peppish mags. Well, grease gun mags are now World War II and they're starting to become unobtainian because they want to charge an arm and a leg.
The Sten gun mags are still cheap, but you can't find them like you used to. But the Peppish mags are the mag coming in. So the whole reason for this is that you can prototype it cheap. You've got cheap mags and ammunition is reasonably priced, making it an interesting caliber to experiment with. Now, if this was 30 years ago, it would be even more valuable because you could have bought pallets and pallets and pallets of 7.62 by 25 for about three cents a round.
If not two cents around because the more you bought the cheaper it was and that that's when this would have been a really really interesting idea What's what's happened though is this while CNC was around 30 years ago? The development and the ideas and the changes in and improvements in certain parts of the programmable technology
have become much more interesting, make it possible to do more unique things. That's why we're seeing the present family of 9mm, .40 caliber and .45 clock mag AR-15s.
Which makes sense because again what I've said many times you don't make an difference if you like clock or don't like clock There's a pile of Glocks around so using the Glock mag makes a lot of sense It's not it's always the magazine that determines the project for most anything over the last So 60 years of American ingenuity in these kinds of weapons
When the AR mag finally became readily available, a lot of unique stuff was built that we know was, in fact it was the Cats meow for the Y, very early on. Because all of these other unique rifles you guys don't see anymore, were all based upon the AR-15 mag in the 5.56 ammo, because that's what the government was buying. And it was a significant innovation and jump forward.
But otherwise, like I said, what was the standard for determining what you were going to build was cheap mags. Otherwise, you have to make a proprietary mag or whatever for yourself. And the other consideration is also minimizing the amount of modification or changes to the overall design. And while you can make a top magazine feed system, and what you would copy would be the stoner.
If you know it's hard to tell to find one if you think chicken teeth stoners are chicken teeth the upper magazine squad gun version is even you know, that's like unobtainium chicken teeth They were out there I've seen only three of them and I've seen two of those that were cut up and destroyed that Sarko had and Sarko was selling a They were selling chopped up stoners for $600 at Knob Creek and when I say chop they took a torch
and they were still asking $600 for cobbled parts. Okay, but they, again, you can find the dimensions for the idea and make something like that work. But you're coming from a totally different direction if you're going to make a top magazine feed because you're having to alter the whole upper. That's the thing. Interesting.
Yeah, remember, right now we're talking AR-15. I've repeated this many times. We get into a war, AR-15 production is progressively going to be almost zero because everything that it takes to make the AR-15 guys is grossly overcomplicated in a war time, especially, gee, what are they talking about? They're talking about lobbing nukes at each other in World War III.
Whoever thinks ahead and simplifies goes to the simplified designs will continue to fight. Trying to maintain even the AK or the AR-15 as a new production rifle is going to almost be impossible. In fact, I would also point out you could hand build any of these guns. Guys, the Vietnamese made exact, think about this, we haven't talked about this for a while.
The Vietnamese made hand copies of every gun that we carried in Vietnam. Have you ever seen a 1911 built the grass hut, the back swamps of Vietnam, some of the stuff that came back? Have you ever seen a Vietnamese M14? There's, I think, one of them in the Patton Museum. I believe there may still be one there. Who knows what Clinton had destroyed years ago.
But they literally, with patience and rat files, and what they had was a rifle to copy. And what they would do is use the original rifle as the test machine for the parts they made by hand. And the Vietnamese made hand-cut copies of the M14.
Now, I doubt they bothered making an M16, because there were so many of those dumped in country that you can keep picking them off or buying them off, whoever. But even there, they made copies of the Thompson that were hand filed, hand cut, and you can just see. Okay, if you've been in machinery at all, or if you have any IDI for line,
They're all functional, but like I've said before where it doesn't mean much They don't have to be straight on the outside. The important thing is that where everything connects they're straight on the inside and the Vietnamese made copies of the well They even made a copy of the pet peeh that they built themselves the North Vietnamese made a copy that was factory produced The South Vietnamese made copies by hand the the Viet Cong
Although I'm sure that it was also the village populations because they had the ability. They know how to use a brazier to temper. They stole or bought hand tools. I will remind you again that while everybody talks about the Viet Cong, they weren't the only fighting force. It was forced popular. That was a South Vietnamese aligned with the South Vietnamese government.
National Defense Force that was a militia force. You had the mountain yards. You had the nung. But the nung, they got all their equipment from us. Then you had Village Defense, which was a separate element altogether. And Village Defense, well, they got what they could from the government, but they built their own also.
And when we say village depends I'm talking just like those little hamlets you see where one little guy was a blacksmith and he could crank out maybe in a week another rifle and they would copy whatever they had most commonly available. Why? They would build it because the magazines and the ammo came from the government. So whatever they made they duplicate. The biggest thing like with the Vietnamese pepeches is where you see the front shroud
They took the front shroud, cut it just past the receiver block, and left the barrel exposed with a carbine-type front sight on it. It saved weight and it saved material. And they didn't really believe that the air shroud was needed, the barrel protection shroud was needed.
And they were small guys so the car so it was basically the peppy ish built the way they built it was in the same family as the carbine the M1 carbine after all your average soldiers a hundred pounds soaking wet if you're lucky and Those weapons were perfectly Dementioned or sized to the operator that was gonna handle it. That's why it's so bizarre that they made copies of the m14 Because the m14 is a big-ass rifle for a small man Just that simple, but they did
So we don't have to go that far. And this is again, remember when now I'm not trying to poop out anybody's ideas. Don't think I'm ridiculing you for calling in. Never do that. I think you, Carl knows that. But for everybody out there, just what we're thinking is and we have to think with this is what can I do minimally to change the design, take advantage of existing reasonably priced components and relatively inexpensive, but very effective ammunition.
Okay, now one of the things I've talked about before and this is again once we get into a conflict situation for production We are we're gonna have a shitload of 5 5 6 brass that's been stomped or damaged and as I mentioned a moment ago and we've talked about it here on the air 7 6 2 by 25 we can make all day, but What you've seen recently is not a bad little idea and that somebody has come up with a 5 5 6 short
It's a little over. I would say it's probably instead of 45 by you know, 5 5 6 by 45 I think it's 5 5 6 by I think 30 or 31 and The dimension of the shoulder is identical to the standard may be a little shallower But basically the same as the 5 5 6 full rifle route
But what they've done is they've loaded it with a proper powder in such a way that they get basically the same performance and there's really no reason for that not to happen. Making a short assault rifle cartridge that would perform identically to the 5.56 standard government round, NATO round, very likely. I mean, there's no reason for that not to happen. Remember that the reason we have the 5.56 is because of ease in dimension.
The 556 NATO round, the 556 by 45 US military round, was a scaled down 30-06. That's all they did. All of their physics for understanding what it would do, they just had to reformulate based upon the change in dimensions.
Part of this, I believe, has to do with, again, all of the math that had already been done, research from Frankfurt Arsenal, which was our original research arsenal for decades, guys. I know not decades, what am I talking about? More than 140 years.
Look up Frankfurt Arsenal. It was the it was the research the R&D Arsenal one of the things that they did was they did all the math and physics for developing a cartridge and any idea of a cartridge just like we're doing right now they bounced off the wall with each other and they would build it in the Arsenal and Experiment well when they were done with the test they kept everything on file though. They paid for it So they might and they were doing R&D research and development
And so what they found is that there was this balance, the 30-06, the M1 1903 30-06 cartridge, you know, the overall design, was optimal. And there was a whole discussion about how they came up with it that is rather interesting because
It was considered to be the premium balance over the Mauser cartridges, the French development, or the Russian development for a rifle route. And for the blast chamber itself, the burn chamber, the shoulder angle was considered to be the perfect solution in what's called the seven black books, and I've seen only three sets of these. They're the Arsenor Armor's books for weapons design.
I know one person who had a copy of 1975 that's a friend of mine. And he got them from a guy who was an old armory arsenal researcher. It shows every conceivable mechanism and every combination of munitions loadings for small arms that you can make. Every kind of toggle, cam, block, drop block, anything you can think of. And I only perused it for a little bit because we had to return it.
To the its rightful owner the person didn't want to come off him Well, we made photocopies or whatever we could but we're talking seven volumes like like Bibles thick as dictionaries each for each volume
In the old school method of, you know, we'll make sure that you've got all the I's and cross all the T's. In our case, we have the benefit, again, for a short time, which will not last because, let's think about something here. If they go boom and start launching mushrooms and marsh gas, what do you think the priority and targets are going to be?
even if they weren't all prioritized, guys, just to maintain a CNC machine, how long do you think we could maintain those? How long do you think even the government could with a succession of nuclear attacks on the infrastructure? You realize how much in the toilet? This is another reason I'm gonna bring up the PAWS rifle. Look it up, P-A, see if you can find anything on it.
I've seen the prints on it. I remember years ago, and this is way, way back, the pause, there's a few people that referenced it decades ago. You see nothing on it now. I don't know if no forgotten weapons, he might be able to find somebody or at least be able to go to where they have the examples of it. The pause weapon was designed specifically for what I'm talking about. We just had World War III.
That smoking mushroom cloud over there on the horizon is one of your arsenal complexes. Oh, by the way, the raw materials are gone too. And all the... Over on the other horizon, there's another mushroom cloud. Well, that's the other factory going up. And most of your manufacturers and production people too. So the PAWS was designed to use off-the-shelf existing parts.
It basically is a square piece of tubing with an M16 type barrel with an AR-15 side mounted magazine, an AR-15 configured magazine using a stamped steel side magazine well and utilizing an M60 trigger group to control the weapon.
It is a works in a drawer rifle that is approximately 34 inches long, 36 inches long, 3 feet. It has a simple plate, butt plate with a piece of rubber bolted to the end of it. And it was as absolutely simple and crude as possible, but it was designed to be used, built with off-shelf parts.
the combination of the AR-15 bolt and another solution for holding the bolt, which was made out of the same square metal, you know, steel stock, made up the rest of the operating mechanism. And it fed from a side magazine station, kind of like a stent, only in 556. That was a government program based upon a World War III scenario. That's not something that somebody said, oh, let's just see if we can make something.
It was specifically with the idea that what we're now talking about again in the year 2023, an all out global conflict in which inevitably nuclear deployment takes place. Okay, so even the government acknowledged, there's no way we can make the M14 or the M16 or any of those weapons, but we probably have a lot of parts laying around. And since we built a ton of these, what can we do with it?
We all these parts. What can we do with these parts? What can we find of the simplest most common parts and at that time the idea was remember in 1963 64 when they came up with this idea for the pause The standard length barrel was 20 inches. So that's why the weapon was as long as it was and The barrel was completely enshrouded and ensconced inside the steel the steel channel
Only the the muzzle was exposed or the muzzle with a flash hider if we could get them and The logic was at the very least you could get the barrel So again prior proper planning prevents piss poor performance. It used to be they thought these things through We got such queers a three dollar bill pedos slash perverts in the system You don't think they're worried about us. I didn't get hold of another late year old boy to molest
or chop his wiener off. That's the turds we have in the DoD, and that's the turds we have in Washington. The only people who are going to come up with solutions are us. The system has pretty well done nothing but gone into Sodom and Gomorrah. You want to save the country? We've got to come up with the solutions. There are many different ideas. The transition ideas, some of these, are just kind of interesting because
You're not going to know what you're going to run into. This guy's down the road. I know there's people all over the state of Michigan that have things you just can't even wrap your brain around. Tons. Guys, years ago when I told people to buy stuff when it was 25 cents a piece, they did. Those macro mags you're paying $25 for now were 25 cents a piece. 50 cents a piece if you bought them just in onesies. But if you bought a whole flat of them, a whole case of them, they were 25 cents a piece.
So there's stuff like that out there for Tokarev's, Peppie's, AK's, AK-74's. And a lot of it still hasn't come out of the wine cellar, so to speak. It's just waiting for. Or again, they don't want to come off it because they know what its value is, and they're just waiting a little bit longer, and they just bleed out a little bit at a time. It's a great retirement package when GM or Ford or Chrysler screwed you.
And that's how these people have saved themselves from going into poverty too in the process. But they've also helped our cause. So the other thing here again, a straight case short cartridge would be interesting. Another one that I thought would be interesting is taking the pepe-ish kits and as we've already pretty well mapped it out, taking the pepe-ish kit when the time comes and doing it in .40 caliber.
All these kits, I told you before guys, barrels, barrels and barrels. They destroyed the barrels and all these kits. You have to buy a new barrel or make a new barrel if they're going to be brought into service. Keep that. So why again, if you want to do something to help the cause, buy AR-15 barrels. Want to keep making AR-15s even after they do all the crap they're doing to try and go police state.
Buy more barrels buy more barrels you want to make money buy more barrels And by the way those little 37 and $40 apiece barrels you were getting a few years ago where they all go go look at the price right now ain't $35 and 37 and $27 apiece are they and that's only in the last few years buy more barrels
and in fact buy more uppers all the way around. We're almost to the top here. A couple of things before I forget that again. I will do this one more time. Over at Coleman's, I mentioned it the other day, the tanker coveralls, $19.95 a pair. I want to reinforce that because they are, I have many of them. I keep buying them every time you place them in order with Coleman's. They still haven't been stocked. They're extra large, in theory short, but they're not real short.
These are US military. They're 100% aramid and they're the cheapest piece of military clothing out there that covers your whole body that you can find. They're at Colmans.com, Colmans.com, Colmans.com, and it's over in the clearance section. The other thing, which I wanted to look at, we have, they're virtually new in the bag.
They are never been issued. They are a 10 light bulb utility bag with rubber baby buggy bumper liners on the inside. There's pictures. You'll see what I'm talking about. But for what they are, the bag is well worth $10. But I would also point out these are high impact ruggedized standard light bulbs, brand new, unissued. You paid God knows what for them as a taxpayer.
And they've got them for $10. The bag can be used, as you'll see when you get it, you could take that bag and use it for a whole lot of projects for stuff that you might be tactically deploying. But the bulbs and the package as is, be kind of nice in the future for any kind of other deployments that take place and have alternate lighting because the LED lighting and the microchip lighting and all the other stuff we got out there is susceptible to EMP.
I'm not the one talking about having, dropping nuclear weapons. Your government, the Purple-haired Fruit-Petto Queers, are talking about having World War III. The Fruit Loop-Petto Queers, the effeminate trash that want to destroy themselves in America, are talking about having a nuclear war. You had best be prepared for the Petto Queer Fruit Loops, waging World War III.
and expecting you to fight for the pedo queers so they can molest another eight year old child or maybe a whole bucket of them because they'll get all kinds of orphans out of the deal so that the pedo queers can do their thing. Yeah, I don't think that's, we're not really gonna be fighting for them. It's kinda like, I don't think we're gonna let you in Christmas today either. I don't think we're gonna do that.
I've got a picture, a letter, in the sun, in my tomb has been sung before. It is 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 form 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 hath shown that mankind are more disposed to suffer while evils are sufferable than to write themselves by abolishing the forms to which they are accustomed.
that when a long train of abuses and use of patience, 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 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 only to tyrants. He has called together legislative bodies that 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 for opposing 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 for 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 offices and the amount and 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,
and 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 parallel to the most barbarous ages and totally unworthy of 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 amongst us and has endeavored 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 in attentions to our British brethren.
We have warned them from time to time of attempts by their legislature to extend an unwarranted jurisdiction over us. We have reminded them of the circumstances of our immigration 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 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 own lives, our sacred honor.
supporters know us well for our large selection of musical genres at the click of a mouse. But did you know you can now take the music with you on your smartphone? Learn more at Live365.com slash smartphone. Live 365.
east and west of the Mississippi along with Alaska.
Don, it's gray. It's been cold down here, but you know what this gray looks like we got Some snow thinking about visiting us eventually here. We'll see what happens It's supposed to get bitter cold even deeper than it is right now But the cloud cover moving in at least gonna stabilize the the cold that's a good thing We might not add much heat, but it'll keep something in what's like him in your neck of the woods What's today today and please proceed with where we left off in the last hour? Well, it's the it's Friday the 13th
February, 2015. Oh, Friday the 13th, enough of that. Go on the weather except where it will probably be in your neck of the woods, snow blowing that way. Again, 2013, sorry, 2015. Let's go back to reloading for at least a little while, you guys. Before we move away, I wanted one more thought on that in separate separation. Sometimes you'll see that ring on the outside. You won't be able to feel it. It will just be a little shinier.
It will just be ever so, you might see it in the sun, that's that 1-5% mentioned earlier. And you might wonder what that is. If you do not explore the inside thickness of the wall, you won't know. That is a remnant of the rubber band thing because that part of the wall is a
was pushed out to the wall. So it's not going to the chamber wall. So it's not going to have the indentation that the inside is going to have because of the basic way the pressure is going. But sometimes you'll see a ring. You turn that case and the light just right. And you roll it round in your hand like a wheel would roll. And you'll see that ring might go two-thirds of the way. It might go all the way around. Condemn that case. Condemn it.
Again, give it to your brother-in-law to put in the on the garage wall or your mother to put in the china cabinet That's a pretty little curio my dear. What is that? Oh my son shoots 50 caliber. Oh, that's wonderful See how that works? At any rate you don't want to leave hunks of a case in the gun while you're shooting In particular someone else is shooting back at you Another reason to keep your eye out for that in sip it
separation, both internal and external. Now let's talk more about cases because we did mention weight. Some people will weigh cases after they have sized them. Well, they're all the same size and they're all the same length. And if they all weigh the same, they all have the same interior volume, don't they? Well, that's a broad brush statement. To a great extent, it's true, but broad brush statements aren't always true, are they?
You can have the thickness of the wall in a different place. You literally can. And you can have different volume inside. People measure volume with water. People measure volume with capping sand into them, crystalline of some sort. It's safest with water. You've got no problem there. It's not going to burst into flames. You're not going to leave any solid particulate inside of the case. Now, if you're a reloader, you have a tumbler, don't you?
talk
Use it again because the material would be beat so skinny down and you would be unable to separate it from anything that you've drawn out of the cases. Now, if you're shooting 50, if you're shooting 2, 2, 3, anything in between and you're not a reloader but you're keeping your cases, you know what a bottle brush is? We'll clean the bottom. You know, I walk into and I'm really frustrated with this. I really, really am because I shoot black powder too and I cannot find a
for a black powder. I walk in, I ask them, it looks like a bottle brush. What do you mean? Well, when I get that brush all the way down to the bottom of the barrel there and I'm turning it around a little bit, I want to clean the wall too. You know, if it's an inline primer, I want to clean that tube, the inside face where that primer bursts into the chamber.
If you can find a bottom brush for your black powder gun, call me. My number is 231-796-8458. It's not made in the industry. I can't understand why not. But if you can find a bottle brush, you can, a little one, you can knock that burned powder out of your empty cases and they'll keep a lot longer. I'm told...
You might find it on Google or do a search for it, but there is a company that builds a, it's a type of soap. I'm not certain if it's a powder or a liquid, but it is meant to wash your cases if you're not going to reload them for a while. Because if you leave that powder remnant sitting in your cases, it will pit them. Now you've got not so much insipid separation, but you've got a pit there.
inside your case. That's not good for the strength of the case, the integrity of the case. It's not good for volume either. Not to mention it's going to collect things much like if you don't clean all of that concrete out of the wheel barrel, next time you put concrete in the wheel barrel, you're certainly not going to clean all of the concrete out of the wheel barrel, are you? Because it gets bigger and bigger. It's growing like the blob, isn't it? Adhesion, especially with lime.
reloading but you're saving your brass, look around and find out. I don't know the name of that soap. Skip told me about it years and years ago and he mentioned it on the air. But there is a cleaner for your cases if you're not able to tumble them. Now here's another thing, if you're, and you probably figured this out, if you've been a reloader for a little while, man, even if I'm not going to reload right now, when I get home from the range, I'm going to tumble those cases.
Why? For the aforementioned reasons. You don't want to leave that powder, that remnant of burnt powder laying on them. It will pit the cases. So when you bring your cases home from the range, next day or three, drop them in the tumbler and clean them. The tumbler cleans them inside and out, doesn't it? It's good when the case is as clean on the inside as it is on the out. It's even better. It's good to have a clean on the inside, but much like
What was his words about the guy who worries more about the pot being clean on the outside instead of the inside? Yeah. Yeah, you know where I'm going. Thank you. Tumble that breath. Don't let it sit around and deteriorate because it... Especially a black powder gun, you need to wash that thing down. Yeah, but I still can't understand why they don't build a bottom brush.
It's a brush with bristles pointing down the length of the bore so that when you get to the bottom you're scroving that wall too. It makes sense. Nobody builds one. Nobody. Oh, some of this brass turns out to be LC marked, Lake City. I'm pretty sure that stands for LC. Yeah, Lake City. It's good and it's bad because I wanted to talk about this too. If you had 86, that might have well have been a shooter's brass.
But when you mix brass like that, that takes that indicator away. Why? Because a shooter is going to want all of the same, again, Lake City or the Brazilian or La Pua or Winchester, because right off the get he's dealing with the uniformity. He's going to try to make them even more uniform. Now if a shooter comes across 100 or 120 cases,
He might shoot them all in order to make them. Oh, he will shoot them all in order to make them fire formed cases to his gun. We've talked about fire formed cases. Remember 50 to 55,000 pounds of internal pressure when you knock that primer off. That's what it takes. At any rate, that's that'll do a whole lot to the
It will fire form it to your chamber. No two chambers are exactly the same. Once you fire form to your chamber, that is one of the steps toward building smaller groups at 100 or at 1,000 or 1,600 yards. Because every time you touch that off, that breath swells a little bit.
And if it's really small for the chamber, it swells a lot and you've wasted energy moving that brass instead of moving the bullet. And if the next bullet goes in and it's tighter to the chamber, well, it's going to print different. That's how critical fire, that's how good fire formed cases can be for your gun. And we've encouraged fire formed cases for years, haven't we? Yes. Yes. And Tom. Yeah.
I used these steel pins for cleaning brass. I saw a video on YouTube. This guy was using one of the old tumblers that uses a big drum that rotates.
I just can't real the name of it. For the media he was using steel pins? Right. It was wet washing too. The drum was rubber lined and tight. He put in a little bit of dishwashing liquid and I think maybe a little bit of lemon juice.
put that in there with these stainless steel pins. How long were they? Do you have any idea how the length of them? Pretty short. Put it in there and when you open it up, it's beautiful. That's just a brass with a shiny, but if you take a 10 power to it, you're not going to see the smoothness that you would. I'm going out on a limb here and saying that it's like rock beats paper. You know what I mean? Steel beats brass.
I bet he was clean inside and out. I bet. I'll be appearance wise. I bet you didn't take long either. No, it was about an hour I think. This was some really nasty looking 760x39. Let's reference that because you know rock beats paper, steel beats brass. Let's reference that. I wanted to bring a thought line and I suffered old timers there for a moment.
I have no idea what's happening. Oh yeah, I know where I wanted to go. You guys, let's talk about match chambers and field chambers because that was mentioned earlier in the day. You know, you can have that Chinese 50 caliber bullet completely loaded and your buddy over there has a finely tuned, custom built 50 caliber and it'll have a match chamber in it from maybe Rock McMillan
or it might have a match chamber greened right into it from Ligia before you buy it by the barrel. You tell them you want that 545 rather that 554 chamber. Now, I don't offhand remember the outside diameter of that neck machine gun bullet. There's a maximum specification. But if you run that maximum specification outside diameter of the neck of a 50 caliber bullet, the brass
down to 554 and you build a chamber that's like, oh, now here, the chamber's going to be 554. The brass is going to be even smaller outside diameter. Why? Because it has to fit in there every time, right? But it's not going to be much smaller, so it might be 553.
It might be 5.52 on a loose one, but it's going to slide in and out of that chamber, no problem. And when you touch it off, you're not going to have a problem. You're not going to have to hit the bolt with a 2x4, but you're not going to be able to put that Chinese bullet into that 5.54 chamber. Why? It fiscally will not go. Popeye's Grandpa will tell you that. Why?
Well, the bullet is the same size, Don. It's 5'10". It's .510. Did you know that? You guys, a .50 caliber bullet is 100,000ths bigger than .50 caliber. At any rate, that bullet is .510. Now you've got a case wall around it, don't you? At least at the back of it. Now let's do some math here. If that case wall
or rather if that bullet is 5'10", and it's going into a chamber that's 5'5'4", what's the difference? You've got what? 5'5'4", you've got 44 thousandths of an inch worth of case surrounding the bullet. Cut it in half and you've got 22 thousandths on each side, and if you want any kind of clearance at all, you cut that case wall down to 20 thousandths all the way around. Now these are offhand numbers, that 5'5'4 is a nailed down number for
size for a 50 caliber match bullet. You can't get much smaller than that. Why? Well, you'd only have about 20,000s of brass around the bullet. Get out of field or gauge. And if you go much less than that, I don't think you'd get but maybe six or eight or maybe nine shots out of that 50 caliber before you start to split the throat. And if you can build it right,
Treat it right. Don't over pressure it. We go back to the aforementioned 12 to 20 shots out of that 50 caliber case. That sounds a lot more user friendly, doesn't it? Yes, it did. Yeah, a bit. But let's, I do this to describe the difference between a match chamber and a field chamber. We can call a field chamber a machine gun chamber. I don't remember the inside diameter, the minimum specimen.
classification for the inside diameter for that stelllight chamber out of a 50 caliber, but it's a lot bigger than 554. Why? John Moses Browning. He wanted you to be able to depend on that gun every time you pulled the trigger it would just hose bullets downrange. You know, you can take a 50 caliber bullet that is bent at the neck, at the top of the shoulder, at the neck, bent about
maybe 12, maybe 15 degrees and it's in the belt and that five pound bolt and those big old springs behind it will just slam that bullet right to home and it will go down range. Did you know if you tried to put that bullet in your bolt gun even the aforementioned 2x4 won't close the bolt? Not hardly. Not hardly.
But that that 50 cal that stellite chamber is meant to consume 50 caliber all day long and Anything you send its way. I'm not talking about Rufus. I'm talking about any mill ball. That's in the link Unless that unless that shoulders majorly bent well gonna cycle This is a reality. I enjoyed again. This only doubles up on the phrase. Oh, this was a thinker when that five
Madeline, man, almost nothing gets in its way. More honey. Yep. I yield to you, Mark. Well, one thing again here to remember was browning designs. There's been no significant change in any of the browning designs. There have been some change-offs.
integrating one Browning idea into another or actually going back to the 20s when Browning did develop a number of different Browning machine gun designs that all are rooted off of the Browning 1919. That's the only variation of MAG 58. If you take a look at the present modern gun that we now call the M249 or whatever it is, 259, the MAG 58 gun is a
Browning design that is a throwback to a Model 23 or Model 1927 Browning that was marketed to other parts of the world.
Pretty sure I got it right. This mag 58 machine gun, let's put it that way. The US nomenclature, you know, a 10-pre 240 probably makes sense. Anyway, the guns out there in force, they work. The .50 cal guns, well, the Browning design has a different mission. The .50 caliber belt that guns, what keep referring to, and Don's brought this up, machine gun versus placement rifles. Long range, you know, weapons designed with accuracy in mind, guys. That's what we're looking for.
So, for everybody, again, it's not that we don't have a number of different solutions there, but the bullet makes the difference. The key constructed case makes the difference. It's what we've talked about over and over again for years. And if you're going to start building, you need to start experimenting. Be patient. Don't build up a whole thousand pounds of them. Buffy's got something to get to her types of brass there. Separate them.
Match up the brass to the brass. Don't just run a load, but you've got two different spec brass there. The Lake City should have a year date on it, by the way. Take a look at that. Thank you for bringing that back up because you bring me circle on that conversation. I've got a few more minutes I can touch on this. Jump in there. Go ahead. A man might come across 100 or 120, 50 caliber. He's going to shoot them all. He's going to make them fire formed.
size them. When he sizes them, he brings them all to the same external diameters up the length of the shoulder across the neck. He files or cuts them to length. So they're all the same size. Now, you measure them for weight. Some people do the internal volume for weight. Some people do it by water. But you take out the, as example, if you're building to shoot in a match, you're going to need 30 bullets
because you're shooting three rounds of five, and then again, three rounds of five, but you're going to need targeting bullets in between. It's good to warm the barrel up. It's good to confirm your point of impact before you pull the trigger on that first round for competition, right? So add another 15 or 20 bullets. You're going to need 75 to 80 bullets to shoot one round of competition in the .50 caliber world. Now you take those 100 or 120,
And looking for that 70 or 75 bullets, you knock out the bottom and you knock out the top of, you knock out the lowest volume and you knock out the highest volume in order to get the middle of that what is known as a bell curve. And when you're getting the middle of that, you're trying to get all of your volume as close as possible, right? Now, you guys...
That AMAX is a tremendous bullet, but if you take 20 of them and you weigh them, you're going to find variances as much as four or five grains. But you know what? In a 750 grain armor piercing tracer, you're going to find variances of 15 or 20 grains. Honestly, gosh, that's how good the AMAX is. But if you load your lightest bullets, a gun is going to get hotter.
Now, this is when we're talking about shooting in competition or shooting five rounds, waiting a few minutes and shooting five rounds, and then waiting a minute and shooting five rounds. As example, shooting from a location, moving to another location, shooting. We've discussed this. You don't want to shoot. You don't want to be Dan Fong. But you want to shoot your heaviest bullets while the gun is cool. Because the lighter bullets are going to run out. I'm sorry.
qualify this. You want to shoot your lightest bullets while the gun is cool. The heavier bullets are going to run out faster, but because the gun, as 50 calibers heat up, they shoot faster. So the heavier bullet, because it's coming out a little faster, is going to print where the old lighter bullet is coming out a little bit slower would. So you're going to keep your small. But now that's over a progression of time. Heat and
of the weight of the bullet. When you reload and you've weighed your bullets and you know the volume of your cases, you're reloading and you're putting a bullet in a particular place in that case of foam, aren't you? Because this bullet is the heaviest bullet. This is going to be the last bullet I shoot in competition. And this bullet is the lightest. This is going to be the first bullet I shoot to confirm my point of impact at 1,000 yards.
I might shoot two or three more to bring it exactly to where I want and then I'm ready for competition. I got to leave in a moment. Let's do this because we've mentioned some competitions where the stakes are so high you do not want to lose and you won't want that hit, that first shot to be hit where you want. You can train with a cold gun too.
If you want that gun to hit consistently at 1,000 yards with groups of two, because you're going to shoot and you're going to move and you're going to shoot and you're going to move, and by the time you get to your next firing position, well, that gun is going to be about 20 or 40 degrees cooler, the chamber and barrel. Now you're back to almost room temperature, so now it's almost like you're shooting with a cold gun again. See? Another point to mention about heat. You shoot five or 10 rounds.
in a short period of time. And you put another one in the chamber because, man, things are still going on and everybody out there just takes their head down. You don't see any moose. You don't see any snakes with legs out there. And you sit and you watch. And you sit and you watch. And then all of a sudden, look, there's a snake riding a moose across. We need to get that. But you know if you've left that bullet in a hot chamber for a minute or three,
Man, it's going to print higher than the bullet that came out just before, even if it's the same weight, same right to God-given perfection, same everything.
You leave that bullet in the chamber and that brass starts to soak up heat and that heat starts to transfer to the powder and when you touch off that primer that powder is going to burn faster. And what happens when the powder burns faster? You build up a little more pressure and what happens you build up a little more pressure? That bullet goes down range a little bit faster doesn't it? It's going to print a little bit higher isn't it? So there's another cautionary about temperature. You don't have to shoot and shoot and shoot and shoot.
to find a different print because you keep shooting your 50, you're going to have to start knocking it down while you're aiming. I'm going to take one click out. I'm going to take two clicks out because I'm still hitting that dot at 1,000 yards. I'm still hitting that center ring. Bullets are getting faster because the barrel's getting hotter. But if you're not shooting and shooting and shooting, if you shoot a small group,
Then you put another bullet in and let it sit in there and soak up that chamber heat It's gonna print like you've been shooting and shooting and shooting and shooting. I thought I'd mentioned that one too mark Thank you very much. One of the other things there too is constant inspection, you know the discussion we've had we've already we have initiating the process with what we've been Going through step by step, but after a shoot cycle With brass you want to do a complete inspection now, especially if you think well, this is kind of
awfully intricate for a single-shot rifle and besides you're not firing that many rounds. Well, that is the whole point. You actually fire more if you can afford to fire more. It is cheaper to shoot, but because it's cheaper to shoot, typically you can shoot more.
Remember? So that's the advantage. Now the idea is not to blaze. The idea is, again, we're perfecting and mastering the trade. So at the end of a process, one of the things that we do is we also log in our ammo boxes. If you don't have them, you build them. Make them out of cardboard or pick up cartridge holders for
the particular loaded case that you're working with. In this case, like six caliber ammo, it could be 30 out of six, 300 wind, 330 at Lapua. Every time that you shoot the brass, put it on the log, on the card, on the piece of paper that sticks to the side of that box. Keep it small, but keep it common sense, date and condition, if at all possible, weather condition.
Now, before you put it back into the tray, that particular box, you keep it all together, inspect your brass.
Do a quick physical inspection. You know what to look for. You know where your suspected weak points can be with a piece of brass that's been used for a period of time. We do a throat inspection. We do a neck inspection. And then we do a case taper inspection. Basically, down towards the base is where you're going to see the first of any kind of significant separations. And Dom's talked about that. He went through the whole process of explaining to you. One of the other tired brass issues that may develop, it will not hurt you initially. Just don't reuse it again.
is you may end up with a lateral or long separation just below the shoulder of the case. This stretching and expanding and contraction, expanding and contraction, it takes place. Eventually, the stuff tires out, guys.
It doesn't happen all the time. Typically, your inspection is probably going to idea that there is something unusual with regard to discoloration or form to begin with. But you can end up with case separation. That's the easiest failure to identify because it's right there. It's in front of you.
When you fired that case, you probably even got a little bit of a gas ID on that. Maybe a little back blow could be any number of different things. And it will be noted. Now, if you have something different in the process when you pull the trigger, you ID that action immediately. You blade that case off to the side.
Because if something is going on, it's either, of course you do also inspect the weapon. If there's something that's a significant change, but the first thing you do is upon firing the round, settling, confirming the hit, is extract the case from the chamber, stop, look at it.
In other words, this way you're going to catch it. You don't just want to throw them back into the mask because you know that there was something unusual that happened. You want to coverate it. Yeah, it could be a powder charge. It could be something else. But if you're getting some kind of significant change with a blowback, actual gas blowback, that's usually a sign that you've got something in the case that... You want to know what I do. My heart knows only virtue. My might upholds the weak. My words speak.
the truth and I am sworn to valor if you want to be a knight of honor this is your oath rule number one a knight has courage battle is the task of a knight have the courage to undertake the difficult and tedious duties prepare to sacrifice all in exchange for wisdom justice must be tempered with mercy
or the pure truth can bring grief. You must not coward, but nobly dare. A true knight keeps his bravery even in the midst of danger. May the lightning of your glory be seen and the thunders of your onset heard from east to west. Number two, a knight has mercy. One can make mistakes.
But those who are good, when they know their course is wrong, and seek to rid of all evil. A knight has generosity that you can, good that you can. Be generous with wisdom and energy and command only through earned respect. A knight who shows the virtue of generosity is a master of his world. As fate...
Having given their word, it's to fulfill it at all costs. It's to believe what you do not see, and its reward is to see what you believe. Put on your armor and rise, who bears the sword of the spirit, and a shield of preservation. Number five, a knight has hope. What defines us is how we rise after falling. Stand firm.
And you will be the one to uphold the code in this unjust world. To be a Knight of Honor is to be a glimpse of hope. In a world where hope can be forgotten, has nobility. Uphold your convictions at all times, especially when no one is watching. Live by honor and protect the innocent and defenseless.
A true warrior fights for those who cannot fight for themselves. Number seven. A knight has justice. The preformers who have wrongly condemned us will be the ones rendering everyone his doom. Answer the calling for honor. Abstain from all unfairness and deceit. And at all times.
Speak the truth. Now must take your place. Have the will, the strength, to be the guardian of the ways of honor and courage. Fulfill your utmost duty, and you will make history forever set in stone. Like all great myths of old, within the code, you will be reborn.
into the warrior within.
In this, the land of the free and home of the brave. The freedoms we secured for you, we hoped you'd always keep. The tyrants labored endlessly while your parents were asleep. Your freedom's gone, your courage lost, you're no more than a slave. In this, the land of the free, the brave. You buy permits to travel and permits to own a gun. Permits to start a business or to build a place for one.
On land that you believe you own, you pay a yearly rent. Although you have no voice in saying how the money's spent. Your children must attend a school that doesn't educate. And your Christian values can't be taught according to the state. You read about the current news in a regulated press. And you pay a tax you do not owe to please the IRS. Your money is no longer made of silver nor of gold.
You trade your wealth for paper so your life can be controlled. You pay for crimes that make our nation turn from God and shame. You've taken Satan's number. You've traded in your name. You've given government control to those who do you harm so they could burn down churches and seize the family farm.
and keep our country deep in debt. Put men of God in jail. Harash your fellow countrymen while corrupted courts prevail. Your public servants don't uphold the solemn oaths they've sworn. And your daughters visit doctors so their children won't be born. Your leaders send artillery and guns to foreign shores and send your sons to slaughter fighting other people's wars. Can you regain the freedoms for which we fought and died?
Or don't you have the courage or the faith to stand with pride? And are there no more values for which you'll fight to save? Or do you wish your children to live in fear and be a slave? O sons of the Republic, arise, take a stand, defend the Constitution, the supreme law of the land, preserve our great Republic and each God-given right, and pray to God to keep the torch of freedom burning bright.
As I awoke he'd vanished in the mist for whence he came. His words were true, we are not free, but we have ourselves to blame. For even now as tyrants trampled each god-given rite, we only watch him tremble, too afraid to stand and fight. If he stood by your bedside in a dream while you were asleep and wondered what remains of the freedoms he'd fought to keep, what would be your answer if he called out from the grave, dill the land of the free?
Ladies and gentlemen, this is the evening intelligence report. I'm Mark Hernke. One day closer to victory for all of our brothers and sisters, both on and behind the lines in occupied territories. West, south, southeast, north. Ladies and gentlemen, you are listening to us on...
www.libertytreeradio.4mg.com and we're on satellite. Say hi to all of our merchant marine operators out there on every ocean of the planet. You guys know how you're doing it. And a myriad of other communications technologies both inside and outside these United States. It is Wednesday. It's Weapons Wednesday. It is the 26th of April. It is the
15th year of open obvious and pissing in your face, Fabian socialist and Soviet socialist occupation of America with a K. 2023, old earth calendar. Give it all she's got, Captain. And 2023, battle for the Republic.
the dance of sorts. Let the dance continue. We're going to make sure that happens. Everybody out there, it has been a very perfect day here, although it's still springtime in Michigan. The air is clear. We had clouds, little frigate clouds all day today. So we had a mix of cover, not too extreme, about 54 to 57 degrees.
But, uh, well, it's cleared up and whatever cloud cover we had to keep some of the heat in, oh, that just disappeared. So it is going to get cool tonight and pay attention, especially traveling. This is the hour when the critters are in motion right now, the deer especially, the slaughter has been horrific. But, uh, again, towards twilight, this is when they're all moving to bed.
or moving from to another area for grazing. And we've got a bunch of packs that have come together here. I think we got six or seven of the herd I'm looking at right now across the 40 acres. And there's another one too, just behind the house here. I just looked at them about nine. They're being protected by being close to the house. In fact, they usually spend their time bedding down near us because of the coyotes. Anyway, it has been a beautiful day.
It is Weapons Wednesday. We were talking about manufacturing arms. It got probably tedious for some because it's hard when you're doing it over radio, but we still can bounce off each other. And again, I want to thank you for all the input. I mentioned the Peterson device. One of our friends, Carl, was talking about, well, why not a top magazine feed? The top magazine feed is especially good if you have questionable magazines. You ever thought about that?
The other advantage is obvious by taking less stuff off from underneath the gun, the operator can get closer to the ground and it's less likely that when they're moving the weapon that there's going to be something that the weapon is going to snag or tag on.
But each weapon that typically is made, for instance, where we usually look at this is with squad automatic weapons for, you know, back in the day to present. There's still been a discussion about top magazine feed as a solution. It's a purely an engineering alternative that's a throw the dice. If everybody got on the same page, I'm sure as quickly as not, they'd make a squad gun with that solution. Stoner came up with this part of his Lego block.
stoner rifle system and of course the idea had already been proven out with the Bren gun many many years earlier and it would be pointed out that one of the reasons that the Bren was successful but also one of the reasons for any purpose for doing the magazine configuration is weak mags or tired production operations.
When the Bren comes into service, the Brits first of all didn't have as much money and didn't have as large military. Of course, they're still a pretty good-sized military because the sun never set on the British Empire. The interesting thing is that the magazines were, you know, at least tight and to spec before the war. But as war production took place, especially in the dark days of the beginning of World War II, as everybody kicked in,
It wasn't guaranteed that the weapon was going to get what it needed to function flawlessly. However, with a gravity drop feed system from above, it's most likely that you're going to eradicate some of the questionable issues with regard to weak magazine springs.
because the quality of the metal and tempering are very critical with that particular feature. And if you've had British Enfields or if you've had other rifles like that that have had aftermarket parts introduced, you will notice that that's the weak point typically on the gun. The follower spring is a big problem with many weapons. They get tired, first of all, but let's understand. Like when you're looking at the British equipment,
At the beginning of the war, they lost everything. When they left Dunkirk, some were carrying their rifles, but not everybody. Most everything got left behind, including the supply train that supported the weapons. Okay? So then they had to proceed, or proceed, not succeed yet.
proceed with production catch as catch can and as I pointed out many times every garage every basement became a little part of the factory mechanism if you had someone who could wield a hammer they bent parts and I'm not exaggerating they bent parts they have a hammer and a mandrel you get a whole bucket full of straps that were pieces of cuts sheet metal
heavy gauge and the grandma would take the piece of metal, put it into the mandrel, beat one of the straps at one end around to where it was supposed to sit in the device and then take and beat the other piece around and when she was done a trigger guard for a Sten gun.
Goes into the finish box clunk and then you grab another strap you take your hammer and tick tick tick tick and tick tick tick tick and look at that another trigger guard That's exactly how the stent gun was made and by the way many of the Bren gun parts were made in the same way because wherever it was non-critical for tolerance But reasonable tolerances were met then garage build was the solution
or somebody's parlor, they were at the kitchen table. They'd come in, give them what they needed to operate, and congratulations, you're part of the defense industry. You're not supposed to know about that. That's supposed to be, things just dropped out of there. It just happened to be there. And we don't want you to think about just how crap out the British situation was, but also, it's a reminder that you can do it yourself, which they especially don't want you to know.
This is another thing that I was talking about in the tour block with the Rupert Murdoch thing. And that Rupert Murdoch was getting real nervous because Tucker Carlson's been talking about the spiritual stamina. Okay, no matter how you look at it. And I again, I don't know. The bottom line is guys in the circles of the enemy, the last thing they want is somebody projecting to you the idea that you have authority.
that you should be strong, that you can win, that you should be focused on the problem, and that you have all of the spiritual and intelligent and physical tools at your disposal that as a combined arms team, make you invincible.
In other words, rather than the pissy weezer whiner crap that you're seeing nonstop, which goes from your music to its feudal resist, to all the drivel you see with all of the woke slash feminist or the effeminate nonsense that's generated with media production, it's focusing on you to denude you to take and destroy your masculinity if you're a man because they want the B grade
experiment that are the pedo queers that we have in the system, well they want to replace you. For that reason, I've put up a fight and we can win easily, but everybody's, you know, if everybody on the same page, the conflict would be very short. But a bunch of people, well I already had my fight, I've been in a war. And I always repoint something out about that. A lot of men I served with served in two, three, even four conflicts.
I had the benefit of actually working with World War I vets when I was very young. They were in service, but they were still very much alive and kicking, although one in two of them were in service. And they'd been in World War I, World War II, Korea, and then into Vietnam. And by Vietnam, they weren't out there ground-pounding, but they were in the war zone. They'd already served their time, guys. Go ahead, Ed, jump in there, please.
that goes into what I played before the intelligence report. I know you caught came in and probably heard the tail end of that. Now I've had people ask me what that's from. That's a speech by Jared Raymond. It's the Knights Code, the code of chivalry, seven rules to be unbreakable. There is a YouTube video of it. I posted it in the, uh, in the gilded. So anybody who wants to see that and check that out. And Jared Raymond is also a musician.
So if you like that, the poem that he did there, go over, check out his other stuff, and support the artist. What's fascinating is overcoming, well, this is an old thing that I was taught years ago. The first rule is to be true to life. I heard the end of that. Death will come in its time, but until that moment, live. And if you're going to live, fight to live.
If you really want to live, fight for your life. Fight for your freedom. Fight for your liberty. Stand up. You know what? You'll find that you can breathe easier. I've said this a million times about what we're facing. The one thing that is going to amaze you. I've had many people experience it when we were in the Dagger war, when we've been in standoffs and we've stood there and then, well, everybody was sure that it was, this was it.
And there were more of them than there were of us. But you know what? Because we all accepted the idea that this is going to be the fight. This is the day your enemy walked away from the battlefield. In fact, unask the AO trying to kill each other. Seriously. We've seen this personally and up close. So again, remember, the first rule is to be true to life.
Death will come in its time, but until that moment, live. And that doesn't mean on your knees. Live. We've got an opportunity. Great time while we're here. Let's enjoy it. Go ahead, call or jump in there. Hey, sorry, this is Carl. This isn't an AR-18. The original is a four-pole-an-eater. Hold on, Carl. You're breaking up. I don't know why. It's like you're, you know,
a warble chamber. Here's the best way to describe it. So if you could move or we use a get closer to the mic, maybe let's try that. Yeah, the 18 originally designed as easy to produce and affordable way to have a 556 NATO M16. Yep. In fact, it was Stoner's idea that the the air was meant for a different mission.
And the AR-18, which we all know is the AR-180 for civilian purposes, was actually the poor man's or should they, the little guy's FAL is what a lot of people described it as. And in fact- I'm sorry, how come that never really took off? Well, part of it is aluminum, the business of aluminum. And the word is Elcoa.
Remember Mr. McNamara, just like you're seeing now, you know a lot of buddies have money invested in things. And one of the things that we had in Vietnam also that nobody ever talks about was aluminum production.
It's still true today. If you look at used to be when you have a little map, you'd have little images of different things that different countries were famous for like there'd be little rubber tires and there would be little stacks of metal and sometimes it would say copper underneath. Well with Vietnam, it was aluminum. We had aluminum production and Elkoa wasn't the only ones like US Steel. Elkoa aluminum and all of the other variant companies
We're heavily invested in trying to bring the aluminum production up. They already had it in aircraft. Of course, also titanium in aircraft, you know that for engines. But the AR lended itself towards the aluminum production line. The AR-1, AR-18, steel stamping and, you know, sheet metal.
So what you had was a little production, you know, product salesmanship here going on. I will remind everybody, if you think about it, the AR-15 is an aircraft aluminum billet. Look at the, we'll look at the grade of aluminum used for the AR-15. And the way we've been building AR-15s, even to this day, is pretty much not changed at all since it was originally developed in 1958-59. Because the gun was available by 1960.
contrary to what they say, I know, like I said, I served with men. One of them is long gone now. He was with the second detachment in Vietnam, second American detachment in Vietnam on the ground. Had a massive photo essay. He was always worried because he was merely screwed by the VA.
And what gets me is I told him, you know, you have everything here to write three books on Vietnam. Nobody could write. He photo essayed everything. He had all of his hand receipts. He recorded everything. They were paranoid because they didn't trust the CIA. But while they were there...
in 61 to 62, the armorer had M16 E1s, or whatever, they basically had to be the E or the E model, but he said the guy would come around and he goes, hey, you guys want to try these out? He'd have pistols by the box and they'd give them away. But one day they came by and he said, hey, we got these in. And it was the M16 E1 variant. And everybody looked at it and said, well, it's neat, but no, I think I'll stick with my carbine.
And as I've said many times, the reason was because of commonality of ammunition, you'd be able to continue to shoot with the 5.56 that early in the war. Nobody had anything for it. No mags, no ammo, whatever you had was whatever came with that shipment of rifles. And that was it. But they wanted everybody to try it out. The AR-180 or the AR-18 was offered later the same way.
And interesting to note that it did catch on. The AR-18 slash the AR-180 was built by the Japanese, also built by the British. And if you'll notice, the British created a light sniper rifle for the troubles. They didn't just use it in Ireland, but they used it in other locations, especially in Africa. And that rifle was popular with the troops.
Like the FAL, it was very, very similar to the FAL and overall concept. As far as looking at it, you can understand it. The Japanese ran it, but they were... Remember, the Japanese are Japanese centric and the AR-18 was not a Japanese rifle.
So while the Japanese did build it and they researched it, the only thing they really did was Mr. Sterling's design, with Stoner's design, forgive me, not Sterling, because it was Sterling that built the other ARs for England. But the Japanese took a lot of the ideas and put them into their, what is it, Type 63 defense rifle. There's a Type 58, 59, 63, 65, there's a bunch of them. But if you look, you'll see, if you look at the internals,
You can see that the reason they bought it and did a production run on it, I think, was to steal the idea, to be able to reactually field test it, research it, use it. They didn't throw it away for a while. They kept it in service. But then all of the things they saw in the rifle, they built into a Japanese centric rifle.
Because that's one thing that they're very famous for. They like, if they're going to use it, they want it to be Japanese in design. They can claim that, you know, it's theirs. It's an ethnic thing and it's a nationalist, you know, nationalistic thing. So, but those are one of the same for Japan. So, the design itself for the AR-18, it would be, it would lend itself towards production similar to working the AK.
It could be done instead of stamp the way that it was done, Stoner knew that if need be, here's a neat trick, most of you haven't probably thought of, you take a piece of steel channel that is thin walled and you don't bend anything. In fact, at that time, if you go through like the steel companies, if you look at the steel stock inventory, when Stoner came up with the AR18,
The standard geometric, pre-produced, extruded,
seamless tubing, square, well in this case rectangular tubing of the same dimension as the receiver for the AR180 was a standard off-the-shelf item. You could buy it by the mile. You could buy as long a piece as you wanted in steel channel. What you would do is just cut it to the spec because there's a taper. If you look at the bottom of the receiver, look at the lower receiver on the AR18.
All you do is cut it appropriately and you have both the upper and lower assembly complete. You just make your cuts and tapers and then all you do is you stipple where you have to for certain points and back then it would then, well it would still be teague welding but you teague weld the components. Not a big deal. Yeah, look all done.
So no, it was a good idea. You're absolutely correct there. It still would be more complicated. When I bring up the PAWS rifle, guys, the PAWS rifle, the research rifles that they did, there were three of them. The PAWS was one. There were two others. And like I've said, one was a flechette gun. But the flechettes are unique.
The idea was to build something where if you had a bunch of ammo laying around you had magazines and spare parts from many other in production weapons How could we build a production rifle from off-the-shelf parts? And that's really again what you're looking at the While the stoner rifle it was stoner rifle forgive me before I go any farther The stoner rifle was more complicated in terms of internal design than say the ar-18
What you got with the Stoner was a Lego rifle where you could change it into a vehicle machine gun. You could turn it into a submachine gun, a CAR-15 type rifle. You could build it up to a standard light rifle in the 5.56. You could turn it into a squad gun with a magazine using the standard 30 round mags or 20 round mags with the reverse magazine feeding from the top.
Whereas the AR-18 was a straightforward one production type you might make it different barrel links down the road but its original purpose was to fit the niche of the infantry rifle period nothing else and that did make sense it really is a good design the reason you don't see a whole lot of them floating around is because there are groups out there guys that they buy them all we've got Patriot units out here that have thousands most of the production of the AR
AR-180. And it doesn't make any difference if they're British, Japanese, or American. They got them all. I've seen them. I've been in arsenals that have rack after rack after rack after rack of AR-180s. And every magazine they could find, they sent people out all over the country. They cleaned out the gun shows. When anything shows up at an auction, they have go-betweens, but they purchase everything.
What's left out there now are considered collectors items or if you recall there was a second regeneration of the AR 180 We've mentioned this back when it happened several years ago, but they did do one change They made one significant change in the new production design They went with the standard air 15 type magazine catch rather than the AR 180 specific magazine latch
And so that's the change. That was a good change. That was a good idea. That's where again, what I say in the tour block, you know, it ain't the razor, it's the blades. The magazines, if they're proprietary, although the good thing is that the AR180 mag was a standard box body of the AR15 magazine. The difference is that they intentionally changed the way that the magazine latch was configured and how it retained the magazine.
That was the only big step and it was purely because back then the idea was that you could make it proprietary so that you could deny material to someone. This is in the British colonial sense of manufacturing. It wasn't so you could provide a better model, it was so you could restrict or hamper
anybody else from getting what you had because you're going to make, you know, ban guns and make gun confiscation legal. And the governments that typically bought these, Japan, they didn't have guns. England, they were heading towards confiscating and cutting up everything and look where they are now.
So at the time they were right back into their well first send us guns send us ammo World War two and then it was well We're going to start making sure we slap the peasants and confiscate the guns and they did again so anyway One the other issues about the idea of the air one a be really it's there's a lot of parts that were there were totally integratable between the air 180 and the m16 rifle air 15 rifle
internal parts, they tried to do as much to utilize as many internal components as possible. Now, a better example of a solution I've mentioned many times is the original Bushmaster 223 rifle. Now, the original Bushmaster was made, we're not talking Bushmaster, the one that, you know, he made the air 15s here and, you know, he sold out. Now you have Lindem Arms. I'm not talking about that Bushmaster, I'm talking about before that.
Bushmaster had freestanding independent designs. They're the ones who made the Bushmaster pistol, which we've talked about many times, but they also made a light rifle. And back when we were outfitting people in that day, you could buy basically three of the Bush, Bushmaster rifles for the price of one AR-15. Now, remember, magazines are all the same. Internal components are pretty much all the same.
And it was a simple, straightforward design, easily produced. Well, it is one of those weapons that would be more easily or more readily produced in a coarse environment because it lends itself towards being able to utilize stuff from other weapon systems.
especially butt stocks, things of that nature, you could improvise, adapt and overcome and make the Bushmaster, the original Bushmaster rifles out of many different systems. The core of the rifle would not change. And it took standard Air 15 M16 magazines and 5.56. So the one thing that they did do is Bushmaster produced that receiver in both aluminum
and in steel, it was dominantly produced in steel, but you also find that they infusion cast the receivers. They didn't just do stamped steel.
They also did infusion cast metal, very similar to what you see with the punky Galil rifles where they've got pock mark holes in the receiver. If you haven't seen enough of the Galil guns, remember they made stamped and they made cast extruded receivers. Well, not extruded, cast.
And a lot of the cast receivers that the Israelis made and issued out, you can actually see scene points and cast flaws going into the body of the metal all over the place. Well, at least I would say this, the ones that were built by Bushmaster didn't have that problem. Of course, they were made in America, so there was a higher standard in general. But overall,
The Bushmaster would be an option. It was one of the preferred designs. In fact, it would be the troops had had a chance to test both weapons. Thought that there there were significant advantages in the AR-18. The single biggest selling feature as we've said a million times with the AR-15, M16 was the buffer system.
That's the big difference. The buffer system felt recoil and the idea that you can put that gun to anybody's shoulders. A 180 pound American Gorilla or a 95 pound soaking wet Vietnamese soldier and both of them could operate it with impunity. It was comfortable for both operators to fire. And everybody in between too. I'm sorry, Carl, anything else? Carl East. Carl might still be there. I've talked to zero.
didn't mean to do that, but when the subject leads to another, just want to make sure. Do we have another callers? Go ahead, please. Good girl. Yes, so actually the IRA ArmaLite song, that's actually talking about the AR-18, not the AR-15 family. Right.
Or the air. Yeah, the reason the IRA loved that rifle is because it had a side-folding stock and you know an urban gorilla sniper or whatever they're doing with it they can you know get from point A to point B without being noticed with a with a weapon a lot easier when it's a smaller package and Bring that to light. Yes. Yeah
And so actually I bought one of the brownie not running the Brownells AR 180 Yeah, they're making that one of those and the pistol link because it put a side-building wrist brace on at the time since taking that off, but I'm actually not super impressed with it. I mean as far as
reliability is fine, but as far as accuracy, once it heats up, so after like three or four or five rounds, the accuracy just goes out the tubes. So I don't know if they've solved that issue yet with newer versions of it, or if I wouldn't have that problem if I had a 16 inch barrel, but that's my experience with it so far. You have a pistol length barrel? Is that what you picked up? Yeah, I think it's a 10 and a half inch. Yeah. Oh, okay.
Well, that actually should be shedding calories pretty efficiently. So it's actually the barrel configuration. Remember, that was the reason for moving from the pencil barrel to the stepped heavier barrels was to help to stabilize sustained fire for accuracy. Because, I mean, we've had so many experiments on that, it's ridiculous.
Well, you did what type of barrel okay? It's a it's a pistol length barrel. What type of barrel was is it configured is today? Step-heavy is it a contoured? pencil barrel what type I Think it's a step heavy is it's not a pencil barrel. I mean it's kind of a standard barrel I mean, there's something special about the barrel. It's just you know ten and a half and and yeah after about five rounds accuracy even at like
50 yards is just, I mean, opens way up. Why did you think he needed to shoot something again? Why did you think he needed to shoot something again 50 yards? Yeah, I know, right? It's a pistol. Come on. Well, I guess 50 yards. Yeah, it better hit something at 50 yards, by God. Well, the other thing there too is, I don't know. I haven't had a chance to look to see what they did. That's, what's that pinning to? That's pinning to a regular AR-15 lower?
Yeah, yeah, so there may be some issue with interaction there. It should be but does it? Operate with the buffer tube or oh, well, yeah, it asked you you've got a buffer tube on it because it's got the lower Right. No, you don't need a buffer tube You do not need right if you have if you have a lower with a buffer tube, it's fine, but it doesn't actually use it It doesn't mean I've got a low head no buffer tube Yeah, so it still maintains all of the integrity of the original block design the way the upper is set up. So
Yeah, so I can take the the lower and I can put a buffer tube on it and use it as a standard AR-15 lower Which is really cool about it and of course it uses AR-15 magazines. Like I said, the reliability, it's fine. It's great. I can't complain about that at all. It's just the accuracy. I don't know what's going on with it.
Well, beyond, okay, at the 10 inch barrel, beyond, in fact, 50 yards should be proud, I'm not saying it should be, but it's livable. It's designed to be either a security weapon or an in, you know, quarter, you know, house-to-house, you know, type of system. When you're looking at that size weapon, you're not really going to be reaching out accurately that far. Doesn't mean I wouldn't try any day, I would.
But that's the only problem with shorter barrels. Remember, it's the idea that you're going to pepper the area with a patterning of projectiles and hopefully tag somebody with something. I've got some little length, or actually identical length, upper on a standard AR-15 pistol lower and I have it maxed right out to 300 yards, just fine with irons.
So there's an extreme noticeable difference. It's kind of like the problem the Germans were having with the G36, where as soon as it warms up, the accuracy just goes to crap. But that's my experience, and I have an earlier iteration of this when this upper kind of first came out. So they might have since corrected it, or maybe I just got a fluke. I don't know.
Well, they think the difference between the G36 is the polymer. That's the issue. You know, the overheat, same problem they have with the Steyr AUG. You know, the restricted automatic fire to 90 rounds, no more than 90 rounds, sustained fire, and then you have to stop because it was slopping out the plastic and the polymer. That's what happened with the G36. With this rifle, it could be interactive metal issues or something where it's, again, transmission of calorie or lack of
dissipation of the energy buildup in some way that's affecting it. I have to look at it. The, okay, here's the, well, how is the barrel and the front sight configured? Is it the same as the original AR180? I have not studied the original AR180, so I couldn't tell you. Is it, okay, what? How is the gas system connected to the upper? With regard to the upper and how it's operating?
Yeah, I don't have it in front of me. I couldn't tell you Okay, it's well. It's well built. The only thing I can think is I actually had a because it's a pistol length upper I put a Not a forward grip but a hand stop up forward and one of the screws was actually touching the Barrel the underside of the barrel
Maybe that wasn't enough to throw things off. I have since taken that off. So next time I shoot it, I'll see what happens. Well, that could. That would create a distortion because everything interacts with the barrel. And then again, once it starts to heat up, remember that all of that, you know, swelling, expansion, contraction, it may create a compression point. See, so you've already maybe solved it yourself.
Yeah, I need to spend some time on the range. I've actually been out of country for like eight months, so I'm glad to be home where I belong and So hopefully I'll get chance to monkey around with it. Don't leave us again. Good things are getting too bad. We need you here Seriously, don't leave again the right on well otherwise
Well, was that particular, I would assume, phosphate finish? Did they go with an alloy or did they go with a steel upper with that? As far as I'm aware, it's a steel. Okay. Tri-magnet, if you're not sure. You remember, aluminum, it just sits there and stares at you. It's not a lightweight gun. They built it pretty solid.
It's well built. I mean, it's got nothing but good things about it to say about it, except for that accuracy issue after about five rounds. It's just everywhere. Well, again, like I said, that is a barrel interaction issue of some kind, either floating or compression. And remember, the barrel moves. If you've seen all the slow-mo images of what happens with your barrel when it's in action.
just what it will have the harmonics of the barrels response to the bullet going down the tube and it could be something having to do with that that's quite probable and quite possible the you know it's unique to that particular weapon made in the shorter configuration see that's the problem is the original design hey you know had particular physics applied to it
When you change or alter it, needless to say, it's like the Kar-15. When they first put the Kar-15 together, they rated it as a submachine gun, as a pattern gun.
It was not listed as a you know, baby air, you know, like a baby m16 or assault rifle It was considered to be in the SMG category, but because of performance and accuracy Now it ended up being still a pretty reasonable gun But for the kind of what work that they wanted, you know to wanted to do with it later on you know as in the as a government assassin gun like they were using with the
Phoenix Project and all of that where they were going in and raiding locations and they were picking off people. Well, when you kick a door in the sprayer room, it's about don't need a whole lot of accuracy. It's why the MAC-10 was riding along with the CAR-15, which was riding along with the Stoner gun. Because, you know, each one had their niche, but most of them were short, short range. And the Stoner that the seals carried typically was the Shorty.
Not always. A lot of guys, they love the stoner. You couldn't pry a stoner out of an operator's hand if they got hold of them. I know a lot of guys that carried the stoner. I didn't get a chance to see that much of anything other than the arsenal down at Fort Wegotcha, Fort Ochuca. And I would spend the weekend, you know, I couldn't spend any money. Got to send the money back home to Nancy.
So for the family. So what I would do is find everything that was free to do. Well, I can peruse the arsenal down there. There was an SF and US Army Intelligence Center arsenal that had over 30,000 guns. All battlefield pickups from one air theater or another. And I got a chance to fiddle fart with the storm, but you can only pull so many weapons at a time. I didn't spend any time on it.
But looking at the configurations that I did see, they were more complicated in the AR-180. That's the first rule. The Stoner was a much more intricate and parts unfriendly gun because there was more to it. But the AR-180, the AR-18 would easily have given it a run for its money.
The other interesting thing about that gun is again, they also look, Stoner was taking it into consideration as the distressed gun or low tech gun for the market. Because you could build parts out of something other than what they originally were constructed in. And including alternate metals. The only thing obviously wouldn't change is the barrel and the bolt carrier. But that's it. Everything else?
There are several different ideas that he presented and that were presented by the, you know, design group to make the gun work. And at the time, let me remind everybody of something else here. At the time in the 1960s, something I said earlier about commonality of magazines and available parts.
The uphill battle with introducing all of these light rifle AR-15 or AR-18 or whatever two or three other European guns comparable is that number one, there was just so many of the World War II weapons left over. Carbines were everywhere and that's what you're competing against. And most importantly, it ain't the razor, it's the blades. It was ammunition.
If you committed to the 556, you had to buy from scratch. There was no buying from, you know, the Rent-A-Revolution companies. You had to buy brand new from whoever was building the ammo. On the other hand, an example, the same time that the AR-18 came out and the AR-15 was moving out.
Even the Dominican Republic was building brand new rifles, but you know what they were doing? If you go look it up, they were building, they look like M1 carbines. They were a different mechanical system, but the magazine and the caliber was determined by cheap and massive quantities of post-World War II or post-Korea or Vietnam, here ammunition is still readily available. And mostly they were feeding off World War II munitions in 1965.
So, you know, Dominican Republic, South America, every country had a carbine variant. They had a main battle rifle, in many cases just bought the Garand, got it for free from us. But they also built new weapons. Several of them, Dominican Republic, well, I mean, why build a Garand-type weapon when you can get a government gun for hardly anything? It's that Japanese-centric thing where it was a national pride thing.
And the same is true for most of the light rifles for that window of time. We're all carbine centric, M1 carbine centric. So coming in with a really cool idea, you're fighting uphill. You gotta find somebody who's got enough money to be able to promote it so that everybody else thinks maybe they need it.
And Japan wasn't quite enough to take the AR-18 off and England, well, they're an anti-gun, you know, pod anyway. They'd sell to anybody. They'll sell them with dictator, but they won't sell the American people. That's the one thing about the war ministry and the munitions ministry in England. They perceived the American people as an enemy. And I'm not joking about that. I've know people who were into
import export from the English inventory guys, there's vast amounts of material you've never seen why they do not want to sell they will not sell to the American people because you are perceived as a ground combatant in the future They have civil defense junk up to up the wazoo that they won't give to their own people But they also were willing to sell to anybody except us
And that's why, again, this is going way back. In fact, this is all the way to the history of the birth of the country. But we're talking in the 20th and into the 21st century, the crown slash the royalist still perceived the American people as a significant enemy. Not the government, because they got them hoored out.
But the American people are a perceived enemy of the of the crown and a perceived enemy of the globalist And so vast amounts of material, but they'll then turn right around and sell it to some crazy town fool who's executing millions of his own or hundreds of thousands of his own people Oh, they'll sell him at heartbeat They'll dump they'll dump everything in anything they want big in fact with barely dropping a dime terms of cost so
Another thing here real quick, again, I mentioned the Stoner rifles, and we were talking about, of course, the AR-18. One of the other companies that come out of nowhere was another one that did a series of P-family of rifles. It was another, basically what the guy did, he was probably, I always figured he was with the Stoner design group.
And one of the guns that he did make, which was absolutely a Stoner design, look it up, it's called the Hack 7. Now there's the Hack 6, I don't know how much production came of that, of these weapons were out there, but the rifle was all the features on a 7.62x51 NATO rifle that you could imagine, that Stoner believed needed to be on the gun. The gentleman built the gun, one of the most important features on that particular weapon,
the Hack 6 and I believe both the Hack 6 and 7 had ambidextrous ejection ports. You could go from one side to the other, same part, just flip the part over to the other side to seal up the magazine well on the other side.
The weapon itself was also produced in a 5.56, which I don't think barely got any production out. But here again, these weapons lended themselves towards simple manufacturing. With today's CNC, these weapons can be cranked out probably 10 times as fast as the Air 15. They were that, they were, you know, crude, rude, and simple in terms of their mechanical design.
But their reliability was relatively high. I mean was was considering they were prototyped now slash first production run rifles or weapon systems they worked and again This is just going that back to the archive so to speak finding the design if you have one example rest of it could be produced and again with the AR the AR 180 design if we're going with the stamped steel instead go with the channel construction
later Bushmaster bullpups. I've mentioned these many, many times. That was a door channel panel. If you don't know that. They made a works in a drawer bullpup rifle. They're floating around out there still. Have you ever looked at that gun? If you worked in the mechanical field, I know exactly where he got the channel for that. That was not built. That was one of those. That was basically taking the pause idea and applying it with other materials.
That's what they did. The Bushmaster rifle, Bushmaster bullpup is another one you guys, if you're serious as a group and you wanted to study something, get together, spend the money on one, they're not that expensive, and take a look at it. And when you do look at it, you go, well, son of a bugger. And it, again, takes advantage of AR parts where AR parts are useful, AR-15 magazine, but the basic design could be built anywhere.
And that's why you should look at it. By the way, you could make the rifle and not make it a bullpup. It could be built as a straightforward light rifle design. All works in a drawer, kind of like, to me, the design itself is very much leans towards the Walther submachine gun weapons that came out about the SMGs.
that came out about the same time as the MP5. The Walthers were cheaper, there were more of them out there. The only reason you have the MP5 instead of the Walther SMG is marketing.
Remember what made the MP5 and the HK family of guns famous as they gave them away for free, which is the dirty secret they never told anybody back when the LA SWAT team, the LA SWAT team was carrying the MP5. You should too. And everybody started grabbing it. Well, here's the thing. Like we mentioned with other weapons, the Walther SMG was available at, you almost could buy five Walthers for the price of one HK, because HK just drove the price up to the roof.
right? They went maximum. See what the market will bear. If you want to see the Walther guns, go back and watch Total Recall. What? Yeah, if you pay attention. Have you ever really closely looked at the weapons in the original Total Recall movie with Schwarzenegger? There's some weapons in there that you should stop and stop the image and look at. There's a movie
that has some things in it that you better stop and ask yourself where the hell did those come from. One of them is a pre-Linda pistol. The pre-Linda pistol designs that were actually SMGs. Anybody remember that? The guy named all of his guns after his daughters. I think his wife too. But there's a little bit of work that was done before that and it's basically a thin pistol.
In other words, if you can make a pistol as absolutely crude, cheap, and simple as possible, what if you were to make a Sten type pistol that's only about a 7 inches long? The tube is 7 inches long. It has an internal magazine. It is a large stick magazine. And the weapon is incredibly simple to make.
But you don't want people to dwell on that because if you had any kind of decent pipe cutter and a little bit of welding experience, and if you took advantage of all these cut barrels that are out there because you don't need a long barrel for a small pistol, with all these cut barrels out there, you could do some really interesting things. Take the chopped barrel, clean it up, re-chamber it to what you need, and pop, pop, boom, boom.
So I gave you another fun homework assignment. Go over and go pull out Total Recall, the original movie with Adenschwaltzenbrunna or Konstantbrunna, yeah Adenschwaltzenager. And when you do watch it, stop it when a weapon pops up. See if you can properly identify it. And back then, the Walther was in the formula, by the way. And that's way after the Walther was introduced into the market.
Interestingly enough, both designs are comparable in terms of how they're produced. The HKs work, the Walters work, it was just, again, cash capital. Your tax dollars paid for a much more expensive weapon, the MP5, when the Walters could have been purchased and you could have had more of them. Well, your tax dollars would have paid for more of them. But then again, if they're trying to ban guns, HK is the company you want to abreast because HK
Why? Because they hate you. HK hates you. You've hated us for years. They love your government money, but they hate you. Always remember that. HK. Why? Because they hate you. So anyway, we're almost to the top here. And let's see, there was a couple of other things before I forget. Now double check, I had a couple. During the day, obviously you can imagine I'm writing things down as I run into something or somebody
through a dart at us and I was like, wait a minute, let me check that out. Also, oh, that's right, very quickly. We mentioned bowtash.com, bowtash.com, bowtash.com, B-O-T-A-C-H.com. I mentioned going to there and looking at their lots, L-O-T-S, when you go to the page, go search lots. They have a ton of slings.
It's a grab bag of mix. It may have already sold. This thing was they were so cheap that they were worth the money, but they had a couple of different lots of these and they're all tactical slings. They're either demo slings or they were trade-ins, but they're all tactical and regular modern slings. So you may want to go check that out. Botash.com. It's going to be 50. I think it was
One lot was like 30 slings, that's small. The other one was 50 and there was another one with well over 80 or so. So depending on who's listening out there, if you were looking for slings and also may want to trade things out or have auxiliaries or put what put slings on weapons you otherwise have figured you couldn't afford to because it's so stinking expensive. Well for a dollar a piece or 50 cents a piece, I think you can afford to. And so there is a mix in there too. The image
shows a pile of them. But the image typically that they show is what you're buying, as we've experienced so far. And again, I will remind you that over at Botash, they also have a couple of magazine lots. One of them is AR-15 mags. The other ones are stole mags.
Some of them are odd batches of mixed stuff, most of which you have no interest in. But some of them, others, are single blocks of a particular model of magazine. You should go over and look at those to see what they have there. And Motash does have their boot sale going, or markdown boot section going on right now. You're going to have to go through each boot you're looking at, find out what they actually have in stock.
because the sizes will be varied. And again, the core sizes that are most common always sell out first because guys, when they put it on markdown, they're already running the inventory down. They're just putting what's left over there because the next container is on its way with the same boots. And in fact, if you were to touch the sail sometime down the road here over the next several weeks or the next couple of weeks,
Chances are when you tag that on their page, I've seen this many times, they still list it as a sale item, but when you go to the actual item, it's all of a sudden jumped up to the regular price. Well, that's because they've re-inventored and all of that code is back up to full price because they've got all of the sizes again. They filled in the inventory. So this is really important if there's something you see there you like and you don't want to spend, you know, you know.
sell your first, you know, newborn son to accomplish the task, you can actually, well, make it affordable by co-incident the clearance section. We're at the top. Is everybody out there? Only virtue. My might upholds the weak. My words speak the truth. And I am sworn to valor. If you want to be a Knight of Honor, this is your oath. Number one, a Knight has courage.
is the Tastala Knight. Have the courage to undertake the difficult and tedious duties, prepare to sacrifice all in exchange for wisdom. Justice must be tempered with mercy, for the pure truth can bring grief. Thus not coward, this is bravery, even in the midst of danger.
May the lightning of your glory be seen, and the thunders of your onset, heard from east to number two. A knight has mercy. One can make mistakes, those who are good, when they know their course is wrong. And seek to rid of all evil. A knight has generosity.
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